Bulletin Daily Paper 06/02/11

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Anglers, go with the flow

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Fishing in the backcountry

Spring thaw brings changing conditions to Central Oregon rivers • SPORTS, D1

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Killer Middlekauff gets life without parole By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Darrell Middlekauff will spend the rest of his life in prison with no eligibility for parole, Judge Stephen Tiktin ruled Wednesday. Middlekauff, 49, was convicted last month for the 2002 murder of his wife, Brenda Middlekauff, and for drug and sex abuse charges stemming from his relationship with two teenage girls in 2004. Middlekauff was

serving time in prison for unrelated charges when his wife’s body, shot three times in the head and buried in a metal drum, was discovered in July 2005 a few miles southwest of Sunriver. The “true life” sentence issued to Middlekauff is the presumptive sentence for a person convicted of aggravated murder in Oregon. Tiktin had the option of imposing a stan-

dard life sentence, under which Middlekauff would have been able to request a parole hearing after 30 years in prison. Middlekauff was sentenced to an additional 24 years in prison for the drug and sex abuse charges. Prior to announcing the sentence, Tiktin granted Middlekauff an opportunity to address the courtroom Wednesday morning. See Middlekauff / A4

REDMOND

Darrell Middlekauff was convicted in May for the 2002 murder of his wife, Brenda.

WATER HAZARD

Police nix switch to lower-cost health plan Decision means 5 positions will stay open, response times may be slower By Patrick Cliff The Bulletin

Redmond residents could experience slower response times on low-priority calls next year because the city’s police officers rejected a proposed switch to a lower-cost health plan. As it sought to overcome a roughly $2 million budget shortfall, the city looked for savings in health insurance costs. Other cuts have included eliminating next year’s scheduled cost-of-living raise. The current plan for an employee with a family will carry a $1,951 monthly premium as of Aug. 1, and the city covers 95 percent of that cost. Only the 37 police union members will have that plan next year. The other roughly 110 employees will have a new plan with a monthly premium of about $1,300, of which Redmond will pay all but $85. Costs for nonpolice union employees will rise with the new plan. The out-of-pocket limit for a family, for example, will climb from $4,000 per family a year to $20,000, according to the city’s summary of benefits. Redmond, though, will contribute $1,500 annually to an employee benefit account to defray the financial impact on those employees. See Police / A5

Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

W

idgi Creek Men’s Golf Club members Ken Schofield, left, and Herb Blank, both of Bend, head back to the clubhouse to get out of the rain and hail during Wednesday afternoon’s storm. “We’ll wait a half an hour to see what happens,” Schofield said. Believe it or not, precipitation for May was slightly below normal in Bend, with a total of

0.76 inches. The National Weather Service’s outlook for June calls for below-normal temperatures and above-normal precipitation. Coming Sunday in Sports: Find out how subpar weather in Central Oregon has affected the region’s golf courses.

TOP NEWS INSIDE

Clamshell packaging is being tossed

SPACE: As Endeavour returns, Atlantis prepares for shuttle program’s last mission, Page A3

By Stephanie Clifford New York Times News Service

INDEX Abby

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Crosswords E5, G2

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C4 F1-6

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The Ecosmart LED bulb in plastic clamshell packaging, left, and paperboard packaging, at a Home Depot store in Atlanta.

The Pyranna, the Jokari Deluxe, the Insta Slit, the ZipIt and the OpenIt apply blades and batteries to what should be a simple task: opening a retail package. But the maddening — and nearly impenetrable — plastic packaging known as clamshells could become a welcome casualty of the difficult economy. High oil prices have manufacturers and big retailers reconsidering the use of so much plastic, and some are looking for cheaper substitutes.

“With the instability in petroleum-based materials, people said we need an alternative to the clamshell,” said Jeff Kellogg, vice president for consumer electronics and security packaging at the packaging company MeadWestvaco. Companies are scuttling plastic of all kinds wherever they can. Target has removed the plastic lids from its Archer Farms yogurts, has redesigned packages for some light bulbs and is selling socks held together by paper bands rather than in plastic bags. See Packaging / A4

Counting the cost of AIDS treatment, 30 years later By David Brown The Washington Post

The AIDS epidemic turns 30 this month. What began as a fatal new plague has become a treatable, if still incurable, chronic illness. That change counts as a triumph by any measure, but it also poses an unusually difficult question

for the next 30 years: How many people do we want to save from a death by AIDS — and who’s going to pay for it? The global AIDS community now has tools that prolong the lives of people infected with the virus and prevent others from acquiring it. They

range from antiretroviral therapy (ART), to circumcision and campaigns to reduce promiscuity. On the horizon are gels and pills that protect against infection during intercourse. Even the outlook for an AIDS vaccine is no longer as bleak as it used to be. See AIDS / A5

Inside • How much has the U.S. contributed to the global fight against AIDS? Page A5

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Bend City Councilor Jodie Barram has vowed to cut off one inch of hair for every $500 pledged to Sara’s Project, a breast cancer education program. If she gets $5,000 worth of pledges, she’ll shave her head.

Bend councilor makes a hair-raising promise By Nick Grube The Bulletin

Bend City Councilor Jodie Barram recently put a $5,000 price on her head. For that amount, she said she’ll shave off the nearly 13 inches of curly brown hair that now grows from her scalp and donate it to Locks of Love, a program that gives hairpieces to disadvantaged children who’ve lost their hair due to medical conditions and treatments. The money will go to Sara’s Project, a fund set up by St. Charles Health System to help raise awareness about breast cancer in Central Oregon and provide financial support to people struggling with the disease. Barram’s pledge is part of this weekend’s Heaven Can Wait event that runs from Friday to Sunday and includes a 5K run/walk and a visit from a group of Arizona firefighters who travel the county in a pink fire truck to raise awareness about cancer. See Hair / A4


A2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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Francesca Canin, center, teaches a class at Calhoun School in New York. The progressive private school has opted for longer classes in five short terms each year, a block schedule that has waned in popularity in public schools.

School hopes longer classes will lead to deeper learning By Jenny Anderson

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Oregon Lottery Results As listed by The Associated Press

POWERBALL

The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

8 18 38 46 56 31 Power Play: 4. The estimated jackpot is $20 million.

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawn are:

9 13 23 32 34 35 Nobody won the jackpot Wednesday night in the Megabucks game, pushing the estimated jackpot to $15.2 million for Saturday’s drawing.

Desi Megrath, bottom left, plays chess with Rex Wei during “community time” at Calhoun School. Students get 45 minutes of unstructured time each day.

New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — At 10:35 a.m. on a Wednesday, six seniors at the Calhoun School, a progressive private school in Manhattan, were discussing the role of social class in “Year of Wonders,” a historical novel about an English village hit by the plague in the 17th century. At noon, the students were still at it. They had moved on from deconstructing the novel, by Geraldine Brooks, to hashing out topics for research papers in the science and social studies class, called Disease and Society. One wanted to tackle 17th-century grave digging in London; another would explore the obligation midwives had to report illegitimate children. Throughout, they had staged only one mutiny, asking to work elsewhere because the classroom was first too cold, then too intellectually stifling (requests denied). If the subject matter was a bit unusual for high school students, the amount of time they had to grapple with it was more so — two hours and 10 minutes, in what is called a class block. Long blocks became standard this year at Calhoun, as part of a radical attempt to alter the structure of the school day and school year.

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A break with tradition Instead of the traditional schedule of eight 45-minute classes each day, with courses broken into two semesters, high school students at Calhoun intensively study three to five subjects in each of five terms, or modules, that are 32 to 36 days long. Classes are in blocks of 65 or 130 minutes each day. Every day, students have 45 minutes of “community time,” an intentionally unstructured period for the students to hang out. What started five years ago as an effort to accommodate maddeningly complex schedules in a relatively small space quickly became a sort of evangelical mission to make progressive education more, well, progressive: embracing depth over breadth, allowing for more experiential learning in Central Park and at nearby museums, and, administrators said they hoped, reducing stress. Steven Nelson, Calhoun’s head of school, said the new schedule fostered teaching in the ways children learn best. “Most of the activities that create the neuron connections in brains which lead to higher-level academic research and achievement are things that require time and space and experiential education,” he said. “These are things that are privileged by a block system.” Block scheduling became popular among public schools about a decade ago, but it ran smack into an increasing emphasis on standards and testing. “We’ve seen lots of schools back away from block schedule,” said Dick Flanary of the National Association of Secondary School Principals. “Looking at that structure and the impact it had on student performance, it hasn’t been a silver bullet.”

should care about. “Most of the activities “The collateral qualities our that ... lead to higherkids carry out with their diplolevel academic research mas,” Nelson said, “are qualities colleges want — kids that are acand achievement are tively interested in things and not just doing things to put it on their things that require transcript.” time and space and experiential education. How’s it working out? These are things that Nearly a year into the experiare privileged by a block ment, teachers interviewed said they enjoyed the flexibility of lon(scheduling) system.”

— Steven Nelson, head of Calhoun School At private schools, though, the longer classes are becoming more common, said Patrick Bassett, head of the National Association of Independent Schools. “I’ve never heard of anyone going back to a traditional schedule, not once,” he added.

Proud to be progressive For all their freedom to experiment, private schools in New York tend to offer fairly traditional, rigorous academic programs. Change, particularly to something as fundamental as the daily schedule, is often viewed with skepticism and caution. “Everyone went to a school in that model,” said Jennifer de Forest, director of Calhoun’s Upper School, which has 180 students in grades nine through 12. “We need to blow that apart to embrace the pedagogical progressivism.” Calhoun, founded in 1896, is considered one of the most progressive private schools in the city. It is one of the few private schools that do not require the ERB, an assessment test for 5-year-olds, for admission. Students call teachers by first names. And classes are always held around tables — not at desks — to foster more discussion and less lecturing. To Nelson, a vociferous and outspoken opponent of the testing culture that has pervaded public and private schools, the new schedule helps Calhoun continue in its progressive vein — and stand out among its peers. While Nelson tries not to engage in the private-school parlor game of counting how many graduates are accepted at Ivy League schools, he cannot help but point out that since fewer of his students apply to Harvard or Yale than those at, say, Dalton, they might just have a better chance of getting in. The new schedule, he said, should make for more interested — and interesting — students, a quality colleges

ger classes, which allowed them to take students out of the classroom and collaborate more, both with other teachers and students. Advanced biology students, for example, trekked to the Black Rock Forest, in Orange County, N.Y., to measure snow depth, and frequented the Museum of Natural History. Spring Workshop, led by English and theater teachers, adapted Edwidge Danticat’s short story “Children of the Sea,” with students writing the script, designing the costumes and building the set. Woodworking and astronomy teachers worked together on a class that built a telescope. Students and parents also had mostly positive reviews, although some said the new schedule fell short of at least one of Nelson’s key goals: reducing stress. For many students, the year had an uneven nature: one easy module, stacked with two art classes, followed by a hard one with multivariable calculus and chemistry. A bad bout of flu could result in missing almost 20 percent of classes that last no more than 36 teaching days. The blocks meant much less daily transition time, with students no longer racing from one 45-minute class to the next, but the modules brought big transitions five times in the year instead of twice — including five sets of exams or final papers. “They have five ends of semesters, which can be hell,” said Claudia Brown, a parent with two children in the school. “I don’t think it lessens the stress.” Another complaint: Boring 45minute classes became boring two-hour classes. Robert Ronan, a senior, said, “There are some classes that lend themselves more easily to two-hour-and-15-minute classes and teachers that can do that, but I sort of feel like a lot of the classes are the same, just stretched into longer periods of time.” Nelson deemed the experiment a success, although he acknowledged there were areas to work out. The dislikes are often the result of poor teaching, he said. “It’s our job to make them interested,” he added.

The nation’s overall education spending grew at a slower pace in 2009 than at any other time in more than a decade, amid deepening state fiscal woes and flatter tax revenues, according to new census figures. Public school districts spent an average of $10,500 per student on elementary and secondary education in the 2009 fiscal year, up 2.3 percent from 2008. In contrast, spending rose by 6.1 percent and 5.8 percent in the two years before that. “I think they are responding to economic and political realities,” said Robert Lowry, deputy director of the New York State Council of School Superintendents. “There’s been this recognition that times are different.” Total revenues devoted to education — which include money from federal, state and local sources — rose to $590.9 billion in 2009, or 1.5 percent more than the year before. Of that amount, state revenues accounted for $276.2 billion (46.7 percent); local revenues, $258.9 billion (43.8 percent); and federal revenues, $55.9 billion (9.5 percent). The report showed that spending slowed as a direct result of big cuts in education aid in some states after years of near constant growth. In total, such aid fell 1.7 percent to $276 billion, with the largest cuts in Florida, Michigan and California. Meanwhile, local tax revenue continued to grow, but at a slower rate than in past years; property taxes accounted for about two-thirds of that revenue. The report does not cover most of the $100 billion in federal stimulus money distributed to schools beginning in

Oregon has taken some criticism for routinely spending 7 percent less per student in public schools than the nation as a whole, according to federal data. Nationally, U.S. public schools spent $10,500 per student in 2008-09, the most recent year for which statistics are available for every school district. In Oregon, schools spent $9,800. — The Associated Press

spring 2009, though federal aid did increase by $8.8 billion during the period. New York led the nation once again in overall spending, at $18,126 per student, with school officials pointing to high personnel costs and a large number of state education mandates, among other factors, that push up the cost of education in the state. Washington, D.C., ranked second, with spending rising 12.4 percent over the previous year — the largest increase in the nation — to $16,408. The next three highest-spending states were New Jersey ($16,271), Arkansas ($15,552) and Vermont ($15,175). At the other end of the scale, Utah spent the least per student, at $6,356, preceded by Idaho ($7,092), Arizona ($7,813), Oklahoma ($7,885) and Tennessee ($7,897). Employee benefits, including pensions and health care, continued to be the fastest-growing cost in education, increasing at twice the rate of salaries, according to the figures. For instance, benefits comprised 22 cents of every $1 spent on schools in 2009, compared with 17 cents in 2002.

Education spending increases slow The rise in spending on elementary and secondary schools, driven largely by pension and medical benefits, eased in the 2009 fiscal year.

Change in current spending on education, United States By year

By category, 2002-9

Teacher salaries +27%

6%

Teacher benefits +64

Inflation

Pupil support +46

4

Staff support +39 General +29 administration

2

’93

’00

’05

’09

School +33 administration

Elementary and secondary school spending per $1,000 personal income By state

$50 45 40 35

Source: Census Bureau

New York Times News Service


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 A3

T S Germany races to find source of lethal E. coli outbreak By Henry Chu Los Angeles Times

LONDON — Germany scrambled Wednesday to pinpoint the source of a deadly outbreak of food-borne bacterial infections that have killed at least 16 people, sickened hundreds more and sparked a diplomatic squabble with Spain. The mass outbreak of E. coli infections is the worst of its kind in recent memory in Germany. Since the beginning of May, more than 1,000 residents have fallen ill from contaminated food, including 470 suffering from a more virulent and potentially life-threatening reaction known as hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can cause kidney failure, strokes and seizures. Normally, Germany records only about 50 to 60 cases of the syndrome a year. In addition, a few dozen infections have been reported in Sweden, Denmark, Austria and other European countries, with one dead. Almost all the victims had recently been in northern Germany, officials said. German health authorities trace the outbreak to tainted lettuce, cucumbers and tomatoes and have warned residents, especially in the north, not to eat those vegetables raw. The E. coli bacteria are often spread through improper handling of food products, particularly those fertilized with manure. However, researchers have been stymied in their attempts to pinpoint the contamination’s source. Ilse Aigner, the nation’s food and agriculture minister, told German television Wednesday that “hundreds of tests” had already been conducted but that more were needed to track “the delivery path” of the suspect vegetables. German officials originally focused on cucumbers shipped from Spain as the culprit. Tests determined that some were, in fact, contaminated with E. coli. But Germany now acknowledges that a different strain of the bacteria from the one found is responsible for the outbreak. The misidentification, and a subsequent ban on imports of Spanish produce, triggered an angry backlash in Spain, where nightly news broadcasts have shown grim-faced farmers watching their profits go up in smoke as they dump tons of cucumbers.

Fighting spreads in Yemen, raising fear of civil war

Meeting fails to end debt stalemate Obama, House Republicans at odds on raising federal borrowing limit By Zachary A. Goldfarb and Paul Kane The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — A Wednesday meeting on the nation’s debt between President Barack Obama and House Republicans ended with neither side showing a willingness to concede any key substantive points or rhetorical differences. Obama is pressing Republicans to agree to a deal that would raise the federal limit on borrowing and begin to curb the growth of the nation’s debt. But in exchange for raising the $14.3 tril-

lion debt limit, Republicans are demanding that Obama agree to spending cuts — particularly in Medicare — far larger than he is prepared to accept. Obama will send Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to Capitol Hill today to meet with House freshmen, who have been most reluctant to raising the federal debt ceiling and most insistent on sizeable spending cuts. Geithner has said that the government could default on its obligations if the debt limit isn’t raised. Obama and Geithner’s meetings with lawmakers are happen-

ing parallel to a working group led by Vice President Joe Biden that may represent the best hope for a bipartisan deal. Biden has said that his group will find “well above $1 trillion” in cuts. Several hours after the White House meeting, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, suggested that those talks were not moving quickly enough to avoid a cliffhanger showdown in August. “The issues they’re dealing with have to be dealt with. They are making some marginal progress, but at the rate that that’s gone, we’ll be right up against the

SPACE SHUTTLE PROGRAM’S LAST MISSIONS The space shuttle Endeavour, STS134, is towed to an orbitor processing facility after safely landing at the conclusion of its final mission on Wednesday, at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Red Huber Orlando Sentinel

Endeavour touches down for last time as Atlantis prepares for shuttle finale By Scott Powers The Orlando Sentinel

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The last and next-to-last ships in America’s 30-year space shuttle program passed in the night early Wednesday morning as Endeavour returned to Earth, completing the penultimate mission, and Atlantis crawled slowly toward its final turn on the launch pad. Endeavour touched down gently at 2:35 a.m. at Kennedy Space Center, after awakening a few in Central Florida with its farewell double sonic boom. Commander Mark Kelly thanked the thousands of workers who kept what he called “this amazing vehicle” flying, and took note of the end. “It’s sad to see her land for

“It’s sad to see her land for the last time, but she really has a great legacy.” — Commander Mark Kelly, on Endeavour

the last time, but she really has a great legacy,” Kelly said. Atlantis, scheduled to launch July 8 on the 135th and final mission of the shuttle program, took its final rollout a little late because of a hydraulic leak in the gigantic crawler-transporter vehicle that transports it from the Vehicle Assembly building. After Atlantis, NASA officials concede, there will be a lull before NASA can create a new space program for Kennedy that might provide an economic en-

gine for the Space Coast, as the shuttle program has been for 30 years, and as other mannedspace flight programs were before that. Already, thousands of shuttle workers have been laid off, and thousands more will yet be after the Atlantis mission is completed. “It will be different without the shuttle program, that certainly is a reality,” said Launch Director Mike Leinbach. “I feel good that Kennedy Space Center will be used in the future. I don’t have a day. I can’t tell you

when the next program will come here.” The next NASA mannedspace flight program, using heavy-lift rockets to take astronauts beyond Earth’s orbit, possibly to the moon, Mars or asteroids, is not possible before 2018. NASA also plans to partner with private companies such as SpaceX and Boeing to support private launches from Kennedy. Endeavour left Kennedy May 16 on its 25th mission, which might be remembered as its greatest. The youngest ship in the fleet, Endeavour took its maiden flight in 1992 and has played critical roles in both repairing the Hubble Space Telescope and building the International Space Station.

going to take on our debt.’” According to lawmakers in the room, Obama replied to Ryan’s complaints by saying that both sides have demagogued the debt issue. But later, White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters that Obama has not been “misdescribing” Ryan’s budget plan or engaging in “demagoguery” on it. “In order to achieve the reductions that they seek in the House Republican plan and to pay for the extensive tax cuts for the wealthy that that plan calls for, they need to do things to Medicare that aren’t necessary,” Carney said in a White House news briefing.

Sentencing set in killing of Yale grad student By Alaine Griffin The Hartford Courant

NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Raymond Clark III, the lab technician who pleaded guilty to killing Yale University graduate student Annie Le in September 2009, is expected to be sentenced to 44 years in prison in Superior Court on Friday. Several members of Le’s family are scheduled to travel from Le’s home state of California for the sentencing, Senior Assistant State’s Attorney David Strollo said Wednesday. Le was beaten, strangled and stuffed into a wall of a Yale University research center. In March, Clark pleaded guilty to Le’s murder and a charge presented for the first time at the plea hearing — criminal attempt to commit first-degree sexual assault — suggesting for the first time a possible motive for the crime. The guilty plea to the charge of criminal attempt to commit sexual assault was entered under the Alford doctrine, meaning that Clark did not admit guilt but conceded that there was probably enough evidence to convict him at trial. Clark previously faced charges of murder and felony murder. The plea deal averted what was expected to be a dramatic and widely publicized trial. Prosecutors have said the evidence against Clark was voluminous, including thousands of pages of police reports, hundreds of pieces of evidence, and more than 1,000 photographs.

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New York Times News Service SANAA, Yemen — Yemen edged closer to civil war Wednesday as fighting spread to new parts of the country and government troops waged increasingly bloody street battles with opposition tribesmen for control of crucial areas in the capital. The violence has transformed a largely peaceful uprising into a tribal conflict with no clear end in sight. The bloodshed also threatens to unleash a humanitarian catastrophe as Yemen, already the poorest country in the Arab world, runs desperately low on gasoline, cooking oil and other basic supplies. The White House announced Wednesday that John Brennan, President Barack Obama’s top counterterrorism adviser, would be traveling to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates this week to discuss “the deteriorating situation in Yemen.” On Wednesday, tanks and armored vehicles could be seen rolling into Sanaa, the capital, from the south. The streets of Sanaa were largely empty as residents fled for the safety of surrounding villages. Exploding artillery shells and sporadic machine-gun fire could be heard across the city.

wall,” Boehner told reporters. The most dramatic moment in Wednesday’s meeting came when Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., the architect of the GOP’s budget, complained to Obama that he was playing politics in the debt debate. He accused the president of mischaracterizing the GOP budget plan as turning Medicare into a “voucher” program that would hurt seniors. Ryan’s comments earned him a standing ovation from his colleagues. “It’s been misdescribed by the president and many others,” Ryan said at the White House after the meeting. “I just said . . . if we demagogue each other at the leadership level, then we’re never

Weiner’s plan to calm furor over Twitter photo backfires dressed to a college student who WASHINGTON — In a mo- follows him on the service. The questions regarding the ment that will probably go down in the annals of how not incident continued into a fourth day. to handle a crisis, Rep. As CNN showed the Anthony Weiner, Dimage on the screen, N.Y., insisted again on a puzzled Wolf Blitzer Wednesday that he was pressed Weiner: “You not the one who sent a would know if this was suggestive photo from your underpants . . .” his Twitter account “I appreciate you — but told NBC News continuing to flash that “I can’t say with certitude” whether the Rep. Anthony that at me,” Weiner now-famous image was Weiner, D-N.Y. said in a tone that made it clear he didn’t. of his own crotch. Weiner insisted In a series of television interviews, Weiner at- again that the episode was “a tempted to tamp down the furor prank” and “a hoax.” But his rethat began over the weekend sponses —and lack of them — when a waist-down photograph assured the controversy would of a man in his underwear ap- continue. He said that he has hired a peared briefly on his page on the social networking site. The lawyer and a security firm, tweet, which Weiner said he which he did not name, to indeleted when he saw it, was ad- vestigate the matter.

The Washington Post

Could it happen to you? Here’s what people can do to keep their social media accounts safe and secure, according to John Harrison, a group manager of security firm Symantec’s Security Response team: • Look for advanced default settings offered by social networks. • Use secure wireless networks • Update security patches often • Set up social media accounts to provide alerts when being accessed from a new device or location • Don’t be predictable: Don’t use 1234 or your spouse’s name as your password.


A4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

C OV ER S T OR I ES

At least 4 are killed as tornadoes hit Massachusetts By Abby Goodnough New York Times News Service

BOSTON — At least four people were killed when tornadoes touched down Wednesday in Springfield, Mass., and a number of nearby towns. The twisters flipped vehicles, collapsed buildings and stunned residents who are not used to such violent storms. Gov. Deval Patrick activated

the National Guard and declared a state of emergency. He said that at least two tornadoes had hit and that serious damage had been reported in 19 communities, many of them small towns along the Massachusetts Turnpike. One man was killed when his car overturned in West Springfield, Patrick said. Two other deaths were reported in Westfield and one in Brimfield, he

said, though he had no details. With storms continuing into the night, Patrick found himself in the unusual position of instructing New Englanders more accustomed to blizzards to take shelter in basements and bathrooms if necessary. The scope of the damage was still unclear, but photos and videos showed buildings with roofs and sides sheared off. The police

were going door to door in some neighborhoods to make sure residents were unharmed. “There’s just total destruction,” said Michael Day, a plumbing inspector from Agawam who was driving through West Springfield shortly after the first tornado struck around 4:30 p.m. “All I can hear is ambulances. There’s a lot of police sirens around and fire trucks.”

Packaging Continued from A1 Wal-Mart, which has pledged to reduce its packaging by 5 percent between 2008 and 2013, has pushed suppliers to concentrate laundry detergent so it can be sold in smaller containers, and made round hydrogen peroxide bottles into square ones to cut down on plastic use. At Home Depot, Husky tools are going from clamshell to paperboard packaging, and EcoSmart LED bulbs are about to be sold in a corrugated box, rather than a larger plastic case. “Most of our manufacturers have been working on this,” said Craig Menear, the head of merchandising at Home Depot. “We’ve certainly been encouraging them.” Shoppers have long complained that clamshells are a literal pain, and environmentalists have denounced them as wasteful. “As a guy in packaging, I get all the questions — there’s nothing worse than going to a cocktail party where someone’s asking why they can’t get into their stuff,” said Ronald Sasine, the senior director for packaging procurement at Wal-Mart. “I’ve heard over the years, ‘How come I need a knife to get into my knife?’ ‘How come I need a pair of scissors to get into my kid’s birthday present?’” But reducing packaging is more complicated in physical stores. The packaging has to sell the product, whether with explanatory text, bright colors or catchy graphics. And it has to deter shoplifters. Retailers lost about 1.44 percent of sales to theft in 2009, the latest numbers available, according to the National Retail Federation. With the interest in alternatives to so much plastic, MeadWestvaco took a tamper-evident cardboard sheet it originally supplied for pharmaceutical trials, added a clear laminate that prevented tearing, and stuck two sheets of the cardboard together. It put a cutout in the middle, and added a plastic bubble formed to a specific product, like a Swiss Army knife or a Kodak camera. Though some of the technology, like the film that covers the cardboard, was not available until recently, “it’s a demand issue as well — it’s hard to develop something internally then go

3 convicted in slaying of Chechen who turned against leader By Ellen Barry New York Times News Service

MOSCOW — A jury in Vienna on Wednesday convicted three Chechens in the murder of Umar Israilov, a bodyguard who had turned against his former employer, the Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. Israilov had filed a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights against Kadyrov, who he said had participated in kidnappings, torture and killings as part of an attempt to quash Chechnya’s separatist movement. He was shot and killed in January of 2009 as he left a grocery store in Vienna. The jury sentenced Otto Kaltenbrunner, who is believed to have organized the shooting, to life in prison; Muslim Dudayev, who drove the getaway car, to 19 years; and Turpal Ali Yesherkayev, an accomplice, to 16 years in prison. A fourth suspect, Lecha Bogatirov, who is believed to have fired the three shots that killed Israilov, left Austria and returned to Russia after the killing, Austrian investigators said. The Austrian prosecutors said that they concluded that Kadyrov had ordered Israilov’s abduction, which went awry as the men tried to snatch him on the street, but that they lacked sufficient evidence to charge him.

Erik S. Lesser /New York Times News Service

Pairs of pliers in plastic clamshell packaging, left, and paperboard packaging, right, at a Home Depot store in Decatur, Ga. The high price of oil, combined with a sickly economy, has retailers scuttling plastic of all kinds wherever they can. cram it into the market if there’s no need,” Kellogg said about why the package, called Natralock, was only recently introduced. Wal-Mart began selling items in the new packaging in 2010, and though MeadWestvaco declined to release usage numbers, it says that all of the Swiss Army knives are using the new packaging, and about 85 percent of the computer memory market (like USB drives and SD cards) has switched over. MeadWestvaco says the package reduces plastic by 60 percent, on average, versus the clamshell version for a given product. It also is lighter by 30 percent, which cuts down on transportation costs and fuel use. Other packaging suppliers are also offering similarly treated cardboard with small plastic bubbles, which are called blister packs. “We’ve seen a lot of small, highvalue products moving away from what would have been two to three years ago a clamshell, to today what is a blister pack or blister board,” said Lorcan Sheehan, the senior vice president for marketing and strategy at ModusLink, which advises companies like Toshiba and HP on their

Hair Continued from A1 For every $500 Barram raises by Friday, she said she’ll cut off one inch of her hair. If she can get $5,000 worth of donations, she said she’ll lop it all off. “I’ve never had super, super short hair. It’s always been medium-length or long,” Barram said with a bit of nervous laughter. “(But) it won’t be Sinead O’Connor short. We’re not going to pull out the razor.” Barram’s mother was diagnosed with breast cancer two years ago. When the cancer started to spread, Barram said she watched her mother’s health quickly deteriorate. That began around Christmastime, and by February she was dead. For this reason, Barram said she wanted to offer her hair as a way to raise awareness about the disease and relay the importance of early detection. “It just made me realize how brutal the disease was,” Barram said. “If giving my hair helps even one person survive their diagnosis, it’s all worth it.” Kattaryna Stiles, the event coordinator for Heaven Can Wait and a community outreach coordinator for St. Charles’ cancer center, said Barram’s story is just one of many she’s heard leading up to this weekend’s event. She said there are many people like Barram who have been raising money who have their own stories involving cancer. “It’s such a deep and personal event for people,” Stiles said. “They’re walking in honor of someone who has survived breast cancer or in

supply chains. The cost savings are big, Sheehan said. With a blister pack, the cost of material and labor is 20 percent to 30 percent cheaper than with clamshells. Also, he said, “from package density — the amount that you can fit on a shelf, or through logistics and supply chain, there is frequently 30 to 40 percent more density in these products.” The packages also meet other requirements of retailers. Graphics and text can be printed on it. Because most people cannot tear the product out of the blister pack with their hands, it helps prevent theft. (Also, the small Sensormatic tag that is linked to a store’s alarm system is hidden between the two sheets of cardboard; with clamshells, it was stuck onto the exterior, so a shoplifter could more easily peel it off. Though clamshells continue to dangle inside stores, “we’re seeing a significant shift,” Sheehan said. Among the manufacturers to make the change is the parent company of Wiss-brand metalcutting snips, which are sold at Home Depot and elsewhere attached to a piece of cardboard

honor of someone who didn’t, or for someone who is fighting breast cancer now. Councilor Barram’s efforts are really a personal tribute to her mother and we applaud these efforts to help raise both awareness and funds for Sara’s Project and for breast cancer.” Heaven Can Wait began in 2000 as a way to raise awareness about the importance of early breast cancer detection. It was created by Central Oregon Running Klub president Joe Levesque after his wife was diagnosed with the disease. The first event in 2000 included 1,026 participants and raised $23,605. Last year, Heaven Can Wait saw 4,129 participants and raised $112,769 for Sara’s Project. So far, the event has raised more than $750,000 in its 11-year history. On Wednesday, Barram said she has raised over $1,000, but noted that there are a number of pledges she’s waiting to receive. People can donate money until 5 p.m. Friday, at which point Barram plans to lop her locks at Murray and Holt Motors on the corner of Franklin Avenue and Third Street. The pink fire trucks will be at the same location Friday from 6 to 9 a.m. and from 3 to 6 p.m. The fire trucks will also be at FootZone on Wall Street on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and parked along Drake Park at Riverside Drive on Sunday during the 5K race. Donations for Barram to cut off her hair can be sent to P.O. Box 1833, Bend 97709. Nick Grube can be reached at 541-633-2160 or at ngrube@bendbulletin.com.

with elastic staples — no plastic in sight. Steven Hoskins, manager of packaging engineering for the Apex Tool Group, the parent company of Wiss, said that getting rid of the plastic packaging saved money, allowed for more products per shipment and cut down on waste. And, Hoskins said, “the package is very attractive to the consumer.” And relatively pain-free.

Middlekauff Continued from A1 In an 18-minute speech, Middlekauff denied any role in his wife’s disappearance and death and revisited several lesser points raised over the course of his nearly four-month trial. A former jail inmate who told the court Middlekauff had threatened to stab a guard at the Deschutes County Jail with a makeshift knife is “a straight weasel,” while reports that jail staff considered him “a whiner” were mischaracterizations of his efforts to stand up for his rights. Middlekauff did not dispute the contention of a psychologist hired by prosecutors who called him a narcissist, but said the psychologist’s claim that he was prone to making outlandish claims about himself was untrue. Psychologist Eric Johnson dismissed Middlekauff’s claim that he speaks several languages last week, while Wednesday Middlekauff claimed fluency in Spanish and American Sign Language and said he speaks “a smattering of German” and is currently studying Hebrew. “I know I’m not a perfect individual. I have a very foul mouth, a drug problem, and mental disorders,” he said. “I’m innocent of murder. I’m guilty of a lot of things, but not of the death of Brenda.” Arguing for the true life sentence, Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Steve Gunnels noted that Middlekauff was on parole when he killed his wife, and again two years later when he began having sex with and supplying methamphetamine to two teenage girls. Middlekauff’s life involves a recurring pattern, Gunnels said, consisting of stretches in jail or prison followed by a return to criminal activity. “What’s past is prologue: The defendant has shown this continually for at least the past 30 years, that he can’t be trusted in the community,” Gunnels said.

“What’s past is prologue: The defendant has shown this continually for at least the past 30 years, that he can’t be trusted in the community.” — Steve Gunnels, Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Rita Ege, Brenda Middlekauff’s sister, called Middlekauff “a parasite” who preyed on her sister’s generosity and naivete. “You are incapable of telling the truth, and, moreover, you are incapable of recognizing the value of human life,” Ege said. “You are an evil animal who deserves to be caged and treated as you treated her.” Ege said she was thankful their mother had died before the truth about what happened to Brenda Middlekauff came out during the trial. Outside the courtroom, Middlekauff’s defense attorney, Duane McCabe, said he was disappointed by Tiktin’s decision, as it will prevent a future parole board from determining if Middlekauff has been rehabilitated. McCabe said jail staff’s refusal to allow Middlekauff access to medications to treat his attention deficit hyperactivity disorder may have added as much as two years to the process of bringing his client to trial, but praised prosecutors for not seeking the death penalty in the case. A death penalty case would have been extremely costly, he said. Middlekauff will transferred out of the jail and moved to a state prison facility within 48 hours. Scott Hammers can be reached at 541-383-0387 or shammers@bendbulletin.com.

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THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 A5

116 civilians reported killed in Sudan region New York Times News Service JUBA, Sudan — Officials from the disputed Abyei area of Sudan said Wednesday that 116 civilians, including many children, had been killed last month when the northern Sudanese army seized Abyei. The figures were the first attempt at calculating the death toll from the incursion, Abyei officials said, and did not include soldiers and policemen also killed in the fighting, which set off fears across Sudan that a larger conflict may be looming. Acuil Akol, the Abyei administration’s finance minister, said that the death toll was tabulated by surveying leaders of the

Police New York Times News Service fi le photo

Protesters block traffic near Trinity Church on Broadway during a rally in New York on March 24, 1988, held to criticize the U.S. government’s response to the AIDS crisis. Among other things, the demonstrators sought increased federal spending to fight AIDS.

AIDS Continued from A1 At least 6 million people in the developing world are now receiving life-extending ART. While that is less than half the 14.6 million HIV-infected people who should be getting treatment under the World Health Organization’s latest guidelines, it nevertheless represents an accomplishment that was inconceivable when the epidemic turned 20 in 2001. That number is likely to grow in the wake of a recent study showing that ART dramatically cuts a person’s infectiousness, and thus is itself a tool for prevention. Bringing those tools to the people needing them — 90 percent of whom are in developing countries — requires lots of money. Last year, the world spent $16 billion on the task, half of which was donated by rich countries and charities. A recent projection estimated that, by 2031, global AIDS costs could reach the equivalent of $35 billion a year. A recent United Nations report declared frankly: “The trajectory of costs is wholly unsustainable.”

Making progress The disease eventually named AIDS first came to public attention on June 5, 1981, in a report on a rare type of pneumonia in five gay men, but scientists now believe the virus entered human beings early in the 20th century. In Africa, where the epidemic began and has had the most devastating effect, the rate of new infections — incidence — peaked in the late 1990s. Today, the epidemic is an astonishing mixture of good news and hard-to-excuse failure. About 33.3 million people around the world are infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. In 2009, the last year for which there are complete statistics, 2.6 million people became infected and 1.8 million people died. Those numbers are down from previous peaks. The decline reflects great progress in the hardest-hit regions, especially in Africa. During the last decade, the HIV incidence declined in 33 countries, and HIV prevalence among young people fell in 15 countries — in both cases, by an astonishing 25 percent —largely due to safer sexual practices. Nevertheless, the number of people living with HIV is still on the increase. Part of the reason is that AIDS patients are surviving longer, thanks to the expansion of antiretroviral therapy in the developing world, where 200 times as many people are getting it now than were just eight years ago. But for every person who starts treatment, two others become infected. Without more progress in preventing new infections, HIV incidence will eventually start rising again. By 2031 when the epidemic turns 50, about 3.2 million adults will become infected each year, according to a recent projection. By the middle of the century, there could be 70 million people living with HIV in Africa alone. Without question, a big reason for the progress made in the last decade is the sums of money brought to bear by the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), created by George W. Bush in 2003 and expanded by President Obama, and by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, a freestanding institution in Geneva

U.S. money for AIDS The United States is by far the largest donor in the global fight against AIDS, accounting for about 58 percent of all money provided by donor governments in 2009.

U.S. commitments in billions of dollars 8

$6.9B (budgeted)

6

4

$2.2B 2

0 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 Money appropriated for HIV/AIDS as part of PEPFAR, including the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. The 2011 total is approximate. Source: Kaiser Family Foundation The Washington Post

that gets money from rich countries (including the United States) to fund grants to needy countries. PEPFAR spent $6.7 billion last year on AIDS treatment and prevention, the Global Fund $1.6 billion. Together, the two provide antiretroviral therapy to about 85 percent of the people receiving it in the developing world — about 4.7 million people in all. Faced with budgetary concerns, both are now seeing the amount of money they have to spend on the problem level off. Everyone agrees that, from now on, low-income countries will have to devote more of their budgets to AIDS. But some fear they will be asked to shoulder too much too soon. “It defies imagination to think that it’s time for donors to pass the hot potato to the government of one of the poorest countries on Earth,” said Asia Russell, who works in Uganda with the activist group Health Global Access Project.

’Money alone will not make it’ Nearly everyone agrees the first thing that needs to be done is to get more bang for the billions of bucks now being spent. “Money is important, but money alone will not make it,” said Michel Sidibe, director of UNAIDS, the United Nations AIDS program. “We need to have a solidarity around issues which are going beyond money. The solution will be found through a genuinely shared responsibility.” The most important step in bringing AIDS treatment to people in the developing world has been the huge decline in the cost of antiretroviral drugs over the last 15 years. Three-drug ART combinations cost $10,000 to $12,000 a year in 1996 when they became standard AIDS therapy in the United States. The Clinton Health Access Initiative, one of former President Bill Clinton’s charities, recently announced a new schedule of brokered prices in which a three-drug combination, which includes the highly favored drug tenofovir, runs $159 a year. The price of an older, less desirable triple combination is $79 a year — less than 1 percent of what it used to be. The initiative has helped create a more sustainable market by bringing drug buyers (often national governments) and drugmakers (usually generics companies) together to encourage more

rational, long-term planning. Recently, it has also begun helping manufacturers find cheaper sources of the chemical raw materials they need to make their products. The result has been a proliferation of firms making AIDS drugs for poor countries (although not for rich countries, where patent restrictions forbid the sales). In 2003, four companies in India made generic AIDS drugs. Today 10 do, and Indian companies supply more than 80 percent of AIDS drugs used in developing countries. “Prices are rock-bottom now for a lot of the older drugs. We can’t keep squeezing, because it will become an unattractive market,” said Brenda Waning, a health economist at the World Health Organization, in Geneva. For newer drugs, she said, “there is still a lot of room for price reductions.” Lowering drug prices is just one of several strategies to make money go further. A researcher from Boston University working in PEPFAR-funded programs in Africa reported recently that when hospital clinics staffed mostly by doctors handed stable patients over to community clinics run mostly by nurses, the cost of care fell 9 percent in South Africa and 21 percent in Zambia. A physician from Columbia recounted that when Rwanda merged its HIV and tuberculosis programs, the number of TB patients being tested for HIV went way up, and the time it took to get someone on TB treatment went way down. “We’re still mining for those efficiencies,” Eric Goosby, the physician who runs PEPFAR at the State Department, said recently. But he added, “My guess is that in the next 18 months to two years we will have found them all.” What happens then is a big question.

What’s next? Recently, a group of economists and epidemiologists convened a project called aids2031 that examined four scenarios for what might happen between now and the epidemic’s 50th anniversary. The most expensive one, costing $722 billion over that period, would ramp up to provide treatment and prevention services for 80 percent of people by 2015. It would prevent 33 million new infections, although 1.3 million a year would still be occurring in 2031, according to modeling done by the Washington-based Results for Development Institute. The cheapest scenario would put almost the same number of people on AIDS drugs but would target prevention services only at high-risk groups, such as uncircumcised African men, infected pregnant women and drug users. It would cost much less — $397 billion — but 1.7 million people would still be getting infected each year 20 years from now. All of the scenarios make clear that, without much better success at preventing infections, the problem of not enough money will go on for decades. “Prevention is the sine qua non for turning off the tap and reducing the need for treatment,” said Robert Hecht, head of the institute. Is there a way to get lots of money for AIDS painlessly? Some people think so. Since 2006, a charity based in Geneva, UNITAID, has collected $1.5 billion and used it for AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis projects. About two-thirds of the money

comes from a small fee that is added to the price of airline tickets in eight countries. A campaign called (RED) has raised $170 million since 2006 by partnering with companies that give the Global Fund a share of profits from the sale of computers, mobile phones, baby strollers and other products. That’s all small change in the face of what’s needed. However, there is one “innovative financing” scheme that could raise as much as $50 billion a year. It’s called a “financial transaction tax.” It would collect a fixed amount — perhaps .05 or .005 percent — on stock purchases, currency trades or other specified activities. A group of 1,001 economists this spring signed a letter to the finance ministers of the G20 countries saying the tax “is an idea that has come of age . . . and is morally right.”

Continued from A1 Even with the extra contribution, Redmond should save about $600 per month for each employee in health costs, according to Sharon Harris, Redmond’s human resources director. Because the police are staying with what Harris called a “Cadillac plan,” the department will leave vacant up to five patrol positions this year. Police will still be able to respond within five minutes to high-priority calls, according to City Manager David Brandt. “Unfortunately, there will be some service level impacts,” Brandt said. “The dog barking calls, noisy neighbor calls won’t get answered as quickly as they do now.” The Redmond Police Officers Union, though, rejected the new insurance plan because it came at the same time the members had agreed to give up cost-ofliving raises for next year, according to Officer Hank Majetich, who is also president of the union. Two years ago, officers also deferred a cost-of-living in-

area’s traditional Dinka chiefdoms, and that the number was most likely a low estimate. He said that the fighting also drove tens of thousands of people into the bush, with many now sleeping in the open, exposed to torrential downpours. The northern Sudanese military sent thousands of troops and militiamen into Abyei on May 21 after repeated clashes between northern and southern Sudan forces. Both sides claim the area, and with southern Sudan gearing up to declare independence on July 9, military action around the contested border has intensified as the date draws near.

crease. The union contract expires on June 30, 2012, and members wanted to stick to its terms, Majetich said. “We feel ... we continue to give and give,” he said. “We just didn’t feel at this point it was fair to continue giving.” Majetich said officers in Redmond have grown increasingly busy over the last year, but he is confident the department will maintain service levels. It will only be on the busiest days that lower-priority calls are answered more slowly than they currently are, according to Majetich. Redmond Police Chief Dave Tarbet said his department would still respond to low-priority calls, but officers might do so differently than they do now. If an issue, for instance, could be handled over the phone, an officer might take that approach instead of responding in person. “We’ll have to weigh it as we continue on,” Tarbet said. “The priority is safety and the safety of property.” Patrick Cliff can be reached at 541-633-2161 or at pcliff@bendbulletin.com.


N A T ION / WOR L D

A6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

CHINA

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Three Gorges Dam may be making a bad drought worse

Mladic to appear before U.N. court THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Ratko Mladic will make his first appearance before the U.N. war crimes tribunal here Friday and be asked to enter his plea on charges including genocide and crimes against humanity, court officials said Wednesday. Mladic, 69, was captured last week after nearly 16 years as a fugitive. He was flown to the Netherlands on Tuesday after judges in Belgrade, Serbia, ruled against the appeal of his extradition on the grounds that he was mentally and physically unfit for trial. He spent the night in an isolation cell at the U.N. detention center near The Hague. Mladic was given a medical examination, officials said. John Hocking, the tribunal’s administrator, spent several hours with him and said he had shown no cognitive difficulty and was not placed on suicide watch.

Rebels blame blast on Gadhafi loyalist BENGHAZI, Libya — An explosion destroyed two cars Wednesday night in a parking lot outside a Benghazi hotel that is a meeting place for Libyan rebel leaders, diplomats and journalists. A rebel spokesman blamed a hand grenade lobbed by an unidentified loyalist saboteur for the blast. The spokesman, Mahmoud Shammam, said that there were no deaths or injuries, and that a hunt for the assailant was under way. Asserting there were “small sleeper cells” loyal to the Libyan leader, Moammar Gadhafi, lurking inside the city, Shammam said, “They want to send a message that they can strike inside Benghazi.”

Report slams Japan’s tsunami readiness TOKYO — Japan underestimated the danger of tsunamis and failed to prepare adequate backup systems at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant, a team of inspectors from an international nuclear regulator said Wednesday in a critical report that came as the Japanese prime minister prepared to face a no-confidence vote. In its preliminary report on the nuclear crisis, which echoed earlier criticisms of Japan’s inadequate safety measures, the team from the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency also called for stronger regulatory oversight. Steps should be taken, it said, to ensure that “regulatory independence and clarity of roles are preserved in all circumstances.” — From wire reports

By Tom Lasseter McClatchy-Tribune News Service

New York Times News Service ile photo

A street scene outside a teahouse near the compound where Osama bin Laden was killed in Abbottabad, Pakistan. Polls shows that many Pakistanis remain unconvinced that bin Laden actually was killed in the May 2 raid by a team of U.S. Navy SEALs.

Two-thirds of Pakistanis deny U.S. killed bin Laden By Alex Rodriguez Los Angeles Times

ABBOTTABAD, Pakistan — It was all a ruse, Ejaz Ahmad sniffed. Osama bin Laden never lived in Abbottabad. To Ahmad, the secret night raid by U.S. commandos, the staccato bursts of gunfire, the crash of the stealth helicopter and the reported killing of the al-Qaida leader in a whitewashed compound just down the road were pure theater. The Americans made it all up to convince the world that terrorism exists everywhere in Pakistan. “Then they’ll come in and take control of our nuclear weapons,” the 20-year-old college student said as he walked along a dirt path near the compound. In Abbottabad and across the country, many Pakistanis remain unconvinced that bin Laden was killed in a raid May 2. A poll conducted by international market research firm YouGov found that two-thirds of Pakistanis do not believe bin Laden was killed last month by a team of U.S. Navy SEALs. Some people say either that bin Laden died several years ago or that he’s still alive, waiting for the right time to reappear in public. Such resistance to official accounts is not unusual in a country with a collective propensity to get swept up by conspiracy theories, analysts say. The profound skepticism shared by many Pakistanis is rooted in their deep distrust of the United States, their desire to protect their country’s nuclear program, their impressions of world events outside Pakistan and their devotion to the preachings of hard-line clerics. The suspicions, analysts say,

Intelligence agency disavows role in journalist’s killing Pakistan’s premier intelligence agency, the Directorate of Inter-Services Intelligence, said allegations that its operatives were behind the abduction and killing of the journalist Syed Saleem Shahzad were baseless, and vowed Wednesday to help bring the perpetrators to justice. Shahzad, who reported on terrorism issues, was buried in his hometown, Karachi, on Wednesday. He was abducted from an upscale area of the capital, Islamabad, on Sunday and his body was found 100 miles away on Monday. — New York Times News Service

give life to conspiracy theories nurtured by free but reckless media that provide exposure for Islamist-minded observers and others willing to raise doubts. Many television talk shows try to gobble up ratings with sensationalism and demonization of the West. The result, analysts say, is often too much scapegoating and not enough self-examination of Pakistan’s own problems, a form of denial. One of the country’s top conspiracy theory purveyors is Zaid Hamid, a defense analyst who wears a trademark red beret and routinely appears on Pakistani talk shows. Recently on YouTube,

Holocaust survivors fight to pursue insurance claims Circuit last year dismissed claims brought against an Italian company, Generali, which had issued many policies before the Holocaust. Leading Jewish groups like the American Jewish Committee and the Anti-Defamation League have also opposed the survivors’ attempts to plead their case in court.

By Eric Lichtblau New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Sixty-six years after she survived an Auschwitz death camp, Renee Firestone is still trying to find out what became of an insurance policy that she suspects her father, who died in the Holocaust, took out from an Italian insurer. Firestone, 87, expected resistance from companies that fielded claims from thousands of survivors and their heirs. What she did not foresee, said Firestone, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Czechoslovakia, was opposition from the U.S. State Department and Congress. “What’s so painful is that we can see they’re just waiting for all of us to die,” she said.

Resistance Claims of hundreds of U.S. survivors like Firestone have set off an intense campaign in Washington. But opposition, even from leading Jewish groups, has created an uncomfortable rift between groups that are normally in alliance and has created a potential minefield for President Barack Obama. The State Department, under both the Obama and George W. Bush administrations, has opposed the idea of allowing survivors to press claims in court

Assistance

Stephanie Diani / New York Times News Service

Renee Firestone, shown at her home in Beverly Hills, Calif., is among the hundreds of Holocaust survivors in the U.S. seeking legal claims to insurance policies taken out by relatives who died during World War II. against European companies because they say it would undermine a reparations agreement that the U.S. reached in 2000 with Germany, which led to $300 million in insurance payments. The threat of private lawsuits, administration officials say, treads on the president’s authority to set foreign policy. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second

Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, a Florida Republican, however, introduced legislation in the House in March that would force insurers to disclose the names of Holocaust-era policy holders and allow survivors and their heirs to seek claims. Ros-Lehtinen, whose maternal grandparents were Sephardic Jews and whose Miami-area district includes many survivors, said, “This will not usurp anybody’s authority. This is about giving the survivors their day in court.” Stuart Eizenstat, a special State Department envoy who forged a number of key Holocaust reparations agreements in the last 15 years, including securing more than $500 million for home care for survivors, said it was distressing to see the government’s efforts, and his personal integrity, under attack by some survivors. “I can’t figure it out,” he said. “It’s just very, very sad.”

Hamid breathlessly talked of an Indian-Israeli-American axis that he said seeks to wrest control of the country’s nuclear arsenal by secretly supporting terrorist groups within Pakistan to foment civil war. One of those organizations, Hamid said in a telephone interview, is the Pakistani Taliban. The militant group has carried out scores of suicide bombings and assaults on Pakistani mosques, markets and security installations, including last week’s militant siege of a Pakistani naval base in Karachi that killed 10 security personnel. Hamid doesn’t doubt that the Taliban carried out the siege, but he insists that it did it at the behest of the U.S. and India. “The Pakistani Taliban is a dirty gang of the CIA. They are assassins working for RAW,” Hamid said, referring to India’s main intelligence agency. “The Pakistani Taliban is doing the dirty work for the CIA, creating enough anarchy in Pakistan to create a global case that Pakistan’s nuclear assets are not safe.” Adherence to conspiracy theories is especially pervasive at mosques run by hard-line imams who take advantage of an audience that is usually poorly educated. Nearly half of the country’s population is illiterate, and nearly a third of all children who attend school drop out by the fifth grade. “They preach all sorts of wrong things in the mosques,” said Javed Hussain, a retired brigadier and former Pakistani special forces commander. “All over Pakistan, religious people have lionized bin Laden. He became a hero. And now they refuse to believe he’s dead.”

XINZHOU, China — As deputy Communist Party secretary of the Yangtze River management station in Xinzhou, Ba Qiansheng is supposed to keep a close eye on rising waters. But these days, the idea of a flood seems ludicrous. On one side of the giant sluice gate at Xinzhou, the water is shallow; on the other side, there’s almost no water. The channel that is supposed to connect with the Yangtze is filled with foot-deep cracks baking in the sun. “It’s the lowest it’s been in 70 years,” Ba said. Asked why that would be, he shifted nervously for a moment. “We don’t yet know the reason,” he said. Pushed for an answer, Ba said there’s been no rain and then, with considerable hesitation, added, “It’s possible that the dam is part of the reason.”

Farmland is affected The “dam” is the Three Gorges Dam, the largest hydroelectric project in the world, which sits to the west of this town in southern China’s Hubei Province. Designed to generate electricity and tame the Yangtze, the controversial dam cost at least $23 billion. It was seen as a testament to the dramatic power of China’s state planning when it was finished in 2006. Now that legacy is being chipped away as the worst drought in at least half a century unfolds across the Yangtze River region. The government says that the least rainfall in at least 50 years has affected some 3.2 million-

plus acres of farmland in seven provinces. In five provinces, 4.2 million people are having trouble finding drinking water. In one province, Hunan, which borders Hubei, rain hasn’t been so scarce since 1910, a provincial official told the state Xinhua newswire. Sun Chufeng, a farmer in Hubei, was plodding along behind a water buffalo, which snorted and strained as it dragged a metal blade through a thick patch of mud he was trying to turn into rice paddy. Asked how the planting season had gone, Sun, 72, paused to wave his hand at the dry fields all around him — “everything you see is usually under water.”

Experts are at odds Xinhua quoted specialists saying the dam had “very little” impact on regional climate conditions and that there is “no evidence that the drought was caused by the dam.” Others disagree. Fan Xiao, a senior engineer with a provincial geological survey team in the area, said that in addition to the lack of rain, the drought conditions are “related to the Three Gorges Dam.” Chinese officials pushed for water levels to hit a height of 574 feet at the dam in 2008 and 2009 — seeking maximum power generation capacity — and finally succeeded last October. That campaign, Fan said, came “at the cost of the downstream water supply.” The areas regularly cited as being hardest hit by the drought all sit downriver from the dam.

Sun Chufeng stands in a rice field in Hubei Province, China, that he was able to irrigate by pumping water from a nearby creek amid an ongoing drought in the Yangtze River region. Tom Lasseter / McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

BendSpineandPain.com (541) 647-1646


B

Personal Finance Grandparents making more sacrifices for family, see Page B3.

www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 2011

B U S I N E SS IN BRIEF

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New indoor market opening in Redmond Venture launches after closure of 2 similar markets in Bend

Public can get peek at Vault data center BendBroadband has scheduled a ribbon-cutting ceremony today for its Vault data center in northeast Bend. The event, which will be held from 4-6 p.m. at the data center, 20845 Sockeye Place, is open to the public, according to a news release. The 30,000-square-foot Vault leases space to companies and individuals who want a secure, reliable and environmentally friendly place to store sensitive data. It also serves as BendBroadband’s network operations center, where employees monitor the company’s Internet, cable TV and telephone operations. St. Charles Medical Center and another unnamed company signed on as the Vault’s anchor tenants, according to the news release.

By Jordan Novet The Bulletin

The Cline Falls couple Jerry and Marisa Parks are today opening a market for artists and vendors looking to sell their wares indoors throughout the year in Redmond. Jerry Parks said his wife has sold her handsewn pants, shorts and blankets for a few years at Central Oregon markets open one weekend at a time, and he has found it challenging to have to break down her booth again and again. “Wouldn’t it be nice to (have a place) you could leave it all the time?” he said. The new market, located in an 11,000-squarefoot building with multiple rooms on U.S. Highway 97 in south Redmond, will be open four

days a week — Thursday through Sunday. Vendors pay 55 cents per square foot a week, and if they prefer, can let the Parkses sell products for them in exchange for a 5 percent cut of sales. The couple, who also run Airframes Inc., which does critical-alignment work for Lancair International, have already found about 30 vendors to sell at the market, with a capacity of about 50, Jerry Parks said. The Redmond’s Bazaar opening comes at a time of shifting opportunities for vendors. In February, the Bend Indoor Markets closed, after facing zoning issues from the city of Bend since its September opening. See Market / B5

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A year-round indoor market opens today in south Redmond, on the heels of the closure of the Merchants’ Market in Bend last month. 126

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Clarification In a story headlined “From the comfort of your smartphone,” which appeared Saturday, May 28, on Page C3, Kathy Ragsdale, CEO of the Central Oregon Association of Realtors was quoted as saying she did not know of any Central Oregon real estate company other than the Garner Group Realtors and Development Inc. using QR codes. At least one other company, Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate, also uses the codes.

By John Markoff and David Barboza New York Times News Service

Salmon Ave.

Yew Ave.

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Indoor market Airport Way Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Greg Cross / The Bulletin

At COCC, entrepreneurs enrolled in a course to learn what to do — and what not to do — to launch a business that will survive

Ed Merriman / The Bulletin

In her spring Launch Your Business class offered through Central Oregon Community College and the Small Business Development Center in Bend, instructor Maureen Quinn describes valuable tips for a successful business contained in books on her recommended reading list.

Teaching the skills for

STARTUP SUCCESS By Ed Merriman • The Bulletin

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tarting a business is like building a house — a good business plan can be the blueprint for success.

Auto sales cool off in May

Launch Your Business class this spring for Central Oregon Community College and the Small Business Development Center.

Monthly light vehicle sales 1.5 million

“The business plan actually lets you make your mistakes on paper, before

you put your money down to start a business,” said Maureen Quinn, who taught the

U.S. sales of new cars and trucks slowed in May after setting a torrid pace earlier in the year.

“Are you about to or did you just recently open the doors to your own company? Avoid costly mistakes and position yourself to succeed” by taking the Launch Your Business class, reads the course description. “Why do you want to own a business? Do you have what it takes?” Quinn asked students on the first night of classes. “The first step in creating a business plan is to

May 2011 1.16 million

1.0

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decide what your goals are for your first year in business. “If your goal is $60,000 a year in sales, you’ll have to gross $5,000 per month,” and even with a good business plan, she said, a new business owner may have to decide whether they can live on a net profit of 5 percent — or $3,000 — for the first year. That point illustrates the fact that

$37.689 SILVER CLOSE CHANGE -$0.614

Veterans W ay

Shareholders OK $7.1B coal merger Shareholders approved Alpha Natural Resources’ $7.1 billion purchase of Massey Energy on Wednesday, creating the nation’s largest metallurgical coal company, but one that still will have to overcome safety concerns after Massey’s Upper Big Branch mine disaster last year. Many coal analysts say the future of the merged company is bright because economic growth in China, Brazil and other developing countries has tightened world supplies of metallurgical coal, which is used for making steel, and driven up prices. Only four countries export metallurgical coal, also known as coking coal, and the newly merged company will be one of the few mining firms in the world that has access to sufficient port and rail infrastructure to expand exports substantially over the next several years. — From staff and wire reports

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Hackers from China hit Gmail, Google says

New market in Redmond

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For a complete listing of stocks, including mutual funds, see Pages B4-5

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Editor’s note: This is the first in a two-part series. In Friday’s edition, you’ll meet the 11 entrepreneurs who took the spring Launch Your Business class, and learn about the businesses they are launching.

many new businesses fail due to a lack of financial resources to pay all of the start-up costs. The costs include everything from rent and supplies to equipment and inventory, as well as the funds needed to support the owner for the first two to five years until the business starts generating enough profit to live on, Quinn said. See Course / B5

MJ J ASOND J FMAM ’10 ’11

SAN FRANCISCO — Google said Wednesday that hundreds of users of Gmail, its e-mail service, had been the targets of clandestine attacks apparently originating in China that were aimed at stealing their passwords and monitoring their e-mail. In a blog post, the company said the victims included senior government officials in the United States, Chinese political activists, officials in several Asian countries, military personnel and journalists. It is the second time Google has pointed to China as the source of an Internet intrusion. Its latest announcement is likely to further ratchet up the tension between the company and Chinese authorities. Last year, Google said it had traced a sophisticated invasion of its computer systems to people based in China. The accusation led to a rupture of the company’s relationship with China and a decision by Google not to cooperate with China’s censorship demands. As a result, Google decided to base its Chinese search engine in Hong Kong. The more recent attacks were not as technically advanced, relying on a common technique known as phishing to trick users into handing over their passwords. But Google’s announcement was unusual in that it put a spotlight on the scale, apparent origins and carefully selected targets of a coordinated campaign to hijack e-mail accounts. See Gmail / B2

Markets dive amid dispiriting reports By Christine Hauser New York Times News Service

Gloomy reports on jobs, manufacturing and auto sales sent stocks down by more than 2 percent Wednesday in their biggest declines since August. Yields on 10-year Treasury notes fell below 3 percent for the first time this year as investors looked for the economy to slow. Stephen Carl, head equity trader at the Williams Capital Group, said the latest economic reports suggested that “the economy is running out of steam.” News that Moody’s cut Greece’s credit rating again because of debt restructuring concerns also contributed to the drop. All 30 stocks in the Dow Jones industrial average fell. The index closed down 279.65 points, or 2.22 percent, at 12,290.14. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index was down 30.65 points, or 2.28 percent, at 1,314.55. Both registered the worst percentage declines since August 11, 2010. The NASDAQ composite index fell 66.11 points, or 2.33 percent, to 2,769.19. See Markets / B5

Percent change in number of vehicles sold in May from the same month last year Chrysler -1.2

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-2.4

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Advocates, bankers join to fight new rules on mortgages

10.1%

GM

-9.1

By Edward Wyatt and Ben Protess New York Times News Service

-22.5

Toyota -33.4 Source: Autodata Corp. AP

WASHINGTON — The weight of the mortgage crisis fell heavily on lower-income and minority communities, where first-time home buyers often fell victim to the predatory lending practices that re-

sulted in an explosion of foreclosures. That left consumer advocates and civil rights groups frequently at odds with bankers, mortgage lenders and their lobbyists during the debate over the financial regulation act last year, which aims to rein in the subprime mortgage excess-

es that inflated the housing bubble. Now, as banking regulators are rewriting the rules for the mortgage market, unusual alliances have sprung up in opposition to tighter lending standards. Advocacy groups like the NAACP and the National Council of La Raza, a La-

tino civil rights organization, on the one hand, and the American Bankers Association on the other, are joining together to fight rules they say could make home loans less affordable for minority and working-class Americans. See Mortgages / B2


B2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Gmail Continued from B1 Google said that once the intruders had logged into the accounts, they could change settings for mail forwarding so that copies of messages would be sent to another address. The company said it had “disrupted” the campaign and had notified the victims as well as government agencies. Executives at Google declined to comment beyond the blog post. The company recommended that Gmail users take additional security steps, like using a Google service known as two-step verification, to make it more difficult to compromise their e-mail accounts. But it emphasized that the password thefts were not the result of a general security problem with Gmail. Google acknowledged that it had been alerted to the problem in part by Mila Parkour, a security researcher in Washington who posted evidence of a type of phishing attack on her blog in February. She documented examples of what has recently been described as a “man-in-the-mailbox” attack, in which the intruder uses the account of one victim and his e-mail contacts to gain the trust of a new victim. Parkour wrote that the method used in this attack “is far from being new or sophisticated,” but that she was posting information about it because of “the particularly invasive approach of the attack.” She highlighted a fake document titled “Draft US-China Joint Statement” that was circulated among people with e-mail accounts at the State Department, the Defense Department, the Defense Intelligence Agency and Gmail. Clicking to download the document directed users instead to a fake Gmail login page that captured their passwords. Caitlin Hayden, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, said the White House was looking into the matter. “We have no reason to believe that any official U.S. government e-mail accounts were accessed,” Hayden said in an e-mail.

Tracing the attacks Google said the attacks apparently originated in Jinan, a provincial capital in eastern China. The city is a regional command center for the Chinese military, one of seven in the country. It is also home to the Lanxiang Vocational School, which was founded with military support. Last year, investigators looking into the attack on Google’s systems said they had traced some of the hacking activity back to the school. At the time, government and school officials strongly denied any connection with the attack, and China’s foreign ministry said linking the Chinese authorities to such attacks was “baseless, highly irresponsible and hype with ulterior motives.” That earlier attack appeared to be aimed at gathering information on human rights activists who were involved in political campaigns aimed at China. It was part of a wave of attacks that hit a range of U.S. companies beginning in mid-2009 and that was first publicly disclosed by Google in January 2010. Chinese government media officials were not immediately available to comment on Google’s latest announcement. Rafal Rohozinski, a network security specialist at the SecDev Group in Ottawa, said it was impossible to lay blame for the campaign on the Chinese government with any certainty. Because of the borderless nature of the Internet, it is easy for intruders to connect through a series of countries to mask their identities. “The fact that someone is harvesting Gmail credentials is not surprising,” Rohozinski said. This year, the Chinese government has stepped up its controls over the Internet within the country, with increased scrutiny of news and blog sites, particularly in the wake of political upheaval in North Africa and the Middle East. The government has also apparently crippled some virtual private network services, or VPNs, which have been used by Chinese and expatriates to gain access to corporate e-mail or get around controls that block many websites from being entered in China, like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. Security specialists said the Google warning to users was an indication that efforts to place the responsibility for Internet security on individuals was failing. “I think this is impossible to solve by going to one user at a time and trying to teach them how to behave on the Internet,” said Nir Zuck, founder and chief technology officer of Palo Alto Networks. “It doesn’t matter how much education you put into it — you will always have end users that will make a mistake.”

COV ER S T OR I ES

SEC investigating trades made by hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors

ONLINE SOCIAL GAMING

By Azam Ahmed New York Times News Service

Photos by Al Seib / Los Angeles Times

Chris Corry, general manager of Zynga’s studio in Marina del Rey, Calif., appears with an image of the company’s latest online social game, “Empires & Allies.”

Rapid development keeps Zynga on top By Alex Pham Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — In a quiet outpost near Marina del Rey, Zynga Inc. has been building an empire. Its troops, a few dozen game developers and designers with a penchant for bringing their dogs to work, have been stealthily working on the San Francisco company’s next big title, “Empires & Allies.” With the nearly 4-year-old firm poised to file an initial public offering of its shares within days — Zynga this week Executive producer Amer Ajami, second from left, lead designlaunched the game, an online er Greg Black, third from left, work with director of product Hans version of a toy soldier set, argu- Yang, far right, and product manager Jeremy Fourteau, far left, ably its most ambitious. at Zynga’s studio in Marina del Rey last month. While players of “Empires & Allies” figure out how to command and conquer their virtual opers work round-the-clock to are accessible to everyone but game boards, Zynga has al- add content, test new features complex enough to be interestready captured the flag when it and constantly adjust the game ing to traditional gamers.” comes to online social games, based on how players are interThis balancing act of creating a rapidly growing and vicious- acting with it. just the right dose of challenge ly competitive segment of the is expected to continue long afgames industry. ter the game goes live. Among Every month, 1 out of 10 The new game Zynga’s key strengths is its abilpeople worldwide on the InterIn that sense, “Empires & Al- ity to track the performance net fires up one of Zynga’s 55 lies” is no different. Its develop- of each feature and design elegames, which include “Farm- ers have worked for just a hand- ment through what’s known as Ville,” “Zynga Poker” and “Ma- ful of months on the title, which A/B testing. Simply put, Zynga fia Wars.” About lets players ex- compares players in two camps, 250 million peopand their island one with a feature and one withple play its games “Traditional nations through out, to see how well the feature each month, a conquests and does. If the feature has a high number equiva- game companies by recruiting al- “click compulsion,” or high rate lent to about measure their lies. Individuals of players clicking on it, Zynga four-fifths of the can only get so incorporates it into the game for audience in U.S. population, far playing by everyone. making Zynga the millions. themselves. To “We can mine our users and the biggest social Social game really get ahead, see in real time what they like to games developer they need friends do,” said Greg Black, “Empires companies like on Facebook. to lend a hand, & Allies” lead designer. “The “ Trad it iona l Zynga measure either by help- sky’s the limit when it comes to game companies ing repel invad- morphing our games to be whatmeasure their au- theirs in the tens ers, agreeing to ever our players want.” dience in the mil- and hundreds become a staff lions,” said John member of variTaylor, manag- of millions. It’s ous enterprises Churning it out ing director and a completely or trading metals There’s another factor workgames analyst different animal.” required to make ing in Zynga’s favor — brute at Arcadia Inweapons and force. vestments Corp. — John Taylor, buildings. With players churning “Social game managing director and “Empires & through social games every two companies like Allies,” like its months, on average, developers games analyst, Arcadia Zynga measure siblings, is de- must release a constant stream theirs in the tens Investments Corp. signed to appeal of new features, and ultimately and hundreds of to a mainstream new games, to keep their fickle millions. It’s a audience with its audience in the fold. “Farmcompletely different animal.” happy, toy-like aesthetic, crisp, Ville,” for example, was once vibrant colors and approachable Zynga’s top game, with close to characters designed by Matt 84 million players a month at its A hot commodity Britton, the game’s art director peak. These days, the 2-year-old Zynga’s recent rounds of fi- and former general manager of title averages just under 45 milnancing have valued the com- Jim Henson’s Creature Shop. lion players a month, accordpany at about $10 billion, and Unlike many other Zynga ing to AppData.com, a site that speculation on Wall Street is games, however, “Empires & tracks Facebook applications. that the IPO will push that fig- Allies” features battles in which To stay on top of the charts, ure even higher. troops can perish forever. It is Zynga in December released What makes the company a modest gamble for Zynga, “CityVille,” which boasted 101 such a hot commodity can be, in whose games have been broadly million monthly players at its part, distilled into a handful of appealing in large part because peak earlier this year. But even game mechanics embedded in its players rarely lose. “CityVille” has waned to 90 mil“Empires & Allies,” which repre“With this game, we wanted lion monthly players, making it sents Zynga’s latest techniques there to be consequences,” said even more important for Zynga for amassing legions of players. Amer Ajami, “Empires & Al- that “Empires & Allies” becomes Mark Skaggs, Zynga’s sen- lies” executive producer. “We its next big hit. ior vice president of product, wanted people to care enough In the past, Zynga has proved summed up one of the com- so that the losses would sting a adept at leveraging an online pany’s design mantras during little, but not so much that they phenomenon known as the neta talk at the Game Developer would quit the game.” work effect, which allows comConference in February in San panies with large audiences to Francisco. “Fast, light and right,” more easily and cheaply market Skaggs told a room packed with New territory their latest offerings. Essentialhundreds of designers eager to “Empires & Allies” is also ly, the company rolls its customlearn the formula for Zynga’s an indication of how Zynga ers from one game to the next, addictive games. plans to further grow its busi- said Justin Smith, founder of That means its games are ness, by taking genres from the Inside Network, a Palo Alto redesigned in weeks or, at most, traditional video game world search firm. a few months with crews of a and introducing them to the This advantage has allowed couple of dozen developers. By mainstream. Zynga to grow much larger than comparison, traditional video “‘Empires’ expands us into its rivals. Indeed, its audience of games require hundreds of peo- the strategy and combat genre,” 243 million players on Facebook ple working two or more years. said Chris Corry, general man- is more than seven times that of Unlike more conventional ager of Zynga’s studio in Los the second-largest social game games, however, much of the Angeles. “For us, the challenge publisher, Electronic Arts Inc., action happens after a Zynga becomes how we thread that with 31.8 million players, acgame is released as its devel- needle of making games that cording to Smith.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether trades in health care stocks made by the hedge fund SAC Capital Advisors as recently as last year were made using inside information, a person briefed on the matter said Wednesday. The investigation comes as SAC, one of the most prominent hedge funds in the world with $12 billion in assets under management, has become something of a focal point for authorities. Two former SAC portfolio managers have pleaded guilty to criminal charges of using inside information to

Mortgages Continued from B1 The growing alliance between civil-rights organizations and banking lobbyists could extend beyond the current round of financial rulemaking. If Congress turns its focus to restructuring Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, for example, the same groups could voice similar concerns over anything that restricts the availability of credit for firsttime home buyers. “I think everybody agrees that the enthusiasm for promoting home ownership went way too far,” said David Stevens, chief executive of the Mortgage Bankers Association. “But now the risk is that we go too far the other way. We still need to be able to make affordable mortgages that don’t just go to the wealthy, who can afford the biggest down payments and who have the most positive credit ratings.” For the uncommon alliance, the first point of attack is on a proposal that would require sellers of mortgage-backed securities to retain part of the risk should a package of loans go sour. The sellers would have to keep on their books at least 5 percent of the value of any baskets of loans they purchase from lenders and then resell to investors. One of the few exceptions to the requirement would be for mortgages on which the home buyer has made a down payment equal to 20 percent of the purchase price. “Most people don’t have 20 percent to put down,” said Janis Bowdler, a project director in La Raza’s office of research, advocacy and legislation. “These rules will so significantly deter the ability of firsttime buyers to break into the market that we will see a real decline in home ownership.” Any standards that apply to the private mortgage market will have to be reflected in government housing finance entities that help low-income and minority borrowers, said Barry Zigas, director of housing policy for the Consumer Federation of America. “Are you going to tell taxpayers that the FHA should have lower standards and take more risk than you expect private investors to take?” he asked. Even the legislators who wrote the law on risk retention say the proposal misses the mark. A bipartisan group of three U.S. senators — Mary Landrieu, D-La., Kay Hagen, D-N.C., and Johnny Isakson, R-Ga. — wrote to regulators last month that a required 20 percent down payment “goes beyond the intent and language of the statute.” The proposed regulations

trade technology stocks. And Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, has questioned how the SEC handled referrals from Wall Street’s self-regulator, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, about 20 stock trades by SAC. But the SEC’s investigation into trading by SAC appears to be much broader. In addition to the inquiry into trading in health care stocks — trades that took place from at least 2007 through 2010 — the commission is examining SAC’s use of expert network firms, companies that connect Wall Street investors with outside experts in various industries, the person briefed on the matter said.

“would necessarily increase consumer costs and reduce access to affordable credit,” the senators wrote. “Sadly, in many cases, some creditworthy borrowers may not be able to get a mortgage at all.” A similar letter this week from 156 members of the House of Representatives noted that in 2009, after mortgage underwriting standards had already tightened up, more than half of home purchases came with a down payment of less than 20 percent. Last year, according to the National Association of Realtors, 96 percent of first-time home buyers made down payments below 20 percent. But as lawmakers and lobbyists of different stripes step up their attacks on the proposal, some regulators are scrambling to push back. They warn that a broader exemption could deter investors who buy mortgage loans from returning to the private mortgage market, or worse, re-inflate the bubble. Because the rule-making process is under way, regulators are guarded in their comments. But in introducing the rule in March, Sheila Bair, the chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., said that the down payment restriction “does not mean that under the rule, all home buyers would have to meet those high standards to qualify for a mortgage.” Rather, she said, those exempt loans “will be a small slice of the market.” Some regulators say that the coalition of consumer and industry groups is jeopardizing rules that could, in the long run, protect borrowers from risky lending practices. In private meetings, some top agency lawyers now refer to the partnership as “the unholy alliance.” But mortgage lenders, consumer and community groups, which are planning a joint news conference in Washington on Thursday to highlight their opposition to the risk-retention proposals, say they are just as certain that the regulations will not prevent risky loans from being made while hurting qualified borrowers. “It is more likely that the credit restrictions that result will disproportionately fall on lower-income borrowers,” said Robert Davis, an executive vice president for the American Bankers Association. That, in turn, puts banks in a bind, because it gives the appearance of violating fair-lending practices.

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THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 B3

P F Are grandparents sacrificing too much?

Take steps to keep your degree from becoming a financial burden By Kara McGuire Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Richard Sennott / Minneapolis Star Tribune

Mike and Joan Hennessy help their grandson, Braeden, make a list of the day’s activities at home in Plymouth, Minn., in April. The Hennessys’ thoughts of traveling to dream destinations during retirement have shifted to the reality of caring for their grandson while their daughter is at work.

Many stretching themselves thin to help children, grandkids B y K ara McGuire Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

MINNEAPOLIS — Mike Hennessy crouched behind a large beach ball to deflect a deluge of rubber balls delivered by his 5-year-old grandson, Braeden. Playing daily rounds of a made-up game his grandson named “Dude Brother Russell” wasn’t how Hennessy, 58, imagined spending his retirement days. But when his daughter didn’t have thousands of dollars to pay for day care, Mike and his wife, Joan, willingly stepped in. Grandparents helping their children and grandchildren is nothing new; that’s what family is for. But the extent of the support — whether it’s providing a place to live, caring for young grandkids, covering back-to-school shopping or paying college tuition — has increased with the fragile economy. At the height of the Great Recession, nearly two-thirds of America’s grandparents were providing an estimated $370 billion in financial support to their grandkids over the previous five years, according to a survey by the MetLife Mature Market Institute. That averages out to $8,661 per grandparent household. “Grandparents are filling the gaps,” said Amy Goyer, a grandparents expert with the AARP. “They’re paying for the school trips, the sports, the costs of extracurricular activities.” But can they afford it? An increasing number of both baby boomers nearing retirement and current retirees find themselves in precarious financial situations.

Not saving enough With the winding down of traditional pensions, people are more reliant on their own retirement savings to pay the bills. But many have failed to save enough. The median balance of retirement accounts for 55- to 64-yearolds is about $100,000, which would buy a retiree an annuity that pays $4,500 a year, calculates Anthony Webb, an economist with the Center for Retirement Research in Boston. Consider declining home values, higher debt levels among seniors and rising medical costs, and “a lot of people are going to face the prospect of a very significant drop in their standard of living at retirement,” Webb said. According to the MetLife survey, two in five reported providing “general support,” a catch-all category that includes expenses such as purchasing a computer, taking a family vacation or stocking a young adult’s fridge. One in four assisted with educational expenses, while one in five contributed to a major life event such as buying a house or getting married. The dollar amount doesn’t include money given to support adult children, an amount that trickles down to grandkids. This implies that grandparents are spending even more than the $370 billion figure suggests. A quarter of 1,077 grandparents surveyed

said they were providing more financial assistance to their grandchildren than they had previously because of the tough economy.

Tough realities Patrick Hagan, a Golden Valley, Minn.-based certified financial planner with Ameriprise Financial, has listened as his aging clients wrestle with the desire to help their children, even if they can’t afford to do so. Hagan said it’s a common refrain: “ ‘If my kids are having a hard time making their house payment and they could lose their house, we’d rather help them now.’ ” Convincing grandparents that they can’t afford to tap their nest egg to help is “a tough conversation to have,” Hagan said. Baby boomers are also wrestling with the possibility that their kids may never be as financially successful as they are, said Goyer. That’s a key element of the American Dream, and one that’s hard to give up. “They want to help,” she said. “They want the best for their grandkids.” More than three-quarters of grandparents in the MetLife survey responded that it’s more important to provide smaller bursts of financial assistance when needed than to leave a lump sum inheritance at the end. That’s concerning, said Sandra Timmerman, director of the MetLife Mature Market Institute, the research center on issues of longevity and aging for insurer MetLife. “Grandparents need to think about their own retirement before giving away too much money to their adult children and grandchildren, because it will come back to bite the family eventually,” she said. Timmerman is referring to a fear of most retirees — running out of money. One estimate of the cost of health care in retirement is close to a quarter million dollars. Inflation is a worry. And there’s the uncertainty of investment returns and how much money one can safely withdraw each year from retirement funds. No child wants to see their parents struggling to make ends meet. No parent wants their children to take care of them in their later years. Yet for many families, the focus is on their kids’ current standard of living, not what will happen if they deplete their nest egg too soon.

Thinking it through Mick Endersbe, an adviser with SagePoint Financial in Duluth, Minn., has taught more college planning seminars than he can remember. In every one, there are well-meaning grandparents who remember when a college degree didn’t cost more than a starter home and want to contribute. While he appreciates their desire to help, he says many haven’t thought it through. “They haven’t analyzed their retirement situation, and in many cases they don’t have a disciplined plan for helping

the kids,” he said in an e-mail. The amount they are contributing is growing. Tuition paid for by family and friends spiked from $5,496 on average for the 2008-09 school year to $9,243 the next year, according to a report by student lender Sallie Mae. The report doesn’t break down the makeup of that group, but the student lender assumes the majority are grandparents. What the MetLife report doesn’t measure is the amount of nonmonetary help provided by grandparents, especially child care. According to research conducted last fall by the Wilder Foundation, seven in 10 Minnesotans who need child care rely on family and friends for some help. Of that group, 52 percent are grandparents. Just 38 percent of these caregivers are paid. Amy McDonough’s mom watches her three kids every Monday. The 40-year-old from Stillwater, Minn., estimates savings of $24,000 over the past eight years. “The monetary benefit is one thing, but the emotional side is huge,” said McDonough, whose mom cooks dinner on Mondays, serving up chicken and rice, goulash and other favorite meals from Amy’s childhood. McDonough thinks having her mom, who started weekly child care after retiring from teaching, has also allowed her greater success at work, giving her a day each week where she can work late, and someone to help with sick kid duty so she doesn’t miss too many days in the office.

I graduated from college in the late 1990s at a time when friends were jetting off to work at tech start-ups and my paid internship turned seamlessly into a full-time gig. I didn’t graduate with much college debt, but even my friends loaded with loans were on the hook for $20,000 at most — a sum most could pay off in a decade. Today, college graduates are leaving school with dimmer job prospects and more college debt. Families are even asking, “Is a college degree worth the cost?” That’s a fair question, and one the Pew Research Center recently took up in a 150page report that found that 57 percent of Americans say a college degree is not a good value for the money and out of reach for the vast majority. Yet 86 percent of college graduates say college has been a good investment for them personally. “Sometimes it’s like, ‘Ugh, I have a big debt,’ but I also graduated with a really good degree and know I can pay it off,” said Carla Harris, 24, who left the College of St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minn., with a doctorate in physical therapy, a full-time job in her field and $80,000 in loans. “I have some debt that I think is unfortunate ... but what I have learned both in the classroom, outside of my classroom, through my jobs, through the organizations I’ve been involved with is 100 percent worth it,” said Allison Henning, who has $13,000 in loans from her University of Minnesota journalism degree and is seeking a job in public relations.

C O M M E N TA RY The average amount of student debt among graduates who have loans is $27,200, according to Mark Kantrowitz, financial aid researcher and publisher of www.finaid.org. I asked Harris, Henning and a handful of other recent graduates to share advice on affording college with teens in the throes of planning for it.

Work, work, work Dana Penkivech just graduated from North Dakota State University with a doctor of pharmacy degree and zero loans. His family helped, but the 25-year-old also paid for much of it himself. He started working when he was 10 and kept socking money away for college throughout high school. “Even if you can pay for one year before you have to take out student loans, that can be a significant savings,” he said. In college, he put more than 200,000 miles on his truck traveling all over the Midwest to referee hockey games. It’s a tough climate for teens in search of part-time jobs, but start looking early, use your personal network, and think creatively about ways to earn money.

president of college planning, citing a recent survey the investment company conducted that found 44 percent of the class of 2011 started college without savings. “Every dollar saved is a dollar less in debt,” he said. Many families save in 529 plans, tax-advantaged accounts dedicated to college savings. But a good old-fashioned savings account or savings bonds work, too. Saving doesn’t have to be painful, said Shauna Archambault, a 23-year-old finance major from the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minn. “Shovel away $10 or $20 a week” if you’re working, or take graduation gift money and “put a portion toward tuition or textbooks,” she said.

Consider your career, lifestyle aspirations One reason Harris went into physical therapy is because she knew “there are lots of opportunities in the field.” Information about various careers, including salary data and hiring outlook through 2018, is available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics: www.bls.gov/oco/. It’s good to do your research and determine whether the career you’re considering will afford you the lifestyle you want before you pick your major.

Save, save, save “Graduates that had saved were able to cover more than half of their college costs,” said Joe Ciccariello, Fidelity’s vice

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‘Zero regrets’ Timmerman said grandparents typically want to be more involved and don’t look at babysitting their grandchildren or taking them back-to-school shopping as a burden. “It’s a stage of life that’s very important to the baby boomers,” she said. A Pew Research Center report found that grandparents the center surveyed ranked spending time with grandchildren and more time with family as what they valued most in old age. Hennessy, who retired from an IT career in 2006, said the time he spends with Braeden makes up for the years he spent climbing the corporate ladder, when he had less time for his own kids. He and his wife, who live in Plymouth, Minn., don’t have a line item in their budget that tracks money they spend on their grandson. But he estimates it’s “easily thousands” per year. Joan, who stayed home to raise their three kids, has postponed her plan to enter the workforce part time. Still, Hennessy thinks their finances are on track because the money they’d expected to use for travel to Europe and Mexico goes to trips to the Minnesota Zoo and stocking the pantry with brownie ingredients instead. “There will be time for us to travel,” Mike said. “We have zero regrets about doing what we’re doing.”

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B USI N ESS

B4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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Cheesecake 30.75 -1.02 ChelseaTh 4.37 -.18 Chemtura n 18.32 -.73 CheniereEn 10.79 -.92 ChesEng 0.30 30.39 -.95 Chevron 3.12 102.49 -2.42 ChicB&I 0.20 36.86 -1.20 Chicos 0.20 14.64 -.44 ChildPlace 48.71 -1.53 Chimera 0.66 3.84 -.07 ChinAuto lf 6.63 -.52 ChinaBAK 1.24 -.09 ChinaBiot 6.98 -.57 ChinaCEd 5.25 -.38 ChinaGreen 4.90 +.14 ChinaInfo 1.97 +.04 ChinaLife 0.91 51.79 -.76 ChinaMed 9.80 -.19 ChiMYWd n 7.10 -.36 ChinaMble 1.93 45.29 -.48 ChinaPStl 1.22 +.04 ChinaSecur 4.64 -.28 ChinaShen 4.03 -.13 ChinaSun 2.47 -.13 ChinaTcF 5.25 -.35 ChinaUni 0.12 21.65 -.43 ChiValve 2.79 -.11 ChinaYuch 1.50 21.43 -.30 Chipotle 285.56 -3.51 Chiquita 14.61 -.29 Chubb 1.56 64.82 -.77 ChungTel n 32.77 +.07 ChurchDwt 1.36 82.00 -2.10 CIBER 5.86 -.24 CienaCorp 25.48 -1.27 Cimarex 0.40 93.60 -2.33 CinciBell 3.03 -.15 CinnFin 1.60 29.77 -.65 Cinemark 0.84 20.77 -.98 Cintas 0.49 31.88 -.97 Cirrus 15.88 -.57 Cisco 0.24 16.38 -.42 Citigp pfJ 2.13 26.04 +.04 Citigrp rs 0.04 39.65 -1.50 Citigp wtA .67 -.04 CitiTdecs 7.50 117.73 -2.77 CitzRepB h .83 -.04 CitrixSys 84.83 -2.79 CityNC 0.80 54.82 -1.51 Clarcor 0.42 41.13 -1.48 CleanDsl rs 7.18 -1.07 CleanEngy 13.84 -.46 Clearwire 4.47 -.13 ClevBioL h 4.45 CliffsNRs 0.56 87.91 -2.79 Clorox 2.40 69.34 -1.14 CloudPeak 20.75 -.49 Coach 0.90 62.38 -1.28 CobaltIEn 13.56 -.83 CocaCola 1.88 66.76 -.05 CocaCE 0.52 29.05 +.16 Coeur 26.29 -1.28 CogdSpen 0.40 6.03 +.03 CogentC 15.42 -.13 Cognex 0.36 34.73 -.47 CognizTech 74.41 -1.63 CohStQIR 0.72 10.19 -.40 Coinstar 52.09 -1.04 ColdwtrCrk 1.83 -.05 ColgPal 2.32 86.91 -.62 CollctvBrd 14.89 -.71 ColonPT 0.60 20.30 -.80 ColumLabs 3.48 -.05 Comcast 0.45 24.44 -.80 Comc spcl 0.45 22.99 -.56 Comerica 0.40 34.51 -1.60 ComfrtS 0.20 10.29 -.08 CmcBMO 0.92 41.11 -1.67 CmclMtls 0.48 14.44 -.45 CmwReit rs 2.00 25.37 -.73 CmtyHlt 27.90 -.74 CommVlt 40.72 -.62 CBD-Pao s 0.38 39.61 -1.00 CompDivHd 1.44 15.02 -.59 CmGnom n 16.73 +.75 CompPrdS 31.70 -1.49 CompSci 0.80 39.25 -.64 Compuwre 9.84 -.35 ComstkRs 28.70 -1.37 Con-Way 0.40 37.76 -1.77 ConAgra 0.92 25.29 -.14 Concepts 12.81 +.08 ConchoRes 91.89 -2.72 ConcurTch 48.85 -1.12 ConocPhil 2.64 72.34 -.88 ConsolEngy 0.40 49.96 -1.31 ConEd 2.40 52.77 -.29 ConstantC 22.74 -1.31 ConstellA 21.68 -.28 ConstellEn 0.96 36.91 -.27 ContlRes 63.13 -3.09 Continucre 4.75 +.04 Cnvrgys 12.62 -.16 ConvOrg h .19 +.02 Cooper Ind 1.16 61.37 -1.48 CooperTire 0.42 23.14 -1.02 Copart 46.19 -.81 Copel 0.66 25.80 -.75 Corcept 4.86 -.08 CoreLab s 1.00 101.66 -1.03 CoreLogic 17.90 -.21 CorinthC 3.99 +.13 CornPdts 0.64 56.02 -.71 Corning 0.20 19.72 -.43 CorpExc 0.60 41.29 -.76 CorpOffP 1.65 34.33 -1.09 CorrectnCp 22.15 -.85 Cosan Ltd 11.92 +.04 Costco 0.96 80.21 -2.27 Cott Cp 8.49 -.26 CousPrp 0.18 8.65 -.12 Covance 57.93 -.93 CovantaH 0.30 16.72 -.25 CoventryH 34.88 -.30 Covidien 0.80 54.80 -.20 CowenGp 4.04 -.08 CrackerB 0.88 46.25 -1.13 Crane 0.92 47.64 -1.55 Credicp 1.95 97.99 -3.38 CSVS2xVxS 20.97 +2.33 CSCush30 20 1.21 23.96 -.39 CredSuiss 1.40 42.52 -.60 Cree Inc 42.09 -1.80 CreXus 0.74 11.12 -.19 Crocs 21.92 -.81 Crossh g rs .89 -.01 CrosstexE 0.36 11.41 +.12 CrwnCstle 41.00 -.41 CrownHold 39.57 -1.04 Cryptologic 1.78 +.05 Ctrip.com 45.05 +.05 CubistPh 36.87 -1.66 CullenFr 1.84 56.68 -1.56 Cummins 1.05 100.64 -4.60 Curis 3.56 -.20 CurEuro 0.10 142.81 -.52 CurrCda 0.07 101.90 -.75 CurSwiss 117.52 +1.44 CurtisWrt 0.32 32.86 -1.25 Cyberonics 32.38 -.27 Cyclacel 1.57 -.04 Cymer 46.66 -1.21 CypSemi 0.36 22.65 -.77 CypSharp 2.40 12.77 -.07 CytRx h .93 -.00 Cytec 0.50 55.06 -1.13 Cytokinet 1.37 -.10 Cytori 5.42 -.30 DCT Indl 0.28 5.41 -.25 DG FastCh 33.27 -2.11 DHT Hldgs 0.40 3.93 -.07 DPL 1.33 30.13 -.04 DR Horton 0.15 12.01 -.17 DST Sys 0.70 49.77 -.50 DSW Inc 48.54 -1.61 DTE 2.35 50.85 -.77 DUSA 6.77 +.18 Daktronics 0.10 11.74 +.99 DanaHldg 17.24 -.88 Danaher s 0.08 52.44 -2.09 Darden 1.28 50.00 -.65 Darling 18.79 -.36 DaVita 83.90 -.15 DeVry 0.24 53.99 +.14 DealrTrk 21.70 -1.47 DeanFds 13.42 -.46 DeckOut s 88.48 -2.62 DeerConsu 0.20 6.68 -.35 Deere 1.64 82.76 -3.32 Delcath 5.76 -.29 Delek 0.15 14.72 -.37 Dell Inc 15.60 -.49 DelphiFn 0.48 28.32 -.85 DeltaAir 9.68 -.40 DeltaPtr h .67 -.04 Deluxe 1.00 24.05 -1.69 DemMda n 14.94 -.27 DenburyR 21.12 -.84 Dndreon 41.00 -1.39 DenisnM g 2.22 -.07 Dennys 3.98 -.11 Dentsply 0.20 38.41 -.83 Depomed 9.07 -.05 DeutschBk 1.07 58.27 -1.48 DBGoldDL 49.05 +.18 DBGoldDS 6.56 -.03 DevelDiv 0.16 13.88 -.61 DevonE 0.68 82.77 -1.30 Dex One 2.14 -.20 DexCom 15.17 -.60 Diageo 2.46 84.21 -.88 DiaOffs 0.50 71.93 -1.74 DiamRk 0.32 11.03 -.47 DianaShip 11.31 -.18 DiceHldg 13.75 -1.02 DicksSptg 38.33 -1.41 Diebold 1.12 32.32 -.73 DigitalRlt 2.72 61.28 -1.09 DigRiver 31.36 -1.19 Dillards 0.20 55.77 -.42 DineEquity 53.93 +.17 DirecTV A 49.66 -.60 DrxTcBull 1.35 45.50 -3.10 DrSCBr rs 36.31 +3.14 DirFnBr rs 46.02 +4.00 DirLCBr rs 35.46 +2.21 DrxEMBull 0.84 37.88 -2.11 DrTcBear rs 21.11 +1.28 DREBear rs 12.30 +1.00 DrxEBear rs 15.12 +.94 DirEMBear 18.21 +.90 DrxFnBull 25.53 -2.69 Dir30TrBear 34.84 -1.44 Dir10TrBull 3.77 61.05 +1.52 DrxREBull 0.39 73.81 -7.33 DirxSCBull 80.52 -8.38 DirxLCBull 0.16 81.93 -5.87 DirxEnBull 0.05 73.81 -5.33 Discover 0.24 23.43 -.41 DiscCm A 42.71 -.85 DiscCm C 38.21 -.62

Nm

D

DiscLab rs 2.49 +.04 DishNetwk 29.53 -.75 Disney 0.40 40.40 -1.23 DolbyLab 45.29 -1.45 DoleFood 13.12 -.29 DollarFn s 22.29 -.42 DollarGen 31.81 -3.26 DollarTh 82.01 -.94 DllrTree s 62.67 -1.07 DomRescs 1.97 47.12 -.60 Dominos 24.61 -.31 Domtar grs 1.40 99.59 -2.89 DonlleyRR 1.04 20.75 -.59 DoralFncl 1.98 -.10 DEmmett 0.52 20.52 -.53 Dover 1.10 63.76 -3.47 DowChm 1.00 35.10 -1.03 DrPepSnap 1.28 40.94 -.26 DragonW g 6.36 -.42 DrmWksA 23.20 -.71 DresserR 51.62 -.96 DryHYSt 0.52 5.08 +.03 Dril-Quip 70.42 -3.76 drugstre 3.79 -.01 DryShips 3.92 -.14 DuPont 1.64 51.57 -1.73 DuPFabros 0.48 25.41 -.73 DukeEngy 0.98 18.58 -.17 DukeRlty 0.68 14.54 -.50 DunBrad 1.44 78.44 -1.77 DurectCp 3.23 -.27 DyaxCp 2.12 -.14 Dycom 16.00 -1.09 Dynavax 2.55 -.21 Dynegy 5.97 -.09

E-F-G-H ECDang n E-House ETrade rs eBay EMC Cp EMCOR EMS Tch ENI EOG Res EQT Corp EV Engy EagleBulk EaglRkEn ErthLink EstWstBcp EastChm EKodak Eaton s EatnVan EVRiskMgd EV TxDiver EVTxMGlo Ebix Inc Ecolab Ecopetrol EdisonInt EducMgmt EducRlty EdwLfSci 8x8 Inc ElPasoCp ElPasoPpl Elan EldorGld g ElectArts EFII ElizArden EltekLtd Embraer Emcore lf EmergBio EmersonEl EmpDist EmployH Emulex EnbrEPt s Enbridge s EnCana g EndvrInt rs EndvSilv g EndoPhrm Endologix EndurSpec Ener1 EnerNOC Energen Energizer EngyConv EngyPtrs EngyTEq EngyTsfr EngyXXI EnergySol Enerpls g Enersis ENSCO Entegris Entergy EntPrPt EntreM rs EntropCom EnzonPhar Equifax Equinix EqLfPrp EqtyOne EqtyRsd EricsnTel EssexPT EsteeLdr EtfSilver EverestRe EvrgrSlr rs ExactSci h ExcelM ExcoRes Exelixis Exelon ExeterR gs ExideTc Expedia ExpdIntl Express ExpScrip s ExterranH ExterranP ExtraSpce ExtrmNet ExxonMbl Ezcorp F5 Netwks FEI Co FLIR Sys FMC Corp FMC Tch s FNBCp PA FSI Intl FTI Cnslt FX Ener FXCM n FairIsaac FairchldS FamilyDlr Fastenal s FedExCp FedRlty FedSignl FedInvst FelCor Ferrellgs Ferro FiberTwr FibriaCelu FidlNFin FidNatInfo FifthStFin FifthThird Finisar FinLine FstAFin n FstBusey FstCwlth FFnclOH FstHorizon FstInRT FMajSilv g FMidBc FstNiagara FstRepB n FstSolar FTDJInet FT ConDis FT RNG FirstEngy FstMerit Fiserv FlagstBcp Flextrn Flotek FlowrsFds Flowserve Fluor FocusMda FEMSA FootLockr ForcePro FordM FordM wt ForestCA ForestLab ForestOil FormFac Fortinet Fortress FortuneBr ForwrdA Fossil Inc FosterWhl FranceTel FrankRes FrkStPrp FredsInc FMCG s Freescale n FDelMnt FreshMkt n FrontierCm FrontierOil Frontline FuelCell FullerHB FultonFncl FurnBrds FushiCopp GATX GFI Grp GMAC CpT GMX Rs GSI Cmce h GT Solar Gafisa SA Gallaghr GameStop GamGld g

19.22 -.37 9.70 -.80 14.99 -.82 30.64 -.54 28.06 -.41 29.52 -.85 26.32 +.23 2.67 46.82 -1.02 0.64 108.19 -.95 0.88 52.10 -2.08 3.04 54.55 -.80 2.77 -.11 0.60 11.58 -.04 0.20 7.83 -.07 0.20 18.85 -1.25 1.88 102.21 -3.64 3.26 -.08 1.36 49.22 -2.45 0.72 30.03 -1.52 1.28 12.20 -.07 1.16 10.87 -.09 1.14 10.50 -.06 18.77 -1.03 0.70 54.28 -.60 1.39 44.87 -.60 1.28 39.11 -.25 20.30 -1.23 0.20 8.37 -.33 87.60 -1.13 3.37 -.04 0.04 20.63 -.41 1.76 34.01 -.36 9.56 -.01 0.10 15.42 -.47 24.42 +.01 17.43 -.62 28.85 -1.88 1.33 -.14 0.64 31.75 -.54 2.42 -.12 23.98 -1.00 1.38 52.18 -2.37 19.19 +.03 0.24 16.31 -.30 9.00 -.30 2.06 30.12 -.59 0.98 32.72 -.93 0.80 33.05 -1.05 13.87 -.28 9.88 -.41 41.50 -.13 8.30 -.27 1.20 40.31 -.30 1.21 -.04 17.05 -1.00 0.54 61.12 -1.15 75.04 -2.01 1.38 -.02 15.36 -.68 2.24 42.13 -.01 3.58 47.20 -.31 32.79 -1.52 4.96 -.15 2.16 31.76 -.68 0.79 21.62 -.08 1.40 54.30 +.98 8.93 -.25 3.32 67.38 -.77 2.39 41.14 -.50 3.49 -.91 8.52 -.38 10.27 -.22 0.64 36.80 -.99 99.57 -1.83 1.50 60.13 +1.38 0.88 19.03 -.58 1.47 59.76 -2.07 0.37 14.66 -.18 4.16 134.05 -3.56 0.75 100.29 -2.22 36.46 -1.88 1.92 87.39 -1.58 .77 +.07 7.37 -.09 3.20 -.21 0.16 20.11 -.03 11.16 -.47 2.10 41.72 -.13 4.88 -.14 9.71 -.15 0.28 27.80 -.21 0.50 51.27 -1.55 20.55 -.57 59.05 -.51 20.54 -1.01 1.91 25.17 -.54 0.56 20.99 -.77 3.22 -.10 1.88 82.03 -1.44 31.73 -1.06 109.40 -4.18 40.15 +1.14 0.24 35.10 -1.05 0.60 81.51 -2.84 43.26 -1.37 0.48 10.28 -.27 4.04 -.37 37.54 -.63 8.45 -.24 0.24 9.94 +.04 0.08 28.37 -.88 17.59 -.45 0.72 54.80 -.94 0.52 31.69 -1.50 0.48 91.43 -2.21 2.68 85.33 -2.27 0.24 6.07 -.50 0.96 24.62 -1.01 5.82 -.41 2.00 25.83 -.50 12.72 -.38 1.60 -.25 14.93 -.64 0.48 15.84 -.14 0.20 31.61 -.57 1.28 12.07 -.26 0.24 12.34 -.72 22.29 -1.73 0.20 22.34 -.72 0.24 15.45 -.63 0.16 5.01 -.08 0.12 5.64 -.21 0.48 15.31 -.57 0.04 10.06 -.45 11.83 -.75 20.25 -.89 0.04 11.93 -.31 0.64 13.85 -.36 31.88 -.37 119.71 -4.54 0.04 35.98 -.94 0.09 21.48 -.53 0.05 21.85 -.52 2.20 44.00 -.62 0.64 15.49 -.80 63.59 -.93 1.39 -.03 7.07 -.17 8.33 -.55 0.90 33.07 -.26 1.28 115.63 -5.60 0.50 66.00 -2.80 30.50 -.75 1.16 61.52 -.41 0.66 24.32 -.62 4.69 -.15 14.23 -.69 5.60 -.58 18.78 -.39 35.50 -.52 30.10 +.20 9.45 -.46 49.70 +1.21 5.03 -.13 0.76 64.16 -.57 0.28 34.35 -.75 102.06 -3.78 32.79 -1.47 1.96 22.38 -.53 1.00 125.07 -4.51 0.76 12.89 -.80 0.20 14.20 -.35 1.00 49.38 -2.26 18.20 -.30 0.20 27.07 -.42 39.64 -.60 0.75 8.70 -.15 0.24 29.17 -.69 1.85 17.82 -.60 1.77 -.13 0.30 21.75 -.54 0.16 10.72 -.42 4.67 -.12 6.29 -.43 1.16 38.01 -1.71 0.20 4.32 -.21 26.25 -.02 5.04 -.23 29.19 -.06 12.12 -.65 0.29 10.50 -.54 1.32 28.32 -.39 27.47 -.51 10.11 -.23 0.25

Nm

How to Read the Market in Review He e a e he 2 578 mos ac ve s ocks on he New Yo k S ock Exchange Nasdaq Na ona Ma ke s and Ame can S ock Exchange Mu ua unds a e 415 a ges S ocks n bo d changed 5 pe cen o mo e n p ce Name S ocks a e s ed a phabe ca y by he company s u name no s abb ev a on Company names made up o n a s appea a he beg nn ng o each e e s s D v Cu en annua d v dend a e pa d on s ock based on a es qua e y o sem annua dec a a on un ess o he w se oo no ed Las P ce s ock was ad ng a when exchange c osed o he day Chg Loss o ga n o he day No change nd ca ed by ma k Fund Name Name o mu ua und and am y Se Ne asse va ue o p ce a wh ch und cou d be so d Chg Da y ne change n he NAV YTD % Re Pe cen change n NAV o he yea o da e w h d v dends e nves ed S ock Foo no es – PE g ea e han 99 d – ue ha been a ed o edemp on b ompan d – New 52 wee ow dd – Lo n a 12 mo e – Compan o me ed on he Ame an E hange Eme g ng Compan Ma e p a e g – D dend and ea n ng n Canad an do a h – empo a e mp om Na daq ap a and u p u ng qua a on n – S o wa a new ue n he a ea The 52 wee h gh and ow gu e da e on om he beg nn ng o ad ng p – P e e ed o ue p – P e e en e pp – Ho de owe n a men o pu ha e p e q – C o ed end mu ua und no PE a u a ed – R gh o bu e u a a pe ed p e – S o ha p b a ea 20 pe en w h n he a ea w – T ade w be e ed when he o ued wd – When d bu ed w – Wa an a ow ng a pu ha e o a o u– New 52 wee h gh un – Un n ud ng mo e han one e u – Compan n ban up o e e e hp o be ng eo gan ed unde he ban up aw Appea n on o he name D v dend Foo no es a – E a d dend we e pa d bu a e no n uded b – Annua a e p u o – L qu da ng d dend e – Amoun de a ed o pa d n a 12 mon h – Cu en annua a e wh h wa n ea ed b mo e en d dend announ emen – Sum o d dend pa d a e o p no egu a a e – Sum o d dend pa d h ea Mo e en d dend wa om ed o de e ed – De a ed o pa d h ea a umu a e ue w h d dend n a ea m – Cu en annua a e wh h wa de ea ed b mo e en d dend announ emen p – n a d dend annua a e no nown e d no hown – De a ed o pa d n p e ed ng 12 mon h p u o d dend – Pa d n o app o ma e a h a ue on e d bu on da e Mo a e o abo e mu be wo h $1 and ga ne o e $2 Mu ua Fund Foo no es e – E ap a ga n d bu on – P e ou da quo e n – No oad und p – Fund a e u ed o pa d bu on o – Redemp on ee o on ngen de e ed a e oad ma app – S o d dend o p – Bo h p and – E a h d dend

Sou ce The Assoc a ed P ess and L ppe Nm Gannett Gap GardDenv Garmin Gartner GascoEngy Gastar grs GaylrdEnt GenProbe GencoShip GenCorp GnCable GenComm GenDynam GenElec GenGrPr n GenMarit GenMills s GenMoly GenMot n GM cvpfB GenSteel Gensco GenOn En Genpact Gentex GenuPrt GenVec rs Genworth GeoGrp Geores GaGulf Gerdau GeronCp GiantIntac Gibraltar GigaMed Gildan GileadSci GlacierBc Glatfelter GlaxoSKln Gleacher GlimchRt GlobalCash GlobCrsg GloblInd GlobPay GblXColm s GlbXSilvM GlbSpcMet GluMobile GolLinhas GolarLNG GoldFLtd Goldcrp g GoldStr g GoldmanS Goodrich GoodrPet Goodyear Google GovPrpIT vjGrace Graco GrafTech Graingr Gramrcy GranTrra g GrCanyEd GraphPkg GrayTelev GrtBasG g GrLkDrge GtPanSilv g GtPlainEn GreenMtC GreenbCos Greenhill GrubbEllis GpTelevisa Guess GugSolar GulfIsland GulfRes GulfportE HCA Hld n HCC Ins HCP Inc HFF Inc HSBC HSN Inc HackettGp HainCel Hallibrtn Halozyme HancHld Hanesbrds HanmiFncl HansenMed HansenNat HanwhaSol HarbinElec HarleyD Harman Harmonic HarmonyG HarisHa HarrisCorp Harsco HarteHnk HartfdFn HarvNRes Hasbro HatterasF HawaiiEl HawHold Headwatrs HltCrREIT HlthCSvc s HltMgmt HlthcrRlty HealthNet HlthSouth HlthSprg HrtlndEx HrtldPay Heckmann HeclaM Heinz HelixEn HelmPayne HSchein Herbalife s HercOffsh HrtgeCo Hersha Hershey Hertz Hess HewlettP Hexcel hhgregg HiTchPhm Hibbett HighwdPrp Hill-Rom HilltopH HiSoft n Hittite HollyCp Hollysys Hologic HomeDp Home Inns HomeProp Honda HonwllIntl HorizLns Hormel s Hornbeck HorsehdH Hospira HospPT HostHotls HotTopic HovnanE HubGroup HubbelB HudsCity HughesCm HumGen Humana HuntJB HuntBnk HuntIng n Huntsmn Hyatt Hypercom Hyperdyn

D 0.16 13.84 -.38 0.45 18.90 -.50 0.20 79.85 -3.93 34.06 -.02 37.89 -1.14 .32 -.02 3.20 -.19 31.25 -1.00 81.89 +.10 7.39 -.57 6.23 -.05 39.90 -1.85 11.21 -1.14 1.88 71.80 -2.42 0.60 19.13 -.51 0.40 16.09 -.39 1.60 -.09 1.12 39.22 -.55 4.55 -.33 30.23 -1.58 2.38 48.24 -1.86 1.73 -.05 43.79 -1.20 3.92 -.07 0.18 15.96 -.06 0.48 28.49 -.86 1.80 52.66 -2.14 3.35 -.13 10.63 -.48 23.74 -.85 23.19 -1.58 27.20 -1.14 0.27 10.66 -.37 4.21 -.18 0.18 8.15 +.03 12.78 -.28 1.26 -.02 0.30 36.79 -.53 41.28 -.46 0.52 13.59 -.63 0.36 14.86 -.55 2.11 42.43 -1.03 2.17 -.06 0.40 10.00 -.24 3.18 -.03 33.71 -1.13 5.83 -.44 0.08 51.14 -.82 0.21 21.68 +.03 0.25 24.96 -.77 0.15 21.42 -1.24 5.22 +.13 0.12 12.64 -.37 1.00 33.31 +1.45 0.19 16.05 -.39 0.41 49.46 -.61 2.63 -.04 1.40 136.17 -4.56 1.16 85.25 -2.04 19.18 -1.27 16.88 -.85 525.60 -3.42 1.68 25.83 -.65 45.56 -1.23 0.84 49.97 -.59 20.32 -.82 2.64 144.80 -6.27 2.23 -.14 6.98 -.18 12.82 -.08 5.17 -.31 2.62 -.03 2.07 +.01 0.08 5.79 -.28 3.13 -.12 0.83 20.89 -.28 79.90 -2.47 24.66 -1.40 1.80 52.59 -3.07 .55 -.03 0.15 23.02 -.51 0.80 44.59 -1.13 0.03 7.18 -.31 0.24 32.62 -1.38 3.35 -.07 28.31 -1.28 34.77 -.12 0.58 32.69 -.40 1.92 36.86 -1.08 15.30 -1.03 1.80 51.41 -.95 34.69 -.52 5.14 +.17 35.48 -.28 0.36 49.03 -1.12 6.31 -.43 0.96 31.82 -.49 29.27 -1.04 1.16 -.04 2.79 -.08 72.26 +.61 6.15 -.58 15.40 -1.08 0.50 35.98 -1.18 0.10 47.61 -.36 7.42 -.37 0.07 13.75 -.16 5.35 -.38 1.00 48.08 -1.36 0.82 32.46 -1.05 0.32 7.62 -.58 0.40 25.64 -1.01 11.50 -.79 1.20 45.36 -.38 4.20 28.98 -.23 1.24 24.37 -.46 5.40 -.14 3.42 -.24 2.86 52.14 -1.05 0.63 16.50 -.56 11.12 -.28 1.20 21.29 -.73 31.66 -.43 27.59 -.48 43.00 -.85 0.08 15.92 -.70 0.04 18.78 -.24 5.97 -.03 8.14 -.35 1.92 53.72 -1.20 16.39 -1.13 0.24 62.66 -.02 70.69 -1.13 0.50 54.56 -1.72 5.97 -.28 5.25 -.19 0.24 5.83 -.19 1.38 55.25 -.48 15.62 -.53 0.40 76.30 -2.73 0.48 36.63 -.75 19.79 -.88 14.90 -.57 28.74 +.68 39.98 -1.66 1.70 35.17 -.91 0.45 46.09 +.45 9.62 -.23 15.55 -.06 60.46 -2.96 0.60 60.79 -1.52 9.26 +.46 20.82 -.68 1.00 35.40 -.88 40.50 -.37 2.48 60.40 -1.50 37.89 -.11 1.33 57.53 -2.02 1.02 -.10 0.51 29.29 -.04 26.26 -.73 12.52 -.82 54.89 -.40 1.80 23.87 -.81 0.08 16.94 -.64 0.28 7.52 -.27 2.54 -.10 37.25 -.91 1.52 64.76 -1.40 0.32 8.71 -.42 59.95 -.05 26.75 -.62 1.00 79.91 -.62 0.52 44.14 -1.71 0.04 6.35 -.25 36.10 -.47 0.40 18.44 -.51 43.12 -1.46 10.22 -.47 4.44 -.31

I-J-K-L IAC Inter IAMGld g ICICI Bk ICO Glb A

36.91 +.13 0.08 20.51 -.54 0.63 46.44 -.62 2.73 -.19

Nm IdexxLabs iGateCorp ING GRE ING GlbDv ING INGPrRTr ION Geoph IPG Photon iRobot iShGold s iShGSCI iSAstla iShBelg iShBraz iSCan iShEMU iShGer iSh HK iShJapn iSh Kor iSMalas iShMex iShSing iSPacxJpn iShSoAfr iSSpain iSSwedn iSSwitz iSTaiwn iSh UK iShThai iShSilver iShS&P100 iShDJDv iShBTips iShAsiaexJ iShChina25 iShDJTr iSSP500 iShBAgB iShEMkts iShiBxB iSh ACWI iShEMBd iSSPGth iShNatRes iShSPLatA iSSPVal iShB20 T iShB7-10T iShIntSelDv iShB1-3T iS Eafe iSRusMCV iSRusMCG iSSPMid iShiBxHYB iShNsdqBio iShC&SRl iSR1KV iShPoland iSR1KG iSRus1K iSR2KV iShBarc1-3 iSR2KG iShR2K iShBar3-7 iShUSPfd iSRus3K iShDJTel iShREst iShDJHm iShFnSc iShSPSm iShDJHlt iShBasM iShPeru iShDJOE iShDJOG iShEur350 iStar ITT Corp ITT Ed IconixBr Idacorp Identive Ikanos ITW Illumina Imation Imax Corp Immersion Immucor ImunoGn Imunmd ImpaxLabs ImpOil gs Incyte IndoTel Inergy Infinera Informat InfosysT IngerRd IngrmM Inhibitex InlandRE InovioPhm Inphi n InsitTc Insulet IntgDv ISSI IntegrysE Intel IntParfum InteractBrk IntcntlEx IntCtlHtl InterDig Intrface InterMune InterNAP IntlBcsh IBM Intl Coal IntFlav IntlGame IntPap IntlRectif InterOil g Interpublic Intersil IntervalLs IntraLks n IntPotash Intuit Invesco InvMtgCap InVKSrInc InvTech InvRlEst IridiumCm IronMtn Isis iSoftStn n IstaPh ItauUnibH Itron IvanhoeEn IvanhM g j2Global JA Solar JDS Uniph JPMorgCh JPMAlerian JPMCh pfZ Jabil JackHenry JackInBox JacobsEng Jaguar g Jamba JamesRiv JanusCap Jarden JazzPhrm Jefferies JetBlue JinkoSolar JBeanTch JohnJn JohnsnCtl JonesGrp JonesLL JosABnk s JoyGlbl JnprNtwk K-Sea KB Home KBR Inc KKR n KKR Fn KLA Tnc KT Corp

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Nm KV PhmA KC Southn Kaydon Kellogg Kemet rs Kendle Kennamtl KeryxBio KeyEngy Keycorp KilroyR KimberR g KimbClk Kimco KindME KindMor n KindredHlt KineticC Kinross g KirbyCp KnghtCap KnightTr Knoll Inc KodiakO g Kohls KongZhg KopinCp Koppers KoreaElc KornFer KosmosE n Kraft KratonPP KrispKrm Kroger KronosW s Ku6Media Kulicke L&L Engy L-1 Ident L-3 Com LAN Air LDK Solar LG Display LKQ Corp LPL Inv n LSB Inds LSI Corp LTXCrd rs LaZBoy LabCp LaBrnch LadThalFn LamResrch LamarAdv LancastrC Landstar LVSands LaSalleH Lattice LawsnSft Lazard LeapWirlss LeapFrog LearCorp s LeeEnt LeggMason LeggPlat LenderPS LennarA Lennox LeucNatl Level3 LexiPhrm LexRltyTr Lexmark LbtyASE LibGlobA LibGlobC LibtyMIntA LibMCapA LibStarzA LibtProp LifeTech LifeTFit LifePtH LillyEli LimelghtN Limited Lincare s LincElec s LincNat LinearTch LinkedIn n LinnEngy LionsGt g LiveNatn LivePrsn LizClaib LloydBkg Local.com LockhdM Loews Logitech LonePne gn LoopNet Lorillard LaPac Lowes Lubrizol LucasEngy Lufkin s lululemn g LumberLiq Luminex LyonBas A

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M-N-O-P M&T Bk MBIA MCG Cap MDC MDU Res MEMC MF Global MFA Fncl MIN h MGIC MGM Rsts MIPS Tech MKS Inst MPG OffTr MSCI Inc Macerich MackCali Macquarie Macys MadCatz g MSG MagelPt Magma MagnaI gs MagHRes MaidenH Majesco MMTrip n MAKO Srg Manitowoc MannKd ManpwrGp Manulife g MarathonO MarinaB rs MktVGold MktVRus MktVJrGld MktV Agri MktVIndo s MktVCoal MarIntA MarshM MarshIls MStewrt MartMM MarvellT Masco Masimo MasseyEn Mastec MasterCrd Materion MatrixSv Mattel Mattson MaximIntg McClatchy McCorm McC&Sch McDrmInt s McDnlds McGrwH McKesson McMoRn MeadJohn MdbkIns MeadWvco

2.80 85.88 -2.42 8.29 -.51 0.68 6.48 -.40 1.00 25.92 -1.03 0.65 23.18 -.45 9.82 -.70 7.53 -.18 0.94 8.12 -.12 0.55 6.49 +.04 7.71 -.35 14.51 -.56 7.80 -.13 0.60 25.44 -.86 2.80 +.06 37.05 -.72 2.00 53.26 -1.11 1.80 34.48 -.88 0.80 25.16 -.27 0.40 28.28 -.60 1.79 -.03 26.62 -.89 1.45 -.15 6.84 -.14 1.00 46.65 -1.85 6.85 -.28 0.28 9.34 -.06 3.05 +.04 22.97 -.17 32.38 -.54 0.08 17.07 -.95 4.00 -.08 0.80 58.48 -2.65 0.52 16.92 -.93 1.00 52.65 -1.52 .26 -.01 0.40 57.07 -1.08 0.18 37.77 -.94 2.93 37.18 -.76 0.33 54.13 -1.35 0.27 31.15 -.38 0.19 48.35 -.74 0.40 36.85 -.96 0.88 30.27 -.40 0.04 7.78 -.22 5.09 -.14 1.60 84.23 -1.43 15.72 -.52 0.30 13.90 -.35 0.75 29.83 -.89 0.24 65.14 -.86 19.57 -1.48 0.60 280.66 -6.39 38.67 -1.00 13.54 +.17 0.92 26.14 -.26 1.63 -.07 0.84 26.43 -.82 2.86 -.16 1.12 49.68 -.51 8.76 -.39 20.46 -.76 2.44 80.98 -.56 1.00 41.17 -1.30 0.80 85.18 -.43 17.60 -.82 1.04 66.96 -.83 0.16 9.58 -.29 1.00 32.84 -1.18

Nm Mechel MedAssets MedcoHlth MedProp MediCo Medicis Medifast Medivation Mednax Medtrnic MelcoCrwn MensW MentorGr MercadoL MercerIntl Merck Meredith MergeHlth MeridBio MeritMed s Meritor Metalico MetalsUSA Methanx MetLife MetLf equn MetroPCS Micrel Microchp Micromet MicronT MicrosSys MicroSemi Microsoft Micrvisn MidAApt MillerHer MindrayM Mindspeed Minefnd g MitsuUFJ MizuhoFn MobileMini MobileTele Mohawk Molex MolinaH s MolsCoorB Molycorp n Momenta MoneyGrm MonPwSys Monotype Monsanto MonstrWw Montpelr Moodys Moog A MorgStan Mosaic MotrlaSol n MotrlaMo n Motricity n Move Inc MuellerWat MurphO Mylan MyriadG NCR Corp NETgear NFJDvInt NIC Inc NII Hldg NPS Phm NRG Egy NV Energy NXP Sem n NYSE Eur Nabors NalcoHld Nanomtr NaraBncp NasdOMX NashF NBkGreece NatCineM NatFuGas NatGrid NatInstr s NOilVarco NatPenn NatRetPrp NatSemi NatwHP Nautilus h Navios Navistar NektarTh Neoprobe NeptuneT g NetLogicM NetApp Netease Netflix NetQin n NtScout NetSolTch NetSuite NetwkEng NBRESec Neurcrine NeuStar NeutTand Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NY CmtyB NY Times Newcastle NewellRub NewfldExp NewmtM NewpkRes Newport NewsCpA NewsCpB Nexen g NextEraEn NiSource Nicor NielsenH n NikeB 99 Cents NipponTT NobelLrn NobleCorp NobleEn NokiaCp Nomura NordicAm Nordion g Nordson s Nordstrm NorflkSo NoAmEn g NA Pall g NoWestCp NoestUt NDynMn g NthnO&G NorTrst NthgtM g NorthropG NStarRlt NwstBcsh NovaGld g Novartis NovtlWrls Novavax Novlus NSTAR NuSkin NuVasive NuanceCm Nucor NuvMuVal NvMSI&G2 NuvQPf2 Nvidia NxStageMd OCZ Tech OGE Engy OM Group OReillyAu OasisPet n OcciPet Oceaneer Och-Ziff Oclaro OcwenFn OdysMar OfficeDpt OfficeMax OilSvHT OilStates Oilsands g

D 26.02 14.16 60.21 0.80 12.00 18.49 0.32 37.56 25.50 22.86 72.83 0.90 39.97 11.81 0.48 33.18 13.34 0.32 88.00 12.89 1.52 36.25 1.02 29.97 5.78 0.76 23.65 19.43 15.58 5.74 15.33 0.68 31.51 0.74 42.63 0.94 80.38 18.15 0.16 11.70 1.38 38.28 5.63 9.56 49.85 21.53 0.64 24.43 1.21 2.51 66.39 0.09 24.05 0.30 28.90 8.21 13.14 4.60 3.07 22.08 1.06 20.06 65.17 0.80 26.63 26.27 1.28 46.08 62.80 19.34 3.75 16.64 13.86 1.12 69.14 14.36 0.40 18.28 0.56 39.41 40.92 0.20 23.13 0.20 68.59 46.88 23.97 8.84 1.86 0.07 3.95 1.10 67.62 23.21 25.20 19.11 40.96 1.80 19.02 0.25 12.78 42.96 9.30 24.31 0.48 15.54 27.10 1.20 35.49 26.79 0.14 28.02 16.44 8.37 24.48 0.72 37.81 0.29 1.38 0.80 17.68 1.38 69.16 2.92 48.94 0.40 28.58 0.44 71.54 0.04 7.25 1.52 25.20 0.40 24.56 1.92 42.92 2.09 0.24 5.30 62.77 9.34 4.93 3.65 38.16 53.22 45.82 267.26 6.07 21.82 1.55 36.93 1.14 0.24 4.37 7.98 26.62 16.68 0.06 6.28 .05 10.00 1.00 15.84 7.71 5.12 0.32 17.35 71.84 0.80 55.67 9.23 17.93 0.15 17.65 0.15 18.22 0.20 22.38 2.20 56.76 0.92 19.96 1.86 54.40 30.83 1.24 82.15 20.60 23.50 11.50 1.06 40.53 0.72 90.49 0.55 6.69 4.95 1.40 23.00 11.21 0.42 50.66 0.92 45.07 1.60 70.79 8.82 3.85 1.44 32.48 1.10 34.90 11.76 18.84 1.12 47.52 2.89 2.00 63.75 0.40 4.18 0.44 12.07 11.23 2.53 63.48 5.18 2.33 36.03 1.70 45.46 0.54 38.33 33.22 21.17 1.45 40.94 0.47 9.34 0.76 9.41 0.66 8.48 19.14 17.96 8.17 1.50 50.11 36.04 59.50 28.48 1.84 103.68 1.20 78.39 1.05 14.33 8.90 11.63 4.09 4.05 7.85 2.36 149.74 77.40 .42

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D

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Q-R-S-T QEP Res n QIAGEN

0.08 42.10 -1.40 19.41 -.32

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Nm SkyPFrtJ SkywksSol SmartM SmartT gn SmartHeat SmithWes SmithAO s SmithMicro SmithfF Smucker SnydLance SocQ&M SodaStrm n Sohu.cm SolarWinds Solazyme n Solera Solutia SonicAut SonicCorp SonocoP Sonus SonyCp Sothebys Sourcefire SouthnCo SthnCopper SoUnCo SwstAirl SwtGas SwstnEngy Spansion SprtnStr SpectraEn SpectPh SpiritAero SpiritAir n Spreadtrm SprintNex SprottSilv SprottGold StageStrs SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SPDR Fncl SP Inds SP Tech SP Util StdPac StanBlkDk Staples StarScient Starbucks StarwdHtl StarwdPT StateStr Statoil ASA StlDynam Steelcse StemCells Stericycle Steris SterlBcsh Sterlite SMadden s StewEnt StifelFn s StillwtrM StoneEngy StratHotels Strayer StreamGSv Stryker SuccessF SulphCo SumitMitsu SunLfFn g Suncor gs SunesisP rs Sunoco SunPowerA SunPwr B SunriseSen SunstnHtl Suntech SunTrst SuperGen SupEnrgy Supvalu SusqBnc SwRCmETR SwRCmATR SwERCmTR SwftEng SwiftTrns n SwisherH n SycamrN s SykesEnt Symantec Synaptics Synchron Syngenta Synopsys Synovus Sysco TAL Intl TAM SA TCF Fncl TD Ameritr TE Connect TECO TFS Fncl THQ TICC Cap TIM Partic TJX TRWAuto TTM Tch tw telecom TaiwSemi TakeTwo Talbots TalismE g Tanger s TanzRy g TargaRsLP Targacept Target Taseko TASER TataMotors Taubmn TeamHlth TechData TeckRes g Teekay TeekayTnk Tekelec TlCmSys TelNorL TelcmNZ Teledyne TelefEsp s TelMexL TeleNav TelData Telestone TeleTech Tellabs Telvent TempleInld TempurP Tenaris TenetHlth Tengsco Tenneco Teradata Teradyn Terex Ternium TescoCp TeslaMot n Tesoro TesoroLg n TesseraT TetraTc TetraTech TevaPhrm TxCapBsh Texas Inds TexInst TexRdhse Textron Theravnce ThermoFis ThmBet ThomCrk g ThomsonR Thor Inds Thoratec 3D Sys s 3M Co TibcoSft Tidwtr Tiffany Timberlnd TW Cable TimeWarn Timken Titan Intl TitanMet TiVo Inc TollBros TomoThera TopImage Trchmrk Toreador TorDBk g Total SA TotalSys TowerGrp TowerSemi Towerstm Toyota TractSup s TradeStatn TrCda g TransAtlH TrnsatlPet TransDigm Transocn TravelCtrs Travelers Travelzoo Trex TriValley TriangPet TridentM h TriMas h TrimbleN TrinaSolar Trinity TriQuint Triumph TrueBlue TrueRelig Trustmk Tuppwre

D 2.08 -.47 24.56 -.91 9.19 -.03 7.14 +.08 1.59 -.23 3.37 -.11 0.56 40.02 -1.45 5.00 -.31 20.65 -.30 1.76 79.34 +.06 0.64 21.13 -.13 0.73 61.08 -1.49 56.36 -1.75 79.78 -.85 23.88 -.77 21.65 -.88 0.30 58.13 -.96 24.13 -.84 0.10 13.19 +.12 10.85 -.64 1.16 34.27 -1.15 3.10 -.14 0.28 26.50 -.24 0.20 40.00 -2.56 26.02 -.69 1.89 39.68 -.40 1.83 33.18 -1.38 0.60 29.55 -.78 0.02 11.59 -.24 1.06 38.32 -.74 41.93 -1.84 19.59 -.44 0.26 18.98 +.33 1.04 27.19 -.40 9.48 -.04 21.47 -.43 11.59 -.21 18.53 -.76 5.83 -.02 16.87 -.80 13.34 -.03 0.30 17.75 -.29 1.23 38.51 -1.24 0.61 35.61 -.50 0.81 31.98 -.33 0.56 39.52 -.92 1.05 75.27 -1.84 0.16 15.31 -.54 0.64 36.40 -1.23 0.33 25.91 -.55 1.31 33.52 -.35 3.80 -.17 1.64 70.45 -3.43 0.40 16.53 -.29 4.22 -.99 0.52 35.98 -.81 0.30 58.68 -2.30 1.76 21.38 -.36 0.72 43.55 -2.22 1.10 25.27 -1.07 0.40 16.52 -.58 0.24 10.54 -.33 .66 -.00 87.32 -1.77 0.60 35.39 -.70 0.06 8.11 -.38 15.18 -.37 35.62 -1.54 0.12 7.27 -.18 38.20 -2.07 19.21 -1.04 31.39 -.87 6.38 -.31 4.00 121.87 +1.69 3.72 +.68 0.72 61.30 -1.10 33.57 -1.50 .05 -.01 5.72 -.03 1.44 30.11 -1.32 0.44 40.22 -1.58 3.00 +.14 0.60 39.58 -.91 21.02 -.04 20.74 -.05 9.34 -.60 9.81 -.36 7.78 -.34 0.04 26.32 -1.81 3.09 -.19 36.83 -.64 0.35 9.60 -.66 0.08 8.25 -.47 7.16 -.16 10.75 -.09 9.72 -.13 38.77 -.46 13.01 -.54 6.42 -.18 6.50 23.96 -.28 20.58 -1.05 19.02 -.53 27.36 -.69 30.55 -1.55 1.57 68.47 -.57 27.08 -.26 0.04 2.30 -.08 1.04 31.75 -.46 2.00 32.42 -1.31 0.72 21.23 -.83 0.20 14.63 -.42 0.20 20.28 -1.27 0.72 36.59 -.24 0.85 18.87 -.33 9.97 -.28 4.03 -.10 1.00 10.00 -.25 1.26 48.35 -.58 0.76 52.00 -1.02 55.11 -1.76 15.50 -1.06 21.15 -.55 0.47 13.68 +.02 16.32 -.07 4.42 -.35 0.27 20.11 -.92 0.80 26.82 -.64 7.46 2.23 34.10 -.46 22.13 -.37 1.00 48.56 -.97 5.05 -.15 4.46 -.07 0.32 23.50 -.73 1.75 58.74 -1.83 22.28 -.12 46.37 -1.00 0.60 50.35 -2.22 1.27 33.15 -.40 1.12 9.26 +.03 8.73 -.37 4.75 -.24 0.52 17.54 -.33 0.67 9.75 -.09 47.62 -1.48 1.98 23.82 -.51 0.83 17.31 -.55 16.29 -.05 0.47 32.56 -.14 7.25 -.35 17.87 -.23 0.08 4.52 -.05 39.73 +5.28 0.52 22.75 -.99 63.05 -1.99 0.68 48.07 -.62 6.30 -.08 .78 -.02 40.01 -1.74 54.68 -1.11 15.52 -.49 27.90 -1.75 0.50 30.55 -.55 20.37 28.52 -1.62 23.64 -.76 25.19 +.35 16.43 -.87 23.76 -.57 13.17 -.47 0.83 50.00 -.90 24.46 -.57 0.30 41.01 -.88 0.52 33.95 -1.35 0.32 16.65 -.58 0.08 22.32 -.56 24.38 -1.75 63.86 -1.59 52.66 -2.09 10.61 -.25 1.24 38.04 -.93 0.40 30.37 -1.93 33.76 -1.01 19.01 -.98 2.20 91.44 -2.94 27.30 -.79 1.00 52.69 -1.71 1.16 73.38 -2.28 31.23 -1.44 1.92 76.43 -.79 0.94 35.35 -1.08 0.20 50.17 -1.45 0.02 25.38 -2.11 0.30 17.99 -.74 10.15 -.19 21.26 -.49 4.32 -.06 2.11 -.22 0.66 64.75 -1.55 5.69 -.57 2.64 82.92 -3.22 3.16 56.29 -1.30 0.28 18.24 -.36 0.75 23.64 -.66 1.15 -.04 5.18 -.12 0.58 81.50 -1.79 0.48 61.53 -1.63 9.72 -.02 1.68 44.03 -.80 0.88 45.37 -.96 2.14 -.09 81.33 -.67 0.79 67.50 -1.81 5.25 -.10 1.64 61.20 -.88 70.16 -4.98 29.74 -.82 .72 +.05 6.61 -.31 1.04 +.06 19.94 -.46 42.23 -1.46 21.68 -1.27 0.36 32.58 -1.81 12.24 -.71 0.16 91.11 -2.41 14.07 -.57 27.62 -1.77 0.92 23.38 -.46 1.20 64.33 -1.13

Nm

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0.28 10.81 -.46 19.21 -.11 0.74 25.04 -1.02 1.04 32.71 -.07 1.73 32.60 -.53 43.00 -1.06 9.04 -.06 7.00 -.07 2.21 -.09 3.98 -.20 13.66 -.59 0.06 21.68 -.55 1.90 -.07 54.12 -1.86 47.40 -1.22 0.47 17.31 -.62 30.61 -1.16 .05 0.20 11.55 -.43 66.63 +1.45 1.17 32.32 -.34 1.17 32.20 -.39 1.90 100.86 -4.11


C OV ER S T OR I ES

THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 B5

Congress urged to toughen penalties for illegal streaming By Eric Engleman Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — Congress should change copyright laws to make illegal streaming of video over the Internet a felony offense, the head of the U.S. Copyright Office told a House panel Wednesday. Federal law treats illegal video streaming as a misdemeanor, and prosecutors have little incentive to file charges in such cases, Maria Pallante, the Register of Copyrights, said today in testimony to a House Judiciary subcommittee.

Course Continued from B1 “Some businesses fail because the owner lacks business skills or people skills,” Quinn said, adding that people who are very good inventors, artists, craftsmen, bakers, cooks or seamstresses often start businesses because they believe they can do it better than the people they work for. But their businesses often fail because they aren’t good at sales, marketing, managing employees, bookkeeping or other duties new business owners often attempt to take on. Quinn, whose background includes banking, financing and real estate, as well as owning a wholesale and retail bakery, recommends would-be entrepreneurs make an honest evaluation of their skills in all of the areas of running a business before launching a business of their own. “A big reason businesses fail is the failure to seek professional services or professional advice from other successful owners,” Quinn said. “It’s important to know what your strengths and weaknesses are, and to get help in those areas where you’re weak,” she said. That may include hiring an attorney to help determine what form of business is best — incorporation or sole proprietorship; an accountant to help set up the business bookkeeping system; a web designer to build a website; or a marketing director, sales representative or customer service help.

Avoiding pitfalls In warning students of some of the most common pitfalls encountered by new businesses, Quinn said her goal is to help improve her students’ chances

Illegal video streaming, which is estimated to draw more than 1 million viewers during major events such as the Super Bowl, reduces the number of viewers from broadcast and cable television programs and movies, and may decrease their advertising revenue. The estimated worldwide value of pirated digital movies, music and software in 2008 totaled between $30 billion and $75 billion, according to a February report from Frontier Economics, a London-based consulting firm. “The issue of unauthorized

streaming is a growing threat to the livelihood of authors and copyright owners” and “requires the attention of Congress,” Pallante said. Pallante was appointed Wednesday to the Register of Copyrights post after serving in an acting capacity following the Dec. 31 retirement of Marybeth Peters. Previous updates to copyright law took place before the technology for large-scale illicit streaming existed, and Congress should amend the law to allow prosecu-

tors to “meaningfully pursue and deter today’s copyright criminals,” said Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., who is chairman of the subcommittee on intellectual property, competition and the Internet. Illegal video streaming threatens the business of Netflix Inc., which rents licensed movies and TV programs to Internet subscribers, David Hyman, the company’s general counsel, said in a May 30 letter released today by the subcommittee. “It’s hard to compete against free,” Hyman wrote.

for beating the odds. More than 80 percent of new businesses fail within the first two years. Another pitfall is a poor choice of business opportunity, such as starting a business in an area already saturated with the same type of business. It’s a common cause for business failures, but Quinn said that mistake can be avoided by doing a thorough market study in the business planning stage. In planning a location, Quinn said it’s also important to consider whether the initial success of the business will require locating in an area with heavy walkby traffic such as downtown business core; or drive-by traffic, like on a well-traveled arterial; piggybacking on a captive audience, such as locating in a shopping mall or near a park, river or ski resort; or adjacent to an area where existing businesses manufacture, distribute or sell similar or complimentary products or services, which could include anything from an industrial park to a shopping mall. Lack of promotion is another factor contributing the failure of new businesses, Quinn said, and that doesn’t necessarily mean failure to advertise effectively. “Remember, every time you go out into the community you are selling yourself,” and how well you represent yourself influences how people feel about doing business with your company, Quinn said. “A lot of people start out wanting to start a business so they can work from home because they think it will be so nice to get out of bed when they want and work in their pajamas, but it’s not that easy,” Quinn said. For home-based businesses, Quinn said owner isolation is one of the big reasons for failure. Oftentimes people give up on home-based businesses because they simply miss the interaction

with co-workers, Quinn said. However, she noted the isolation factor can be mitigated if the owner recognizes that potential and joins business organizations, takes classes, attends seminars or conducts business in person when possible, rather than just by phone or over the Internet.

profit, and to assess when changes in their pricing, marketing activities, work hours, expenses or other elements of their business plan may be needed to reach their weekly goals, Quinn said. “Starting a business is hard. Only one out of three business startups actually open,” she said.

Managing the money

Expert advice

Over the six-week course of workshop presentations and one-on-one meetings, the 11 entrepreneurial hopefuls in Quinn’s spring class were taught formulas for setting prices for their products or services; the consequences of underpricing or overpricing; and how to determine what they can afford to pay for overhead expenses such as rent, phone, insurance, utilities, advertising and wages, as well as other expenses such as professional services. “When starting out you may have to pay cash for everything,” Quinn said. It takes awhile for a business to establish credit, but she said a good idea for business owners is to “hang onto your money as long as you can.” Carefully managing cash flow can make the difference between turning a profit or running in the red from one week to the next. Quinn said simple steps such as paying employees twice a month instead of weekly can help employers hang onto their money longer and improve cash flow. “Cash flow must be managed daily,” Quinn said. She also taught students how to prepare what she called a break-even analysis to identify how many products or how many hours of services they need to bill out to cover all of their costs each week. Knowing the weekly breakeven point helps business owners set weekly sales goals required to meet costs and generate a

In a national business survey conducted by CNNMoney. com, 49 percent of small-business owners confided that they wished they had asked successful business owners advice. Quinn said the Launch Your Business class provides that opportunity through four one-on-one sessions of business coaching, which is in addition to a series of three-hour weekly workshop presentations where the entrepreneurial hopefuls learn to put together solid business plans. Two key components of a business plan include the “elevator pitch,” which is a memorable, concise statement about a business that can be relayed in the length of an elevator ride, and a “value proposition,” which tells potential customers what most important attribute of the business is, or how it is more socially responsible, empowering to customers, and more worthy of their business than the competition. “What is your most important attribute?” Quinn asked. For example, she cites, what is the first thing that comes to mind when you think of Volvo? Safety. Quinn says her value proposition for the class reflects her hope that her students “will feel empowered, confident, understood and ultimately be inspired to build a better business and a better life.” Ed Merriman can be reached at 541-617-7820 or emerriman@ bendbulletin.com.

Market Continued from B1 And the Merchants’ Market in northeast Bend closed May 22 amid an exodus of vendors, after just over two months of business, said owner Martin Morris. Meanwhile, the Central Oregon Saturday Market got back into full swing across from the Bend Public Library this past Saturday. Morris estimated about 25 percent of the vendors at the Merchants’ Market have migrated to Redmond’s Bazaar and another 25 percent have decided to set up shop at the Central Oregon Saturday Market. Parks said Redmond’s Bazaar will come in handy as a market for vendors who live in northern parts of Central Oregon and don’t want to worry about rising

Markets Continued from B1 On Wall Street, financials, materials and industrials all fell more than 3 percent, with financial shares declining by 3.48 percent. Bank of America was down 4.26 percent at $11.24, while Wells Fargo tumbled 5 percent to $26.94. ADP Employer Services, the payroll processing firm, said Wednesday that private employers added 38,000 jobs in May, the smallest increase since September and well below market expectations. The report came in advance of Friday’s monthly employment report for May by the Labor Department. The nonfarm payroll employment numbers are anticipated every month by investors to assess the state of wages, salaries and, ultimately, consumer spending. “We had this accumulation of data pointing to slower economic growth,” said Kathy Jones, a strategist at the Schwab Center for Financial Research. “I think today’s ADP number probably just tipped everybody over the edge who was hoping we might see a strong employment report on Friday.” Economists said that the ADP survey could have been affected by severe storms in many parts of the country last month, while automobile manufacturers have temporarily laid off workers in response to a disruption in supply chains. Analysts at Capital Economics said in a research note that the dip also reflected a slowdown in the growth in the service sector.

gas prices, because they won’t have to drive to Bend to sell their goods. He hopes the business will be able to run year-round. “There’s only way to find out, is to try it,” he said. Morris wished the Parkses the best of luck. “I hope it works out for ’em, but I don’t see how, from what I learned through my process,” Morris said. From his perspective, vendors do want a place to sell that’s protected from the elements — they just don’t want it from June to September. But Jerry Parks said he and his wife feel a sufficient market to successfully run Redmond’s Bazaar exists now. Jordan Novet can be reached at 541-633-2117 or at jnovet@ bendbulletin.com.

Economists at Goldman Sachs revised their estimate of May nonfarm payrolls to 100,000 from 150,000 after the ADP report. “While the ADP report has a mixed track record in forecasting payroll growth, our research indicates it should receive some weight,” they said in a research note. “Moreover, the weakness in the ADP report follows a streak of weaker-than-expected news on both the labor market and activity as whole.” The slower growth in employment and fewer new orders were factors in the lower measure of manufacturing last month. In its survey of 18 manufacturing industries, the Institute for Supply Management said its index fell to a 19-month low of 53.5 last month from 60.4 the previous month. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated that the index would decline to 57.1 points. “Pressures from rising commodity costs, plus supply-chain disruptions from Japan’s natural disaster, and extreme weather domestically, have combined to slow manufacturing’s momentum,” said Nigel Gault, IHS Global Insight’s chief U.S. economist. “This is particularly worrying since manufacturing has been the economy’s shining star,” he added in a research note. Also weighing on investor sentiment was a report that the steady recovery in auto sales stalled in May, as consumers stayed away from new-car showrooms because of higher prices, shortages of some Japanese models, and concerns over the economy.

Market update Northwest stocks Name

Div

PE

AlskAir Avista BkofAm BarrettB Boeing CascdeB rs CascdeCp ColSprtw Costco CraftBrew FLIR Sys HewlettP HmFedDE Intel Keycorp Kroger Lattice LaPac MDU Res MentorGr Microsoft

... 1.10 .04 .36 1.68 ... .80f .88f .96f ... .24 .48f .22 .84f .12f .42 ... ... .65 ... .64

9 13 20 10 17 14 20 27 25 ... 23 9 ... 10 11 14 13 ... 17 32 6

YTD Last Chg %Chg 65.52 24.61 11.24 14.71 75.35 8.07 38.78 63.62 80.21 9.35 35.10 36.63 10.75 22.00 8.18 23.90 6.32 8.01 23.18 13.34 24.43

-2.02 -.32 -.50 -.57 -2.68 -.04 -1.85 -1.98 -2.27 +.25 -1.05 -.75 -.38 -.51 -.29 -.92 -.27 -.37 -.45 -.07 -.58

+15.6 +9.3 -15.7 -5.4 +15.5 -4.5 -18.0 +5.5 +11.1 +26.5 +18.0 -13.0 -12.4 +4.6 -7.6 +6.9 +4.3 -15.3 +14.4 +11.2 -12.5

Name

Div

PE

NikeB Nordstrm NwstNG OfficeMax Paccar PlanarSy PlumCrk PrecCastpt Safeway Schnitzer Sherwin StancrpFn Starbucks TriQuint Umpqua US Bancrp WashFed WellsFargo WstCstB rs Weyerh

1.24 .92 1.74 ... .48a ... 1.68 .12 .58f .07 1.46 .86f .52 ... .20 .50f .24 .48f ... .60

20 16 17 12 30 ... 39 22 14 15 19 10 25 11 40 13 13 11 34 ...

Precious metals Metal NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver

Price (troy oz.) $1546.00 $1542.40 $37.689

Pvs Day $1535.00 $1535.90 $38.303

Market recap 82.15 45.07 44.46 7.85 47.63 3.01 39.79 153.30 23.16 57.57 86.06 41.90 35.98 12.24 11.55 24.70 15.39 26.94 17.14 20.72

-2.30 -1.76 -.71 -.51 -2.37 -.05 -.73 -3.80 -1.54 -1.53 -1.78 -1.28 -.81 -.71 -.43 -.90 -.50 -1.43 -.32 -.82

-3.8 +6.3 -4.3 -55.6 -16.9 +45.4 +6.2 +10.1 +3.0 -13.3 +2.8 -7.2 +12.0 +4.7 -5.2 -8.4 -9.0 -13.1 +21.6 +9.5

Prime rate Time period

NYSE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

Vol (00)

NokiaCp S&P500ETF BkofAm SPDR Fncl FordM

2111616 1964184 1708689 1189825 903530

Last Chg 6.69 131.87 11.24 15.31 14.23

-.33 -3.03 -.50 -.54 -.69

Gainers ($2 or more) Name iP SER2K C-TrCVOL CSVS2xVxS iP SESPX KV PhmB

Last 29.13 30.10 20.97 31.91 3.47

Chg %Chg +5.40 +3.46 +2.33 +3.41 +.35

+22.8 +13.0 +12.5 +12.0 +11.2

Losers ($2 or more) Name Nautilus h Sequans n Solutia wt JnprNtwk ProSUltSilv

Last

Chg %Chg

2.09 -.41 -16.4 16.95 -2.22 -11.6 2.59 -.29 -10.1 32.97 -3.64 -9.9 187.12 -20.08 -9.7

3.25 3.25 3.25

Nasdaq

Most Active ($1 or more) Name CheniereEn Neoprobe NA Pall g VirnetX KodiakO g

Vol (00)

Last Chg

151633 10.79 -.92 44045 4.93 -.55 37334 3.85 -.27 34898 29.25 +2.99 34580 6.45 -.40

Gainers ($2 or more) Name StreamG un StreamGSv LucasEngy VirnetX HeraldNB

Last

4.12 +.90 3.72 +.68 3.20 +.36 29.25 +2.99 4.13 +.34

Name T3 Motn un Neoprobe Accelr8 GormanR AvalRare n

Last

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

SiriusXM Microsoft Cisco Intel MicronT

552 2,530 87 3,169 100 37

+28.0 +22.4 +12.7 +11.4 +9.0

Name

Last

Mattersight Orexigen Telvent LizhanEn n Selectica

Chg %Chg

7.80 +1.32 +20.4 3.34 +.51 +18.1 39.73 +5.28 +15.3 2.00 +.26 +15.0 5.84 +.75 +14.7

Losers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg

3.09 -.40 -11.5 4.93 -.55 -10.0 4.77 -.52 -9.8 39.99 -3.91 -8.9 7.18 -.64 -8.2

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last Chg

894028 2.27 -.08 690009 24.43 -.58 607519 16.38 -.42 548838 22.00 -.51 530332 9.56 -.65

Name

Last

AmSupr StarScient NaturlAlt SkyPFrtJ ChinaBio

Diary

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

52-Week High Low Name

Gainers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Diary

Percent

Last Previous day A week ago

Amex

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Indexes

Chg %Chg

8.11 -2.58 -24.1 4.22 -.99 -19.0 3.54 -.81 -18.6 2.08 -.47 -18.4 11.38 -2.40 -17.4

Diary 155 317 36 508 10 12

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

426 2,198 84 2,708 74 73

12,876.00 5,565.78 441.86 8,718.25 2,490.51 2,887.75 1,370.58 14,562.01 868.57

9,614.32 3,872.64 352.69 6,355.83 1,770.05 2,061.14 1,010.91 15.80 587.66

Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

World markets

Last

Net Chg

12,290.14 5,283.57 431.52 8,281.59 2,393.55 2,769.19 1,314.55 13,952.36 821.40

-279.65 -185.98 -4.85 -195.69 -43.61 -66.11 -30.65 -335.13 -26.90

YTD %Chg %Chg -2.22 -3.40 -1.11 -2.31 -1.79 -2.33 -2.28 -2.35 -3.17

52-wk %Chg

+6.16 +3.46 +6.55 +3.99 +8.39 +4.38 +4.53 +4.43 +4.82

+19.91 +21.05 +19.70 +21.08 +30.69 +21.40 +19.68 +20.90 +24.36

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed Wednesday.

Key currency exchange rates Wednesday compared with late Tuesday in New York.

Market

Dollar vs:

Amsterdam Brussels Paris London Frankfurt Hong Kong Mexico Milan New Zealand Tokyo Seoul Singapore Sydney Zurich

Close

% Change

345.95 2,662.96 3,964.81 5,928.61 7,217.43 23,626.43 35,410.51 20,866.29 3,551.54 9,719.61 2,141.34 3,172.87 4,788.60 5,977.84

-1.00 t -.92 t -1.05 t -1.02 t -1.05 t -.24 t -1.18 t -1.15 t +.10 s +.27 s -.05 t +.41 s -.01 t -.74 t

Exchange Rate

Australia Dollar Britain Pound Canada Dollar Chile Peso China Yuan Euro Euro Hong Kong Dollar Japan Yen Mexico Peso Russia Ruble So. Korea Won Sweden Krona Switzerlnd Franc Taiwan Dollar

Pvs Day

1.0654 1.6360 1.0259 .002143 .1542 1.4374 .1286 .012350 .085704 .0358 .000925 .1606 1.1871 .0349

1.0662 1.6448 1.0322 .002151 .1539 1.4378 .1286 .012270 .086439 .0357 .000928 .1618 1.1721 .0349

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BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 18.46 -0.43 GlAlA r 20.17 -0.22 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.78 -0.20 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.50 -0.43 GlbAlloc r 20.28 -0.21 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 56.23 -1.35 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 30.89 -0.77 DivEqInc 10.49 -0.26 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 31.93 -0.80 AcornIntZ 42.56 -0.38 ValRestr 51.70 -1.42 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.60 -0.09 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 11.74 -0.21 USCorEq2 11.57 -0.31 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 35.62 -0.82 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 36.02 -0.83 NYVen C 34.34 -0.79 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.41 +0.02 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 22.26 -0.27 EmMktV 35.82 -0.46 IntSmVa 18.06 -0.23 LargeCo 10.40 -0.24 USLgVa 21.60 -0.56 US Small 22.57 -0.71 US SmVa 26.43 -0.86 IntlSmCo 18.02 -0.19 Fixd 10.36 IntVa 19.05 -0.43 Glb5FxInc 11.21 +0.03 2YGlFxd 10.21 Dodge&Cox: Balanced 73.93 -1.35 Income 13.60 +0.04

+5.8 +3.9 +3.5 +5.9 +4.0 +5.3 +5.6 +4.2 +5.8 +4.0 +2.5 +2.8 +4.5 +5.7 +3.7 +3.8 +3.4 +4.1 +0.5 -0.9 +5.0 +5.4 +7.6 +5.7 +3.4 +5.0 +0.6 +3.9 +3.0 +0.6 +5.8 +3.9

IntlStk 36.88 -0.70 Stock 114.07 -2.85 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.12 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.52 -0.46 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.08 GblMacAbR 10.20 -0.02 LgCapVal 18.57 -0.47 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.61 -0.33 FPA Funds: FPACres 28.20 -0.24 Fairholme 31.93 -0.89 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 20.63 -0.42 StrInA 12.72 +0.01 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 20.84 -0.43 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 14.11 -0.12 FF2015 11.79 -0.10 FF2020 14.36 -0.16 FF2020K 13.57 -0.16 FF2025 12.01 -0.16 FF2030 14.36 -0.21 FF2030K 13.99 -0.20 FF2035 11.97 -0.20 FF2040 8.36 -0.14 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.96 -0.29 AMgr50 16.00 -0.14 Balanc 19.03 -0.22 BalancedK 19.03 -0.22 BlueChGr 48.11 -1.03 Canada 59.62 -1.55 CapAp 26.45 -0.50 CpInc r 9.78 -0.07 Contra 70.27 -1.47 ContraK 70.27 -1.47 DisEq 23.90 -0.55 DivIntl 31.18 -0.52 DivrsIntK r 31.17 -0.52 DivGth 29.65 -0.74

+3.3 +6.2 NA +1.9 +3.0 +1.1 +1.9 +6.4 +5.3 -10.3 +3.5 +4.9 +3.6 +4.2 +4.4 +4.5 +4.5 +4.7 +4.7 +4.7 +4.8 +4.8 +4.8 +4.1 +4.7 +4.8 +6.1 +2.5 +4.4 +5.8 +3.9 +3.9 +6.1 +3.4 +3.5 +4.3

EmrMk 26.50 Eq Inc 46.19 EQII 19.07 Fidel 34.09 FltRateHi r 9.86 GNMA 11.75 GovtInc 10.64 GroCo 90.53 GroInc 19.12 GrowthCoK 90.53 HighInc r 9.17 Indepn 25.58 IntBd 10.79 IntlDisc 33.85 InvGrBd 11.68 InvGB 7.60 LgCapVal 12.09 LatAm 57.81 LevCoStk 30.41 LowP r 41.36 LowPriK r 41.36 Magelln 73.92 MidCap 30.73 MuniInc 12.55 NwMkt r 15.89 OTC 59.89 100Index 9.10 Ovrsea 33.69 Puritn 18.73 SCmdtyStrt 12.79 SrsIntGrw 11.75 SrsIntVal 10.39 SrInvGrdF 11.68 STBF 8.54 SmllCpS r 20.75 StratInc 11.38 StrReRt r 9.96 TotalBd 10.99 USBI 11.58 Value 72.68 Fidelity Selects: Gold r 48.53 Fidelity Spartan: ExtMkIn 40.24

-0.39 -1.16 -0.48 -0.84 -0.01 +0.05 +0.04 -2.23 -0.42 -2.22 -0.01 -0.65 +0.03 -0.60 +0.05 +0.04 -0.28 -1.30 -0.83 -0.72 -0.72 -1.71 -0.76 +0.03 +0.03 -1.38 -0.20 -0.59 -0.25 -0.14 -0.21 -0.20 +0.05 +0.01 -0.68 +0.01 -0.05 +0.04 +0.06 -1.95

+0.6 +4.6 +4.8 +6.1 +1.8 +3.9 +3.0 +8.9 +4.7 +8.9 +5.1 +5.1 +3.6 +2.5 +3.7 +4.2 +5.5 -2.1 +7.0 +7.8 +7.8 +3.3 +6.5 +4.1 +3.9 +9.0 +4.1 +3.7 +4.9 +1.2 +4.1 +4.5 +3.7 +1.6 +5.9 +5.0 +4.4 +4.0 +3.5 +5.8

-0.83 -5.0 -1.09 +6.8

500IdxInv 46.67 -1.09 IntlInxInv 36.75 -0.64 TotMktInv 38.39 -0.92 Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv 46.68 -1.08 TotMktAd r 38.40 -0.91 First Eagle: GlblA 48.32 -0.55 OverseasA 23.42 -0.10 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FedTFA px 11.66 -0.02 FoundAl p 11.21 -0.15 HYTFA p 9.88 +0.02 IncomA px 2.26 -0.02 USGovA px 6.84 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv 13.90 -0.07 IncmeAd x 2.24 -0.03 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC tx 2.28 -0.02 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 21.92 -0.35 Frank/Temp Temp A: ForgnA p 7.62 -0.10 GlBd A p 13.94 -0.06 GrwthA p 19.36 -0.35 WorldA p 15.87 -0.28 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.96 -0.07 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 41.91 -0.97 GMO Trust III: Quality 21.51 -0.32 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 15.09 -0.19 Quality 21.52 -0.32 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 37.89 -0.98 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.45 MidCapV 38.22 -0.98 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.41 CapApInst 38.95 -0.97 IntlInv t 63.77 -1.09

+5.3 +4.8 +5.7 +5.4 +5.7 +4.2 +3.4 +4.9 +7.2 +4.8 +6.9 +3.2 +4.5 +6.6 +6.6 +6.2 +9.2 +4.5 +8.8 +6.9 +4.2 +4.2 +7.5 +3.4 +7.6 +5.5 +5.4 +5.7 +3.3 +6.1 +6.3

Intl r 64.45 -1.10 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 34.68 -0.85 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI 34.73 -0.84 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 43.63 -1.04 Div&Gr 20.56 -0.46 TotRetBd 11.30 +0.03 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.39 +0.13 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r 17.40 -0.19 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 17.22 -0.33 CmstkA 16.47 -0.39 EqIncA 8.90 -0.15 GrIncA p 19.95 -0.46 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 25.04 -0.45 AssetStA p 25.85 -0.46 AssetStrI r 26.08 -0.47 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.65 +0.04 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 11.64 +0.03 HighYld 8.34 ShtDurBd 11.02 +0.01 USLCCrPls 21.15 -0.53 Janus T Shrs: OvrseasT r 48.24 -0.91 PrkMCVal T 23.73 -0.51 Twenty T 66.14 -1.33 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 13.45 -0.17 LSGrwth 13.43 -0.24 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.66 -0.24 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p 22.03 -0.25 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.85 -0.64 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.95 -0.05 StrInc C 15.61 -0.07

+6.4 +0.1 +0.3 +3.0 +5.4 +3.7 +0.8 +4.1 +6.5 +5.1 +4.1 +4.1 +5.5 +5.9 +6.0 +3.1 +3.2 +5.5 +1.1 +2.3 -4.7 +5.1 +0.6 +4.7 +4.6 -0.6 -0.7 +9.2 +7.1 +7.0

LSBondR 14.90 -0.05 +7.0 StrIncA 15.53 -0.06 +7.4 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY x 12.55 -0.05 +5.7 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.85 -0.34 +2.6 BdDebA p 8.09 -0.01 +6.1 ShDurIncA p 4.63 +2.5 Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t 4.66 +2.1 MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.59 -0.19 +4.4 ValueA 23.97 -0.54 +5.4 MFS Funds I: ValueI 24.09 -0.54 +5.5 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 9.30 -0.15 +8.0 MergerFd 16.26 -0.02 +3.0 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.58 +0.02 +3.8 TotRtBdI 10.58 +0.02 +4.0 MorganStanley Inst: MCapGrI 41.26 -0.90 +10.5 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 30.75 -0.42 +5.3 GlbDiscZ 31.15 -0.42 +5.5 QuestZ 18.67 -0.21 +5.5 SharesZ 22.11 -0.35 +6.3 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 49.59 -1.35 +7.9 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 51.34 -1.40 +7.8 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.51 +6.0 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 29.08 -0.43 +4.8 Intl I r 20.23 -0.30 +4.2 Oakmark r 43.74 -0.95 +5.9 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.19 -0.07 +6.2 GlbSMdCap 16.46 -0.26 +6.4 Oppenheimer A: DvMktA p 36.04 -0.39 -1.2 GlobA p 64.83 -1.14 +7.4 GblStrIncA 4.41 +5.4

IntBdA p 6.71 -0.01 MnStFdA 33.10 -0.73 RisingDivA 16.39 -0.37 S&MdCpVl 34.28 -0.84 Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 14.84 -0.34 S&MdCpVl 29.31 -0.72 Oppenheimer C&M: RisingDvC p 14.79 -0.34 Oppenheimer Roch: RcNtMuA 6.74 +0.02 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 35.69 -0.38 IntlBdY 6.71 -0.01 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.06 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r 11.05 +0.01 AllAsset 12.64 -0.03 ComodRR 9.63 -0.07 DevLcMk r 11.03 -0.04 DivInc 11.67 HiYld 9.51 InvGrCp 10.84 +0.03 LowDu 10.52 -0.01 RealRtnI 11.73 +0.05 ShortT 9.91 TotRt 11.06 PIMCO Funds A: RealRtA p 11.73 +0.05 TotRtA 11.06 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 11.06 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.06 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.06 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 48.61 -0.29 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 42.28 -1.06 Price Funds: BlChip 39.92 -1.02 CapApp 21.43 -0.34 EmMktS 35.34 -0.51

+3.9 +2.2 +6.0 +7.0 +5.5 +6.6 +5.6 +4.8 -1.1 +4.0 +3.3 +5.2 +5.4 +6.5 +4.8 +4.5 +5.4 +5.7 +2.2 +5.2 +1.0 +3.4 +5.0 +3.2 +2.9 +3.3 +3.3 +6.1 +3.4 +4.7 +5.5 +0.2

EqInc 24.60 EqIndex 35.52 Growth 33.45 HlthSci 36.06 HiYield 6.96 IntlBond 10.37 Intl G&I 14.23 IntlStk 14.83 MidCap 62.67 MCapVal 25.04 N Asia 19.70 New Era 53.22 N Horiz 36.91 N Inc 9.66 R2010 16.04 R2015 12.45 R2020 17.24 R2025 12.64 R2030 18.15 R2035 12.85 R2040 18.29 ShtBd 4.87 SmCpStk 37.03 SmCapVal 37.55 SpecIn 12.67 Value 24.69 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 14.37 VoyA p 23.51 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r 18.93 PennMuI r 12.37 PremierI r 21.95 TotRetI r 13.74 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 39.26 S&P Sel 20.62 Scout Funds: Intl 33.61 Selected Funds: AmShD 43.03 Sequoia 142.31 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 21.38 Third Avenue Fds:

-0.57 +4.2 -0.82 +5.3 -0.84 +4.0 -0.57 +19.1 -0.01 +5.7 +5.3 -0.24 +6.9 -0.24 +4.2 -1.64 +7.1 -0.50 +5.6 -0.12 +2.7 -1.50 +2.0 -0.89 +10.2 +0.04 +3.3 -0.18 +4.6 -0.17 +4.7 -0.27 +4.9 -0.22 +5.0 -0.34 +5.0 -0.26 +5.1 -0.38 +5.0 +1.4 -1.09 +7.6 -1.15 +3.9 -0.03 +4.2 -0.59 +5.8 NA -0.66 -0.8 -0.44 -0.34 -0.51 -0.33

+3.7 +6.2 +7.9 +4.5

-0.91 +5.6 -0.47 +5.4 -0.68 +3.8 -0.97 +3.9 -2.85 +10.1 -0.33 +6.6

ValueInst 52.56 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 29.80 IntValue I 30.47 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 24.98 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml 22.30 CAITAdm 10.97 CpOpAdl 80.56 EMAdmr r 40.28 Energy 132.56 ExtdAdm 45.41 500Adml 121.49 GNMA Ad 10.99 GrwAdm 33.13 HlthCr 58.76 HiYldCp 5.86 InfProAd 26.69 ITBdAdml 11.51 ITsryAdml 11.63 IntGrAdm 64.26 ITAdml 13.56 ITGrAdm 10.09 LtdTrAd 11.09 LTGrAdml 9.73 LT Adml 10.90 MCpAdml 99.62 MuHYAdm 10.29 PrmCap r 72.15 ReitAdm r 86.22 STsyAdml 10.78 ShtTrAd 15.91 STIGrAd 10.81 SmCAdm 38.19 TtlBAdml 10.80 TStkAdm 33.25 WellslAdm 55.14 WelltnAdm 56.12 Windsor 47.70 WdsrIIAd 48.44 Vanguard Fds: AssetA 25.64 CapOpp 34.87

-0.77 +1.5 -0.27 +6.4 -0.28 +6.6 -0.08 +4.9 -0.28 +0.02 -1.88 -0.55 -3.38

+4.9 +4.1 +4.9 +1.1 +9.6 NA -2.82 +5.4 +0.04 +3.7 -0.74 +5.1 -0.63 +14.6 +5.9 +0.13 +5.2 +0.07 +4.7 +0.06 +3.7 -1.20 +4.5 +0.01 +3.8 +0.04 +4.6 +0.01 +1.8 +0.10 +6.7 +0.02 +4.0 -2.43 +8.1 +0.02 +3.9 -1.67 +5.7 -2.62 +10.7 +0.01 +1.3 +0.9 +0.01 +2.0 NA +0.04 +3.3 -0.79 +5.8 -0.22 +5.8 -0.74 +5.2 -1.21 +4.6 -1.12 +6.3 -0.60 +4.9 -0.81 +4.9

DivdGro 15.37 Energy 70.59 EqInc 21.93 Explr 79.28 GNMA 10.99 GlobEq 18.84 HYCorp 5.86 HlthCre 139.23 InflaPro 13.59 IntlGr 20.19 IntlVal 32.84 ITIGrade 10.09 LifeCon 16.91 LifeGro 23.11 LifeMod 20.44 LTIGrade 9.73 Morg 18.98 MuInt 13.56 PrecMtls r 26.65 PrmcpCor 14.61 Prmcp r 69.52 SelValu r 20.09 STAR 20.01 STIGrade 10.81 StratEq 20.20 TgtRetInc 11.68 TgRe2010 23.30 TgtRe2015 12.98 TgRe2020 23.11 TgtRe2025 13.21 TgRe2030 22.73 TgtRe2035 13.74 TgtRe2040 22.56 TgtRe2045 14.17 USGro 19.33 Wellsly 22.76 Welltn 32.49 Wndsr 14.13 WndsII 27.28 Vanguard Idx Fds: TotIntAdm r 27.28 TotIntlInst r 109.14 500 121.47 Growth 33.12

+6.9 +9.6 +8.3 +8.7 +3.7 +5.5 +5.9 -1.49 +14.6 +0.07 +5.2 -0.37 +4.4 -0.61 +2.1 +0.04 +4.6 -0.16 +3.8 -0.43 +4.8 -0.28 +4.4 +0.10 +6.6 -0.46 +5.3 +0.01 +3.8 -0.55 -0.2 -0.32 +6.1 -1.60 +5.7 -0.45 +7.1 -0.23 +4.9 +0.01 +2.0 -0.52 +10.3 -0.04 +4.1 -0.19 +4.4 -0.14 +4.5 -0.30 +4.6 -0.20 +4.7 -0.38 +4.8 -0.26 +5.0 -0.43 +4.9 -0.27 +5.0 -0.42 +5.9 -0.09 +5.8 -0.43 +5.1 -0.36 +4.6 -0.64 +6.3

MidCap

21.94 -0.53 +8.0

SmCap

38.14

SmlCpGth

23.86 -0.75 +8.9

SmlCpVl

16.65 -0.50 +4.0

-0.47 -1.89 -2.81 -0.74

Yacktman Funds:

-0.29 -1.80 -0.44 -2.20 +0.04 -0.34

+3.5 +3.5 +5.3 +5.0

NA

STBnd

10.65 +0.02 +1.8

TotBnd

10.80 +0.04 +3.3

TotlIntl

16.31 -0.28 +3.5

TotStk

33.23 -0.80 +5.7

Vanguard Instl Fds: DevMkInst

10.44 -0.19 +4.6

ExtIn

45.41

FTAllWldI r

97.26 -1.75 +3.7

GrwthIst

33.13 -0.74 +5.1

InfProInst

NA

10.87 +0.05 +5.2

InstIdx

123.45

NA

InsPl

123.46

NA

InsTStPlus

30.07 -0.72 +5.8

MidCpIst

22.01 -0.53 +8.1

SCInst

38.19

TBIst

10.80 +0.04 +3.3

TSInst

33.25 -0.80 +5.8

NA

Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl

100.36 -2.33 +5.4

STBdIdx

10.65 +0.02 +1.9

TotBdSgl

10.80 +0.04 +3.3

TotStkSgl

32.09 -0.77 +5.8

Western Asset: CorePlus I Fund p

11.07 +0.03 +4.3 17.96 -0.25 +8.6


B USI N ESS

B6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M

If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Marla Polenz at 541-617-7815, e-mail business@bendbulletin.com, or click on “Submit an Event” on our website at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.

BUSINESS CALENDAR TODAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794, luiz.soutomaior@schwab.com or www.schwab.com. GET MORE OUT OF YOUR IPAD: Twoevening class. Registration required; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Sky View Middle School, 63555 N.E. 18th St., Bend; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit. cocc.edu.

2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc .edu.

TUESDAY HOME BUYER WORKSHOP: Learn how to determine home much home you can afford, how the buying process works and more. Visit www .exitrealtybend.com and select the real estate show icon to view real estate agent Jim Mazziotti’s live internet TV real estate program; free; 7 p.m.; 541480-8835, mazz@propertiesinbend .com or www.exitrealtybend.com.

WEDNESDAY

INSURANCE BILLING BASICS: Two-afternoon class. Registration required; $59; 1-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Tax return reviews. Call to schedule an appointment; free; 3-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666 or www.facebook.com/Zoomtax. LEAVING A LEGACY, BOOMERS AFTER HOURS: Learn how to design a plan to create a financial legacy. Located at the Cascade Culinary Institute at Central Oregon Community College. Registration required; $25; 5:30-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.

BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603. PROTECTING YOUR COMPETITIVE EDGE: Jon Napier, Kurt Barker and Clint Todd, attorneys with Karnopp Petersen LLP, discuss protecting intellectual property for profit and nonprofit organizations; free; 7:30-9 a.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. BANKS AND OTHER FINANCIAL SERVICES: Registration required; free; 5:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-3187506, ext. 109. CROOKED RIVER RANCHTERREBONNE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE NETWORKING SOCIAL: Free; 5:30 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, 8222 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 2110; 541-923-2679 or www.crrchamber .com.

SATURDAY

THURSDAY

BEGINNING QUICKBOOKS PRO: Registration required; $59; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Madras COIC Office, 243 S.W. Third St., Suite A; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu.

June 9

FRIDAY

MONDAY WHAT’S HAPPENING ON YOUR WEBSITE?: Learn how to analyze website statistics and track the type of traffic the website is attracting. Registration required; $39; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,

BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. SPEND AND MANAGE DEBT WISELY: Learn how to save for the future while paying for the past. Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541318-1794, luiz.soutomaior@schwab .com or www.schwab.com.

FRIDAY June 10 BUSINESS LENDING: The Risk Management Association, Economic Development for Central Oregon, Central Oregon Community College’s Small Business Development Center and Opportunity Knocks present three sessions on business lending: 9 to 11 a.m. is for lenders and focuses on financing made easy; a lunch event from 11:30 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. is a panel discussion about current lending trends and the final event of the day from 1:45 to 3:00 p.m. is a networking event. Registration required; $25 for lunch event; two other events of the day are free; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor Village, 19800 S.W. Touchmark Way, Bend; 541-388-3236 or events@edcoinfo.com. SUSTAINABLE BUILDING ADVISER COURSE INFORMATIONAL MEETING: Learn about Central Oregon Community College’s nine-month program for building professionals looking for training to apply sustainable concepts; free; 1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc .edu/building/default.aspx. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Tax return reviews. Call to schedule an appointment; free; 3-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666 or www.facebook.com/Zoomtax.

INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603. EXCEL 2007 BEGINNING: Twoafternoon class. Registration required; $59; 1-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. HOME BUYING CLASS: Registration required; free; 5:30-9:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 109.

THURSDAY June 16 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. HOW TO START A BUSINESS: Registration required; $15; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837290 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. GET STARTED WITH INVESTING: Understand the basics of risk, asset allocation, diversification and feel more confident making investment decisions. Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794, luiz.soutomaior@ schwab.com or www.schwab.com.

MONDAY

FRIDAY

June 13

June 17

WORRIED ABOUT MAKING HOUSE PAYMENTS?: Learn what to do if you fall behind. Registration required; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A110, Bend; 541-318-7506, ext. 109.

FREE TAX FRIDAY: Tax return reviews. Call to schedule an appointment; free; 3-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666 or www.facebook.com/Zoomtax.

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

June 14

June 22

HOME-BUYING CLASS: Registration required; free; 5:30-9:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506, ext. 109.

BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603. UNDERSTANDING AND MANAGING CREDIT: Registration required; free; 5:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-3187506, ext. 109.

WEDNESDAY June 15 BUSINESS NETWORK

American Airlines must put fares back on Orbitz, judge rules By Andrea Ahles McClatchy-Tribune News Service

FORT WORTH, Texas — American Airlines must put its fares back on travel site Orbitz.com, a judge ruled on Wednesday. The Fort Worth-based carrier had previously pulled its fares off of the site in December, saying it wanted the website to connect directly to the airline’s reservation system. At issue are the fees American and other airlines pay the big travel reservation systems, called global distribution systems, to display flights and make bookings. American wants more travel services, such as travel agencies and websites, to connect directly to American’s

own reservations system. Initially, the Illinois court had ruled in favor of American, saying it didn’t have to provide its fare information to Orbitz while the two parties settled their contract dispute in the courts. Wednesday’s ruling grants Orbitz a permanent injunction, forcing American to make its fares available on the site. “This reinstatement of American Airlines full schedule of flights on Orbitz.com and Orbitz for Business is a win for transparency, consumer choice and for all of our mutual customers,” Orbitz said in a statement. American, which is a unit of AMR Corp., said it “fundamentally disagree(s)” with the court’s ruling.

NEWS OF RECORD PERMITS City of Bend

Greg Welch Construction Inc., 2335 N.W. Dorion, $226,644 Sustainable Building Innovations, 2323 N.W. Dorion, $261,268 Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC, 20872 S.E. Tamar, $304,339 Carolyn Cella Collins Revocable Trust, 295 N.W. Riverfront, $220,000 City of Redmond

Brandon Strecker, 1728 N.W. Larch Wood Court, $175,361 Oregon Joy LLC, 3335 S.W. Antler Ridge Lane, $160,913 Oregon Joy LLC, 364 S.W. 35th St., $117,901 Oregon Joy LLC, 322 S.W. Antler Ridge Court, $163,177 Deschutes County

Donald S. Gonzales, 70170 Cayuse

Place, Sisters, $260,963.95 Deena M. Rounds, 3110 N.W. Odem Ave., Terrebonne, $210,706.68 Michael B. Wickward, 15471 Ferndale Court, La Pine, $174,803.49 James L. Shannon, 63731 Johnson Road, Bend, $106,524.77 Hodgson Revocable Trust, 17985 Cascade Estates Drive, Bend, $472,557.39 Crook County

Steve Riney, 8062 N.W. Lamonta, Prineville, $310,233 Keeney Creek Ranch LLC, 41611 S.E. Shotgun, Post, $376,000 Prime Homes Incorporated, 858 N.W. Olde Iron, Prineville, $120,044 R&R Ranches LLC, 13689 S.W. Bussett, Powell Butte, $221,254 R&R Ranches LLC, 13689 S.W. Bussett, Powell Butte, $133,182


L

Inside

OREGON Fast chargers for electric cars going up along I-5, see Page C2. Classes canceled after bear wanders near school, see Page C3.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 2011

IN BRIEF Ride the River shuttle starts June 17 The Ride the River shuttle, the popular transportation service for river floaters, will begin running June 17. The shuttle service will continue to run its seasonal route through Sept. 5, with more frequent service offered on Saturdays and Sundays when temperatures are expected to reach 90 degrees or higher. The shuttle is in its sixth season of transporting river floaters.

Volunteers sought for safety council The Deschutes County Commission is seeking two volunteers to serve on the Deschutes County Public Safety Coordinating Council. The volunteers will serve a two-year term on the council. Council members will help make recommendations to the commissioners on the use of state grant funds to serve the adult and juvenile offender populations, among other duties. The council meets once a month. Those interested should e-mail a letter of interest by 5 p.m. July 1 to cjsrvcs@ deschutes.org. Letters can also be sent to Board of County Commissioners, Bonnie Baker Deschutes County Services Center, 1300 N.W. Wall St., No. 200, Bend 97701. Letters should include the applicant’s name, address, contact information, occupation and the amount of time the person has been a resident of Deschutes County. The letter should also include an explanation of one page or less about why the applicant wants to serve on the council. —Bulletin staff reports

State clears DOE employees in probe into Hayes contract 4 workers had been suspected of steering project to Gov. Kitzhaber’s partner By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — The state has cleared four employees of any criminal wrongdoing in an investigation surrounding a Department of Energy contract awarded to a company with ties to the governor’s girlfriend and Bend consultant Cylvia Hayes. On Wednesday, the Oregon Department of Administrative Services said an independent investigation found the DOE employees did not violate state contract rules

when they issued a Federal Energy Assurance Grant to a Seattle-based engineering and consulting firm, R.W. Beck. The investigation started because DOE officials were suspected of steering the contract toward the partnership that included Hayes. She is one of four people who formed TEEM, or Toward Energy Efficient Municipalities, that was awarded a subcontract to work under R.W. Beck. The state employees were suspected of

urging R.W. Beck to hire Hayes’ group for the subcontract work, after her company lost out on the original $200,000 contract, according to a published report. The Oregon Department of Justice first started investigating whether Hayes got special treatment because of her relationship with Gov. John Kitzhaber, who had not yet officially taken office, after being informed of possible “contracting improprieties” at the Department of Energy. See Hayes / C6

Mov ing in step to Latin rhythms

HOW TO CO N TAC T Your state legislators SENATE

HOUSE Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-Dist. 53 Phone: 503-986-1453 E-mail: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Rep. Jason Conger, R-Dist. 54 Phone: 503-986-1454 E-mail: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Rep. Mike McLane, R-Dist. 55 Phone: 503-986-1455 E-mail: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Rep. John Huffman, R-Dist. 59 Phone: 503-986-1459 E-mail: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us

Your D.C. delegation U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore. Phone: 202-225-6730 Bend office: 541-389-4408 Web: walden.house.gov U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. Phone: 202-224-3753 Bend office: 541-318-1298 Web: merkley.senate.gov U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. Phone: 202-224-5244 Bend office: 541-330-9142 Web: wyden.senate.gov

HOW TO SUBMIT Civic Calendar notices: • E-mail: news@bendbulletin.com • Please write “Civic Calendar” in the subject line and include a contact name and daytime phone number. Births, engagements, marriages and anniversaries: • Mail information to Milestones, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708, within one month of the celebration. • More details: Milestones publishes in Sunday’s Community Life section.

Bend council OKs 3-year extension on affordable housing fee By Nick Grube The Bulletin

Fear of permanently losing Bend’s affordable housing fee caused city councilors to compromise Wednesday and make changes to the program that not all of them agreed with but still voted to approve. Because the fee, which currently charges builders one-third of 1 percent on construction projects, was set to expire later this month, the council needed to renew the program for another three years under emergency procedure guidelines, meaning any approval needed to be unanimous. A single no vote would have meant the fee would disappear, potentially forever, because state law precludes the city from enacting a similar charge in the future.

Straw votes

News of Record on Page C2.

Sen. Chris Telfer, R-Dist. 27 Phone: 503-986-1727 E-mail: sen.christelfer@state.or.us Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-Dist. 28 Phone: 503-986-1728 E-mail: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R-Dist. 30 Phone: 503-986-1950 E-mail: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us

C

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

On the Web For more information about upcoming events and classes, visit www.centraloregontango.com.

Classified workers at Redmond schools agree to pay freeze By Patrick Cliff

Dancers practice moving to the different rhythmic and melodic structures in tango music while learning how to Argentine tango Wednesday evening at the Sons of Norway Hall. Central Oregon Tango offers the hourlong class every Wednesday at 6:30.

This caused the seven-member council to hold a number of straw votes just to find out if there was any opposition to a renewal of the fee. It also caused councilors to concede to some changes that they might not have otherwise. “I can’t imagine letting this go,” Councilor Mark Capell said. “Five to 10 years from now, we would regret it.” Perhaps the biggest change the council made to the affordable housing fee as it stands today is reducing the amount of the charge form one-third of 1 percent to one-fifth of 1 percent. For a $200,000 home this would be the difference between paying about $670 in affordable housing fees or $400. Getting to that figure, however, was not easy, and the councilors went back and forth about whether to lower the fee to onefourth of 1 percent or one-sixth of 1 percent. Eventually, after a lack of consensus on either figure, the councilors decided to split the difference to get to the unanimous vote they needed. See Fee / C6

State panel on global warming says cities need to curb growth Commission’s ideas intended to help Oregon reach 2020 goals on emissions

The Bulletin

Classified employees in the Redmond School District agreed Tuesday to freeze all salaries for the 2012-13 school year in an effort to help the district overcome a more than $8 million shortfall. There are 338 classified district employees, a group that includes support staff and custodians. Leadership of the local Oregon School Employees Association had already agreed to the concession in principle, and union membership approved the change with 79 percent of the vote. The district has made a similar offer — including cutting six days from the next school year — to its teachers, but that group has yet to vote on the proposal. The move comes on top of the union’s vote last year to defer a 1 percent raise. According to the district, that raise has been eliminated. Lynn Evans, the district’s human resources director, praised the union’s vote. “It’s wonderful,” Evans said. “We’re very happy and encouraged with how cooperative the classified employee group was to through this.” Evans said negotiations with the union representing district teachers are ongoing. But if those negotiations change anything about the district’s current offer, district leadership will open discussions again with the classified union, Evans said. “We’ll work with the classified employees if anything has to change.... We’ll go back to the table,” Evans said. Dru Carpenter, president of the classified union, could not be reached for comment. Patrick Cliff can be reached at 541-633-2161 or at pcliff@bendbulletin.com.

By Kate Ramsayer

‘Roadmap’ recommendations Some of the greenhouse gasreducing recommendations in the Oregon Global Warming Commission’s “Roadmap to 2020” include: • Requiring Oregon’s six largest cities to stay within their current urban growth boundaries. • Charge people based on their use of the transportation system, whether they are driving, biking or commuting, with the fee also based on use during peak hours. • Developing a new source of funding for carbon-light transportation options, with funds possibly coming from lottery dollars, payroll taxes, voluntary contributions or a tax on parking. • Expanding public transportation options. • Charging for parking to encourage fewer single-vehicle driving trips. • Creation of a tax credit or other incentives for electric vehicles and charging stations. • Create a carbon inventory for Oregon’s forests.

The Bulletin

T

o reduce greenhouse gas emissions, Oregon’s six biggest cities should confine their growth over the next 40 years to existing urban growth boundaries, suggests the Oregon Global Warming Commission. The state should develop a “utility” funding model for paying for transportation infrastructure that taxes all users — from bicyclists to commuters to truck drivers — based on the amount they use and the impact they have. Another idea from the commission, which is holding a public meeting tonight in Bend, would be to tax parking or offer drivers a chance to offset their driving, to help fund transit options that emit fewer greenhouse gases. The overall goal, said commission chair Angus Duncan, is to “basically figure out how to get us out of this climate hot spot we’re in,” he said.

Created in 2007 The commission, which was created by the Legislature in 2007, is working to help the state meet goals — reducing emissions to 10 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and to 75 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. The commission has developed an interim “Roadmap to 2020,” with 40 ideas for reducing emissions, and this spring has been talking to city governments and the public, sharing the suggestions in the proposal and asking people to

contribute their own ideas as well. The recommendations don’t carry any authority, Dodson said, but instead are ideas and suggestions that local governments or the state could adopt to reach the goals. “Their only full weight is if the governor and the legislature and a bunch of city councils can be persuaded they are good ideas,” Dodson said.

2010 goals being met Oregon is hitting its 2010 goal leveling off the increase of emissions and starting to decrease it, Dodson said. “But bending the line down is a consequence of a lot of these changes being implemented,” he said. “The next step is how you get to 2020 (goals).” Some of the most controversial suggestions, he recognized, are ones that involve a shift in how municipalities do things — such as the suggestion for the six largest urban areas to stay within their urban growth boundary through 2050. “That’s a challenging proposition,” Dodson said. But if the cities could end up with neighborhoods that support transit and people being able to walk or bike to grocery stores, shopping and work, it can help reduce emissions, he said. And ideas like charging for all parking, or taxing parking spots, were some of the toughest suggestions for the commission members to figure out, Dodson said. See Warming / C5


C2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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

Theft — Items were reported stolen from a vehicle at 6:39 a.m. May 27, in the 1200 block of Northwest Stannium Road. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 7:13 a.m. May 27, in the 1000 block of Southeast Paiute Way. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 7:21 a.m. May 27, in the 1500 block of Northwest Milwaukee Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 9:27 a.m. May 27, in the 3300 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 10:23 a.m. May 27, in the 1500 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 12:09 p.m. May 27, in the 1600 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Theft — Items were reported stolen from a vehicle at 12:20 p.m. May 27, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 12:27 p.m. May 27, in the 1600 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and items stolen at 12:35 p.m. May 27, in the 1600 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:39 p.m. May 27, in the 2200 block of Southeast Velocette Lane. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 12:51 p.m. May 27, in the 100 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Criminal mischief — Graffiti was reported at 2:09 p.m. May 27, in the 100 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:38 p.m. May 27, in the 61500 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:14 p.m. May 27, in the 1800 block of Northeast Lotus Drive. DUII — Heather Louise Knehans, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:53 p.m. May 27, in the 61600 block of Pettigrew Road. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 5:53 p.m. May 27, in the 1400 block of Northwest Ogden Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:59 p.m. May 27, in the 20600 block of Wild Goose Lane. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:59 p.m. May 27, in the 100 block of Northwest Oregon Avenue. Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 10:31 p.m. May 27, in the area of Ferguson and Ladera roads. DUII — Brynn Kathleen Price, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:20 p.m. May 27, in the 100 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. DUII — Taylor James Shobe, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:58 a.m. May 28, in the area of Bear Creek and Pettigrew roads. DUII — Emile Francois Lemoigne, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:48 a.m. May 28, in the area of Northwest Portland Avenue and Northwest Wall Street. DUII — Gina Marie Lemke, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:51 a.m. May 28, in the 1600 block of Northwest Wall Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:33 a.m. May 28, in the 800 block of Northeast Hidden Valley Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:26 a.m. May 28, in the 800 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 9:08 a.m. May 28, in the 700 block of Northwest Bond Street. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 9:10 a.m. May 28, in the 1500 block of Northwest Hartford Avenue. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 9:29 a.m. May 28, in the 100 block of Northwest Florida Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:41 a.m. May 28, in the 20500 block of Mutt Court. DUII — Nellie Sue Conte, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:15 a.m. May 29, in the area of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Greenwood Avenue. DUII — Adrian Hernandez Del Razo, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:40 a.m. May 29, in the 200 block of Northeast Third Street. DUII — Quinn Gorman, 21, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:55 a.m. May 29, in the 400

block of Northeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:13 a.m. May 29, in the 60600 block of China Hat Road. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:15 a.m. May 29, in the 1900 block of Northeast Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:49 p.m. May 29, in the 1300 block of Northwest City View Drive. DUII — Deanna Lynn Bonvicino, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:54 p.m. May 29, in the 200 block of Northeast Revere Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:56 p.m. May 29, in the 1000 block of Northwest Bond Street. DUII — Keith Brian Martin, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:44 a.m. May 30, in the 700 block of Northwest Columbia Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:34 a.m. May 30, in the 600 block of Northeast Bellevue Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:32 a.m. May 30, in the 600 block of Northeast Franklin Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 12:29 p.m. May 30, in the 63400 block of U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:30 p.m. May 30, in the 20500 block of Cooley Road. Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 3:55 p.m. May 30, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:58 p.m. May 30, in the 2800 block of Northeast Cordata Drive. Redmond Police Department

Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:18 p.m. May 31, in the 1300 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 2:44 p.m. May 31, in the area of Northwest Ninth Street and Northwest Birch Avenue. Theft — Gasoline was reported stolen at 10:06 a.m. May 31, in the 1100 block of Southwest Lake Road. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 9:49 a.m. May 31, in the 1500 block of Northwest Canyon Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:53 a.m. May 31, in the 200 block of Northwest Elm Avenue. Criminal mischief — Graffiti was reported at 8:02 a.m. May 31, in the 500 block of Southwest Sixth Street. DUII — Robert Willis Browne, 62, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:39 a.m. May 31, in the area of Southwest 12th Street and Southwest Glacier Avenue. Prineville Police Department

Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 2:44 a.m. May 31, in the area of Third Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:11 p.m. May 31, in the area of Northwest Harwood Street. Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office

DUII — Larry Todd Brooks, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:12 p.m. May 31, in the area of North U.S. Highway 97 and Northwest O’Neil Way in Redmond. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:55 p.m. May 31, in the 200 block of West Black Crater Avenue in Sisters. DUII — Christina Louz Aguilar, 31, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:29 p.m. May 31, in the 100 block of East Washington Avenue in Sisters. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:22 a.m. May 31, in the 65100 block of 78th Street in Bend. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:08 a.m. May 31, in the 56400 block of Solar Drive in La Pine.

BEND FIRE RUNS FRIDAY 16 — Medical aid calls. SATURDAY 21 — Medical aid calls. SUNDAY 8:05 a.m. — Unauthorized burning, 20755 Double Peaks Drive. 21 — Medical aid calls. MONDAY 5:47 a.m. — Transport vehicle fire, 2060 U.S. Highway 20. 8:32 a.m. — Chimney or flue fire, 19793 Buck Canyon Road. 12:31 p.m. — Authorized controlled burning, 60855 Emigrant Circle. 15 — Medical aid calls. TUESDAY 15 — Medical aid calls.

PETS The following animals have been turned in to the Humane Society of Redmond animal shelter. The Redmond shelter’s telephone number is 541-923-0882 — or refer to the website at www.redmondhumane.org. Mastiff mix — Adult male, white; found near Helmholtz Way in Redmond. Pug — Adult male, tan and black; found near Northwest Tetherow Road in Redmond.

GREEN HIGHWAY

CALIFORNIA A Nissan Leaf charges in Portland last week. A series of fast-charging stations for electric cars will be installed this year along Interstate 5 in Southern Oregon. Rick Bowmer The Associated Press

Legislators seek limits to picketing at military funerals By Patrick McGreevy Los Angeles Times

Electric car fast-chargers coming to I-5 in Oregon By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

GRANTS PASS — A series of fast-charging stations for electric cars will be installed this year along Interstate 5 in Southern Oregon to become one of the first links in a Green Highway stretching down the West Coast from Canada to Mexico. The Oregon Department of Transportation announced Wednesday that AeroVironment has been chosen to build eight level-3 DC fast-charging stations between Eugene and the California border under a $700,000 federal stimulus grant. The Monrovia, Calif.-based company manufactures unmanned aircraft and industrial charging stations for electric forklifts and aircraft tenders. AeroVironment Vice President Kristen Helsel said the company hopes to start building by the end of summer and have the charging stations up and running before the end of December. Though fewer than 50 electric cars are driving around Oregon, the installation of fast-charging stations will build acceptance for electric vehicles by making it possible for people to take trips

beyond the typical range of 100 miles, said John MacArthur, a project manager at Oregon Transportation Research and Education Consortium in Portland. “It’s pretty exciting,” he said. “We’re in this kind of leading edge of electrification.” The AeroVironment fast-charging stations are separate from the EV Project, a partnership between the federal government and ECOtality of San Francisco, which is working on installing 14,000 charging stations in six states and the District of Columbia, including Oregon, Washington and California.

Power levels Level 1 car chargers use 110 volts, like a regular home outlet, and will charge a vehicle overnight. Level 2 uses 240 volts, like a home dryer or range, and will charge a car in three or four hours. Level 3 uses 480 volts and can take a Nissan Leaf’s 45-kilowatt battery from a 20 percent charge to 80 percent in less than 30 minutes, the company said. It uses a universal connection on a cable that plugs into the car. The cost of using one of the char-

gers has not been set yet, said Helsel. The fast-charging stations will be spaced 30 miles apart and located within a quarter mile of the interstate in places such as convenience stores and gas stations, still to be chosen, where a driver can find a restroom and other amenities, said project director Art James of ODOT. The governors of Oregon, Washington and California signed an agreement last year to create a Green Highway corridor so people with electric cars could eventually drive from Vancouver, British Columbia, to San Diego, James said. The nation’s first publicly accessible level 3 fast-charging station is in Oregon, said MacArthur. Installed by Portland General Electric, it is located in the basement of the World Trade Center in Portland. The EV Project is installing about 1,000 level 2 chargers and a few fast-chargers in the Willamette Valley between Eugene and Portland, said MacArthur. By 2012, fast-chargers should start showing up on the Oregon Coast, in the Cascades and along Interstate 84, he said.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Alarmed by instances of loud protests at military funerals, state lawmakers advanced a proposal Wednesday that would restrict such picketing so it is not disruptive. The California Senate approved a bill by Sen. Ted Lieu, a Democrat, that would make it a misdemeanor to picket a funeral in a disruptive way on private property within 1,000 feet of the ceremony. “This is a bill that preserves the sanctity and dignity of funerals,” Lieu told his colleagues before the 36-1 vote to pass SB 888 and send it to the Assembly for action.

Supreme Court The vote comes just months after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Pastor Fred Phelps and his Westboro Baptist Church have a constitutional right to picket military funerals. Phelps and his congregation do so claiming the deaths of U.S. soldiers are divine retribution for the country’s toleration of homosexuality. The picketing has included signs that read “Thank God for Dead Soldiers” and “God Hates Fags.” Lieu said he crafted the state legislation to comply with the limits set by the court ruling. “I accept the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court has the power to render stupid decisions, but protesters should not be able to disrupt actual funeral services,’” Lieu said.

In 1981, ‘Donkey Kong’ makes its U.S. debut The Associated Press Today is Thursday, June 2, the 153rd day of 2011. There are 212 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On June 2, 1886, President Grover Cleveland, 49, married Frances Folsom, who at 21 became America’s youngest first lady, in the Blue Room of the White House. (To date, Cleveland is the only president to marry in the executive mansion.) ON THIS DATE In 1851, Maine became the first state to enact a total ban on the manufacture and sale of liquor. In 1855, rioting broke out in Portland, Maine, over rumors a stash of liquor (which would have been legal for “medicinal and mechanical purposes” under the Maine Law) was being kept inside City Hall; one man was killed when militiamen opened fire. In 1897, Mark Twain, 61, was quoted by the New York Journal as saying from London that “the report of my death was an exaggeration.” In 1941, baseball’s “Iron Horse,” Lou Gehrig, died in New York of a degenerative disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; he was 37. The chief justice of the United States, Charles Evans Hughes, announced his retirement effective July 1, 1941. In 1953, Queen Elizabeth II of Britain was crowned in Westminster Abbey, 16 months after the death of her father, King George VI. In 1961, during a state visit to France, President John F. Kennedy, noting the warm reception his wife had received, jocularly described himself as “the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris, and I have enjoyed it.” Playwright and director George S. Kaufman, 71, died in New York. In 1966, the U.S. space probe Surveyor 1 landed on the moon and began transmitting detailed photographs of the lunar surface. In 1979, Pope John Paul II arrived in his native Poland on the first visit by a pope to a Communist country.

T O D AY I N H I S T O R Y In 1981, the Japanese video arcade game “Donkey Kong” made its U.S. debut. In 1986, for the first time, the public could watch the proceedings of the U.S. Senate on television as a six-week experiment of televised sessions began. TEN YEARS AGO Nepal’s Crown Prince Dipendra, on life support after shooting to death eight members of the royal family, including his parents, before turning the gun on himself, was named king by Nepal’s State Council. Actresscomedian Imogene Coca died in Westport, Conn., at age 92. FIVE YEARS AGO The United Nations General Assembly concluded a conference on AIDS by promising to set “ambitious national targets,” but falling short of setting exact financial goals for the fight against the disease. Canadian authorities announced they had foiled a homegrown terrorist attack by arresting 17 (later 18) suspects. (Charges were dropped or stayed against seven while 11 others were sent to prison.) Grateful Dead keyboardist Vince Welnick died in Sonoma County, Calif., at age 55. ONE YEAR AGO Amid the Deepwater Horizon oil spill crisis, BP chief executive Tony Hayward apologized for having told reporters, “I’d like my life back,” calling the remark hurtful and thoughtless in a statement posted on Facebook. A taxi driver went on a murderous rampage across a tranquil part of rural England, leaving 12 dead before committing suicide. Pitcher Armando Galarraga of the Detroit Tigers lost his bid for a perfect game against Cleveland with two outs in the ninth inning on a call that first base umpire Jim Joyce later admitted he’d blown. (The Tigers beat the Indians, 3-0.) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor Milo O’Shea is 86. Actress-singer Sally Kellerman is

74. Actor Ron Ely is 73. Actor Stacy Keach is 70. Rock musician Charlie Watts is 70. Singer William Guest (Gladys Knight & The Pips) is 70. Actor Charles Haid is 68. Composer Marvin Hamlisch is 67. Movie director Lasse Hallstrom is 65. Actor Jerry Mathers is 63. Actress Joanna Gleason is 61. Actor Dennis Haysbert is 57. Comedian Dana Carvey is 56. Actor Gary Grimes is 56. Pop musician Michael Steele is 56. Rock singer Tony Hadley (Spandau Ballet) is 51. Singer Merril Bainbridge is 43. Rapper B-Real (Cypress Hill) is 41. Actress Paula Cale is 41. Actor Anthony Montgomery is 40. Actor-comedian Wayne Brady is 39. Actor Wentworth Miller is 39. Rock musician Tim RiceOxley (Keane) is 35. Actor Zachary Quinto is 34. Actor Domi-

nic Cooper is 33. Actress Nikki Cox is 33. Actor Justin Long is 33. Actor Deon Richmond is 33. Actress Morena Baccarin is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singer Irish Grinstead (702) is 31. Rock musician Fabrizio Moretti (The Strokes) is 31. Country singer Dan Cahoon (Marshall Dyllon) is 28. Actress Brittany Curran is 21. THOUGHT FOR TODAY “Vox populi, vox humbug.” (The voice of the people is the voice of humbug.) — Gen. William T. Sherman, Union military leader (1820-1891), in a letter to his wife written on this date in 1863

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THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 C3

O Defense gets unclassified documents in bomb plot

O B Report: 34 patients died from mistakes PORTLAND — A state commission says at least 34 patients died last year at Oregon hospitals as a result of preventable mistakes. The Oregonian reported the latest figures from the Oregon Patient Safety Commission show no change from 2009, when the same number of patients died after medical errors. Surgical teams accidentally left objects in patients 18 times — despite the commission setting a target of eliminating that type of error. In 10 cases, doctors operated on the wrong body part or the wrong patient or performed the wrong procedure. The patient safety commission was created by the Legislature in 2003 in a joint effort by the state and the health care industry to reduce serious medical errors. Fiftysix of Oregon’s 58 hospitals participate in the voluntary program.

By Nigel Duara The Associated Press

PORTLAND — A federal judge has ordered prosecutors in an Oregon terrorism case to hand over all non-classified documents to the suspect’s defense team but stopped short of saying the defense has a right to everything the prosecution gathered in at least six months of investigation. U.S. District Judge Garr King set an April 10 trial date during arguments Wednesday over the release of evidence in the case of Mohamed O. Mohamud, who has pleaded not guilty to charges of attempting to detonate a weapon of mass destruction. Mohamed O. He was arrested after an Mohamud undercover operation involving a phony bomb in downtown Portland last year during a holiday tree lighting ceremony. Stephen Sady, a federal public defender, argued that the government may have evidence that could show Mohamud’s innocence and said his detailed request for government surveillance records is not a fishing trip. “We’re not shooting in the dark,” Sady said, but declined to elaborate in front of prosecutors. The government prosecutors say they’ve gone beyond what they’re required to provide in a case involving national security, and have rejected the so-called open-file approach. Before the hearing, Sady requested a laundry list of items in looking for evidence that government agents entrapped Mohamud. Sady and the rest of Mohamud’s defense team argue that only they can determine whether classified government surveillance of Mohamud can prove their client’s innocence. Sady has asked for all communications between Mohamud and anyone working for the government, as well as any conversations Mohamud had that were recorded by government agents. Prosecutors agreed to hand over all unclassified material. Mohamud appeared Wednesday in a blue prison shirt over long white shirt-sleeves, his curly hair cropped closer than it was in his mug shot six months ago. Mohamud’s father, Osman Barre, was in court on Wednesday but declined to comment. King also ordered prosecutors to deliver to the defense a recording device used in Mohamud’s first meeting with undercover agents. The recording device, prosecutors said, ran out of batteries during the meeting. Sady said Wednesday he wants it examined by an expert. The recording is important to the defense’s efforts to prove Mohamud was entrapped because Mohamud’s first contact with agents could show his predisposition to committing a crime. To get a jury to consider the idea that Mohamud was entrapped, the defense has to show at least three things: That Mohamud wasn’t predisposed to terrorism before government agents intervened, that the government used sophisticated means to induce Mohamud to the crime and that they exploited Mohamud’s specific vulnerabilities. Mohamud began meeting with undercover FBI agents last summer. They purported to show him how to detonate a remote-controlled bomb — unbeknownst to Mohamud, it was actually triggered by an FBI agent — and helped him record a video statement taking credit for the Portland bomb plot.

Democrat says GOP reneged on BPA ban

Photos by Rick Bowmer / The Associated Press

An adult black bear looks over the tall grass near Tualatin Elementary School on Wednesday in Tualatin.

Black bear captured near Tualatin school The Associated Press TUALATIN — A black bear that wandered onto a field next to a Portland-area elementary school has been tranquilized and removed. Students who arrived at Tualatin Elementary School before classes were canceled because of the bear’s presence stayed indoors Wednesday and studied what a district spokeswoman described as “bear curriculum.” The 200-pound male bear eluded capture for several hours but was finally dart-

ed with a tranquilizer gun and fell asleep in a tree he had climbed. When he failed to fall from the tree into a waiting net, a firefighter trained in technical rescues climbed up and fashioned a harness while a federal Agriculture Department wildlife expert gave the bear another dose of tranquilizer — just in case. Firefighters then lowered the animal safely 60 feet to the ground. The Oregonian says state Department of Fish and Wildlife agents plan to release the bear in the coastal mountains.

541-322-CARE Students at the Tualatin Elementary School watch an adult black bear run near their school Wednesday. The bear was tranquilized and captured. It will be released in the coastal mountains.

Like diploma, exam anxiety dreams last lifetime By Bill Graves The Oregonian

PORTLAND — You sit in a classroom, and your teacher puts an exam on your desk. Medieval English history? You know nothing about it. You forgot you ever signed up for this course. You’ve not cracked a single book. You’ve skipped every class. And if you don’t pass this exam, you don’t get your degree. You reel between dread and panic. And then you wake. Sometimes sweating. Seniors in Oregon’s public universities cramming for final exams next week may never have had the exam dream. But chances are they will. In earning a college degree, they’ve become prime candidates for the nightmare for decades to come. It is among the most common anxiety dreams, says Dr. Alfred Lewy, professor of psychiatry at Oregon Health & Science University, probably because everyone spends a chunk of life in school. The exam is a symbol of a test

in waking life, maybe a presentation, job interview, relationship or performance. Lewy says the dream also raises the question, “Is there something that I have overlooked in my life that I should be prepared for that I haven’t prepared for today?” David Snook, 27, Gresham, will graduate from Portland State University this month with a degree in chemistry, but first he must pass finals in ecology, biology and philosophy. He’s not worried and never dreams about the exams. But he did dream — more than once — about instrumental analysis last term. “It was the hardest lab I’ve ever done,” he says. He had a 15-page lab report packed with tedious measurements of ion concentrations in various solutions. If he didn’t complete it, he wouldn’t complete the lab, and without the lab, he wouldn’t graduate. In his dream, he finishes, but turns the lab report in a few minutes late. The lab assistant refuses to accept it.

SALEM — A Democratic state lawmaker says she had a deal with a key Republican to advance a bill banning a potentially harmful chemical from some children’s beverage containers, but Republican leadership scuttled the agreement. Democratic Sen. Jackie Dingfelder of Portland said Wednesday that GOP Rep. Vic Gilliam of Silverton approached her with an agreement to hold public hearings or votes on various bills. One of them would ban the chemical bisphenol-A — also called BPA — from baby bottles, children’s sippy cups and reusable water bottles. Dingfelder says she upheld her end of the deal but Republican leadership refused to allow Gilliam to schedule a vote on the ban. Gilliam says there wasn’t enough support among Re-

He’s ruined. People have the exam dream or a variation of it long after they take their last final. “I left law school more than 40 years ago, and I still have that dream, and not infrequently — as recently as the last couple of months,” says Paul Kelly, president of the State Board of Higher Education. In his dream, Kelly says, “I realize the week before the exam that I’ve never gone to class. I have no idea what has been covered. I have to read the whole textbook.” State Sen. Mark Hass of Beaverton, chair of the Senate education committee, connects his exam dream to a persistent fear of flunking when he juggled work and school during his years at the University of Oregon. “I guess I kept that fear with me,” he says. “I can see an old professor’s face in my dream, and I’m walking into class and everyone is taking this test, and I don’t have a backpack, and I don’t have any paper. I ask, ‘What’s going on?’ ” Richard Lariviere, president of the University of Oregon, says

he had a flip version of the exam dream as a young professor. He’s teaching a class, but he can’t find the classroom. “The harder you look, the more confused you get,” he says. In the U.S., the exam dream is most common among adults, and until recently has shown up as early as high school. But with public schools testing more for accountability, Willis writes, parents and teachers report some firstgraders have disturbing dreams about poor school performance. Most people never faced in waking lives the disasters they find in the exam dream. So why are circumstances in the dream so dire? “Dreams are like grand operas,” says Garfield. “Dreams exaggerate dramatically. Part of that is the language of pictures, and it surely gets our attention, which may be the purpose of it. We wouldn’t have dreams unless it serves some biological advantage. “This is a warning, something that can help guide us to better behavior and more success in our waking life.”

publicans to advance the bill and “it’s too simplistic” to say there was a deal.

Youth Authority to cut 119 positions SALEM — The Oregon Youth Authority plans to eliminate 119 positions this summer because of state budget cuts. The Statesman Journal reported 56 positions would be cut at the MacLaren Youth Correctional Facility in Woodburn and 39 at the Hillcrest Youth Correctional Facility in Salem. The Oregon Youth Authority has 1,135 employees. In addition to Woodburn and Salem, the agency has facilities in Albany, Warrenton, Tillamook, Florence, Grants Pass, Burns and La Grande.

Portland may cover workers’ sex surgery PORTLAND — Portland Mayor Sam Adams says city benefits should include sex-reassignment surgery. He says the benefits should match the city’s policy against gender discrimination. The Oregonian reported that if the City Council agrees next week, Portland will become the first city in Oregon to cover surgery for transgender employees. Multnomah County established a similar policy last year. Adams says the change will cost the city about $32,000 a year through a fund that insures about two-thirds of the city’s 6,500 employees. — From wire reports

Local churches For contact information and Web links to local churches, visit www.bend bulletin.com/churches.

The Bulletin


C4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

E

The Bulletin AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

BETSY MCCOOL GORDON BLACK JOHN COSTA RICHARD COE

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-chief Editor of Editorials

OK Rep. Walden’s Bowman Dam bill

I

t’s not often that a law that will cost the government nothing has as much potential for good as a bill introduced in Congress this week by Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River. Walden’s proposed

“Central Oregon Jobs and Water Security Act” would fix a mapping mistake at Crook County’s Bowman Dam on the Crooked River. It makes a change that would benefit not only the people of Crook County but the wildlife in that river and nearby McKay Creek. Nearly 18 miles of the Crooked River joined the National Wild and Scenic Rivers system in 1988. That’s fitting: The river is among the prettiest in Oregon. Unfortunately, the law that created the stretch of protected water placed the point at which it begins squarely in the middle of Bowman Dam. That placement makes it impossible to release a tiny fraction of the uncontracted-for water currently stored behind the dam. And that, in turn, makes it impossible to do a variety of good and useful things. Unless the line is changed, Portland General Electric can not put in a small hydroelectric power station at the base of the dam, a project that would add jobs in the county and provide enough power to light nearly 5,000 homes. Unless the line is changed, just over 5,000 acre-feet of uncontracted water cannot be released, and unless that happens the city of Prineville has no good way to mitigate a plan to use an equal amount of badly needed groundwater. And, unless the line is changed, a steelhead habitat restoration project on McKay Creek remains stalled. The restoration project would return 11.2 cubic feet per second of water to that creek, bringing the ultimate goal of restoring steelhead to Crooked River that much closer to reality.

Those first two changes, the hydro project and water for groundwater mitigation, are critical to the county’s economic future. Though 50 jobs building the hydro project might not sound like much, each one would be a blessing for the county with the state’s highest unemployment rate at nearly 16 percent. As for the groundwater mitigation, if the city of Prineville cannot draw the extra groundwater mitigation would allow, it cannot ensure Facebook and other potential new businesses in the area that they will have the water they need to expand. Just as bad, the city itself cannot add to its system some 500 homes that currently must get their water elsewhere. Finally, the Crooked River itself would benefit, for it would acquire about 5,100 acre-feet of additional water, boosting streamflow and benefiting wildlife along the way. Walden’s bill makes a minor change to the wild and scenic designation on the Crooked River, moving its starting point a quarter-mile downstream from the dam. It requires PGE or anyone else building a hydro project there to look for potential damage such a project might do and mitigate accordingly, ensuring that the river itself is not damaged. It costs Crook County, the state of Oregon and the federal government not a penny, yet holds the possibility for all sorts of benefits. It is well worth the support of all parties in Congress.

Fight for good charities

S

enate Bill 40 is the tool Oregon Attorney General John Kroger needs to make it harder for charities that spend little on charity. Critics want to kill the bill because it’s imperfect. Of course, imperfection has never stopped the Oregon Legislature before, but the bill should pass to help Oregonians know what they give gets to people who need it. The bill has a simple principle: Charities should spend at least 30 percent of the money raised on helping people. If a charity doesn’t, the charity can still raise money in Oregon, but Kroger’s office can yank the charity’s tax-deductible status in Oregon. There are penalties in the bill if a charity isn’t open about its tax-deductible status. Some charities do only spend pennies on the dollar on good works. The Wishing Well Foundation of Louisiana is dedicated to fulfilling the fondest wishes of terminally ill children. Its average annual expenditures are about $1.3 million. Of that only about 12 percent goes to charitable causes. The bill has restrictions, making it more a scalpel than a sledgehammer. Charities get to appeal. Mitigating circumstances would be considered,

such as fundraising drives. There are no additional reporting requirements for charities. And more. The bill does have flaws. High administrative and fundraising costs do not equal fraud or misuse. Expenditures alone also tell donors nothing about the relative effectiveness of an organization. But nobody has come forward with an example of a worthy charity that would be harmed by the 30 percent threshold. The bill zipped through the Oregon Senate. Nobody testified against it. The Nonprofit Association of Oregon was quick to support it. In the Oregon House, the bill went to the Revenue Committee and State Rep. Vicki Berger, R-Salem, the co-chair of the committee, is unhappy with it because of its flaws. The Democratic co-chair, Rep. Phil Barnhart, D-Eugene, told The Oregonian he supports the bill but won’t overrule Berger. That’s a death sentence for the bill. Unless, you do something. This is the phone number for Berger’s office in Salem — 503-986-1420. Call her office. Encourage her to support the bill.

More work needed on bike lanes and sidewalks in state By Jerry Fleming Bulletin guest columnist

T

his is a letter intended for state, county and city street and highway maintenance departments, plus all who use them. By all, I mean motorists, truckers, businesses, bicyclists, wheelchair users, users of scooters made for people with physical limitations, etc. Because of illness and accidents, I have been restricted to bicycles and then electric scooters as my sole means of transportation in the past nine months. My long-running ideas and notions of highway and street usage and courtesies have been soundly shaken and changed forever. Let me state first that I have great appreciation for the work the crews do to maintain our roads and streets (given the time and money they have to work with). The mostly smooth and pock-free surface is a pleasure to navigate with the well-cushioned suspension systems found in most cars and even heavy sport utility vehicles and trucks along with the plush seats and the comforts bestowed upon them. Now let’s switch to bicycles. We have many more bike lands today than just a few years ago. And they are greatly appreciated, but we need to continually keep adding. Also — here’s where my beef really is — the construction and upkeep of these lanes is sorely lacking. For example, storm drains are almost always in those bike lanes (by the very nature of being placed on the lower edge of the roadway) but could be leveled off and made smoother than they are. The type that is cut in the sides of the curb are even better.

IN MY VIEW Then when it comes time for the repaving of the main lanes, the bike lanes are usually ignored or very scantily covered with new surfacing. Thus they become deteriorated and potholed from the normal freeze-and-thaw action the main lanes go through. The plowing of snow in the wintertime and subsequent sweeping of cinders and sand and slush virtually stops at the fog line, which is the beginning of the bike paths. This leaves all manner of garbage like bottles, cans, boards (even with nails or screws sticking up out of them), cardboard, food wrappers, etc., scattered there for us to have to maneuver around or through. This causes dangerous swerving either out into the roadway or up over a curb; no matter how fast or slow we are going, this is a very dangerous situation. I realize more work by the road crews, such as one more pass with the plows or sweepers to clean another two or three feet past the fog line, is going to cost more money, but it could come from licensing fees on our bicycles and even scooters, as was suggested by a My Nickel’s Worth letter in May. I totally agree with proposal. We all need to pay our way for our public services. I left the rough, uncomfortable and unsafe traveling on these paths as my final subject: electric handicap scooters and motorized wheelchairs. The problems of the bicyclist dim compared with those of people with disabilities. Now, I know you are saying we should stay on the sidewalks with that type of conveyance. Right? Well, I’d try, but when you’re tooling along just fine

The plowing of snow in the wintertime and subsequent sweeping of cinders and sand and slush virtually stops at the fog line, which is the beginning of the bike paths. This leaves all manner of garbage like bottles, cans, boards, cardboard, food wrappers, etc., scattered there for us to have to maneuver around or through. and wham! you encounter a nonexisting stretch of walkway or the walkway turns into soft mud or gravel or lawn or a bunch of overgrown shrubs, weeds, tree limbs, etc., you have no choice but to head for the road again. And, in my case, with a scooter that has solid rubber tires and no spring suspension, even with a brand-new sidewalk, the monster expansion cracks they carve into the concrete just about jar my bones and liver to pieces. I am 77 years old, but I love biking and the satisfaction of being on the green side of the DEQ. I don’t plan on going back to a gas-guzzler vehicle, but maybe a little Vespa scooter or such and then I’ll be back out on the main lanes, with that oh-so-smooth and comfortable commute again. Jerry Fleming lives in Bend.

Letters policy

In My View policy

Submissions

We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or OpEd piece every 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 600 and 800 words, signed and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or In My View and send, fax or e-mail them to The Bulletin. WRITE: My Nickel’s Worth OR In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 FAX: 541-385-5804 E-MAIL: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

The city of Bend addled by seven core incompetencies By Scott Siewert Bulletin guest columnist

I

n a capitalistic society, every organization needs a set of “core competencies” to assure survival while fulfilling their respective missions. For example, FedEx can deliver a package cross-country in one day. Conversely, the city of Bend has developed and refined a set of “core incompetencies” during the past decade that has severely degraded its primary missions of public safety and public service while concurrently threatening the economic viability of our town. Those incompetencies are as follows: • Arrogance: As a perfect example of the arrogance that runs rampant at City Hall, the city impounded Juniper Water Utility with no compensation whatsoever to the owner of that utility. Of course, he sued and won a judgment against taxpayers between $10 million and $20

million, plus his own massive attorney fees. So what does the city do? It appeals and loses again, making lawyers on both sides the clear winners while taxpayers got whacked as usual. Add $7 million for repairs to the estimated $12 million in judgments and fees for 1,200 exclusive homes in the upscale Mountain High area. The average, hardworking taxpayers picked up a tab of $158,000 for each upscale home in that development through no fault of their own. Expect the surface water project to be even worse! • Fiscal irresponsibility: Bend paid nearly $5 million for the former Bulletin property during “boom years” before conducting an analysis of the cost of a new and unnecessary city hall. When the numbers came in, the project was not feasible, and now taxpayers are still stuck with this albatross five years later,

IN MY VIEW with interest on the debt compounding every day! • Mismanagement: The urban growth boundary expansion plan wasted millions of taxpayer dollars and consumed massive amounts of ultimately futile labor by city personnel over six years. This debacle transpired because the city would not follow Redmond’s reasonable model or listen to authorities like Deschutes County that told Bend the plan would “never fly” at the state level. • Apathy toward taxpayers: Bend Area Transit provides an excellent example of Bend’s “know-it-all attitude.” While voters rejected the system on multiple occasions, the city proceeded to squander millions on its pet project. • Grandiose schemes: Instead of run-

ning a city that focuses on public safety and services, the city of Bend engages in numerous grandiose schemes like Juniper Ridge, which has consumed $18 million for no benefit to anyone but Les Schwab, Suterra and their respective balance sheets. Our city officials view themselves as huge land developers instead of public servants! And we are left to wonder why they can’t run the town. • Slothfulness: Bend approved the purchase of property at Juniper Ridge by Suterra in October 2008 with closing anticipated in January 2009. In January 2010, it was revealed that closing was never executed because of city slothfulness even though Suterra owed taxpayers $536,000. The sale was finally executed in May 2010, 19 months after the deal was consummated, and taxpayers received no interest. Plus we

lost the benefit of property taxes for a full year because of city negligence. • Perpetual litigation: Any organization that is riddled with a continuous stream of lawsuits will be severely impeded from executing its mission. Bend has been consumed for years with actions like the Junk Bus lawsuit, and those brought by the Riverhouse, Juniper Ridge Partners and many others. Massive waste of taxpayer resources at City Hall, including excessive salaries, PERS, extravagant health and welfare programs for city employees and legions of consultants combine with the foregoing list of “core incompetencies” to threaten the future of our city. Taxpayers should send a strong message to city fathers that they will no longer accept “city spin” or the status quo. Scott Siewert lives in Bend.


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 C5

O D

N Edwin William "Bill" Friedlander, of Bend Mar. 28, 1941 - May 28, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: Funeral Mass, 11 am Friday, June 3, 2011, St. Francis of Assisi Historic Church, downtown Bend, interment at Pilot Butte Cemetery to follow. Contributions may be made to:

Christmas Basket Fund, BPOE #1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Road, Bend, OR 97701; Partners In Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701.

James Eric Jensen, of Redmond Sept. 18, 1941 - May 28, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals-Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Visitation: 12 noon-5 pm, Thur. June 2, 2011, at Autumn- Redmond, 485 NW Larch Ave.; Graveside: 1 pm, Fri. June 3, 2011, at Terrebonne Pioneer Cemetery, Smith Rock Way, Terrebonne.

Thomas B. Turner, of Bend Jan. 7, 1928 - May 24, 2011 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 www. niswonger-reynolds.com. Services: A family service was held Tuesday, May 31, 2011 at Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.

Twylla Mae Knake, of Bend Aug. 10, 1922 - May 25, 2011 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471. www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: Memorial Service to be held on Sunday, June 5th, at 2:00pm, at Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 Shevlin Park Rd, Bend. Contributions may be made to:

Oregon Public Broadcasting , 7140 SW Macadam Avenue Portland, OR 97219 OR Legacy Hopewell Hospice House – in memory of Kobe Kemple. 6171 Southwest Capitol Highway Portland, OR 97239-2649 (503) 244-7890

Obituary Policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, e-mail or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. DEADLINES: Death notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon on Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. PHONE: 541-617-7825 MAIL: Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 FAX: 541-322-7254 E-MAIL: obits@bendbulletin.com

Clarence John Van Orsow

Laurence ‘Larry’ Roland Serrurier

Dennis James Sherbino

Warming

April 7, 1920 - May 12, 2011

Oct. 8, 1930 - May 26, 2011

August 1, 1940 – May 27, 2011

Culver resident, Clarence John Van Orsow, passed away May 12, 2011, in Bend, Oregon, with all seven children at his side. He was born April 7, 1920, in Dundas, Minnesota, the oldest of four children born to John and Mary (Gangloff) Clarence J. Van Orsow. Van Orsow He moved to Oregon when he was 18, and met the love of his life for 69 years, Wanda, at Oaks Park Skating Rink in Portland. They were married September 20, 1941. Mr. Van Orsow was drafted into the Army during World War II and served from December 3, 1942 to November 28, 1945, spending his tour of duty in Europe. In 1953, he moved his family to Central Oregon where he worked for Leo Fehrenbacher in Lone Pine. He later became the policeman for the City of Culver, and farmed on his own. He retired after 25 years as ditch rider for North Unit Irrigation District. He continued to work part-time for Round Butte Seed Growers and local farmers into his 70’s. He was instrumental in organizing Little League in Culver and Jefferson County, drove athletic bus for Culver High School for many years and kept the score book for various sports. He enjoyed traveling to cribbage tournaments and placed in many of those tournaments. He won enough cribbage boards that he was able to give one to each of his children and grandchildren. He always enjoyed spending time with his many grandchildren. Survivors include his children, Charlotte Steinbeck of Burns, Bob Van Orsow of Culver, Denny Van Orsow of Madras, Angie Obrist of Tillamook, Bo Van Orsow of Bend, Jo Guiney of Culver and Geri Baker of Bend; 21 grandchildren, and 28 greatgrandchildren; sister, Dorothy Kerslake of Troutdale; and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his wife, Wanda, his parents, one brother and one sister. Mass of Christian Burial was held May 16, 2011, at 10:00 a.m., at St. Patrick Catholic Church in Madras. Interment was held at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend on Tuesday, May 17, 2011 at 1:00 p.m. Memorial donations have been suggested by the family to the Culver Volunteer Fire Department. Arrangements were under the direction of Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home of Madras.

Laurence ‘Larry’ Roland Serrurier M.D., was born in Rochester, Minnesota, to Helen Schroeder Serrurier and Laurence Roland Serrurier M.D. When Larry was young, the family lived in San Juan, Texas and Tacoma, Washington Larry Serrurier before settling in Portland where Larry attended Russellville Grade School and Franklin High School. From 1948 until 1955, Larry attended Stanford University and then Stanford Medical School. Following medical school, Larry interned in Madison, Wisconsin, and spent two years as a captain at the Lackland Air Force Base in Texas. He completed his residency in internal medicine at the Veterans Hospital in San Francisco. In 1952, Larry met Patricia ‘Pat’ Ryan on a sunny afternoon on the Washougal River. They married shortly thereafter and remained best friends for 57 years of marriage. They moved back to Portland in 1959, and Larry started a practice in internal medicine at the Valley Medical Clinic. When he retired in 1995, over 400 adoring and faithful patients attended a party to extend him best wishes in his retirement. Shortly thereafter, Larry and Pat moved to Bend. While Larry was committed to the practice of medicine and the welfare of his patients, he was first and foremost a wonderful husband and father, and the family shared his passion for the outdoors with frequent backpacking trips in the Sierra, the Wallowa, the Sawtooth and the Olympic mountains. Larry also enjoyed drifting rivers and was an avid bicyclist. He also spent a lifetime enjoying tennis, golf and volleyball. Larry is survived by his beloved wife, Pat, and his three children, Greg (wife, Nancy and children, Kate and Ben of Menlo Park), Peter (wife, Penny and children, Alex and Nathaniel of Portland), and Aimee (husband, Patrick Griffiths and children, Will and Ryan of Bend). Larry will be remembered most for his caring and thoughtful nature and his great sense of humor. Those who knew him will be pleased to know that his last meal was a chocolate milkshake. Contributions in Larry’s name may be made to 1000 Friends of Oregon, PO Box 40367, Portland, OR 97240, or a charitable organization of your choice.

Dennis James Sherbino of Redmond, OR, died on Friday, May 27, 2011 at St. Charles Medical Center. He was 70. A memorial service was held at 2 pm, Wednesday, June 1, at Victory Baptist Church, 21530 NE Butler Market in Dennis James Road, Bend. GraveSherbino side service will be held at 2:00 pm, Thursday, June 2, at Glen County Cemetery in Willows, CA. Mr. Dennis Sherbino was born August 1, 1940, in Mason City, Iowa, the son of Vercyl and Miriam Sherbino. He graduated from Phoenix Christian High in 1959. He went on to attend Simpson Bible College for Bible and Music training. He also earned various certificates in Electronics and Calibration. He married Nancy Hastain on July 18, 1965, at La Honda Community Church, where Dennis served earlier as Youth Pastor during his Dad’s Pastorate. Mr. Sherbino was known as the “Fix It Man,” with his God-given ability to work on electronics, calibration, construction and mechanics. He also had a love for Christian music and radio broadcasting, starting KECR Family Radio in Southern CA. His employment of forty years in electronics included starting the biomedical department at El Camino Hospital, in Mt. View, CA. Survivors include his wife, Nancy; foster son, Jose Ortiz of California; adopted twin sons, Ray and Bryan Sherbino of California; two biological daughters, Denise Phillips of West Virginia, and Debbie Fredericks of Arkansas; sister, Mary Jo Dickenson of Oregon; and brother, Larry Sherbino of California. He has 10 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his Dad, Mom, and brother. The family would like to give special thanks for the wonderful care they received from the doctors, nurses, and staff of St. Charles Medical Center. Memorial contributions can be made to Victory Baptist Church, Media and Sound Fund, in honor of Dennis Sherbino. Baird Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements, (541) 382-0903.

Continued from C1 “Nobody likes to either hear or propose that something should cost more,” he said. “But one of the reasons that we emit carbon is that it doesn’t cost us anything to do it.” Other ideas include shifting how properties are taxed, he said, maybe basing it more on how efficient a house is and how many people live there, instead of its assessed value. Or, instead of charging a gas tax, charge a fee based on the efficiency of a vehicle and the number of miles its driven. “Everyone who uses a transportation system should pay something,” he said — although a bicyclist would pay significantly less than a Hummer driver. “Those are the kinds of ideas that we at least want to get people thinking about,” Dodson said. The commission was in town Wednesday as well to update the Bend City Council. Before the meeting, Bend Mayor Jeff Eager said the city has received grants from the federal government to do things like replace the lights at the parking garage with more efficient versions, and has worked on projects like allowing public works staff to do more remote monitoring and control, so they don’t have to drive around as much. Those things can help the city save money while helping reduce emissions, he said. But Eager said he’s not interested in new taxes or fees. “I don’t think it’s a good idea to be assessing fees for global warming in Bend right now,

The Oregon Global Warming Commission is looking for input on how to reduce greenhouse gasses, and holding a public workshop in Bend from 7 to 9 p.m. today at the Bend Parks and Recreation Building, 766 S.W. Columbia St., in Bend. For more information, visit www.keeporegoncool.org. The commission is also asking people to take a survey about how to reduce the state’s greenhouse gas footprint, available at http:// conversation.fuseinsight. com/topic/start/OGWC_ Roadmap_3_3_2011/ intro?SID=Medford. just because of the state of the economy,” Eager said. “And any effect they would have on any kind of carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere would be negligible.” State Rep. Jason Conger, RBend, agreed that whatever happens in Oregon is a “drop in the bucket,” compared to what’s going on worldwide. If Oregon wants to make a difference, he said, it should focus on supporting innovation related to renewable, low-emission energy sources. “If we’re serious about having a global impact, the way to do it is to focus our attention on finding cheaper alternatives to the production of clean energy,” Conger said. Kate Ramsayer can be reached at 541-617-7811 or kramsayer@bendbulletin.com.

Clarice Taylor, actress who played ‘Cosby Show’ grandmother, 93 By Valerie J. Nelson Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Clarice Taylor, an actress best known for portraying the self-possessed Grandmother Huxtable on the hit television sitcom “The Cosby Show,” died Monday. She was 93. Taylor died of congestive heart failure at her home in Englewood., N.J. Bill Cosby said she was “perfect” as the mother of his character, Cliff Huxtable, on the NBC series that aired from 1984 to 1992 except she looked “young enough to play my sister.” “She did stand-up comedy. She and I were not of the ‘theatuh’ per se, we are performers,” Cosby told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday. “So

whenever I’d say something to her about doing something, I just talked to her the way comedians talk.” After appearing in the original Broadway production of “The Wiz” in the late 1970s, Taylor toured with the show and roomed with Phylicia Rashad, who would play Cosby’s wife on the TV series. Taylor first auditioned to play Rashad’s mother but eventually was cast as Cosby’s. “I put on a gray wig, a bandana over that, flat-heeled shoes and a long dress with no shape to it,” Taylor told The Associated Press in 1987. “Bill saw through my act. I read five lines, and he said, ‘If you’re going to go through all of this, you’ve got the part.’ ”

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

Twylla Mae Knake

Edwin William ‘Bill’ Friedlander

August 10, 1922 – May 25, 2011

March 28, 1941 - May 28, 2011 Bill Friedlander, an 11-year Bend, Oregon resident, passed away from complications associated with a recent surgery. He married Carol on September 23, 1961, in Carbondale, Illinois. To say that Bill’s hobbies were hunting and fishing, would be an understatement. Bill was active in many clubs and service groups in Central Oregon - he recently served as secretary for the Redmond Rod & Gun Club, and was a certified instructor for hunter education programs; volunteered with ODFW as well as a being a hunter representative for their Access & Habitat Program Regional Council. His legacy will continue, although he will be missed. He was a member of Bend Elks Lodge #1371 and served as Lodge Treasurer for four years. Bill was a past president of the Portland Wholesale Lumber Association, and was a valuable 37-year member of Portland’s Hoo-Hoo Club 47 serving as President, vice-president and vice-regent. He was highly regarded for his expertise in the lum-

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ber industry and well-known to be a fair and honest salesman. Bill is survived by his wife, Carol, of Bend, son, William Warren Friedlander of Portland, OR, daughter, Dawn E. Friedlander of Sunray, TX; sister, Maggie Hrkac; three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A funeral mass will be held Friday, June 3 at 11 a.m. at St. Francis Historic Downtown Church, corner of Franklin Ave. and Lava Road, Bend. Memorial contributions may be made to BPOE #1371 Christmas Basket Fund, or Partners In Care Hospice. Autumn Funerals of Bend is handling the arrangements. 541-318-0842.

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Twylla was born into the Knake family in Cissna Park, Illinois and spent her early years in Danville, Illinois. Along with her mother, father and one brother, she spent time around the family’s restaurant and worked there as a growing child. Alfalfa of the Little Rascals and jazz singer Bobby Short were frequent child performers in the restaurant and two of Twylla’s peers. This is also where she and Dick Van Dyke learned to tap dance together and where she started playing the marimba. Her appreciation of music, theatre and the arts lasted throughout her life. Twylla married in 1944 during wartime to HM Kemple, Jr. In 1945 she graduated from St. Luke’s Hospital School of Nursing in Chicago and began work as a registered nurse. Between 1946 and 1958, she gave birth to six children and devoted most of her day to day life to her family. The family moved to Bend in 1956. While raising the children, Twylla volunteered in classrooms and was actively involved in PTA throughout her children’s school lives. She was an active PEO member in Bend. Grace First Lutheran was Twylla’s church home during all of her years in Bend. In 1976 she re-entered the nursing profession at Bend Memorial Clinic in the office of Dr. Richard Robinson. Twylla managed a ranch and was a horsewoman. She had a hunger for knowledge in a wide realm including the current state of world affairs. She was an avid environmentalist far ahead of her time. Twylla was a master at gathering family and friends as well as strangers into her realm of support, wisdom and acceptance. She was a magnet for people who needed a soft place to fall or a place to work through hard life decisions. At the end of every visit with her children and grandchildren she would ask, “What are you?” They all learned to say in reply, “I am unique and valuable.” She lived fully as a model of integrity and was unapologetically her own person – a trait that rubbed off on all her offspring. Twylla died at her home in Tumalo of congestive heart failure. She is survived by her children Kip Kemple of Portland; Kathleen Kemple Adams of Durango, Colorado; Kara Kemple Alexander of Tigard and Kris Kemple Cranston of Bend. Her sons, Kobe & Ken Kemple have already died. She was special grandmother to 16 grandchildren and 8 great grandchildren. She maintained close relationships with what she called “all the family in-laws and outlaws”. Twylla’s memorial service will be held on Sunday, June 5th at 2:00 pm at Grace First Lutheran Church in Bend and will be followed by a reception. In lieu of flowers, Twylla would prefer to have donations made to: Oregon Public Broadcasting, 7140 SW Macadam Avenue, Portland, OR 97219, or: Legacy Hopewell House Hospice – in memory of Kobe Kemple. 6171 Southwest Capitol Highway, Portland, OR 97239-2649. (503) 244-7890.


W E AT H ER

C6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

THE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST

Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2011.

TODAY, JUNE 2

HIGH Ben Burkel

57

Bob Shaw

FORECASTS: LOCAL

STATE

Maupin

Government Camp

Western

Ruggs

Condon

63/42

63/40

65/43

42/36

Warm Springs

Marion Forks

60/40

53/32

Willowdale

59/39

Mitchell

Madras

Camp Sherman 52/32 Redmond Prineville 57/35 Cascadia 54/36 56/36 Sisters 55/34 Bend Post Oakridge Elk Lake 54/34

45/23

54/32

54/31

Vancouver 57/50

Portland

52/32

Fort Rock

62/48

Bend

56/40

Boise

57/35

65/45

57/40

Redding

Idaho Falls Elko

66/50

Christmas Valley

56/35

54/34

56/34

Silver Lake

57/42

Helena

Grants Pass

Eastern

Hampton

Missoula

Reno

52/34

Mostly cloudy with scattered showers today.

Crater Lake 48/25

57/41

San Francisco

Salt Lake City

60/49

62/43

June 8

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

Mostly sunny and warm. HIGH

LOW

Full

Last

New

June 15 June 23 July 1

Thursday Hi/Lo/W

Astoria . . . . . . . . 59/49/0.29 . . . . . 57/49/sh. . . . . . 65/49/pc Baker City . . . . . . 61/36/0.04 . . . . . 54/36/sh. . . . . . . 61/40/c Brookings . . . . . .55/43/trace . . . . . 60/48/sh. . . . . . 59/49/sh Burns. . . . . . . . . . 52/32/0.01 . . . . . 55/37/sh. . . . . . . 62/40/c Eugene . . . . . . . . 57/47/0.16 . . . . . 62/48/sh. . . . . . 64/45/sh Klamath Falls . . . 46/33/0.17 . . . . . 53/35/sh. . . . . . 58/38/sh Lakeview. . . . . . . 48/32/0.10 . . . . . 52/33/sn. . . . . . 58/40/sh La Pine . . . . . . . . 52/33/0.04 . . . . . 55/31/sh. . . . . . 60/33/sh Medford . . . . . . . 55/46/0.29 . . . . . 65/45/sh. . . . . . 67/47/sh Newport . . . . . . . 57/43/0.01 . . . . . 56/48/sh. . . . . . 59/51/sh North Bend . . . . . 57/45/0.00 . . . . . 59/49/sh. . . . . . 59/49/sh Ontario . . . . . . . . 68/50/0.00 . . . . . 61/47/sh. . . . . . 69/48/pc Pendleton . . . . . . 62/46/0.02 . . . . . 63/45/sh. . . . . . 67/45/pc Portland . . . . . . . 60/51/0.30 . . . . . 62/52/sh. . . . . . 68/51/pc Prineville . . . . . . . 50/39/0.06 . . . . . 54/36/sh. . . . . . 67/39/sh Redmond. . . . . . . 53/40/0.19 . . . . . 58/36/sh. . . . . . 62/39/sh Roseburg. . . . . . . 53/48/0.54 . . . . . 63/47/sh. . . . . . 66/50/sh Salem . . . . . . . . . 61/49/0.41 . . . . . 62/50/sh. . . . . . 65/49/sh Sisters . . . . . . . . . 53/40/0.08 . . . . . 55/34/sh. . . . . . 64/36/sh The Dalles . . . . . . 69/53/0.02 . . . . . 64/48/sh. . . . . . 71/50/pc

WATER REPORT

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX The higher the UV Index number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Index is for solar at noon.

3MEDIUM

0

2

4

HIGH 6

V.HIGH 8

10

POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.com

LOW

PRECIPITATION

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50/37 24 hours ending 4 p.m.. . . . . . . . 0.11” Record high . . . . . . . . . . . . .93 in 1986 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.11” Record low. . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 in 1955 Average month to date. . . . . . . . 0.03” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.27” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39 Average year to date. . . . . . . . . . 5.44” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.. . . 29.92 Record 24 hours . . . . . . . 1.04 in 1971 *Melted liquid equivalent

Bend, west of Hwy. 97......Low Sisters.................................Low Bend, east of Hwy. 97.......Low La Pine................................Low Redmond/Madras...........Low Prineville ...........................Low

LOW

LOW

71 43

TEMPERATURE

FIRE INDEX Friday Hi/Lo/W

Mostly cloudy, chance of showers, cooler. HIGH

78 44

PLANET WATCH

Moon phases First

MONDAY

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . . . .4:52 a.m. . . . . . .7:45 p.m. Venus . . . . . . . .4:28 a.m. . . . . . .6:56 p.m. Mars. . . . . . . . .4:08 a.m. . . . . . .6:29 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . . . .3:28 a.m. . . . . . .4:54 p.m. Saturn. . . . . . . .3:04 p.m. . . . . . .2:58 a.m. Uranus . . . . . . .2:28 a.m. . . . . . .2:40 p.m.

OREGON CITIES City

Eugene

56/33

53/29

Calgary

Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:25 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:42 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:24 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:43 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 5:59 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 9:47 p.m.

LOW

75 43

BEND ALMANAC

58/50

55/33

HIGH

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Yesterday’s regional extremes • 69° Hermiston • 32° Burns

SUNDAY Mostly sunny and mild.

NORTHWEST

62/52

Burns

Mostly cloudy, chance of rain showers, LOW warmer.

65 38

Seattle

Mostly cloudy with scattered showers today.

SATURDAY

A trough of low pressure will remain in place with showers scattered throughout the region today.

50/32

55/31

Chemult

HIGH

35

Paulina

La Pine

48/25

LOW

Central

Brothers

Sunriver

53/30

Tonight: Mostly cloudy, isolated showers.

65/46

54/33

Crescent

Crescent Lake

Today: Mostly cloudy, scattered showers, isolated storms, cool, breezy.

56/37

58/38

57/35

Mostly cloudy with scattered showers today.

FRIDAY

MEDIUM

HIGH

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48,756 . . . . .55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182,399 . . . .200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 79,146 . . . . .91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . . 42,477 . . . . .47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 149,178 . . . .153,777 River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . 399 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 881 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 541 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,683 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 885 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . 1,003 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,308 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partial clouds, c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain, t-thunderstorms, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix, w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are high for the day.

S

S

S

S

S

Vancouver 57/50

Yesterday’s U.S. extremes

S

S

Calgary 65/46

S

Saskatoon 63/50

Seattle 58/50

S Winnipeg 68/59

S

S

S

S

S S

Quebec 53/42

Thunder Bay 65/44

Bismarck 84/54

S

Halifax 63/45

Portland 64/45 Boston Boise 71/51 Buffalo Rapid City Detroit 57/40 65/46 New York 82/51 • 105° 72/56 76/53 Marianna, Fla. Philadelphia Chicago Cheyenne Columbus 85/57 86/46 70/59 • 25° Omaha Des Moines 83/63 San Francisco Salt Lake Washington, D. C. 92/72 86/71 60/49 Bryce Canyon, Utah City 87/59 Las Denver Louisville 62/43 Kansas City Vegas • 1.26” 90/52 91/68 92/74 St. Louis 81/60 Charlotte St. Petersburg, Fla. 90/75 94/69 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 88/60 69/55 93/71 94/70 95/75 Phoenix Atlanta 97/68 Honolulu 92/72 Birmingham 87/74 Dallas Tijuana 97/71 96/76 68/55 New Orleans 94/74 Orlando Houston 90/70 Chihuahua 94/74 95/61 Miami 87/77 Monterrey La Paz 96/73 95/63 Mazatlan Anchorage 86/66 61/49 Juneau 67/44 (in the 48 contiguous states):

Portland 62/52

Billings 75/45

St. Paul 75/69 Green Bay 65/53

To ronto 67/50

FRONTS

Hayes Continued from C1 In December 2010, the DOJ said it could not prove any criminal wrongdoing beyond a reasonable doubt. Former Gov. Ted Kulongoski elected to hire Malheur County Circuit Court Judge Frank Yraguen to review the case. The judge’s report has not been released. But DOJ spokesman Tony Green said his department is looking forward to the documents being released so the public can weigh in. Yraguen ended his investigation in March. “The three agencies (Oregon Department of Energy, Department of Consumer and Business Services and the Department of

Corrections) then elected to hire an outside firm to provide them with another personnel review,” Green said. The state hired two Portland lawyers with the firm Barran Liebman to review the case. Lonn Hoklin, with the Department of Administrative Services, said the independent counsel was hired to recommend any employment action, if necessary. The employees were told Wednesday that they were cleared to return to work today and none of the employees face any disciplinary actions. “It was an exhaustive investigation,” Hoklin said. “The results were comprehensive.” Hoklin said all the employees involved in the investigation are being given a chance to go

through a name-clearing hearing. The four employees are Mark Long, Joan Fraser, Paul Seesing and Shelli Honeywell. Long temporarily worked for the Oregon Department of Energy, but has since moved back to his post with the Department of Consumer and Business Services. Fraser is also an employee with DCBS who temporarily worked for the DOE. Honeywell works permanently for the Department of Corrections, but again was on a temporary rotation at the DOE. Seesing is a project manager at DOE. Questions have been raised about the handling of the DOJ’s investigation into the matter. “Defense counsel has made allegations of ethical improprieties during the course of the investi-

Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . .96/77/0.00 . . .95/69/s . . . 94/68/s Akron . . . . . . . . .83/73/0.00 . 73/47/pc . . 76/64/pc Albany. . . . . . . . .93/71/0.00 . 65/43/pc . . . 73/47/s Albuquerque. . . .94/62/0.00 . 88/60/pc . . 87/63/pc Anchorage . . . . .57/50/0.09 . . .61/49/c . . . 61/45/c Atlanta . . . . . . . .96/73/0.00 . 92/72/pc . . 92/72/pc Atlantic City . . . .89/70/0.00 . . .83/53/s . . . 69/60/s Austin . . . . . . . . .97/68/0.00 . . .98/69/s . . . 98/70/s Baltimore . . . . . .98/73/0.00 . . .87/56/s . . . 81/59/s Billings. . . . . . . . .75/44/0.00 . 75/45/pc . . . .63/45/t Birmingham . . . .98/69/0.00 . 97/71/pc . . 96/73/pc Bismarck . . . . . . .73/36/0.00 . . .84/54/t . . 71/53/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . .57/40/sh . . 66/46/pc Boston. . . . . . . . .82/64/0.12 . . .71/51/s . . . 71/52/s Bridgeport, CT. . .81/67/0.00 . . .69/51/s . . . 73/53/s Buffalo . . . . . . . .80/64/0.00 . . .65/46/s . . . 72/56/s Burlington, VT. . .90/69/0.38 . .60/42/sh . . . 70/45/s Caribou, ME . . . .81/54/0.05 . .61/42/sh . . . 59/41/c Charleston, SC . .95/74/0.00 . . .88/73/s . . 86/74/pc Charlotte. . . . . . .95/70/0.00 . 94/69/pc . . 90/68/pc Chattanooga. . . .97/73/0.00 . 96/68/pc . . 96/69/pc Cheyenne . . . . . .77/39/0.00 . 86/46/pc . . . 70/45/s Chicago. . . . . . . .81/59/0.00 . . .70/59/t . . 91/76/pc Cincinnati . . . . . .87/68/0.00 . 86/66/pc . . 90/67/pc Cleveland . . . . . .82/75/0.00 . . .68/53/s . . 75/69/pc Colorado Springs 88/52/0.00 . . .86/54/s . . . 79/51/s Columbia, MO . .85/59/0.00 . 90/71/pc . . . 93/71/s Columbia, SC . . .97/75/0.00 . . .95/71/t . . . .93/72/t Columbus, GA. .102/76/0.00 . . .98/69/s . . 96/71/pc Columbus, OH. . .87/75/0.00 . . .83/63/s . . 88/67/pc Concord, NH . . . .90/59/0.01 . 63/44/pc . . . 72/45/s Corpus Christi. . .91/70/0.00 . . .93/72/s . . 92/74/pc Dallas Ft Worth. .94/76/0.00 . . .96/76/s . . . 97/73/s Dayton . . . . . . . .85/71/0.00 . . .82/63/s . . 90/68/pc Denver. . . . . . . . .82/48/0.00 . . .90/52/s . . . 78/51/s Des Moines. . . . .81/55/0.00 . . .86/71/t . . 90/68/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . .82/70/0.00 . 72/56/pc . . 76/67/pc Duluth . . . . . . . . .65/49/0.00 . . .60/54/t . . . .64/57/t El Paso. . . . . . . . .99/70/0.00 . 99/73/pc . . 96/73/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . .65/49/sh . . 74/50/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . .70/47/0.00 . . .74/66/t . . . .77/56/t Flagstaff . . . . . . .74/38/0.00 . . .69/33/s . . . 71/36/s

Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . .76/63/0.00 . 75/53/pc . . 84/63/pc Green Bay. . . . . .74/58/0.00 . 65/53/pc . . 83/69/pc Greensboro. . . . .94/72/0.00 . . .94/66/s . . 85/66/pc Harrisburg. . . . . .93/71/0.01 . . .82/52/s . . 79/58/pc Hartford, CT . . . .86/66/0.00 . . .69/45/s . . . 75/48/s Helena. . . . . . . . .68/45/0.00 . .56/40/sh . . 61/41/sh Honolulu . . . . . . .86/76/0.00 . . .87/74/r . . . 87/73/s Houston . . . . . . .98/70/0.00 . 94/74/pc . . 94/72/pc Huntsville . . . . . .97/70/0.00 . 97/70/pc . . 96/70/pc Indianapolis . . . .86/70/0.00 . 85/66/pc . . 89/72/pc Jackson, MS . . . .98/69/0.00 . 98/71/pc . . 99/72/pc Madison, WI . . . .78/58/0.00 . . .70/60/t . . 90/69/pc Jacksonville. . . . .93/69/0.00 . . .90/68/s . . 91/70/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . .69/44/0.00 . . .67/44/c . . . 61/46/c Kansas City. . . . .83/56/0.01 . 92/74/pc . . 92/72/pc Lansing . . . . . . . .75/65/0.00 . 73/50/pc . . 84/66/pc Las Vegas . . . . . .87/69/0.00 . . .81/60/s . . . 84/69/s Lexington . . . . . .88/71/0.00 . 88/64/pc . . 90/66/pc Lincoln. . . . . . . . .87/50/0.00 . 93/71/pc . . 92/67/pc Little Rock. . . . . .94/70/0.00 . 95/75/pc . . 97/74/pc Los Angeles. . . . .65/53/0.00 . . .69/55/s . . . 72/56/s Louisville . . . . . . .92/77/0.00 . 91/68/pc . . 96/70/pc Memphis. . . . . . .96/73/0.00 . 97/76/pc . . 99/76/pc Miami . . . . . . . . .89/76/0.00 . 87/77/pc . . . 88/78/s Milwaukee . . . . .79/62/0.00 . 56/53/pc . . 86/66/pc Minneapolis . . . .76/55/0.00 . . .75/69/t . . 89/63/pc Nashville . . . . . . .94/70/0.00 . 94/70/pc . . 96/70/pc New Orleans. . . .98/75/0.00 . 94/74/pc . . 92/73/pc New York . . . . . .90/69/0.00 . . .76/53/s . . . 77/57/s Newark, NJ . . . . .95/69/0.00 . . .78/53/s . . . 78/56/s Norfolk, VA . . . . .93/71/0.00 . . .88/63/s . . . 80/67/s Oklahoma City . .91/72/0.00 . . .93/71/s . . . 92/69/s Omaha . . . . . . . .85/54/0.00 . 92/72/pc . . 92/68/pc Orlando. . . . . . . .83/69/0.42 . . .90/70/s . . . 91/71/s Palm Springs. . . .90/64/0.00 . . .90/61/s . . . 94/63/s Peoria . . . . . . . . .84/55/0.00 . . .85/67/t . . . 91/72/s Philadelphia . . . .96/70/0.00 . . .85/57/s . . . 80/59/s Phoenix. . . . . . . .94/73/0.00 . . .97/68/s . . . 99/70/s Pittsburgh . . . . . .85/75/0.00 . . .75/48/s . . 80/58/pc Portland, ME. . . .73/59/0.00 . 64/45/pc . . 70/48/pc Providence . . . . .80/61/0.00 . . .72/49/s . . . 76/52/s Raleigh . . . . . . . .95/70/0.00 . . .94/67/s . . 87/64/pc

gation,” a statement from the DOJ reads. “We conducted a thorough internal review and have concluded that the allegations are baseless. We stand by the integrity of the investigation.” More documents regarding the investigation could be released as soon as Friday depending on if any of the employees request a name-clearing hearing. Hayes did not return a call for comment. A statement from Kitzhaber’s office said he “supports the agencies’ decision to reinstate the employees and release information related to the investigation as soon as possible.” Lauren Dake can be reached at 541-419-8074 or at ldake@bendbulletin.com.

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . .71/39/0.00 . 82/51/pc . . . 71/52/s Savannah . . . . . .95/74/0.00 . . .92/72/s . . . 90/72/s Reno . . . . . . . . . 61/45/trace . 57/41/pc . . 70/44/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . .59/50/0.09 . .58/50/sh . . 65/49/pc Richmond . . . . . .96/71/0.00 . . .92/59/s . . . 84/67/s Sioux Falls. . . . . .73/45/0.02 . . .85/68/t . . 81/58/pc Rochester, NY . . .82/73/0.00 . . .67/45/s . . . 71/54/s Spokane . . . . . . 63/47/trace . .59/42/sh . . 64/45/pc Sacramento. . . . .64/46/0.10 . 70/48/pc . . 73/52/pc Springfield, MO. .87/67/0.00 . 90/70/pc . . . 92/70/s St. Louis. . . . . . . .91/66/0.00 . 90/75/pc . . 95/74/pc Tampa . . . . . . . . .88/72/1.05 . . .90/74/s . . . 91/73/s Salt Lake City . . .78/56/0.00 . 62/43/pc . . 65/47/pc Tucson. . . . . . . .102/67/0.00 . 96/61/pc . . . 97/63/s San Antonio . . . .95/72/0.00 . . .96/71/s . . . 96/72/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .92/73/0.00 . 94/74/pc . . . 95/74/s San Diego . . . . . .68/58/0.00 . . .68/56/s . . . 70/56/s Washington, DC .98/76/0.16 . . .87/59/s . . . 84/61/s San Francisco . . .62/51/0.15 . 63/50/pc . . 61/53/pc Wichita . . . . . . . .92/66/0.00 . . .94/72/s . . . 95/71/s San Jose . . . . . . .66/51/0.01 . 68/49/pc . . 65/51/pc Yakima . . . . . . . .65/49/0.29 . 66/43/pc . . 69/48/pc Santa Fe . . . . . . .90/57/0.00 . 82/51/pc . . 80/50/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . . .93/69/0.00 . . .93/62/s . . . 98/63/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . .66/45/0.00 . 71/53/pc . . . 76/54/s Athens. . . . . . . . .78/57/0.02 . 80/65/pc . . . 82/66/s Auckland. . . . . . .63/48/0.00 . . .62/50/s . . 61/51/sh Baghdad . . . . . .118/84/0.00 . .104/80/s . . 101/77/s Bangkok . . . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .94/81/t . . . .93/82/t Beijing. . . . . . . . .91/68/0.00 . . .91/69/s . . 89/67/pc Beirut. . . . . . . . . .77/70/0.00 . . .77/65/s . . . 81/67/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . .68/55/0.05 . 74/56/pc . . 77/54/pc Bogota . . . . . . . .66/52/0.00 . .68/52/sh . . 66/52/sh Budapest. . . . . . .82/59/0.00 . . .81/58/t . . . .79/60/t Buenos Aires. . . .64/37/0.00 . 64/44/pc . . . 59/42/s Cabo San Lucas .90/68/0.00 . . .88/70/s . . . 90/71/s Cairo . . . . . . . . . .90/70/0.00 . . .87/68/s . . . 89/69/s Calgary . . . . . . . .63/41/0.00 . 65/46/pc . . . 64/42/c Cancun . . . . . . . .88/77/0.00 . . .86/76/t . . . .87/76/t Dublin . . . . . . . . .66/52/0.00 . 70/49/pc . . 70/53/sh Edinburgh . . . . . .66/52/0.00 . 68/50/pc . . 70/52/sh Geneva . . . . . . . .57/45/0.00 . .70/53/sh . . . .76/55/t Harare . . . . . . . . .75/54/0.00 . 76/56/pc . . 76/57/pc Hong Kong . . . . .90/79/0.00 . 88/76/pc . . 86/76/pc Istanbul. . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . 76/64/pc . . 78/62/pc Jerusalem . . . . . .81/55/0.00 . . .81/61/s . . . 85/62/s Johannesburg . . .57/27/0.00 . . .61/39/s . . . 64/41/s Lima . . . . . . . . . .72/64/0.00 . . .71/64/s . . 70/64/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . .82/61/0.00 . . .77/61/s . . 77/59/pc London . . . . . . . .70/45/0.00 . 74/53/pc . . 73/55/pc Madrid . . . . . . . .72/48/0.00 . 71/49/pc . . 72/52/sh Manila. . . . . . . . .90/81/0.00 . . .92/78/t . . . .92/77/t

Fee Continued from C1 “It’s a compromise,” Councilor Tom Greene said with a chuckle. The council will revisit this decision within six months and make any changes they see fit. Perhaps one of the biggest sticking points for some of councilors, including Kathie Eckman and Scott Ramsay, was the cost of the current fee to builders. For this reason they said they couldn’t support a renewal unless it was lower than the onethird of 1 percent. One the other side of that spectrum were Capell and councilors Jodie Barram and

Mecca . . . . . . . .106/82/0.00 . .108/84/s . . 109/83/s Mexico City. . . . .73/55/0.00 . . .82/57/t . . . .81/55/t Montreal. . . . . . .84/70/0.00 . 56/44/pc . . . 68/48/s Moscow . . . . . . .81/52/0.00 . . .81/58/s . . . .79/56/t Nairobi . . . . . . . .84/63/0.00 . . .78/58/t . . 79/58/pc Nassau . . . . . . . .86/77/0.00 . . .88/76/t . . . .89/76/t New Delhi. . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .97/79/t . . 99/81/pc Osaka . . . . . . . . .70/63/0.00 . . .73/61/t . . . 76/61/s Oslo. . . . . . . . . . .63/48/0.00 . 70/50/pc . . . 73/51/s Ottawa . . . . . . . .84/68/0.00 . 62/43/pc . . . 69/49/s Paris. . . . . . . . . . .70/45/0.00 . 75/56/pc . . 79/57/pc Rio de Janeiro. . .77/64/0.00 . 79/64/pc . . . .80/67/t Rome. . . . . . . . . .75/57/0.00 . . .79/58/t . . . .81/59/t Santiago . . . . . . .64/34/0.00 . 66/34/pc . . . 68/34/s Sao Paulo . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . . .71/53/s . . . .72/54/t Sapporo. . . . . . . .63/63/0.00 . .61/52/sh . . 64/53/sh Seoul . . . . . . . . . .72/59/0.00 . .77/60/sh . . 77/59/pc Shanghai. . . . . . .82/68/0.00 . . .82/66/s . . 83/67/sh Singapore . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . . .90/78/t . . . .90/79/t Stockholm. . . . . .64/52/0.00 . 75/53/pc . . . 69/50/s Sydney. . . . . . . . .68/61/0.00 . 65/53/pc . . . 68/51/s Taipei. . . . . . . . . .90/75/0.00 . .83/74/sh . . . .87/75/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . .81/66/0.00 . . .79/63/s . . . 83/65/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . .63/54/0.00 . . .68/62/r . . 75/63/sh Toronto . . . . . . . .79/72/0.00 . . .67/50/s . . . 68/54/s Vancouver. . . . . .63/50/0.00 . .57/50/sh . . . 64/48/c Vienna. . . . . . . . .75/59/0.00 . .75/59/sh . . . .78/59/t Warsaw. . . . . . . .84/61/0.00 . . .80/61/t . . 81/59/pc

Jim Clinton, who tended to like the affordable housing fee as it exists today. Since its inception in 2006, Bend’s affordable housing has raised about $2.7 million. Over that time it has doled out more than $2 million to 13 projects, including some to build rental units for seniors and to provide affordable living quarters for disabled veterans. Bend’s affordable housing fee is the only of its kind in the state, and city officials say it has helped bring more than $20 million in state and federal funds into the area to help build affordable housing. Nick Grube can be reached at 541-633-2160 or at ngrube@bendbulletin.com.


S

D

NHL Inside Canucks win Game 1 of finals in dramatic fashion, see Page D4.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 2011

BASEBALL

N BA C O M M E N TA RY

HUNTING & FISHING

Madras’ Gill named to all-WCC team

LeBron’s detractors are bracing for a title

Turner Gill, a 2010 graduate of Madras High School who is now a freshman at the University of Portland, has been named to the all-West Coast Conference baseball team as an outfielder/designated hitter. In his first season of college baseball, Gill hit .332 and led the Pilots in hits (61), doubles (18), on-base percentage (.393) and multiple-hit games (15). During conference play Gill, who was also selected to the all-WCC freshman team, hit .372, the eighth-best average in the WCC. Gill and junior pitcher Kyle Kraus were the only two Pilots to be named to the 26-member all-WCC team, which was announced Wednesday. Senior pitcher Chris Dennis received honorable mention. — Bulletin staff report

As Heat’s Big Three succeed, Cavs fans, others commiserate By Harvey Araton New York Times News Service

NBA Shaq set to retire after 19 seasons BOSTON — Shaquille O’Neal, who struggled to get on the court for the Boston Celtics because of leg injuries, said on Twitter on Wednesday that he is going to retire after a 19-year career in which he won four NBA titles and the 2000 league Most Valuable Player award. O’Neal sent a tweet shortly before 2:45 p.m. saying, “im retiring.” It included a link to a 16-second video in which he says, “We did it; 19 years, baby. Thank you very much. That’s why I’m telling you first: I’m about to retire. Love you. Talk to you soon.” An inveterate prankster who gave himself a new nickname — or several — in each of his six NBA cities, the 15-time All-Star did not notify his latest team of his plans. He played just 37 games this year, the first of a two-year deal at the veteran’s minimum salary, making just three brief appearances after Feb. 1. “To my knowledge, he has not informed any of us that he’s retiring,” Celtics spokesman Jeff Twiss said. If he goes, O’Neal retires fifth all-time with 28,596 points, 12th with 13,099 rebounds and second only to Artis Gilmore among players with more than 2,000 baskets with a .582 field goal percentage. O’Neal was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1992 draft by the Orlando Magic. He signed with the Los Angeles Lakers in 1996 and had his greatest success there, winning three titles alongside Kobe Bryant and coach Phil Jackson. After 3½ years in Miami, a tenure that included his fourth NBA championship, O’Neal became a veteran-forhire, moving to Phoenix and then Cleveland and finally Boston. — The Associated Press

Shaquille O’Neal

INDEX Scoreboard ................................D2 Softball ......................................D2 MLB ...........................................D3 NHL .......................................... D4 Football .................................... D4 Tennis ........................................D5 Hunting & Fishing ............ D5, D6

Mark Morical / The Bulletin ile

The Middle Deschutes, pictured here just upstream from Tumalo State Park, is a good spring and summer option for anglers.

Go with the flow A deep snowpack affects Central Oregon’s rivers —and anglers — in different ways By Mark Morical

Current flows in Central Oregon A look at how fast Central Oregon rivers were running on Wednesday (in cubic feet per second). Higher flows make for more difficult fishing conditions:

400 The Deschutes River, from Crane Prairie to Wickiup Reservoir

The Bulletin

In this year of record snowpack, the spring thaw has brought exceptionally high water flows in rivers throughout Central Oregon. Just how that affects fishing prospects varies from river to river. The Deschutes, for example, is regulated by dams, so this spring and summer it’s business as usual — the Middle Deschutes is the place to be. While the Deschutes upstream of Bend was surging at a rate of about 1,700 cubic feet per second on Wednesday, rendering it somewhat unfishable, the river downstream of Bend was running at 142 cfs. In Bend, the river is diverted to canals for irrigation April through October, making for lower flows downstream of the city. “Conditions from Bend to Lake Billy Chinook are very good,” said Brett Hodgson, a Bend-based fisheries biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. “It’s excellent fishing right now. The Middle Deschutes is more fishable, with higher densities of fish, too, particularly for rainbows.” But that is no secret to anglers, who have been crowding the banks of the river in areas such as Crooked River Ranch, knowing that the lower flows help their odds by congregating the fish. Anglers looking for a bit more solitude can now head up to the far reaches of the Upper Deschutes, which opened to fishing this past weekend. From the headwaters of the Deschutes at Little Lava Lake downstream to Crane Prairie Reservoir, the fishing is excellent for brook trout and rainbow trout, according to Hodgson. That section of the Deschutes is not regulated by dams, so flows remain consistent. “It’s very easy to fish throughout the open season,” Hodgson said. He added that this year’s snowpack will benefit the stretch of river below Little Lava Lake. “This year will be favorable for flows and the trout population between Crane and Little Lava,” Hodgson said. See Flow / D4

On the web To look up flows on area rivers, visit this website: http://www.usbr.gov/pn/hydromet/destea.html

The moment of truth eventually came for those who railed at LeBron James, who ridiculed him as an artificial King and who refused to consider the possibility that his widely panned departure from Cleveland was not only the best thing for him but for the NBA. The harsh reality hit Scott Raab, a Cleveland native who is writing a book on James’ betrayal of his native northern Ohio, when the Miami Heat picked up steam in the playoffs after a sometimes turbulent regular season. Next up “Not that I thought he wouldn’t succeed — just not this soon,” said • NBA finals, Game 2, Raab, a writer for Esquire. He added that he had no reaDallas son to believe that Dirk Nowitzki Mavericks at and the Dallas Mavericks could Miami Heat; stop James and the Heat after Heat lead Miami’s 92-84 victory in Game 1 series, 1-0 of the NBA finals Tuesday night W h e n : Today, left James three short of his first 6 p.m. league championship. “For me, it’s shaping up to be a TV: ABC bitter experience,” Raab said. For Kevin Adler, a sports marketing executive based in Chicago, the recalibration of James’ reputation occurred when James stole the ball in the fourth quarter of an Eastern Conference finals game against his beloved Bulls and threw down a thunderous dunk. “I said to myself, we’re not going to beat him, but at the same time I was thinking that if you’re a basketball fan, then you almost have to be a LeBron fan because of how good he is,” said Adler, the president of Engage Marketing. On it goes, the grudging acknowledgements from just about everywhere that James now has the upper hand. As he is seemingly being fitted for a championship crown to validate his moniker, there is little doubt that he is the NBA’s most compelling and transcendent figure and approaching his greatest hour. See LeBron / D5

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Creighton dreams of playing in CWS at home By Eric Olson The Associated Press

880 The Deschutes River, downstream of Wickiup Reservoir

1,700 The Deschutes River, downstream of Benham Falls

140

OMAHA, Neb. — Maybe only the most ardent Creighton fans believe the Bluejays can make it to the College World Series, which will be played a few blocks from campus at the new TD Ameritrade Park. Imagine if they do, though. “They won’t have any problem selling tickets to that game,” coach Ed Servais said Tuesday. “In fact, they may be disappointed they didn’t expand the stadium if that ever comes about.” To Servais, the prospect of a true home team christening the CWS stadium is a dream right now. See Creighton / D4

Next up • NCAA regionals, ArkansasLittle Rock at Oregon State • When: Friday, 6 p.m. • Radio: KICE-AM 940

The Deschutes River, in Bend

1,250 The Crooked River, below Prineville Reservoir and Bowman Dam Source: Bureau of Reclamation

Nati Harnik / The Associated Press

Creighton’s Reese McGraw delivers a pitch against Nebraska during a game in Omaha, Neb., in April. The Bluejays are hoping to play in the College World Series, staged in their hometown.


D2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

O A TELEVISION TODAY GOLF 6:30 a.m. — European Tour, Wales Open, first round, Golf Channel. 9:30 a.m. — Nationwide Tour, Melwood Prince George’s County Open, first round, Golf Channel. Noon — PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament, first round, Golf Channel.

TENNIS 2 a.m. — French Open, women’s semifinals, Tennis Channel. 5 a.m. — French Open, women’s semifinals, ESPN2.

BASEBALL 10 a.m. — MLB, Pittsburgh Pirates at New York Mets, MLB Network. 5 p.m. — MLB, San Francisco Giants at St. Louis Cardinals or Minnesota Twins at Kansas City Royals, MLB Network. 7 p.m. — MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports.

SCOREBOARD

9:30 a.m. — Nationwide Tour, Melwood Prince George’s County Open, second round, Golf Channel. Noon — PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament, second round, Golf Channel.

TENNIS 11 a.m. — French Open, men’s semifinal, NBC (same-day tape).

SOFTBALL 4 p.m. — College, NCAA World Series, Game 5, teams TBA, ESPN. 6:30 p.m. — College, NCAA World Series, Game 6, teams TBA, ESPN.

BASEBALL 5 p.m. — MLB, Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals or Minnesota Twins at Kansas City Royals, MLB Network. 7 p.m. — MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports.

BOXING 6 p.m. — Friday Night Fights, Yudel Johnson vs. Miguel Torres, ESPN2.

SOFTBALL 10 a.m. — College, NCAA World Series, California at Alabama, ESPN2.

RADIO

12:30 p.m. — College, NCAA World Series, Oklahoma State at Baylor, ESPN2. 4 p.m. — College, NCAA World Series, Oklahoma at Arizona State, ESPN2. 6:30 p.m. — College, NCAA World Series, Missouri at Florida, ESPN2.

TODAY BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — NBA finals, Dallas Mavericks at Miami Heat, KICE-AM 940.

FRIDAY

BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — NBA finals, Dallas Mavericks at Miami Heat, ABC.

BASEBALL 6 p.m. — College, Arkansas-Little Rock at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940.

FRIDAY GOLF 6:30 a.m. — European Tour, Wales Open, second round, Golf Channel.

Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

S B Cycling • Lab chief told feds of suspicious Armstrong test: The director of the Swiss anti-doping laboratory informed federal authorities last fall that Lance Armstrong’s test results from the 2001 Tour de Suisse were “suspicious” and “consistent with EPO use,” The Associated Press has learned. Martial Saugy made the statement in September, according to a person familiar with the investigation, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about the case. The revelation came to light Wednesday as attorneys for Armstrong demanded an on-air apology from CBS’ “60 Minutes” after Saugy told a Swiss newspaper that the lab found suspicious levels of EPO, a blood-boosting drug, in four urine samples from the race Armstrong won. But Saugy said he didn’t know if any belonged to the seven-time Tour de France winner. That was contrary to what he said in his statement made to officials from the FBI, the Food and Drug Administration and anti-doping authorities, the person familiar with the investigation told the AP. Though Saugy was not under oath, there are potential legal ramifications for lying to authorities working on a federal probe.

Football • Ohio State president says athletic director’s job is safe: Ohio State’s president says he expects university athletics director Gene Smith to stay on despite head football coach Jim Tressel’s resignation and a growing number of alleged NCAA violations by the football program. President Gordon Gee also told Columbus-area reporters Wednesday there is “a legitimate question” about how some confirmed violations happened and that Ohio State’s athletic compliance system should be fixed if it’s not working. Tressel was forced to step aside Monday in the midst of an NCAA investigation involving players’ sales of game memorabilia. Both Gee and Smith heaped praise on Tressel during a March news conference called after it was revealed Tressel had known about the sales for months but never alerted university authorities. Gee said at the time that Tressel’s job was safe. • Pryor’s driver’s license suspended in Ohio: The NCAA is interested in Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor’s cars. The state of Ohio says he shouldn’t be driving one. Pryor was seen driving a sports car to a team meeting on Monday hours after coach Jim Tressel’s forced resignation, even though his Ohio driving privileges have been suspended. Pryor is being investigated by the NCAA for the cars he has driven over his three years as a Buckeye, The Columbus Dispatch has reported. The newspaper also said NCAA investigators are looking into more than 50 vehicle transactions involving Ohio State athletes, their families and friends and two Columbus dealerships.

Soccer • FIFA re-elects its leader amid scandals: Stung by allegations of mismanagement and corruption, Sepp Blatter held onto his spot as the leader of world soccer Wednesday, winning a one-man election derided as a “coronation.” The 75-year-old Swiss who has headed FIFA virtually unchallenged for 13 years struck a rare note of humility in a speech short on specifics that promised to reform an ethics committee and provide more transparency in decision-making. “We have been hit and I personally have been slapped,” Blatter told delegates to the

sport’s congress. “I don’t want that ever again.” Blatter won a fourth four-year term as head of FIFA, soccer’s governing body, by receiving 186 out of 203 votes in an election during the congress in which his was the only name on the ballot. His sole challenger, Qatari executive committee member Mohamed bin Hammam, withdrew from the race last weekend amid bribery allegations. The election capped a period of several months in which FIFA has been buffeted by a swirl of corruption allegations, bid scandals, internal infighting and match-fixing cases that have scarred the credibility of the organization and the world’s most popular sport.

Basketball • Triano out as Raptors coach: Jay Triano will not return as Toronto Raptors coach next season. The Raptors announced Wednesday they will not exercise their option on Triano’s contract. He will be retained as a consultant and a special assistant to president and general manager Bryan Colangelo. Triano, an Ontario native, guided the Raptors to a record of 87-142 in his three seasons as coach. The Raptors finished 22-60 this season, last in the Atlantic Division. • McHale hired to coach Houston Rockets: The Houston Rockets made it official Wednesday that Kevin McHale will take over as coach for Rick Adelman, who left the team days after his fourth season in Houston. McHale spent 15 years with the Timberwolves in his native Minnesota. The Hall of Famer was let go in 2009 and has recently served as a TV analyst. Reports last Friday said he was taking the job. He will be introduced at a news conference in Houston on Friday. The 53-year-old McHale becomes Houston’s third coach since 2003, when Rudy Tomjanovich stepped down for health reasons. Jeff Van Gundy coached the team from 2003-07, taking the Rockets to three playoff appearances.

Hockey • Panthers introduce Kevin Dineen as new head coach: The Florida Panthers have formally introduced Kevin Dineen as the franchise’s 11th head coach. The Panthers made the announcement at a press conference Wednesday at the BankAtlantic Center. Dineen replaces Pete DeBoer, who was fired on April 10, one day after completing his third season behind the Florida bench. Like DeBoer, this will be Dineen’s first NHL headcoaching job. Dineen spent the past six seasons as head coach of the Portland Pirates of the AHL. In Maine, Dineen compiled a mark of 266-155-59 and led the Pirates to the playoffs in five of his six seasons. Dineen’s father, Bill, played and coached in the NHL and his brothers Gord and Peter also were NHL players. • Colin Campbell out as NHL disciplinarian: Colin Campbell is done serving as the NHL’s chief disciplinarian, handing off one of the most thankless tasks in hockey to Brendan Shanahan. Campbell gratefully relinquished a key component of his NHL job on Wednesday before the start of the Stanley Cup finals between Vancouver and Boston. For the past 13 years, the former New York Rangers coach has handed out the league’s supplemental discipline — mostly suspensions and fines for dangerous play. “It’s a job that needs fresh eyes, a fresh look,” Campbell said. “After 13 years of this, it’s an all-encompassing job. You want to do the right thing for the players, for the game.” —From wire reports

A Modified — 1, Tony Steele, 1972 Datsun Z, 47.410. D Modified — 1, Andrew Allison, 1979 VW Rabbit, 43.589. 2, Jim Lewis, 1959 Bug Eye Sprite, 62.886. E Modified — 1, Morgan Smith, 1972 Datsun 240Z, 42.467. Street Touring S — 1, Thomas Bennett, 1989 Toyota MR2, 42.980. 2, Patrick O’Donnell, 1988 Toyota MR2, 44.899. Street Touring X — 1, Sterling Crosson, 2004 VW R32, 44.509. Super Street Modified — 1, Marvin Wodtli, 2008 Pontiac Solstice GXP 2.0 L, 39.699. F Street Prepared Ladies — 1, Karen Archibald, 1979 VW Scirocco, 46.251. Novice (pax) — 1, Stacy Arata, 2003 Ford Focus, 39.764. OSPU — 1, Steve Joneli, 1978 Austin Mini 1380cc, 44.757. 2, Alex Yinger, 1972 Datsun 240Z, 47.497. 3, Mark Yinger, 1972 Datsun 240Z, 47.918. Top Time Of Day Raw Time: Tyler Shepard, XP, 38.961. Pax: Matthew Pilliod, BSP, 34.335. Stock: Bill Randleman, CS, 41.448. Street Prepared: Matthew Pilliod, BSP, 39.971. Prepared: Tyler Shepard, XP, 38.961. Modified: Morgan Smith, EM, 42.467. Touring: Thomas Bennett, STS, 42.980. Street Modified: Marvin Wodtli, SSM, 39.699. Street Prepared Ladies: Karen Archibald, FSPL, 46.251. Novice: Stacy Arata, NGS, 39.764.

IN THE BLEACHERS

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Playoffs All Times PDT ——— FINALS (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) Miami 1, Dallas 0 Tuesday, May 31: Miami 92, Dallas 84 Today, June 2: Dallas at Miami, 6 p.m. Sunday, June 5: Miami at Dallas, 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 7: Miami at Dallas, 6 p.m. x-Thursday, June 9: Miami at Dallas, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 12: Dallas at Miami, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 14: Dallas at Miami, 6 p.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE Playoffs All Times PDT ——— STANLEY CUP FINALS (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) Vancouver 1, Boston 0 Wednesday, June 1: Vancouver 1, Boston 0 Saturday, June 4: Boston at Vancouver, 5 p.m. Monday, June 6: Vancouver at Boston, 5 p.m. Wednesday, June 8: Vancouver at Boston, 5 p.m. x-Friday, June 10: Boston at Vancouver, 5 p.m. x-Monday, June 13: Vancouver at Boston, 5 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 15: Boston at Vancouver, 5 p.m.

DEALS Transactions

TENNIS French Open Wednesday At Stade Roland Garros Paris Purse: $24.99 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Quarterfinals Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Robin Soderling (5), Sweden, 6-4, 6-1, 7-6 (3). Andy Murray (4), Britain, def. Juan Ignacio Chela, Argentina, 7-6 (2), 7-5, 6-2. Women Quarterfinals Maria Sharapova (7), Russia, def. Andrea Petkovic (15), Germany, 6-0, 6-3. Li Na (6), China, def. Victoria Azarenka (4), Belarus, 7-5, 6-2.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Philadelphia 6 3 2 20 14 New York 4 2 6 18 18 Houston 3 4 6 15 17 D.C. 4 4 3 15 16 Columbus 3 3 5 14 11 New England 3 5 4 13 10 Toronto FC 2 5 6 12 13 Chicago 1 4 6 9 15 Sporting Kansas City 1 6 2 5 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Los Angeles 8 2 5 29 20 FC Dallas 6 3 4 22 16 Seattle 5 4 5 20 16 Colorado 4 3 6 18 15 Portland 5 4 2 17 15 Real Salt Lake 5 2 2 17 10 Chivas USA 3 4 5 14 14 San Jose 3 4 4 13 14 Vancouver 1 5 7 10 13 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Wednesday’s Game Vancouver 0, Chivas USA 0 Friday’s Game D.C. United at Los Angeles, 8 p.m. Saturday’s Games Sporting Kansas City at Toronto FC, 4 p.m. Columbus at New York, 4:30 p.m. New England at FC Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Seattle FC at Chicago, 5:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 6 p.m. Vancouver at Real Salt Lake, 6 p.m. Houston at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Portland at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m.

GA 9 11 15 20 13 15 23 19 19 GA 12 12 13 13 17 4 13 14 17

BASEBALL College NCAA Division I Regionals Glance Double Elimination x-if necessary All Times PDT ——— At Goss Stadium Corvallis Friday, June 3 Game 1 — Georgia (31-30) vs. Creighton (44-14), 1 p.m. Game 2 — UALR (24-32) at Oregon State (38-17), 6 p.m. Saturday, June 4 Game 3 — Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser, 1 p.m. Game 4 — Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner, 6 p.m. Sunday, June 5 Game 5 — Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 loser, 1 p.m. Game 6 — Game 4 winner vs. Game 5 winner, 6 p.m. Monday, June 6 x-Game 7 — Game 4 winner vs. Game 5 winner, 6 p.m.

AUTO RACING Local Autocross Club of Central Oregon 2011 Event No. 1 At Hoodoo Mountain Resort May 21 Results Super Stock — 1, James Hudson, 2009 Corvette Z06, 49.683. C Stock — 1, Bill Ranidleman, 2006 Miata MX-5, 44.442. D Stock — 1, Jerome Russell, 2010 Mazda Speed 3, 45.272. E Stock — 1, Thomas Atkins, 1990 Mazda Miata 1.6, 50.515. A Street Prepared — 1, Jim Kell, 2004 Corvette Z06, 48.277. B Street Prepared — 1, Jeffery Fields, 2005 MazdaSpeed MX-5, 44.261. 2, Matthew Pilliod, 1994 MR2 Turbo, 45.152. D Street Prepared — 1, Craig Smith, 2002 MazdaSpeed 3, 45.316. 2, James Luntzel, Eagle Talon, 48.699. E Street Prepared — 1, Brandon Warner, 1998 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS-T, 47.256. 2, Todd Lindquist, 1999 SVT Mustang Cobra, 49.188. 3, Brady Allison, 1998 Mustang SVT, 51.717. F Street Prepared — 1, Doug Drouet, 1979 VW Scirocco, 45.614. 2, Charles Ray, 1993 Honda Accord 2.2 L, 47.505. X Prepared — 1, Tyler Shepard, 1985 Toyota MR 2, 42.79. 2, David Boyd, 1967 Sunbeam Tiger, 49.761. 3, Jack Gassaway, 1967 Sunbeam Tiger 289, 54.371. C Prepared — 1, Dave Arata, 1987 Mustang LX, 50.758. E Prepared — 1, John Wiley, 1989 BMW 325i,

44.962. F Prepared — 1, Sean Glaab, 1974 Datsun 260Z, 46.572. D Modified — 1, Andrew Allison, 1977 VW Rabbit, 46.875. E Modified — 1, Luke Smolich, 1992 Nissan Sentra, 50.372. Street Touring — 1, Jason Sterner, 2003 Hyundai Tiburon, 47.681. 2, Kevin Bemrose, 1991 Mazda B2200, 51.375. 3, Alex King, 2008 VW Jetta, 51.517. Street Touring S — 1, Thomas Bennett, 1986 Toyota MR2, 46.241. Street Touring X — 1, Sterling Crosson, 2004 VW R32, 45.568. Street Touring U — 1, Jolynn Franke, 2004 Dodge SRT4 2.4, 49.344. Super Street Modified — 1, Marvin Wodtli, 2008 Pontiac Solstice GXP 2.0 L, 44.556. 2, Coy Sinclair, 2001 Honda S2000, 46.107. OSPU — 1, Steve Joneli, 1978 Austin Mini 1380cc, 48.953. 2, Alex Yinger, 1972 Datsun 240Z, 50.546. 3, Mark Yinger, 1972 Datsun 240Z, 50.886. Top Time Of Day Raw Time: Tyler Shepard, XP, 42.790. Pax: Jerome Russell, DS, 36.987. Stock: Bill Ranidleman, CS, 44.442. Street Prepared: Jeffery Fields, BSP, 44.261. Prepared: Tyler Shepard, XP, 42.790. Modified: Andrew Allison, DM, 46.875. Touring: Sterling Crosson, STX, 45.568. Street Modified: Marvin Wodtli, SSM, 44.556. 2011 Event No. 2 At Hoodoo Mountain Resort May 22 Results Super Stock — 1, James Hudson, 2009 Corvette Z06, 43.564. C Stock — 1, Bill Ranidleman, 2006 Miata MX-5, 41.448. D Stock — 1, Jerome Russell, 2010 Mazda Speed 3, 42.332. E Stock — 1, Thomas Atkins, 1990 Mazda Miata 1.6, 42.835. A Street Prepared — 1, Jim Kell, 2004 Corvette Z06, 43.806. B Street Prepared — 1, Matthew Pilliod, 1994 MR2 Turbo, 39.971. 2, Jeffrey Fields, 2005 MazdaSpeed MX-5, 40.471. D Street Prepared — 1, Craig Smith, 2008 MazdaSpeed 3, 41.402. E Street Prepared — 1, Branden Warner, 1998 Mitsubishi Eclipse GS-T, 44.835. F Street Prepared — 1, Doug Drouet, 1979 VW Scirocco, 41.575. 2, Charles Ray, 1993 Honda Accord 2.2 L, 42.975. X Prepared — 1, Tyler Shepard, 1985 Toyota MR 2, 38.961. 2, David Boyd, 1967 Sunbeam Tiger, 41.836. 3, Jack Gassaway, 1967 Sunbeam Tiger 289, 45.885. C Prepared — 1, Dave Arata, 1987 Ford Mustang, 42.435. 2, Jerry Braunberger, 1985 Camero Z 28, 42.684. F Prepared — 1, Sean Glaab, 1974 Datsun 260Z, 41.420.

BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Activated LHP Brian Matusz from the 15-day DL. Designated UT Jake Fox for assignment. National League ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Placed RHP Kyle McClellan on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Lance Lynn from Memphis (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES—Placed OF Cameron Maybin on the 15-day DL, retroactive to May 28. Recalled OF Aaron Cunningham from Tucson (PCL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—C Shaquille O’Neal announced his retirement. HOUSTON ROCKETS—Named Kevin McHale coach. TORONTO RAPTORS—Announced the contract option on coach Jay Triano will not be exercised and he will be retained as a special assistant to the president and general manager. FOOTBALL National Football League SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Named Michael Bracken video operations manager. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Added the title of chief executive officer to team president John McDonough. Re-signed general manager of minor league affiliations Mark Bernard, Rockford (AHL) coach Bill Peters and Rockford assistant coaches Ted Dent and Steve Poapst. MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed D Hal Gill to a one-year contract. NEW YORK RANGERS—Traded F Roman Horak and two 2011 second-round draft picks to Calgary for D Tim Erixon and a 2011 fifth-round draft pick. Signed Erixon to a three-year contract. PHOENIX COYOTES—Signed RW Jordan Szwarz and G Louis Domingue. WASHINGTON CAPITALS—Signed C Mattias Sjogren to a two-year contract. COLLEGE CONFERENCE CAROLINAS—Announced King (TN) and North Greenville have been accepted for membership. GARDNER-WEBB—Announed men’s basketball G Jarvis Davis is transferring from UCF. MEMPHIS—Named Damon Stoudamire men’s assistant basketball coach. NORTHWESTERN—Announced men’s basketball F Nikola Cerina has transferred from TCU. SAN JOSE STATE—Named Klayton Adams tight ends coach and Kirk Doll special teams coordinator/running backs coach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 2,030 1,785 63 15 The Dalles 617 897 13 2 John Day 587 778 9 -1 McNary 780 697 6 -2 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 167,146 50,946 5,279 1,902 The Dalles 121,606 37,004 1,450 756 John Day 99,441 34,758 2,804 1,750 McNary 94,304 24,917 2,631 1,579

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Pac-10 is playing second fiddle to Big 12 at College World Series By Jeff La tzk e The Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — Arizona State coach Clint Myers isn’t used to the powerful Pac-10 being so outnumbered at the Women’s College World Series. Myers’ top-seeded Sun Devils are one of only two Pac-10 schools at college softball’s championship event that starts today in Oklahoma City, the fewest since 1998. The Big 12 makes up half the field with four schools qualifying, and the Southeastern Conference has the other two with second-seeded Alabama and No. 4 seed Florida. “I’m guessing people are going to feel sorry for us because we’re so thinly populated here,” said Myers, temporarily forgetting that California was also in the field. “I figure that we’ll get the sympathy vote and possibly get a free pass. That’s about it from the Pac-10.” There should hardly be any sympathy for the Pac-10 at this event — as Missouri coach Ehren Earleywine noted by interrupting Myers with a sarcastic “sure.” The Pac-10 has won 22 of the 28 titles in World Series history — with UCLA and Arizona combining to win 20, including one the Bruins had to vacate for NCAA rules violations. UCLA beat Arizona in last year’s championship series, but this is only the second time — and first since 1986 — that neither of the powerhouse programs made it to the final eight. “There’s great young pitchers out there right now and you’ve got to go out and play your A-game,” Myers said. “If you don’t, then you don’t get the chance to come to the big dance. “The Pac-10, it’s still a tough conference, it’s still going to be a great conference. And with us and Cal, we hope to represent our conference as well as it’s

David Wallace / The Arizona Republic

Arizona State players celebrate beating Texas A&M in the super regionals last weekend. been represented in the past.” Despite declining representation by the Pac-10 — which had five teams in 1999, and made up half the field the following five years — the trophies still reside out west. The conference has won the past five titles and nine of the past 10, including wins by Arizona State (2008) and California (2002). Oklahoma (2000) is the only other team in this year’s field that has won a national title. No SEC team has ever won the championship. All that tradition is replaced by the local flavor of having the Sooners and rival Oklahoma State in the World Series field in the same year for the first time. Myers predicted that attendance records will be broken — although that has been the case even when the local teams haven’t been in the field in recent years. The Friday night and Saturday night sessions have already sold out. There’s a world of difference from a dozen years ago. Attendance for the week was only 24,010 in 1999, and it jumped to more

than 38,000 when Oklahoma made its run to the title in 2000. The event has grown to the point that the past four years have been the most highly attended in the event’s history, with an average of more than 60,000 fans each year — without the benefit of area teams. Players were relatively anonymous back when Oklahoma coach Patty Gasso led the Sooners to the title at the turn of the century, but not so much anymore. “Really, it’s kind of a movie-star status,” Gasso said. “Back when we were here, it was big, but not to this level.” Gasso said she’ll do what she can to maximize the Sooners’ home field advantage. Instead of staying in a hotel all week, she’s keeping her team a halfhour away from the hubbub in Norman until the games get started. “That’s one of the benefits of being here is that you’re able to stay at home, so we’re going to use it to the best of our advantage,” Gasso said. “There’s just so much stuff happening and distractions. I’d rather them just be in the comfort of home until it’s time.” The Big 12’s best showing at the World Series comes the same year the conference’s postseason tournament — usually held at the Hall of Fame Stadium where the World Series is played — was canceled. “It’s kind of cool that we have kind of like a half-Big 12 tournament, halfWorld Series going on since our Big 12 tournament got canceled this year,” Missouri ace Chelsea Thomas said. The first day of the double-elimination tournament will feature Alabama against Cal, Oklahoma State against Big 12 rival Baylor, Arizona State against Oklahoma and Florida against Missouri. The champion is crowned after a best-of-three series starting Monday.


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 D3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AL BOXSCORES Royals 2, Angels 0 Los Angeles Aybar ss Abreu lf Tor.Hunter rf Callaspo 3b Branyan dh a-M.Izturis ph-dh Trumbo 1b Conger c Amarista 2b Bourjos cf Totals

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

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

H BI BB SO 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 7 0 1 10

Avg. .315 .275 .242 .299 .100 .285 .255 .234 .149 .236

Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Gordon lf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .285 Me.Cabrera cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .269 Hosmer 1b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .291 Francoeur rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .278 Butler dh 4 1 2 2 0 0 .296 Aviles 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .236 Getz 2b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .253 Treanor c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .212 A.Escobar ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .212 Totals 28 2 7 2 3 2 Los Angeles 000 000 000 — 0 7 0 Kansas City 000 000 002 — 2 7 1 One out when winning run scored. E—Aviles (6). LOB—Los Angeles 7, Kansas City 5. 2B—Abreu (14). HR—Butler (4), off S.Downs. RBIs— Butler 2 (22). SB—Aybar (14), Gordon (5). S—Treanor. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 5 (Callaspo 3, Tor.Hunter 2); Kansas City 2 (Hosmer, Me.Cabrera). Runners moved up—Tor.Hunter, A.Escobar. GIDP— Tor.Hunter, Bourjos, Butler, Aviles. DP—Los Angeles 2 (Callaspo, Amarista, Trumbo), (Aybar, Trumbo); Kansas City 2 (A.Escobar, Getz, Hosmer), (Getz, A.Escobar, Hosmer). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Chatwood 7 2-3 5 0 0 2 2 100 3.64 S.Downs L, 3-2 2-3 2 2 0 1 0 17 0.53 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA F.Paulino 5 4 0 0 0 4 71 0.00 G.Holland 2 2-3 2 0 0 0 6 43 0.00 Teaford 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 2.84 L.Coleman 0 0 0 0 1 0 5 3.12 Collins W, 3-2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 10 2.61 Teaford pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. L.Coleman pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—S.Downs 1-0, Teaford 1-0, L.Coleman 2-0, Collins 3-0. T—2:40. A—12,022 (37,903).

Yankees 4, Athletics 2 New York AB R Jeter ss 4 1 Granderson cf 5 0 Teixeira 1b 4 0 Al.Rodriguez dh 4 1 Cano 2b 3 1 Swisher rf 3 1 Dickerson rf 0 0 Martin c 3 0 An.Jones lf 2 0 Gardner lf 1 0 E.Nunez 3b 4 0 Totals 33 4

H BI BB 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 1 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 4 4

SO 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 5

Avg. .264 .278 .257 .292 .284 .215 .308 .242 .230 .248 .224

Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crisp cf 3 0 2 0 1 1 .272 DeJesus dh 4 1 2 0 0 1 .254 C.Jackson 1b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .248 Willingham lf 4 1 1 2 0 2 .240 Sweeney rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .301 K.Suzuki c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .242 M.Ellis 2b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .214 Kouzmanoff 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .220 Pennington ss 3 0 0 0 0 3 .256 Totals 30 2 5 2 3 7 New York 100 300 000 — 4 6 0 Oakland 200 000 000 — 2 5 0 LOB—New York 7, Oakland 4. 2B—Jeter (7), Al.Rodriguez (10), DeJesus (7). 3B—Crisp (5). HR—Swisher (4), off G.Gonzalez; Willingham (10), off A.J.Burnett. RBIs—Al.Rodriguez (31), Swisher 3 (23), Willingham 2 (37). SB—Martin (6), Crisp (17). Runners left in scoring position—New York 3 (Cano, Granderson, Martin); Oakland 3 (Willingham, DeJesus, C.Jackson). GIDP—Kouzmanoff. DP—New York 2 (E.Nunez, Cano, Teixeira), (Chamberlain, Teixeira). New York IP H R ER Burnett W, 6-3 7 3 2 2 Chmberln H, 11 1 2 0 0 Rivera S, 14-17 1 0 0 0 Oakland IP H R ER G.Gnzlez L, 5-3 6 1-3 5 4 4 Devine 2-3 0 0 0 Fuentes 1 1 0 0 A.Bailey 1 0 0 0 HBP—by G.Gonzalez (Jeter). T—2:37. A—25,469 (35,067).

BB 3 0 0 BB 4 0 0 0

SO 5 1 1 SO 4 0 1 0

NP 103 7 16 NP 109 4 16 13

ERA 3.86 3.00 2.01 ERA 2.49 0.00 4.44 0.00

Orioles 2, Mariners 1 Baltimore Pie rf Ad.Jones cf Markakis 1b Wieters c Scott dh Hardy ss Reimold lf Mar.Reynolds 3b Andino 2b Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 3 33

R 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2

H BI BB 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 7 2 1

SO 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 2 2 8

Avg. .259 .296 .244 .263 .230 .250 .357 .190 .259

Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. I.Suzuki dh 4 0 2 0 0 1 .276 Ryan ss 4 0 0 0 0 2 .275 Smoak 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .247 Olivo c 4 1 1 0 0 0 .241 F.Gutierrez cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .220 M.Wilson rf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .167 Ja.Wilson 2b 3 0 2 1 0 0 .260 L.Rodriguez 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .167 M.Saunders lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .168 Totals 32 1 5 1 0 5 Baltimore 010 000 010 — 2 7 1 Seattle 010 000 000 — 1 5 0 E—Mar.Reynolds (10). LOB—Baltimore 6, Seattle 4. HR—Hardy (3), off Pineda; Ad.Jones (7), off J.Wright. RBIs—Ad.Jones (30), Hardy (13), Ja.Wilson (6). SB— I.Suzuki (14). CS—Reimold (2). Runners left in scoring position—Baltimore 1 (Andino); Seattle 2 (L.Rodriguez, Smoak). Runners moved up—F.Gutierrez. GIDP—Smoak. DP—Baltimore 1 (Mar.Reynolds, Andino, Markakis). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Matusz 5 2-3 4 1 1 0 3 84 1.59 Johnson W, 4-1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 15 2.93 Uehara H, 6 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 2.66 Gregg S, 9-12 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 3.38 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pineda 7 6 1 1 1 7 106 2.30 J.Wright L, 1-2 1 1 1 1 0 1 14 1.75 Pauley 1 0 0 0 0 0 18 0.81 Inherited runners-scored—Ji.Johnson 1-0. HBP—by Pauley (Reimold). T—2:33. A—18,036 (47,878).

White Sox 7, Red Sox 4 Chicago Pierre lf Al.Ramirez ss Quentin rf Rios cf Konerko dh A.Dunn 1b Lillibridge cf-rf Vizquel 3b R.Castro c Beckham 2b Totals

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

R H 1 0 3 3 0 2 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 7 12

BI 0 1 1 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 7

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

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

Avg. .259 .297 .258 .201 .310 .180 .308 .280 .213 .242

Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Ellsbury cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .292 Pedroia 2b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .245 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .329 Youkilis 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .254 Ortiz dh 4 2 2 1 0 0 .313 C.Crawford lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .235 Lowrie ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .305 Reddick rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .385 Saltalamacchia c 4 0 1 2 0 1 .219 Totals 35 4 9 4 1 2 Chicago 000 121 102 — 7 12 0 Boston 030 001 000 — 4 9 0 LOB—Chicago 8, Boston 5. 2B—Quentin (18), Lillibridge (3), Vizquel (5), Ortiz (13), Lowrie (11). HR—Lillibridge (6), off Wakefield; Konerko (12), off Papelbon; Ortiz (13), off Floyd. RBIs—Al.Ramirez (31), Quentin (37), Konerko 3 (44), Lillibridge 2 (11), Ortiz (28), Lowrie (22), Saltalamacchia 2 (17). SB—Pierre (10). Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 6 (Vizquel 4, Konerko, Beckham); Boston 2 (Youkilis, Ad.Gonzalez).

Runners moved up—Al.Ramirez, Pedroia. GIDP— Youkilis. DP—Chicago 1 (Al.Ramirez, Beckham, A.Dunn). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Floyd W, 6-5 6 2-3 9 4 4 1 1 97 3.84 Sale H, 3 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 13 4.98 Santos S, 9-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 1.35 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wakefield 6 7 4 4 1 4 97 4.40 Albers L, 1-3 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 13 3.92 R.Hill 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 0.00 Bard 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 3 19 3.29 Papelbon 1 2 2 2 0 1 16 3.42 R.Hill pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Sale 1-0, R.Hill 2-0, Bard 3-0. HBP—by Wakefield (Konerko). WP—Albers. PB—Saltalamacchia. T—2:53. A—37,321 (37,065).

Rangers 3, Rays 0 Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus ss J.Hamilton lf Mi.Young dh A.Beltre 3b N.Cruz rf Napoli 1b Torrealba c Gentry cf Totals

AB 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 33

R 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 3

H BI BB 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 3 1

SO 0 0 1 3 1 0 3 0 0 8

Avg. .238 .267 .291 .335 .252 .234 .225 .213 .205

Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jaso c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .220 Zobrist 2b 3 0 2 0 1 0 .252 Joyce rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .361 Longoria 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .240 Damon dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .275 B.Upton cf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .234 Fuld lf 2 0 1 0 1 0 .229 S.Rodriguez 1b-ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .227 Brignac ss 2 0 1 0 0 1 .179 a-F.Lopez ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .217 Totals 30 0 5 0 2 8 Texas 000 010 020 — 3 6 0 Tampa Bay 000 000 000 — 0 5 0 a-struck out for Brignac in the 8th. LOB—Texas 5, Tampa Bay 5. 2B—A.Beltre (13), Gentry (2), Zobrist (16). RBIs—Andrus 2 (20), N.Cruz (25). SB—Kinsler (11), Andrus 2 (17), N.Cruz (2), Gentry (5), Fuld (13). CS—Fuld (6). Runners left in scoring position—Texas 3 (Gentry, J.Hamilton, Torrealba); Tampa Bay 3 (Longoria, Jaso, Damon). Runners moved up—Torrealba. GIDP—Jaso. DP—Texas 1 (C.Lewis, Andrus, Napoli). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA C.Lewis W, 5-5 8 4 0 0 2 8 113 3.48 Feliz S, 11-14 1 1 0 0 0 0 15 1.37 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Price L, 6-5 8 5 3 3 1 8 113 3.52 A.Russell 1 1 0 0 0 0 17 2.84 HBP—by A.Russell (Napoli). WP—Feliz. PB—Torrealba, Jaso. T—2:28. A—13,725 (34,078).

Tigers 4, Twins 2 Minnesota AB R Span cf 5 0 A.Casilla ss 4 0 Morneau 1b 3 0 Cuddyer 2b 4 0 Thome dh 1 0 a-Plouffe ph-dh 2 0 Valencia 3b 3 0 D.Young lf 4 1 Repko rf 4 0 Butera c 3 1 c-Tolbert ph 0 0 Totals 33 2

H BI BB 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 6 2 6

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

Avg. .295 .231 .243 .262 .237 .200 .232 .213 .161 .133 .167

Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kelly lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .266 b-A.Jackson ph-cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .224 Santiago 2b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .265 Boesch rf 3 1 0 0 1 0 .250 C.Wells rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .228 Mi.Cabrera 1b 3 1 1 3 1 1 .311 V.Martinez dh 4 1 1 0 0 1 .300 Dirks cf-lf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .257 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 2 0 0 0 .314 Avila c 3 0 1 1 0 0 .281 Inge 3b 3 0 0 0 0 3 .211 Totals 30 4 7 4 4 6 Minnesota 000 000 200 — 2 6 1 Detroit 013 000 00x — 4 7 0 b-struck out for Kelly in the 7th. c-walked for Butera in the 9th. E—D.Young (2). LOB—Minnesota 11, Detroit 6. HR—Butera (1), off Porcello; Mi.Cabrera (11), off S.Baker. RBIs—Butera 2 (7), Mi.Cabrera 3 (40), Avila (30). SB—Dirks (1). CS—Jh.Peralta (2). Runners left in scoring position—Minnesota 5 (D.Young, Valencia, Plouffe 2, Cuddyer); Detroit 3 (Inge, Jh.Peralta, Boesch). Runners moved up—Span. Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA S.Baker L, 2-4 6 7 4 4 3 5 107 3.86 James 2 0 0 0 1 1 27 0.00 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Porcello W, 5-3 6 2-3 6 2 2 3 4 106 3.79 Schlereth 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2.60 Albrqrque H, 2 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 9 3.06 Benoit H, 8 1 0 0 0 0 1 19 5.57 Vlvrde S, 14-14 1 0 0 0 2 1 21 3.24 Schlereth pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Schlereth 1-0, Alburquerque 2-0. IBB—off Valverde (Morneau). HBP—by Schlereth (Morneau). T—2:46. A—24,363 (41,255).

Indians 13, Blue Jays 9 Cleveland Brantley cf A.Cabrera ss Choo rf T.Buck lf C.Santana c G.Sizemore dh a-Marson ph-dh LaPorta 1b Hannahan 3b Everett 2b Totals

AB 6 6 6 5 3 5 1 5 4 5 46

R 2 2 1 2 2 0 0 2 1 1 13

H 2 4 1 3 0 2 0 3 1 2 18

BI 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 3 0 1 11

BB 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 5

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

Avg. .289 .306 .246 .278 .224 .263 .204 .255 .229 .293

Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Y.Escobar ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .296 McCoy ss 1 2 1 0 1 0 .229 C.Patterson lf 5 1 1 1 0 1 .291 Bautista rf 4 0 1 2 1 1 .360 J.Rivera 1b 5 0 0 0 0 2 .235 Arencibia c 5 1 1 0 0 1 .256 A.Hill 2b 2 0 0 0 0 1 .239 Encarnacion 3b 1 1 1 0 2 0 .252 E.Thames dh 5 1 3 0 0 2 .286 R.Davis cf 4 2 2 4 0 1 .275 J.Nix 3b-2b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .193 Totals 39 9 11 8 4 10 Cleveland 408 001 000 — 13 18 2 Toronto 000 033 102 — 9 11 2 E—Everett (4), R.Perez (1), R.Davis (2), Y.Escobar (5). LOB—Cleveland 11, Toronto 7. 2B—Brantley (10), A.Cabrera 3 (14), G.Sizemore (13), Hannahan (8). 3B—E.Thames (1), R.Davis (4), J.Nix (1). HR—LaPorta (7), off Camp; R.Davis (1), off Tomlin. RBIs—Brantley (24), A.Cabrera 3 (39), G.Sizemore 3 (16), LaPorta 3 (26), Everett (1), C.Patterson (27), Bautista 2 (40), R.Davis 4 (14), J.Nix (11). Runners left in scoring position—Cleveland 6 (Everett, LaPorta, G.Sizemore, Choo 2, Marson); Toronto 2 (J.Nix, E.Thames). Runners moved up—G.Sizemore. GIDP—C.Santana, Bautista. DP—Cleveland 1 (Hannahan, Everett, LaPorta); Toronto 1 (J.Rivera, McCoy, Rauch). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tomlin W, 7-2 6 8 6 6 1 7 93 3.27 Durbin 1 1 1 0 0 0 11 5.01 Herrmann 1 1 0 0 1 1 18 7.82 R.Perez 0 1 2 1 1 0 10 1.83 Pestano 1 0 0 0 1 2 17 1.29 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Drabek L, 3-4 2-3 3 4 4 3 1 38 4.69 Camp 1 2-3 6 7 6 1 1 39 4.23 Frasor 2-3 1 1 0 0 1 28 1.59 Rzepczynski 2 1 0 0 1 2 28 2.52 Janssen 1 3 1 1 0 1 17 1.93 Rauch 2 2 0 0 0 1 28 3.57 F.Francisco 1 2 0 0 0 0 14 5.74 R.Perez pitched to 3 batters in the 9th. Inherited runners-scored—Pestano 1-0, Camp 2-0, Frasor 1-1. WP—Durbin, R.Perez, Rzepczynski. T—3:12. A—15,397 (49,260).

NL BOXSCORES Diamondbacks 6, Marlins 5 Florida

AB R

H BI BB SO Avg.

STANDINGS, SCORES AND SCHEDULES AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division New York Boston Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Central Division Cleveland Detroit Chicago Kansas City Minnesota West Division Texas Seattle Los Angeles Oakland

W 31 30 29 28 25 W 33 29 27 25 17 W 30 28 29 27

L 23 26 26 28 29 L 20 26 31 30 37 L 26 27 29 30

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Pct .574 .536 .527 .500 .463 Pct .623 .527 .466 .455 .315 Pct .536 .509 .500 .474

GB — 2 2½ 4 6 GB — 5 8½ 9 16½ GB — 1½ 2 3½

Wednesday’s Games Texas 3, Tampa Bay 0 Chicago White Sox 7, Boston 4 N.Y. Yankees 4, Oakland 2 Baltimore 2, Seattle 1 Kansas City 2, L.A. Angels 0 Detroit 4, Minnesota 2 Cleveland 13, Toronto 9

WCGB — — ½ 2 4 WCGB — ½ 4 4½ 12 WCGB — 1½ 2 3½

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

Str W-4 L-4 L-1 L-2 W-1 Str W-2 W-4 W-3 W-2 L-4 Str W-1 L-1 L-2 L-3

Home 17-13 16-13 14-16 15-14 15-14 Home 19-6 17-11 10-13 19-14 6-15 Home 19-11 15-14 13-13 14-15

Away 14-10 14-13 15-10 13-14 10-15 Away 14-14 12-15 17-18 6-16 11-22 Away 11-15 13-13 16-16 13-15

East Division Philadelphia Florida Atlanta New York Washington Central Division St. Louis Milwaukee Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Houston West Division Arizona San Francisco Colorado Los Angeles San Diego

Today’s Games Texas (Bush 0-1) at Cleveland (C.Carrasco 4-2), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota (Swarzak 0-2) at Kansas City (O’Sullivan 2-4), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Shields 5-3) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 5-4), 7:10 p.m.

W 34 31 31 25 24 W 33 30 29 26 23 22 W 31 30 26 26 24

L 22 23 26 30 31 L 24 26 28 28 31 34 L 25 25 29 31 32

Pct .607 .574 .544 .455 .436 Pct .579 .536 .509 .481 .426 .393 Pct .554 .545 .473 .456 .429

GB — 2 3½ 8½ 9½ GB — 2½ 4 5½ 8½ 10½ GB — ½ 4½ 5½ 7

Wednesday’s Games Washington 2, Philadelphia 1 Houston 3, Chicago Cubs 1 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 9, N.Y. Mets 3 Atlanta 4, San Diego 3 Arizona 6, Florida 5 San Francisco 7, St. Louis 5, 11 innings Colorado 3, L.A. Dodgers 0

WCGB — — 1½ 6½ 7½ WCGB — 2 3½ 5 8 10 WCGB — 1½ 5½ 6½ 8

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

Str L-2 L-1 W-1 L-2 W-2 Str L-1 L-1 W-1 W-2 L-3 W-3 Str W-1 W-1 W-1 L-1 L-1

Home 19-10 14-12 17-13 12-16 14-12 Home 15-11 21-7 17-12 9-14 12-19 11-17 Home 18-11 13-8 13-15 15-16 9-20

Away 15-12 17-11 14-13 13-14 10-19 Away 18-13 9-19 12-16 17-14 11-12 11-17 Away 13-14 17-17 13-14 11-15 15-12

Today’s Games Pittsburgh (Maholm 2-7) at N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 3-4), 10:10 a.m. San Francisco (J.Sanchez 3-3) at St. Louis (Lynn 0-0), 5:15 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 2-6) at Arizona (Duke 1-0), 6:40 p.m. Houston (Norris 2-4) at San Diego (Stauffer 1-3), 7:05 p.m.

National League roundup

• Yankees 4, A’s 2: OAKLAND, Calif. — A.J. Burnett settled down after an early homer to snap an 11-start road winless streak, and Nick Swisher homered against his former team to help the New York Yankees beat Oakland for the 10th straight time. Derek Jeter got his 2,984th hit and Alex Rodriguez drove in a run for the Yankees, who have their longest winning streak against the A’s since winning 14 straight from 1956-57. • White Sox 7, Red Sox 4: BOSTON — Paul Konerko hit a go-ahead single in the seventh inning and a two-run homer in the ninth to lead Chicago in a sweep of the three-game series. Boston, which had two hits over the last seven innings, lost a fourth straight for the first time since a six-game, season-opening slide. • Rangers 3, Rays 0: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Colby Lewis scattered four hits over eight innings and Elvis Andrus had two RBIs for Texas. Lewis (5-5) struck out eight and walked two. Neftali Feliz allowed a leadoff single in the ninth before wrapping up his 11th save and completing the shutout. • Orioles 2, Mariners 1: SEATTLE — Adam Jones had three hits against his former team, including the go-ahead homer into the upper deck in the eighth inning, to lead Baltimore over Seattle. Jones turned on a fastball from Jamey Wright (1-2) and homered into the second level seating in left field to give Baltimore the lead. • Royals 2, Angels 0: KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Billy Butler hit a game-winning, two-run homer in the ninth inning for Kansas City. Jeff Francoeur singled with one out before Butler connected off Scott Downs (3-2). Tim Collins (3-2), the fifth Royals pitcher, pitched 1 1⁄3 innings for the win. • Tigers 4, Twins 2: DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera hit a three-run homer in the third and Rick Porcello pitched into the seventh inning, lifting Detroit to a win over Minnesota. Detroit swept the three-game series and has won four straight, while the Twins have lost 10 of 12, falling to 17-37 for the worst record in baseball. • Indians 13, Blue Jays 9: TORONTO — Matt LaPorta hit a three-run homer and Cleveland built a big lead from the very start, helping Josh Tomlin and the Indians beat Toronto. Down 12-0, Toronto became the first major league team in 30 years to hit three straight triples.

• Nationals 2, Phillies 1: WASHINGTON — Laynce Nix hit a homer and made a game-saving catch, helping Washington starter John Lannan beat Philadelphia for the first time in 14 tries. Lannan (3-5) entered the game 0-10 with a 6.44 ERA against Philadelphia. • Astros 3, Cubs 1: CHICAGO — Brett Myers allowed one run over six innings, Michael Bourn hit a go-ahead two-run single in the seventh and Houston beat the Chicago Cubs to finish off a three-game sweep. Myers (2-4) won his sixth straight decision against the Cubs, improving to 123 with a 2.12 ERA in his career against the Astros’ NL Central rivals. • Pirates 9, Mets 3: NEW YORK — Kevin Correia became the first eight-game winner in the majors and pesky Pittsburgh scratched out five infield singles in a five-run seventh inning to beat the New York Mets. Andrew McCutchen made a dazzling catch in deep right-center and Correia (8-4) pitched six poised innings to help the Pirates improve to 1714 on the road — matching last season’s win total. • Braves 4, Padres 3: ATLANTA — Tommy Hanson went six strong innings on a sweltering night and center fielder Jordan Schafer made an outstanding catch for the final out, leading Atlanta past San Diego and preventing the Padres from sweeping the series. • Reds 4, Brewers 3: CINCINNATI — Jay Bruce and Joey Votto hit two-run homers during Cincinnati’s late comeback, and Francisco Cordero got his 300th career save, securing the Reds’ win over Milwaukee Brewers. The struggling Reds won for only the fourth time in their past 15 games. • Diamondbacks 6, Marlins 5: PHOENIX — Justin Upton’s bloop single to right field with two outs in the bottom of the ninth drove in the winning run in Arizona’s victory over Florida. • Giants 7, Cardinals 5: ST. LOUIS — Nate Schierholtz hit a tying single with two outs in the ninth inning, then got the go-ahead hit in the 11th inning as San Francisco shook off a poor outing by Tim Lincecum to beat St. Louis. • Rockies 3, Dodgers 0: LOS ANGELES — Ubaldo Jimenez pitched a four-hitter to win for the first time this season, Todd Helton homered and Colorado defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers, snapping a three-game losing skid.

5 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 37

0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 3 1 2 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 11

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

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

.237 .245 .317 .316 .344 .267 .211 .275 .211 ------.159 --1.000

Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. R.Roberts 3b 5 1 1 2 0 1 .272 K.Johnson 2b 4 1 1 0 1 1 .225 J.Upton rf 5 0 1 2 0 0 .264 S.Drew ss 4 1 3 0 0 1 .291 C.Young cf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .239 Montero c 2 0 0 0 1 0 .276 Miranda 1b 3 0 0 0 0 2 .243 G.Parra lf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .266 a-Bloomquist ph-lf 1 1 1 0 1 0 .277 D.Hudson p 2 1 0 0 0 0 .250 b-Nady ph 1 0 0 1 0 0 .273 Da.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Putz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Burroughs ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Totals 34 6 10 6 3 7 Florida 031 000 001 — 5 11 2 Arizona 000 003 111 — 6 10 0 Two outs when winning run scored. a-was intentionally walked for G.Parra in the 7th. breached on error for D.Hudson in the 7th. c-grounded out for M.Dunn in the 9th. d-struck out for Putz in the 9th. E—Dobbs (3), Mujica (1). LOB—Florida 5, Arizona 7. 2B—Morrison (11), Dobbs (10), Bonifacio (6), C.Young 2 (18). 3B—Stanton (2), K.Johnson (2). HR—Stanton (12), off D.Hudson; J.Buck (6), off Putz; R.Roberts (8), off Vazquez. RBIs—Stanton 3 (32), J.Buck (20), Vazquez (2), R.Roberts 2 (24), J.Upton 2 (30), C.Young (31), Nady (17). CS—Coghlan (5). S—Miranda. Runners left in scoring position—Florida 4 (Infante, J.Buck, Vazquez 2); Arizona 3 (R.Roberts 2, Miranda). Runners moved up—Bonifacio, R.Roberts, J.Upton. GIDP—R.Roberts. DP—Florida 1 (Infante, Bonifacio, G.Sanchez). Florida IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vazquez 6 6 4 4 0 5 83 6.02 Choate H, 6 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 10 1.04 Mujica BS, 1-1 1 1-3 2 1 0 0 0 15 3.86 M.Dunn 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 7 3.75 Hensley L, 0-2 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 4 3.60 Badenhop 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 13 2.84 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Hudson 7 10 4 4 0 3 103 4.22 Da.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 0 3 13 1.78 Putz W, 1-1 1 1 1 1 0 1 12 1.88 Vazquez pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Choate 1-0, Mujica 3-1, M.Dunn 1-0, Badenhop 1-1. IBB—off Choate (Bloomquist). HBP—by Choate (Montero). T—2:52. A—16,169 (48,633).

AB 5 4 0

R 0 0 0

H BI BB 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 9 14

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 2 9

0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 3

0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 4

.222 ------.256 .270 .256 .194 .291 .238 .238 .000 .259

New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Pagan cf 4 0 1 0 1 1 .223 Turner 2b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .320 Beltran rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .283 Bay lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .234 Dan.Murphy 1b 4 1 2 0 0 0 .289 R.Paulino c 2 0 1 0 1 0 .333 Beato p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --O’Connor p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Thayer p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Pridie ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .237 Harris 3b 4 0 1 0 0 3 .216 R.Tejada ss 4 0 2 2 0 0 .311 Capuano p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .125 Thole c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .223 Totals 35 3 10 3 2 8 Pittsburgh 000 000 540 — 9 14 0 New York 000 200 010 — 3 10 0 a-singled for Correia in the 7th. b-hit a sacrifice fly for Resop in the 8th. c-struck out for Thayer in the 9th. LOB—Pittsburgh 6, New York 7. 2B—Br.Wood (4), Beltran (17). HR—Turner (2), off D.McCutchen. RBIs— Tabata (9), J.Harrison (2), G.Jones (18), Br.Wood (9), C.Snyder (14), Overbay 2 (21), Paul 2 (5), Turner (22), R.Tejada 2 (4). SB—Tabata (14). CS—Walker (1), Pagan (2). SF—G.Jones. Runners left in scoring position—Pittsburgh 2 (A.McCutchen 2); New York 4 (Bay, Capuano, Dan. Murphy, Pagan). Runners moved up—Turner, Beltran. GIDP—Overbay, R.Paulino. DP—Pittsburgh 1 (Cedeno, Walker, Overbay); New York 2 (Turner, R.Tejada, Dan.Murphy), (Turner, Dan. Murphy). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Correia W, 8-4 6 6 2 2 2 4 86 3.40 Resop H, 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 3.96 D.McCutchen 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 15 1.54 Moskos 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 0.00 Ascanio 1 2 0 0 0 1 11 6.00 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Capuano L, 3-6 6 8 5 5 1 2 79 5.19 Beato 1 3 3 3 1 2 31 3.42 O’Connor 0 2 1 1 1 0 8 2.70 Thayer 2 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.70 Capuano pitched to 5 batters in the 7th. Beato pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. O’Connor pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Moskos 1-0, Beato 3-3, O’Connor 2-2, Thayer 3-1. HBP—by Beato (C.Snyder). T—2:58. A—25,234 (41,800).

Braves 4, Padres 3

Pirates 9, Mets 3 Pittsburgh Tabata lf J.Harrison 3b Resop p

b-G.Jones ph 0 D.McCutchen p 0 Moskos p 0 Ascanio p 0 A.McCutchen cf 5 Walker 2b 4 Diaz rf 3 Br.Wood 3b 2 C.Snyder c 3 Overbay 1b 4 Cedeno ss 3 Correia p 2 a-Paul ph-rf 2 Totals 37

SO Avg. 0 .241 0 .375 0 ---

San Diego AB E.Patterson cf 3 b-Cnningham ph-rf 1 Bartlett ss 3 Headley 3b 3

R 0 0 0 0

H BI BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1

SO 1 1 1 1

Avg. .182 .000 .249 .274

Ludwick lf Hawpe 1b Luebke p Gregerson p d-Tekotte ph Denorfia rf-cf K.Phillips c 1-Ro.Johnson pr Forsythe 2b Richard p Neshek p Cantu 1b Totals

4 3 0 0 1 4 4 0 4 2 0 0 32

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

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

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

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

.252 .239 .000 --.214 .309 .206 .179 .154 .000 --.197

Atlanta AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Schafer cf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Prado lf 4 2 2 1 1 0 .279 C.Jones 3b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .258 McCann c 3 1 2 1 1 1 .309 Freeman 1b 4 0 2 2 0 0 .270 Ale.Gonzalez ss 3 0 1 0 1 1 .269 Uggla 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .175 Mather rf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .283 Hanson p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .105 a-Ma.Young ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .100 O’Flaherty p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Venters p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Hinske ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .305 Kimbrel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 32 4 10 4 5 4 San Diego 020 000 100 — 3 6 1 Atlanta 201 001 00x — 4 10 1 a-popped out for Hanson in the 6th. b-struck out for E.Patterson in the 7th. c-singled for Venters in the 8th. d-struck out for Gregerson in the 9th. 1-ran for K.Phillips in the 9th. E—Headley (7), McCann (3). LOB—San Diego 5, Atlanta 10. 2B—Prado (15), McCann (13), Freeman (12). HR—K.Phillips (2), off Hanson; Prado (8), off Neshek. RBIs—K.Phillips 2 (7), Cantu (16), Prado (33), McCann (30), Freeman 2 (19). SB—Bartlett (9), Headley (6). S—Schafer. SF—Cantu. Runners left in scoring position—San Diego 2 (Ludwick, Hawpe); Atlanta 5 (Mather 3, Hanson, Prado). Runners moved up—K.Phillips. GIDP—Freeman. DP—San Diego 1 (Forsythe, Bartlett, Hawpe). San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Richard L, 2-6 4 2-3 8 3 3 4 1 97 4.52 Neshek 1 1 1 1 1 1 23 2.13 Luebke 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 17 3.81 Gregerson 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 2.81 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hanson W, 6-4 6 3 2 2 2 4 96 2.82 O’Flaherty H, 9 1 2 1 1 0 1 23 1.65 Venters H, 12 1 0 0 0 0 3 17 0.52 Kmbrl S, 16-20 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 2.89 Inherited runners-scored—Neshek 2-0, Luebke 1-0. IBB—off Richard (Mather). T—2:52. A—21,452 (49,586).

Reds 4, Brewers 3 Milwaukee Weeks 2b Morgan cf Braun lf Fielder 1b C.Hart rf Lucroy c Y.Betancourt ss Counsell 3b Marcum p Loe p Totals

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

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

H BI BB 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 3 1

Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO Marcum 7 5 2 2 0 7 Loe L, 2-5 1 1 2 2 0 1 Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO Leake 6 7 3 3 0 3 Arredondo 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Bray 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Masset W, 1-3 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Crdero S, 10-12 1 0 0 0 0 2 Inherited runners-scored—Masset 2-0. Loe (B.Phillips), by Leake (Morgan). T—2:43. A—22,213 (42,319).

NP ERA 100 2.78 17 4.33 NP ERA 85 5.03 30 1.93 11 1.33 5 3.60 16 1.71 HBP—by

Astros 3, Cubs 1

American League roundup

Coghlan cf Infante 2b Morrison lf G.Sanchez 1b Dobbs 3b Stanton rf J.Buck c Bonifacio ss Vazquez p Choate p Mujica p M.Dunn p c-Cousins ph Hensley p Badenhop p Totals

Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Stubbs cf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .253 B.Phillips 2b 3 1 0 0 0 0 .290 Votto 1b 4 2 3 2 0 1 .338 Bruce rf 4 1 1 2 0 2 .292 Renteria ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .237 F.Lewis lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .255 Cairo 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .316 Bray p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Masset p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Cordero p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Hanigan c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .243 Leake p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .235 a-Heisey ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .275 Arredondo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Rolen 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .244 Totals 30 4 6 4 0 8 Milwaukee 200 100 000 — 3 9 1 Cincinnati 000 000 22x — 4 6 0 a-struck out for Leake in the 6th. E—Y.Betancourt (6). LOB—Milwaukee 5, Cincinnati 3. 2B—C.Hart (6), Cairo (4). 3B—Morgan (3). HR— Weeks (10), off Leake; Bruce (17), off Marcum; Votto (7), off Loe. RBIs—Weeks (23), Braun (40), Y.Betancourt (19), Votto 2 (32), Bruce 2 (46). CS—Cairo (2). Runners left in scoring position—Milwaukee 1 (C.Hart); Cincinnati 2 (Hanigan 2). Runners moved up—Braun, Lucroy, Counsell, F.Lewis, Cairo. GIDP—Braun. DP—Cincinnati 2 (B.Phillips, Votto), (Cairo, Votto).

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

Avg. .291 .383 .306 .291 .275 .301 .226 .200 .125 ---

Houston AB Bourn cf 5 Barmes ss 5 Pence rf 4 Ca.Lee 1b 4 Wallace 1b 0 Keppinger 2b 4 Michaels lf 4 C.Johnson 3b 4 Towles c 3 Myers p 2 a-Ang.Sanchez ph 1 Escalona p 0 Del Rosario p 0 b-M.Downs ph 0 Melancon p 0 Totals 36

R H 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 11

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

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

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

Avg. .273 .225 .317 .256 .316 .409 .154 .217 .198 .182 .259 ----.259 ---

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fukudome rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .307 Barney 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .303 S.Castro ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .313 C.Pena 1b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .214 Ar.Ramirez 3b 3 0 1 0 0 0 .289 K.Wood p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Marshall p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Marmol p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-B.Snyder ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 DeWitt lf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .276 Soto c 3 0 0 0 0 2 .219 Colvin cf 2 0 0 0 1 0 .108 D.Davis p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 LeMahieu 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 29 1 3 1 3 5 Houston 010 000 200 — 3 11 1 Chicago 100 000 000 — 1 3 0 a-struck out for Myers in the 7th. b-walked for Del Rosario in the 9th. c-struck out for Marmol in the 9th. E—Keppinger (1). LOB—Houston 8, Chicago 6. HR—Michaels (1), off D.Davis; Fukudome (2), off Myers. RBIs—Bourn 2 (19), Michaels (2), Fukudome (5). SB—Bourn 2 (22). S—D.Davis. Runners left in scoring position—Houston 6 (Ca.Lee, Barmes 4, Michaels); Chicago 4 (Ar.Ramirez, Fukudome 2, Soto). Runners moved up—Keppinger. GIDP—Pence, Soto. DP—Houston 1 (C.Johnson, Keppinger, Ca.Lee); Chicago 1 (S.Castro, Barney, C.Pena). Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Myers W, 2-4 6 3 1 1 2 3 98 4.82 Escalona H, 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 17 2.84 DelRosario H, 2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 15 2.84 Mlancon S, 4-6 1 0 0 0 1 2 15 1.98 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Davis L, 0-4 6 1-3 8 3 3 0 5 92 5.95 K.Wood 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 10 2.57 Marshall 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 2 22 1.17 Marmol 1 1 0 0 1 2 17 3.33 Inherited runners-scored—Del Rosario 1-0, K.Wood 2-0, Marshall 3-2. HBP—by Escalona (Soto). WP—Myers. PB—Towles. T—2:49. A—31,340 (41,159).

Nationals 2, Phillies 1 Philadelphia AB R Polanco 3b 4 0 Mayberry cf 3 0 Utley 2b 4 0 Howard 1b 4 1 B.Francisco rf 2 0 Ibanez lf 4 0 Ruiz c 4 0 W.Valdez ss 2 0 a-Rollins ph-ss 1 0 Oswalt p 1 0 b-Do.Brown ph 1 0 Stutes p 0 0 Bastardo p 0 0 d-Gload ph 1 0 Totals 31 1

H BI BB 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 0 4

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

Avg. .319 .231 .194 .252 .224 .246 .250 .242 .263 .154 .324 ----.275

Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bernadina cf-lf 4 1 2 0 0 2 .256 Desmond ss 3 0 0 0 0 0 .224 Werth rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .255 L.Nix lf 4 1 1 1 0 2 .303 Storen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Morse 1b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .301 Espinosa 2b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .214 W.Ramos c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .252 Cora 3b 1 0 0 0 1 0 .250 Hairston Jr. 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .248 Lannan p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Coffey p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Slaten p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Marquis ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .296 Clippard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Ankiel cf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .210 Totals 29 2 6 2 3 6 Philadelphia 010 000 000 — 1 5 0 Washington 101 000 00x — 2 6 2 a-walked for W.Valdez in the 6th. b-flied out for Oswalt in the 6th. c-popped out for Slaten in the 6th. d-flied out for Bastardo in the 9th. E—Cora (2), Hairston Jr. (7). LOB—Philadelphia 9, Washington 8. 2B—Howard (14), Morse (7), W.Ramos (8). HR—L.Nix (9), off Oswalt. RBIs—Werth (22), L.Nix (23). SB—Mayberry (5). S—Oswalt, Desmond. Runners left in scoring position—Philadelphia 4 (Oswalt, Utley, Do.Brown 2); Washington 3 (Bernadina, W.Ramos, Espinosa). Runners moved up—Ruiz. GIDP—Mayberry. DP—Washington 1 (Espinosa, Desmond, Morse). Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Oswalt L, 3-3 5 6 2 2 2 3 79 2.70 Stutes 2 0 0 0 0 2 29 2.03 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 1 1 18 1.33 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lannan W, 3-5 5 1-3 4 1 0 3 1 85 4.05 Coffey H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 7 1.69 Slaten H, 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.19 Clippard H, 12 2 0 0 0 0 0 25 1.95 Storen S, 10-11 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 1.95 Inherited runners-scored—Coffey 2-0, Slaten 3-0. HBP—by Oswalt (Espinosa), by Lannan (Mayberry). T—2:50. A—24,495 (41,506).

Giants 7, Cardinals 5 (11 innings 0 San Francisco Torres cf M.Tejada 3b F.Sanchez 2b Huff 1b 1-Burriss pr-1b Schierholtz rf C.Ross lf B.Crawford ss Whiteside c Lincecum p S.Casilla p b-Burrell ph Ja.Lopez p R.Ramirez p

AB 6 6 6 4 1 6 5 6 4 2 0 1 0 0

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

H BI BB 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 3 2 0 4 1 1 2 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

SO 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0

Avg. .252 .210 .298 .219 .286 .274 .267 .333 .200 .074 --.229 .000 ---

c-Rowand ph Romo p Br.Wilson p Totals

1 0 0 48

0 0 0 0 0 0 7 16

0 0 0 7

0 0 0 4

0 .247 0 --0 --5

St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Theriot ss 4 0 2 1 0 1 .303 Franklin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Jay lf-rf 5 0 1 0 0 3 .342 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 1 0 .262 Berkman rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .329 E.Sanchez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Salas p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Greene ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Rasmus cf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .276 Y.Molina c 5 1 3 0 0 1 .320 2-Kozma pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 .125 Schumaker 2b 5 0 1 1 0 1 .215 Descalso 3b 5 2 3 0 0 1 .241 Westbrook p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .111 Batista p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Craig ph-lf 3 1 1 2 0 0 .337 Totals 42 5 12 4 1 9 San Francisco 000 003 101 02 — 7 16 1 St. Louis 001 200 200 00 — 5 12 0 a-homered for Batista in the 7th. b-fouled out for S.Casilla in the 8th. c-lined out for R.Ramirez in the 10th. 1-ran for Huff in the 9th. 2-ran for Y.Molina in the 11th. E—B.Crawford (1). LOB—San Francisco 13, St. Louis 7. 2B—Torres (10), F.Sanchez 2 (15), C.Ross (5). 3B—Descalso (2). HR—Huff (5), off Batista; Craig (4), off Lincecum. RBIs—Torres (9), Huff (24), Schierholtz 2 (15), C.Ross (14), B.Crawford (6), Whiteside (2), Theriot (20), Schumaker (10), Craig 2 (21). SB—Burriss (4), C.Ross (3), Jay (4), Rasmus (5). CS—Theriot (1). S—Westbrook. SF—Whiteside. Runners left in scoring position—San Francisco 7 (Huff, Lincecum, Torres 2, M.Tejada, B.Crawford, Whiteside); St. Louis 5 (Berkman 3, Pujols, Westbrook). GIDP—Berkman, Schumaker 2. DP—San Francisco 3 (F.Sanchez, B.Crawford, Huff), (B.Crawford, Huff), (F.Sanchez, B.Crawford, Burriss). SF IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lincecum 6 1-3 10 5 5 0 9 112 2.59 S.Casilla 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 10 3.00 Ja.Lopez 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 14 2.75 R.Ramirez 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 10 1.59 Romo W, 3-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 2.60 Wlson S, 15-17 1 2 0 0 0 0 17 3.24 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Westbrook 5 2-3 9 3 3 2 4 100 5.15 Batista 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 16 2.28 E.Sanchez H, 7 1 1 0 0 0 1 17 2.38 Salas BS, 1-11 1 2 1 1 1 0 19 1.82 Franklin L, 1-4 2 3 2 2 1 0 34 7.52 Inherited runners-scored—S.Casilla 2-0, Batista 1-0. IBB—off Franklin (C.Ross), off Westbrook (Whiteside). HBP—by Lincecum (Theriot). WP—Lincecum 2, Westbrook. T—3:44 (Rain delay: 0:16). A—35,775 (43,975).

Rockies 3, Dodgers 0 Colorado S.Smith rf J.Herrera 2b C.Gonzalez lf Tulowitzki ss Helton 1b Wigginton 3b J.Morales c Fowler cf Jimenez p Totals

AB 5 4 3 3 4 3 3 4 3 32

R 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 3

H BI BB 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 3 2

SO 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 4

Avg. .307 .267 .258 .251 .306 .263 .233 .242 .000

Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Furcal ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .215 Blake 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .301 Ethier rf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .325 Kemp cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .306 Gibbons lf 3 0 1 0 0 0 .245 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .245 Elbert p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Guerrier p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Barajas c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .215 Carroll 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .293 Garland p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-Miles ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .272 Lindblom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Sands 1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .220 Totals 31 0 4 0 0 7 Colorado 011 100 000 — 3 8 0 Los Angeles 000 000 000 — 0 4 1 a-singled for Garland in the 6th. E—Carroll (4). LOB—Colorado 8, Los Angeles 4. 2B—S.Smith (16), Tulowitzki (11). 3B—Wigginton (1). HR—Helton (7), off Garland. RBIs—C.Gonzalez (34), Helton (23), J.Morales (7). S—J.Herrera, Jimenez. SF—C.Gonzalez, J.Morales. Runners left in scoring position—Colorado 4 (Helton, J.Herrera, Fowler 2); Los Angeles 1 (Kemp). Runners moved up—Blake. Colorado IP H R ER BB Jimenez W, 1-5 9 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB Garland L, 1-5 6 5 3 3 1 Lindblom 1 2 0 0 0 Elbert 2-3 1 0 0 1 Guerrier 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 Inherited runners-scored—Guerrier Elbert (Wigginton). WP—Lindblom. T—2:28. A—36,975 (56,000).

SO NP ERA 7 106 4.98 SO NP ERA 2 88 4.33 0 10 0.00 0 14 0.00 2 14 3.25 3-0. IBB—off

LEADERS Through Wednesday’s Games ——— AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Joyce, Tampa Bay, .361; Bautista, Toronto, .360; MiYoung, Texas, .335; AdGonzalez, Boston, .329; HKendrick, Los Angeles, .322; Aybar, Los Angeles, .315; JhPeralta, Detroit, .314. RUNS—Bautista, Toronto, 45; Granderson, New York, 44; MiCabrera, Detroit, 40; ACabrera, Cleveland, 37; Ellsbury, Boston, 36; Gordon, Kansas City, 36; AlRamirez, Chicago, 36. RBI—AdGonzalez, Boston, 46; Konerko, Chicago, 44; Beltre, Texas, 43; Granderson, New York, 41; Bautista, Toronto, 40; MiCabrera, Detroit, 40; ACabrera, Cleveland, 39. HITS—AdGonzalez, Boston, 76; MiYoung, Texas, 72; ACabrera, Cleveland, 67; Konerko, Chicago, 66; AlRamirez, Chicago, 66; Ellsbury, Boston, 64; Span, Minnesota, 64. DOUBLES—Gordon, Kansas City, 18; Quentin, Chicago, 18; MiYoung, Texas, 18; Ellsbury, Boston, 17; AdGonzalez, Boston, 17; MiCabrera, Detroit, 16; Zobrist, Tampa Bay, 16. TRIPLES—Bourjos, Los Angeles, 6; Crisp, Oakland, 5; Granderson, New York, 5; RDavis, Toronto, 4; 12 tied at 3. HOME RUNS—Bautista, Toronto, 20; Granderson, New York, 17; Teixeira, New York, 16; Ortiz, Boston, 13; Quentin, Chicago, 13; Konerko, Chicago, 12; Beltre, Texas, 11; MiCabrera, Detroit, 11; Cano, New York, 11. STOLEN BASES—Ellsbury, Boston, 19; Andrus, Texas, 17; Crisp, Oakland, 17; RDavis, Toronto, 15; Aybar, Los Angeles, 14; ISuzuki, Seattle, 14; Fuld, Tampa Bay, 13. PITCHING—Tomlin, Cleveland, 7-2; Lester, Boston, 7-2; 10 tied at 6. STRIKEOUTS—Shields, Tampa Bay, 81; FHernandez, Seattle, 81; Weaver, Los Angeles, 77; Price, Tampa Bay, 76; Verlander, Detroit, 76; CWilson, Texas, 75; Lester, Boston, 74; Haren, Los Angeles, 74. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—Holliday, St. Louis, .342; Votto, Cincinnati, .338; JosReyes, New York, .335; Berkman, St. Louis, .329; Ethier, Los Angeles, .325; YMolina, St. Louis, .320; Polanco, Philadelphia, .319. RUNS—Braun, Milwaukee, 40; Bruce, Cincinnati, 39; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 39; Votto, Cincinnati, 39; Weeks, Milwaukee, 39; Bourn, Houston, 38; Rasmus, St. Louis, 37. RBI—Bruce, Cincinnati, 46; Pence, Houston, 43; Fielder, Milwaukee, 42; Howard, Philadelphia, 42; Braun, Milwaukee, 40; Kemp, Los Angeles, 40; Berkman, St. Louis, 36. HITS—JosReyes, New York, 76; Pence, Houston, 73; SCastro, Chicago, 71; Polanco, Philadelphia, 69; Votto, Cincinnati, 68; Prado, Atlanta, 67; Ethier, Los Angeles, 65; GSanchez, Florida, 65; Weeks, Milwaukee, 65. DOUBLES—CYoung, Arizona, 18; Beltran, New York, 17; Pence, Houston, 17; JosReyes, New York, 17; Coghlan, Florida, 16; CJones, Atlanta, 16; SSmith, Colorado, 16. TRIPLES—JosReyes, New York, 8; SCastro, Chicago, 5; Fowler, Colorado, 5; Rasmus, St. Louis, 5; Victorino, Philadelphia, 5; Espinosa, Washington, 4; Barney, Chicago, 3; Bourn, Houston, 3; Braun, Milwaukee, 3; Morgan, Milwaukee, 3. HOME RUNS—Bruce, Cincinnati, 17; Kemp, Los Angeles, 13; Braun, Milwaukee, 12; Howard, Philadelphia, 12; ASoriano, Chicago, 12; Stanton, Florida, 12; Berkman, St. Louis, 11; Fielder, Milwaukee, 11; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 11; JUpton, Arizona, 11. STOLEN BASES—Bourn, Houston, 22; JosReyes, New York, 19; Desmond, Washington, 16; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 16; Kemp, Los Angeles, 14; Tabata, Pittsburgh, 14; Braun, Milwaukee, 13; CGomez, Milwaukee, 13. PITCHING—Correia, Pittsburgh, 8-4; Jurrjens, Atlanta, 7-1; Lohse, St. Louis, 7-2; Gallardo, Milwaukee, 7-2; Hamels, Philadelphia, 7-2; Halladay, Philadelphia, 7-3; 7 tied at 6.


D4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

NHL FINALS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

‘Roll Tide’ takes on new meaning in Alabama Football team plays a role in rebuilding in wake of tornadoes By John Zenor The Associated Press

Darryl Dyck / The Associated Press

Vancouver Canucks left wing Raffi Torres scores the winning goal against Boston Bruins goalie Tim Thomas during the third period of Game 1 of the Stanley Cup finals in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wednesday.

Canucks score in final minute to top Bruins, 1-0 Vancouver scores with 18.5 seconds remaining to take opener of Stanley Cup Finals against Boston By Greg Beacham The Associated Press

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Raffi Torres ended an ugly Stanley Cup finals opener with a dramatic flash of beauty for the Vancouver Canucks. Torres scored on an exceptional pass from Jannik Hansen with 18.5 seconds to play, and the Canucks stunned the Boston Bruins 1-0 on Wednesday night. Roberto Luongo made 36 saves in his third shutout of the postseason for the Canucks, but Boston’s Tim Thomas matched him until Torres — the only Vancouver player with previous finals experience — slipped through the Bruins’ defense for an eye-popping goal that launched a wild celebration at Rogers Arena. “I thought we were going to play all night the way it was going,” Luongo said. “It was an exciting way to start the series. It was such a close game. It could’ve gone either way, a flip of the coin.” Game 2 is Saturday night in Vancouver. Thomas stopped 33 shots for the Bruins, who went scoreless on six power plays. Boston also killed six Vancouver power plays in an outstanding defensive game against the NHL’s highest-scoring team until the final minute. “I heard Raffi yelling,” Hansen said with a grin. “It was easy to hear him.” With uneasy fans anticipating overtime, the Canucks’ third-line wings connected. Hansen spotted Torres streaking toward the net and floated a pass right to him, and

Creighton Continued from D1 Creighton is the No. 2 seed in the NCAA Corvallis Regional, and Servais said he has enough to think about with Friday’s firstround game against No. 3 seed Georgia (3130). Host Oregon State (38-17) and ArkansasLittle Rock (24-32) also are in the bracket. Creighton (44-14) rolls into the tournament after sweeping the Missouri Valley Conference regular-season and tournament championships for the first time, clinching both titles at the new ballpark. The Bluejays started playing at TD Ameritrade Park in April and are 14-4 in the 24,000-seat stadium. “We were like 6-year-old kids walking into Yankee Stadium,” outfielder Trever Adams said. The Bluejays, built on defense and pitching, are in the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2007 with one of their best teams since 1991.

Torres slipped it past Thomas for his third goal of the postseason. “We brought him in because he was an emotional, physical player,” Vancouver coach Alain Vigneault said of Torres, who lost the 2006 Stanley Cup finals with Edmonton. “He’s had nothing but a great attitude and a great work ethic with us all year long. He comes to play, prepares himself real well. We need him to play the way he does. You know, he’s a little bit sometimes outside the box, but you’ve got to let him be who he is.” Torres’ goal ended the 37-year-old Thomas’ shutout streak at just under 129 minutes. He hadn’t allowed a goal since Game 6 of the Eastern Conference finals, shutting out Tampa Bay in Game 7. Canucks forward Alex Burrows even appeared to bite the gloved finger of Boston’s Patrice Bergeron after the first-period buzzer, raising the possibility of a suspension for the Canucks’ rambunctious first-line wing. “I don’t mind the rough play and those scrums at the end, as long as it’s just pushing and shoving and all that,” Bergeron

said. “But biting? I mean, come on.” Both teams entered their first playoff meeting looking to end lengthy Stanley Cup droughts. Vancouver has never won the NHL title in four decades of existence, losing its only two trips to the finals in 1982 and 1994. Boston has lost five straight finals since winning in 1972. After a full week off, the Canucks came out with palpable energy from a crowd that shook the arena violently enough to dislodge a bit of confetti left over from the Western Conference finals onto the ice before the game. But the officials kept both teams on a steady parade to the penalty box in the first two periods, a big change from the Bruins’ penalty-free Game 7 in the Eastern Conference finals against Tampa Bay. Boston got nine shots without a goal during an early four-minute power play against Vancouver before failing to convert a two-man advantage for 1:32 early in the second period. Luongo was outstanding in the opener of his attempt to win the Stanley Cup on the same ice where he backstopped Canada to the gold medal in last year’s Olympics. The Canucks started to turn the game in their favor in the third period. Christian Ehrhoff’s pinpoint pass set up Hansen for a breakaway early in the third, but Thomas coolly stopped his low shot, prompting Hansen to slam his stick into the glass in frustration. Maxim Lapierre had a point-blank chance with 8½ minutes left, but Thomas stopped his deflection. Alex Edler then made a slick move for quick shot with 5½ minutes to play, but the puck rang off the crossbar above Thomas’ right shoulder.

The ’91 squad was the first true home team in a College World Series, and its legacy has lasted. The coach of that team, current Chicago Cubs general manager Jim Hendry, still comes around. Hendry and other members of the ’91 team visited last month. They gave a pep talk, reminding the players that even a team from a 6,000-student Jesuit school can play at the highest level. “We have a poster upstairs (in the players’ lounge) that shows the ’91 team being there and with all the Creighton fans behind them,” said Jonas Dufek, the Bluejays’ No. 1 pitcher. “It’s always in the back of your mind.” Creighton thrives on the underdog role and understands it must achieve on a grand scale to command the spotlight. As the Bluejays were wrapping up the MVC regular-season title with a sweep of Missouri State two weeks ago, the talk among local sports fans was about the firing of Mike Anderson as coach of a Nebraska

program that finished last in the Big 12. This past weekend, as Creighton was winning the Valley tournament in Omaha, the emphasis was on the pending transfer of a backup quarterback at Nebraska. The Bluejays aren’t getting too much attention yet, kind of like when Valley coaches picked them fifth in the league in the preseason poll. “I think it’s one of the things that motivates us, to be honest with you,” Servais said. “I always tell our players we play a lot better when we play with a chip on our shoulders. Whether we’re flying under the radar, not getting the respect we deserve, we’re going to use it as a way to guide these guys to play at a higher level.” The Bluejays will get plenty of attention if they can make it through this week’s regional. “We’re not going to go out there and just roll it out and say, ‘OK, we’re done,’ ” Adams said. “Our goal has been to get to June somehow and then keep playing.”

Next up • Stanley Cup Finals, Game 2, Boston Bruins at Vancouver Canucks • When: Saturday, 5 p.m. • TV: NBC

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Football can’t rebuild homes and families, not even in a football-mad state like Alabama. But the game can provide inspiration and hope. Especially in the aftermath of the devastating tornados that ripped through the state. Since the storms on April 27 — which killed 42 people and damaged or destroyed more than 5,000 homes in Tuscaloosa alone — “Roll Tide” has taken on new meaning. The saying, which usually stands for greetings and goodbyes and many things in between, now sends the message, “We can do this.” Alabamians from all over the state and people from around the country have descended on the state to help. And “Roll Tide” supplies a quick pick-me-up for ‘Bama fans, said Keith Avery, a lifelong Tuscaloosa resident. “It instills a ray of hope,” he said. “It reminds people you can’t take that from us. You can take material things, but you can’t take that. We’re from Tuscaloosa. “You’ll never take that from us.” Crimson Tide offensive lineman Barrett Jones says he and his teammates feel Tuscaloosa is their town, too. So they are trying to do their part. Jones, who went out with others from the football complex to pass out drinks and later helped clear debris in the Forest Lakes neighborhood with a chain saw, said it’s important for athletes to embrace the city. “Football is a big part of the Alabama community,” he said, adding, “Obviously it is our city.” Alabama coach Nick Saban has taken it a step further. His charity, Nick’s Kids, has adopted a community in Holt as part of a project to rebuild every home there. “I’ve never seen devastation like this and I don’t think you can get the full impact by watching on TV,” Saban said Tuesday at the Southeastern Conference’s spring meetings in Destin, Fla. “You get the physical impact of the destruction. But you really don’t get the personal pain of meeting the people who lost their home and lost all their belongings and people who lost loved ones and had to make calls to tell people that. “The personal pain is not apparent as it is when you’re right there witnessing it.” Saban’ charity has embraced “Project Team Up,” a concept Saban hopes others will follow. Architects, lumber companies, builders and other groups are do-

nating time, energy and supplies to help rebuild Holt. Together, they’re trying to reconstruct each of the 60 homes destroyed. “The people are going to have ownership because they’re going to buy the home and pay $600 a month,” Saban said. “And then we’re taking that $600 and putting it in the foundation to build the next home and the next home and the next home and the next home. That’s what we’re trying to do. “But bigger than what we’re doing is we’re trying to promote the concept to people all over Alabama and all over the southeast that got affected by these tornados to team up a small group, pick some place and help build it.” Saban hopes that “Roll Tide” spirit takes hold. Tide long-snapper Carson Tinker has experienced the power of it firsthand. He was injured in a tornado that killed his girlfriend, Ashley Harrison — a sorority sister of Saban’s daughter Kristen — and is still recovering mentally and physically. He is going through physical therapy with a broken wrist and preparing for a skin graft on his ankle, which looks “like they took a divot out of my leg with a golf club.” Still, he gets a boost whenever he hears “Roll Tide” and from the numerous fans — both Auburn and Alabama — who have told him they’re praying for him. The first time Tinker heard it was from a woman at the hospital in Tuscaloosa. “When that lady said, ‘Roll Tide’ to me in the hospital, I’ll never forget that,” Tinker said. “It really does give me a lot to look forward to in the fall. It really means a lot to me. “Every time I hear it, I smile. And I kind of choke up a little bit.” Despite the tragedy, the anticipation of the fall continues to lift spirits. Preseason magazines fill a shelf next to the front door at the local Barnes & Noble, one with a cover wondering: “Another BCS banner for Title Town?” The display window at Bama Fever, where you might catch a reflection of the destroyed shopping center across the street, features a crimson and white T-shirt with “We Are Alabama. April, 27, 2011” on the front. “You talk football 24-7-365 when you live here,” Avery said. “I’ve been living here 52 years and it’s always been that way. It still is. It’ll never change. There’s too much tradition, especially when it comes to the University of Alabama.”

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Flow Continued from D1 The peak of the spawning period for wild Crane Prairie rainbows is just now winding down, so Hodgson noted that anglers fishing upstream of Crane Prairie should be careful not to walk through redds, the gravel spawning beds in which the trout release their eggs. From Crane Prairie downstream to Wickiup Reservoir, the Deschutes on Wednesday was running at 400 cfs — a challenge, but not unfishable. That section of the river can offer good fishing for brown trout and rainbow trout. Below Wickiup Reservoir that same day, the Deschutes was surging at 880 cfs. “That being said, there’s some huge browns up there, particularly the first few miles below Wickiup,” Hodgson revealed. “There’s not a lot of them, and you have to know the river.”

He said lures can be effective when fishing in high water, and bigger flies can work well by getting down lower in the water column. Other sections of rivers opened to fishing this past weekend, including the Metolius River upstream of Allingham Bridge and the Fall River downstream from Fall River Falls. Because those are spring-fed rivers, the heavy snowpack will have little effect on their flows, according to Hodgson. The river probably most affected by the massive snowpack is the Crooked River below Prineville Reservoir and Bowman Dam. That river was running at 1,256 cfs on Wednesday, and high flows have made it unfishable for much of the spring. Hodgson said he is worried that the high flows could lead to another decline in the revered redband trout population in the Crooked River. According to biologists and researchers, high flows likely caused gas-bubble disease in the fish several years ago and led to poor

fishing. The redband population has since rebounded, but the torrential flows are a serious threat to one of Central Oregon’s favorite fisheries. In late June, Hodgson and other ODFW employees plan to sample the Crooked River’s redband trout population to determine the impact of the high flows. “It’s certainly going to be very interesting to see what we find when we do our sampling,” Hodgson said. While the record snowpack may have caused a problem on the Crooked River, anglers cannot deny its positive effects on upper-elevation water bodies — it will provide more cold water and habitat for trout. “All those headwater streams in the Ochoco National Forest, this’ll be a great year for trout up there,” Hodgson said. “That’s a real boon for trout populations.” Mark Morical can be reached at 541-3830318 or at mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

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THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 D5

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

FISHING REPORT

Nadal to face Murray in semis

Anglers enjoy kokanee success at Wickiup

By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

PARIS — At last, Rafael Nadal sounded satisfied. Then again, what could he possibly have complained about Wednesday? The five-time French Open champion reached the semifinals and improved his career record at Roland Garros to 43-1 with a clean-as-can-be 6-4, 6-1, 7-6 (3) victory over the only man he’s ever lost to there, two-time runner-up Robin Soderling. “Today, I played better. Much better, in my opinion,” Nadal said. “It was nothing secret, nothing magic. ... I found a lot of solutions.” After Nadal’s previous match, he chided himself for not hitting the ball with conviction and fretted that his level of tennis wasn’t good enough to win the tournament a sixth time, which would tie Bjorn Borg’s record for the most by a man in history. Against Soderling, Nadal was at his “King of Clay” best. He scrambled along the baseline to dig out and get back shots that would be winners against most anyone else. He went from defense to offense in a blink, winning 14 of the first 19 points that lasted at least 10 strokes, according to the AP’s tally. He made a hard-to-believe 13 unforced errors total; Soderling made 41. Nadal broke in each of the first two games the 6-foot-4 Soderling served, six times in all. “He played really good. It’s the first match this tournament that he played well all the time,” said Toni Nadal, Rafael’s uncle and coach. “Well, only in the

LeBron Continued from D1 Not that James was without support last summer, when his popularity imploded. For Oscar Robertson, the affirmation of James’ so-called Decision came exactly when he told his ESPN interviewer, Jim Gray, “I’m going to take my talents to South Beach.” Noting that most NBA championships have been won by transactions involving superstars, going back to the trade of Bill Russell’s draft rights to Boston from St. Louis, Robertson was bewildered by the harsh reactions of his fellow Hall of Famers. Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird were among those who criticized James for bolting from Cleveland to team with his generational rival Dwyane Wade. Robertson blamed the media for overreacting, contending that James was merely exercising the rights that Robertson and others had fought for. “The images on television of people screaming and burning jerseys made it all worse,” said Robertson, whose name was on the 1970 lawsuit that resulted in free agency. Eleven months after that moment, it is hard to deny that James’ collaboration with Wade and Chris Bosh has been a success. NBA television ratings have soared on the backs of James and the Heat. His No. 6 jersey is the leader in league merchandising sales. On Facebook, James has 6.7 million “likes” on his page, notes Sam Kennedy, the president of Fenway Sports Management, the marketing arm of the Boston Red Sox and, in defiance of local sentiment, a corporate partner of James’ since April. By comparison, Liverpool, one of the world’s most prominent soccer clubs and another partner of Kennedy’s group, has 5.6 million. The Red Sox weigh in with 2.5 million. The numbers speak for themselves, and Fenway Sports could not resist. In a city that had taken delight in bedeviling James in previous postseasons, the company signed him up not long before James and the Heat knocked the Celtics out of the playoffs in the second round. In effect, James won on the court and off, adding to the notion that he is now unstoppable. “The local media and fans were very resentful,” Kennedy said of the deal. “Listen, I grew up in Boston as a Red Sox and Celtics fan, and the irony of the partnership was not lost on us. But this was an opportunity to partner with one of the most powerful athletes and one with incredible reach, globally.” The lesson now being provided by James is not to be misled by the emotions of the moment, according to Adler, the Chicago sports marketing executive. Not when dealing with an uncommonly gifted 26-year-old just approaching the prime of his career. After all, his ungracious de-

Michel Spingler / The Associated Press

Andy Murray returns the ball to Juan Ignacio Chela during their quarterfinal match of the French Open the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Wednesday. third set was I a little worried. But it was very good for us today.” On Friday, the top-seeded Nadal will take on No. 4 Andy Murray, who became only the third British man in the past 70 years to reach the French Open semifinals by beating unseeded Juan Ignacio Chela of Argentina 7-6 (2), 7-5, 6-2. Murray has been playing with a torn tendon in his right ankle since twisting it in the third round, and he trailed Chela 41, then 5-3, before saving two set points

and turning the match around. “Just a really scrappy match,” said Murray, who is 0-3 in Grand Slam finals. “I didn’t start particularly well and then got a little bit better, started moving a bit better, towards the end of the first set.” The other men’s semifinal is No. 2 Novak Djokovic, who is 41-0 in 2011 and has won 43 consecutive matches overall, against No. 3 Roger Federer, owner of a record 16 Grand Slam titles. It’s the 12th time in the history of the

Open era, which began in 1968, that the top four seeded men reached the semifinals at a Grand Slam tournament — and first since the 2006 French Open. In contrast, none of the top four seeded players will participate in the women’s semifinals today, when No. 5 Francesca Schiavone of Italy, the defending champion, faces No. 11 Marion Bartoli of France, and No. 6 Li Na of China meets No. 7 Maria Sharapova of Russia. For Sharapova, who had right shoulder surgery in October 2008, it’s her first major semifinal in more than three years, and she is bidding to complete a career Grand Slam. She won Wimbledon in 2004, the U.S. Open in 2006, and the Australian Open in 2008, but never has been to a final in Paris. “I put a lot of work in to be in this stage of the Grand Slams,” Sharapova said after beating No. 15 Andrea Petkovic of Germany 6-0, 6-3 Wednesday with her fiance, New Jersey Nets guard Sasha Vujacic, in the stands. “I’m really happy that it’s here.” Li, who became the first Chinese player to reach any major final at the Australian Open in January, was a 7-5, 6-2 winner over No. 4 Victoria Azarenka. “So many people think I’m not so good (on a) clay court,” Li said, “but I think now they should change a little bit.” No one ever has doubted Nadal’s proficiency on the slow, red surface. Since 2005, the year he won his first French Open title in his tournament debut, Nadal is 198-8 on clay, including an 81-match unbeaten streak that ended in 2007.

Mavs’ obstacles in finals? Dirk’s finger and 1-0 deficit MIAMI — Brian Cardinal took one look at Dirk Nowitzki’s injured finger, turned to the Dallas Mavericks’ trainer and recommended his treatment plan. “Cut it at the knuckle,” Cardinal said, making a scissors motion with his right hand. “Like Ronnie Lott.” Good thing “Dr.” Cardinal is a backup forward whose specialty is comic relief. Nowitzki’s injury was more a source of fun than concern Wednesday, starting from the moment he woke up. He expected the torn tendon at the tip of his left middle finger to be sore and throbbing and it was neither. So only the devilish teasers were even considering a Lott-like amputation of his fingertip. Nowitzki took the practice court wearing a splint to keep the finger straight and figures it’ll be mostly a nuisance for the next month or two. He and shooting coach Holger Geschwindner were planning their own workout later Wednesday to see which moves Nowitzki can and can’t make and to come up with ways to compensate, starting with Game 2 of the NBA finals against the Miami Heat tonight. “Hey, (Rajon) Rondo played with one arm, so

parture from Cleveland aside, it is not as if James has run afoul of the law or fallen into the clutches of the tabloid scandal-mongers with revelations about insalubrious private affairs, a la Tiger Woods. “And even Tiger: What happens when he makes a run at the Masters?” Adler said. “The television ratings go through the roof.” One intriguing James admirer is Jim Ross, who as a famed voice of professional wrestling — good ol’ J.R. in the world of WWE — knows a few things about the art of sports promotion, of stirring fan passion, one way or another. Ross believes James did a brilliant job of making a highly marketable spectacle of himself when he turned from hero to villain, or baby face to heel in the parlance of wrestling, which happens to be a James pastime. “After a long, productive tenure as a fan favorite, he changed the story line and the way he did it, by going on ESPN, with Jim Gray as his straight man, was a classic wrestling promotion,” Ross said. “A hero doesn’t brag on his own abilities. It was a selfcentered point of view that told his fans, ‘I’ve changed my philosophy.’ ” Ross, an NBA fan who roots for the Oklahoma City Thunder in his native state, does not think James is a real-life heel. They shared an autograph session during a “Monday Night Raw” event in Cleveland when James was a rookie, and he came away with the impression that James was “a really nice kid, very humble, mature for his age.” But in the name of show-biz, wrestling heels break rules and often get away with it. James broke Cleveland’s heart and appears to be surmounting that, too. And while it is likely that more or even most fans will root for Miami to lose to Dallas,

he might be able to play with nine fingers,” Geschwindner said, smiling. Nowitzki was hurt trying to strip the ball from Chris Bosh with a little under four minutes left in the opener. He knew something serious was wrong because he couldn’t straighten the tip. The injury is known as a “mallet finger” and generally takes six to eight weeks to heal. With only quick, courtside treatment, Nowitzki managed to hit one of two shots and all four free throws after the incident. With the Mavs joking about an injury to their best player, it’s clear they aren’t too uptight about losing the opener of the NBA finals, ending a five-game road winning streak or being down in a series for the first time this postseason. Besides, the Mavs made so many mistakes in Game 1 they figured they deserved to lose. Their biggest concern was getting outrebounded by 10. Coach Rick Carlisle called it losing at the line of scrimmage, saying, “The guys that hit first and hit most aggressively and with the most force are going to have the most success. And they did it better than we did last night.” — The Associated Press

James has no doubt impressed younger fans with his audacity and defiance. Hence, the surge in his jersey sales. Which probably makes David Stern, the commissioner of the NBA, an admirer, too. Stern is not a theatrical match for WWE’s Vince McMahon, but his league has been sizzle-centric going

back to the Showtime Lakers of the 1980s. Most arenas create a gladiatorial atmosphere in pregame introductions. Now Stern has the Heat, a classic anti-hero team with its black road jerseys, incontrovertible swagger and suffocating defense. In stark competitive contrast, the Western Conference has

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served up the Mavericks, an earnest team of aging veterans led by Nowitzki, a star from Germany whom announcers keep comparing to Bird. There is a cost for James in all of this. A recent survey conducted by Public Policy Polling of Raleigh, N.C., indicated that support for James has steadily eroded in the Cleveland area since last summer, even among blacks. According to the latest poll, 49 percent had an unfavorable view of James, compared with 23 percent favorable. “It’s no doubt the jealousy factor, people realizing he may win that championship after all, and it won’t be for them,” said Tom Jensen, the polling group’s director. Dru Joyce II, who coached James at St. Vincent-St. Mary High School, agreed that James did not handle the departure well (James has since expressed remorse). Yet the blowback “left the realm of sports and became a character assassination,” Joyce said. “That’s what’s happened in sports. We take this thing truly beyond what it’s meant to be.”

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:

CENTRAL ZONE ANTELOPE FLAT RESERVOIR: The lake is accessible and anglers have reported good trout fishing. BIG LAVA LAKE: The lake is open and is accessible for fishing. CLEAR LAKE: Has not been stocked due to snowpack. CRANE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR: Fishing is good with reports of large rainbows and brook trout. CROOKED RIVER BELOW BOWMAN DAM: High flows can limit success, and anglers are encouraged to monitor flows before venturing out. CULTUS LAKE: The lake is now accessible, and fishing pressure has been low. Anglers braving the elements have caught large lake trout. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Trout fishing has been good, and anglers are reporting the fish are very active. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK: The Metolius arm is open and anglers have been catching several bull trout less than 24 inches and occasional keepers. Anglers must obtain a tribal angling permit to fish in this zone; please reference the 2011 Oregon Sport Fishing Regulations. LITTLE LAVA LAKE: Little Lava is fully accessible and fishing should be good. LOST LAKE: Has not been stocked due to snowpack. METOLIUS RIVER: Trout fishing has been good. Insect hatches should offer opportunities for good dryfly fishing. The river upstream of Allingham Bridge opened to fishing on May 28. ODELL LAKE: Fishing for lake trout is good, and kokanee fishing is improving with warming weather; the evening bite is typically better than the early morning bite. PINE HOLLOW RESERVOIR: Pine Hollow has been stocked and should be great for spring trout fishing. ROCK CREEK RESERVOIR: Rock Creek has been stocked and should be great for spring trout fishing. SUTTLE LAKE: Spring sampling showed large brown trout in shoal areas. WALTON LAKE: The lake was stocked with catchable rainbow trout on May 23. Anglers have reported excellent fishing for very healthy trout — some exceeding 20 inches long. WICKIUP RESERVOIR: Fishing is good. Anglers have been reporting success jigging and trolling for kokanee.


D6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

H U N T I NG & F ISH I NG

Blazing trails for trout Modern tanks allow for faster transport and stocking of Cascade lakes

Please e-mail sports event information to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event� on our website at bendbulletin.com. Items are published on a space-availability basis, and should be submitted at least 10 days before the event.

FISHING

GARY LEWIS

T

he rivers we drift, the streams we wade, the still waters where we cast a fly were charted, not that long ago, by a type of man and woman uniquely made for a young America. To supplement a diet of deer and elk, sometimes they caught trout — rainbows and cutthroats — in the same places we fish 200 years later. Peter Skene Ogden, John C. Fremont, Jim Bridger, Kit Carson and Tom Fitzpatrick were a few of the trailblazers who crossed the plains on horseback and climbed the mountains to wade icy streams and set traps for beaver. Along the way, they named our rivers and lakes. A few of these waters exist today much like the pioneers found them. The trails are still there, narrow paths through stands of pine and hemlock. Oregon’s backcountry Cascade lakes, some 450 waters, are stocked by helicopter in the oddnumbered years with funds provided by a surcharge on fishing licenses. With a nose cone, dorsal fin, and stabilizing tail, the transport tank looks like a scaled-down space shuttle. It is suspended on a cable and can hold up to four pounds of fish (approximately 1,000 fingerlings) in each of its 30 self-contained, oxygenated cells. An operator in the helicopter works a control panel that controls trap doors, releasing the fish into the lake. The device was designed by engineers with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife and funded by the ODFW Restoration and Enhancement Program. With the helicopter and the capsule, biologists can stock an average of 90 lakes per day. Before 1997 (the first year of helicopter stocking), it took months to plant the backcountry lakes by horseback. Biologist Ted Wise said there are two kinds of anglers who hit the backcountry lakes: the ones who go to camp and fish, and the ones who go only to fish. “Sometimes angling success on the lakes goes up and down, depending on the harshness of the

H & F C

Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Steve Brandt, of Bend, fishes Timothy Lake, a drive-to fishery in the Cascades.

Many high-country lakes are best fished from a boat. Pack in a float tube or rubber raft to get away from the bank. If you use a spinning rod, try fishing a fly and clear plastic bubble. The bubble will allow you to cast your fly as far as a heavier lure. winter or even the summer kill. The anglers who frequent those high lakes and have success are extremely close-mouthed.� Wise recommends anglers try to fish clusters of lakes. From the Columbia River to the California border, there is a lot of real estate dotted with little blue lakes full of possibility. To get specific recommendations, call fisheries biologists in the High Desert region (541-388-6363), the Northwest region (971-673-6000), the Springfield office (541-726-3515), the Umpqua office (541-440-3353) or the Klamath office (541-8835732). And check the web site to see which high lakes have been stocked for each district (historically) and which ones are still stocked. According to the fisheries biologists, the Cascade High Lakes air stocking program and fisheries are the most cost-effective in the state. Each district fish biolo-

gist provides navigation for the pilot, while an accompanying biologist uses a control panel to release fish into the lakes at the appropriate time. Most of the high lakes are stocked on a twoyear rotation. From the research, we know that trout stocked as fingerlings in 2009 will be legal in 2011. And the fish stocked in 2007 and before can provide a trophy component to the fishery that may surprise even the most well-traveled fishermen. There are 20-inch trout in some of these lakes. Part of the allure of high-country trout fishing is the scenery. You won’t enjoy it if you’re slapping mosquitoes, so bring repellent. To make sure you get there and back, bring a map and compass. “Fishing Central Oregon� by Sun Publishing, “Fishing in Oregon� by Flying Pencil and booklets available from various ranger districts are the best resources for what fish are available and the best methods to use.

Many high-country lakes are best fished from a boat. Pack in a float tube or rubber raft to get away from the bank. If you use a spinning rod, try fishing a fly and clear plastic bubble. The bubble will allow you to cast your fly as far as a heavier lure. There are still places in the Cascades the crowd hasn’t found, backcountry waters with trout that may go the whole year without seeing an artificial fly or a pinch of Power Bait. In the cool of the evening, you might look across the lake and see a beaver pulling a branch toward his lodge — the way it was when the trailblazers sought their fortune in this land we call Oregon. Gary Lewis is the host of “Adventure Journal� and author of “John Nosler — Going Ballistic,� “Black Bear Hunting,� “Hunting Oregon� and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisOutdoors.com.

DESCHUTES RIVER SALMONFLY FESTIVAL: Saturday, June 4, from 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. at Deschutes River Camp near Warm Springs; free; live music, food, beer, and fly-fishing films; Deschutes River Camp is a fly shop and campground that offers fly-fishing products, boating safety items, lodging, fly-fishing schools, a shuttle service and guided fishing trips; 541-553-5555 or www.deschutesrivercamp.com. FLY FISHING BEGINNING ON THE CROOKED RIVER: Overview of equipment and terminology, fly selection and fishing techniques; fishing license required; $16 payable to instructor for flies and leader; class meets Saturday, June 18, 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.; cost is $175; to register call 541-3837270 or e-mail ceinfo@cocc.edu. YOUTH FLY FISHING CAMP: June 2022, 9 a.m. to noon; at Bend’s Shevlin Park; ages 9-13; offers children the opportunity to experience and learn fly-fishing basics; experts from the Central Oregon Fly Fishers Club will teach campers various fly casts, fishing techniques and strategies, fly-tying, safe wading and the basic bugs that fish like to eat; space is limited; $60 in-district, $81 otherwise; 541-389-7275. KOKANEE DERBIES: The Kokanee Power of Oregon (KPO) will host three more kokanee derbies this year; entry fee is $50 for nonmembers and $35 for members; cash and tackle prizes for the winners; derbies are June 11 at Green Peter Reservoir near Sweet Home, July 23 at Wickiup Reservoir and Aug. 20 at Odell Lake; applications available at local sporting goods stores and online at kokaneepoweroregon.com; KPO is a nonprofit dedicated to enhancing inland fisheries; contact kent@kokaneepoweroregon.com. DESCHUTES CHAPTER OF TROUT UNLIMITED: Meets on the first Monday of each month at the Environmental Center in Bend; meeting starts at 6:45 p.m. for members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 541-306-4509; communications@deschutestu. org; www.deschutestu.org.

HUNTING THE BEND CHAPTER OF THE OREGON

STICK & SAGE 3-D ARCHERY SHOOT: June 4-5; Saturday 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sunday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.; off Forest Road 41 west of Bend; 40-target 3-D trail shoot and kids’ 3-D course; traditional/primitive bows only; individuals are $15 for two days or $10 for one day, families are $20 for two days or $15 for one day; hosted by Traditional Archers of Central Oregon and sponsored by the Bend Bowmen; 541-480-6743 or drymtcamo@bendbroadband.com. BEND TRAP CLUB: Five-stand and skeet shooting Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m; trap shooting on Thursdays and Sundays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; located east of Bend, at milepost 30 off U.S. Highway 20; contact Marc Rich at 541-388-1737 or visit www.bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGON SPORTING CLAYS AND HUNTING PRESERVE: Thirteen-station, 100-target course and five-stand open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to dusk, and Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m. to dusk (closed Wednesday); located at 9020 South Highway 97, Redmond; www. birdandclay.com or 541-383-0001. REDMOND ROD & GUN CLUB: Rifle and pistol are Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; skeet is Tuesdays and Sundays beginning at 10 a.m.; trap is Wednesdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. to closing, and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; 2011 family memberships now available for $50; nonmembers are welcome; www.rrandgc.com. HORSE RIDGE PISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns at the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range on U.S. Highway 20 at milepost 24; first and third Sunday of each month at 10 a.m.; 541-4087027 or www.hrp-sass.com.

pet pals PHOTO CONTEST ENTER TODAY 3 EASY WAYS:

Look for your pet’s photo online at bendbulletin.com/petpals and in the Pet Pals keepsake Guide Book, publishing June 15

1. ENTER YOUR PHOTO ONLINE

to www.bendbulletin.com/petpals Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

SHOOTING

2011

FLY-TYING CORNER

Zug Bug, courtesy The Patient Angler.

HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the second Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the King Buffet at the north end of the Wagner Mall, across from Robberson Ford in Bend; contact Bendchapter_oha@yahoo.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERS ASSOCIATION: Meets the first Tuesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Prineville Fire Hall, 405 N. Belknap St.; contact: 541-447-5029.

2. MAIL YOUR PHOTO to Pet Pals Contest,

THE PHOTO ENTRY DEADLINE IS JUNE 8TH

The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020 By Gary Lewis For The Bulletin

Chances are you favor one or the other, the Zug Bug or the Prince Nymph. Tied with peacock herl, both are extremely fishy, suggestive of mayfly nymphs or stoneflies and other tasties. These days, most anglers fish nymphs with a bead, but to my mind, the Zug Bug is best employed without weight or extra flash. Dig a Zug Bug out of your box when prospecting lakes or ponds in late spring and early summer. On a floating

line or an intermediate sinking line, this fly is most effective when it is fished with little movement. Let the cruising opportunist trout find it. And they will, because it’s tied with peacock and peacock is magic. Tie the Zug Bug on a No. 10-14 nymph hook. Use peacock tips for the tail. Build the body with peacock herl and rib with fine silver tinsel or wire. Use soft hackle fibers at the throat and tie in a wedge of mallard, teal, pheasant or grouse as a wing, trimming it straight across.

3. DROP YOUR PHOTO OFF at 1777 SW Chandler Avenue, Bend

Include your pet’s name and your contact information including email address. Each entry requires a $5 entry fee. Make your check payable to: The Bulletin/Pet Pals The 2011 Pet Pals Photo Contest supports the NIE program and is a product of:

For more info call Shannon at 541-617-7852 or email her at petpals@bendbulletin.com For official rules visit www.bendbulletin.com/petpals.

YOU CAN WIN PRIZES FROM THESE LOCAL BUSINESSES!

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

DANCIN WOOFS DAY CARE | TRAINING CENTER

WHAT IS NIE (NEWSPAPERS IN EDUCATION)? NIE provides newspapers to classrooms throughout Central Oregon. Kids who use newspapers in school score higher in social studies, language arts, and mathematics.


O

E

ADVENTURES IN THE CENTRAL OREGON OUTDOORS Oprah’s network goes to the movies

OUTING

Inside

Will the new “documentary club” become a book-club-like phenomenon? Page E6

• Television • Comics • Calendar • LAT crossword • Sudoku • Horoscope

www.bendbulletin.com/outing

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 2011

What does ‘June-uary’ hold for us hikers? By Lydia Hoffman The Bulletin

We might as well get used to the snowcapped sheen on the mountains. It’s not going anywhere. Expect generally snowier conditions than usual at high elevations well into summer, said Chris Sabo, a U.S. Forest Service trails specialist. The snow is melting slowly, and there has been more snowfall this week at high elevations. But the good news is that conditions for snow sports at Dutchman Flat Sno-park are still “awesome,” said Sabo, with 6 to 8 feet of snow remaining. All other sno-parks are closed for the season. Just call it “June-uary” and break out the snowshoes. The current snowline ranges from about 4,800 feet around Elk Lake to about 6,000 feet at Newberry Crater. In general, trails above 5,000 feet are still blocked with snow. The Cascade Lakes Highway will not be open for this weekend. The plowing has been delayed by mechanical breakdowns, and the road is still blocked with snow between Mount Bachelor and Elk Lake. The McKenzie Pass Highway is also not yet open to highway traffic. See Trails / E3

TRAIL UPDATE

Photos by Markian Hawryluk / The Bulletin

A stream crossing on the Rooster Rock Trail, a two-mile hike to a scenic rocky overlook through luscious green forest.

High Desert Museum now offers free admission to military families

Wet weather,

Admission to the High Desert Museum will be free now through Labor Day for all active military personnel and their immediate families through a program supported by the National Endowment for the Arts. The program, called Blue Star Families, allows for free admission for all active-duty members of the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, National Guard and Reserve, and up to five immediate family members. Some special or limited-time museum exhibits may not be included, so it’s best to check with the museum in advance. The museum, located south of Bend on U.S. Highway 97, is one of more than 1,300 across the nation participating. (For a complete list, visit www.arts.gov/bluestarmuseums.) Normal admission for nonmembers is $10 for adults; $9 for those 65 and older; $6 for ages 5-12; and free for kids 4 and younger. It’s open daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Contact: 541-382-4754 or www.highdesert museum.org.

fowl hike

SPOTLIGHT

Even in a drizzle, the payoff for tackling Rooster Rock is far from poultry By Markian Hawryluk • The Bulletin

A

What I Wore hosts book, dress sale

s a hiker, rain torments me. The mere mention of rain in the forecast usually has me scurrying for the remote control, rather than the trails.

Rain is miserable. Cold, damp weather penetrates to your bones and saps your body heat.

Stripped of bark, a tree along the Rooster Rock Trail has an almost varnish-like finish.

And regardless of what you wear, you’re going to get wet anyway. You can try sealing yourself up in waterproof rain gear, but don’t buy that whole “breathable” myth. I’ve yet to find the jacket that doesn’t become a steam bath when I’m moving at top speed. And rain is so insidious, it seeks out any gap in your defenses, taking any chance to trickle down your neck and send shivers down your spine. Sure, I get the whole April shower-May flower connection and I’m happy not to have to turn on the sprinklers at home. But I’m a fair-weather hiker to the core. So you can imagine the past few weeks of persistent precipitation have been trying for me. That said, a three-day weekend just cries out for some outdoor recreating. So despite a threat of rain, I pulled out the dog-eared guidebooks and scoured the pages for a hike I hadn’t done before and that wasn’t going to be snowed in. With blind optimism outweighing the 30 percent chance of rain, I packed up the car and headed for Rooster Rock. See Rooster / E6

What I Wore, a Redmond-based formal wear bank, will host the What I Wore Book and Dress Sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 18. What I Wore collects dresses, shoes, purses and accessories and lends them to high school girls and women who cannot afford their own. All proceeds from the sale will go toward “furthering and replenishing the What I Wore project’s inventory,” according to a news release. Casual dresses, in addition to hardcover, paperback and children’s books, can be donated to the event at 1489 N.W. Jackpine Ave., Redmond, before June 15. What I Wore is at 2622 S.W. Glacier Place, Suite 180, Redmond. For more information contact Michelle Duff at whatiworeformals@gmail.com or 541-504-1201, or visit www.whatiworeformals.org.

BendFilm 2011 Bash this Saturday The folks who bring you BendFilm will host the BendFilm 2011 Bash from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday at Furnish, 761 N.W. Arizona Ave., Bend, in support of the nonprofit film festival. The event will feature beverages from Oregon Spirit Distillers, Silver Moon Brewing, Volcano Vineyards and Crazy Dave’s Ginger Brew; small bites from Cafe 3456, Blue Bite Catering and Salt & Flame Catering; and live music by K.C. Flynn. Tickets are $35 ($65 for couples) and are in limited supply. Contact: www.bendfilm.org/2011bash. — From staff reports

If you go Getting there: Drive West on U.S. Highway 20 toward Sweet Home. The trailhead for Rooster Rock is just before mile marker 51, and the pull-out for the Trout Creek Trail is just past marker 49. Difficulty: Difficult Cost: Free self-issue permit at trailhead. No parking pass required. Contact: Willamette National Forest, Springfield, 541-225-6300

Correction

A trail runner nears the Rooster Rock spire after climbing 2,300 feet up the Trout Creek Trail. The trail takes a left turn at the spire and continues for another 200 feet to a scenic overlook.

In a story headlined “Babies on boards,” which appeared Sunday, May 29, on Page C1, the gender of twin girls in a photo on Page C8 was misidentified in an accompanying photo caption. The Bulletin regrets the error.


T EL EV ISION

E2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Dad’s homework aid gets a passing grade

‘Single Ladies’: all bling, no brain By Hank Stuever The Washington Post

Dear Abby: I’m writing regarding the letter from “Not Fooled in Michigan” (April 22), who expressed concern about her fiance’s daughter’s reliance on him to proofread her college papers. As a teacher, I know when I assign a paper that the spelling and grammar will likely be checked by a computer or a person other than a student. Whether it’s the campus proofreading service or a parent is immaterial. Would “Fooled” have the same “ethical” objections if “Kimberly” were using the campus office to provide the same service? What matters is the content of her essays, which the girl is apparently writing by herself — and incidentally, completing in enough time to send them to a proofreader and await a response. That suggests a more developed sense of responsibility than is common among my students. I see no ethical dilemma here, and I find it disingenuous of “Not Fooled” to suggest otherwise. As for Kimberly’s “unhealthy” reliance on her dad, the aforementioned campus services are, in my experience, generally staffed with underpaid undergraduates or overworked teaching assistants. If her dad has the knowledge and time to assist her, I see nothing wrong with her asking for his help. That’s not overreliance on a parent. It’s choosing the best of one’s available options. — Texas Teacher Who Knows Dear Teacher: Thank you for writing. I received a huge number of responses to that letter — from teachers, parents and students alike. Read on: Dear Abby: The fiancee needs to determine which class the papers are for before calling foul. If it’s a composition class in which the student is graded on spelling and grammar, then no, Dad shouldn’t fix them, but he can advise. It’s called being a parent, and “Not Fooled” better become

DEAR ABBY accustomed to the idea of sharing his attention. If it’s something like a history class, editing assistance shouldn’t be a problem. All good writers have editors to help with mechanics because after looking at a piece for too long, you no longer see the errors. — Cyndi in Ohio Dear Abby: I’m a 43-year-old college student. I always send my siblings my essays before I turn them in, not just to proofread, but for their opinions of my writing. I would bet this is why the daughter sends her work to her father. My daughter is still in high school, but I hope she continues to seek my opinion on her essays in the future. It has prompted many valuable and intriguing discussions, some of which have helped us to understand each other better as she transitions to adulthood. There’s nothing “unhealthy” about an 18- to 22-yearold college student asking her dad to help with a paper. What’s unhealthy is a future stepmom taking issue with it. It appears she has some underlying jealousy. — Mom Graduating With Her Kid Dear Abby: Perhaps the daughter is simply making her father feel useful by including him in her life with this simple act. His fiancee should become more involved in the parenting process if she intends to stick her nose there. I can think of worse situations than this example of a parent being a parent. I wish there were more dads like him. — Rachael in Southwest Georgia Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.Dear Abby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

“Single Ladies,” a new VH1 soap opera, exists in a goldflecked nightmare version of Atlanta, where life can be winnowed down to the lyrics of assertive pop songs and a series of upscale, urban cliches. It’s all champagne fountains, micro-miniskirts and cuisine served by, as one show-off suitor tells a single lady, “my personal four-star chef.” In this world, when a sister is feeling down (and/or stressed-out about trying to launch her fancy dress boutique of dis-tinc-tion), nothing can cheer her up as much as signing the lease on a new Jaguar. That sort of high-end, bougie consumer nonsense is, I guess, part of the escapism offered by “Single Ladies,” which borrows its title from the fully charred Beyoncé hit and the equally overdone idea that female viewers are still (still!) waiting to exhale, waiting for Mr. Big, waiting for the next everything-mustgo stampede on low-cut wedding dresses. This is a series for people who found “Sex and the City” too quick-witted and “The Wendy Williams Show” too intellectually stimulating. It’s the TV equivalent of a beach read with no words. Even if “Single Ladies” can be enjoyed in some basic brainless way (and even though it’s safely sequestered on VH1, where standards are aggressively low), there’s something steadfastly embarrassing about it. The women seem to be operating from a false sense of empowerment, a soulfulness which unfortunately reads as soullessness. The men all talk like that grandiloquently suave Old Spice spokesman who rides his stallion shirtless. “Single Ladies” dares

VH1

LisaRaye McCoy, Stacey Dash and Charity Shea star in VH1’s “Single Ladies.” The series, which premiered Monday, is scheduled for additional showings, including today at 3 p.m.

Enduring two hours of terrible writing and acting would be bad enough, but there is something else: “Single Ladies” is astonishingly lacking a moral center that should be the subtext of even the most tawdry fiction. ... There’s no one to root for here; everyone is ethically unctuous. the more sheltered among us to ask: “Are there people who really look and talk like this?” Yes, and they’re on a show called “The Real Housewives of Atlanta,” which indeed makes “Single Ladies” seem redundant and strangely off-key — to say nothing of how it further advances depressing stereotypes of the black upper-middle class. Again we see popular culture’s bad habit of validating minorities by reaching for their lowest common denominators. Here, people are judged by outdated estimations of what used to be known as bling. Executive-produced by Queen Latifah, who once upon a time seemed to know better, the two-

hour launch of “Single Ladies” tosses uncertainly between a serious attempt at a relationship drama and a pathetic stab at … camp, I suppose? It’s about three women (their group will expand to four in a couple of episodes) trying to figure out what they want from relationships. Val (Stacey Dash) has just been dumped by her longtime beau after she demanded that he — altogether now — “put a ring on it.” (He declines.) Val’s best friend, Keisha (LisaRaye McCoy), is a professional poker player who, despite her advanced age, still sometimes appears as an underclad vixen in hip-hop videos. When she shows up for her latest shoot

in a new Cam’ron video, she is handed a pink business suit and informed that she’s playing an older, but still trampy, woman. (Oh, the indignity.) Lastly, there is April (Charity Shea), the token white friend, a platinum blonde who has married the dream black man — only she’s cheating on him with Atlanta’s sexysmooth mayor (played by rapper Common). Enduring two hours of terrible writing and acting would be bad enough, but there is something else: “Single Ladies” is astonishingly lacking a moral center that should be the subtext of even the most tawdry fiction. I’m not talking about the bed-hopping, the cheating, the conspicuous consumption and, in Keisha’s case, the theft of a diamond-encrusted watch from the Cam’ron video shoot. I was struck more by how easily the three women tell lies to protect one another, in a sort of gender-reversed version of the “bros before hos” rule: Did you steal that watch? (No, Keisha lies.) Are you sleeping with the mayor? (No, April lies.) Did you lie to me about my wife’s cheating? (No, stammers Val.) There’s no one to root for here; everyone is ethically unctuous. Val’s boyfriend reminds her, in more colorful language, that she’s a grown woman. That’s exactly what I was thinking, watching “Single Ladies”: The two lead actresses are in their 40s, dressed like they’re in their 20s, saddled with the impulsecontrol issues of preteens. This is supposed to be a show about adults? For adults?

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9:00

9:30

Paid Program Paid Program The Office ‘PG’ Parks/Recreat CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ‘14’ Entertainment The Insider ‘PG’ Glee Silly Love Songs ’ ‘14’ Å Without a Trace ’ ‘PG’ Å Doc Martin Movement ’ ‘PG’ The Office ‘PG’ Parks/Recreat Nikita 2.0 ’ ‘14’ Å Love of Quilting Joy/Painting Doc Martin Movement ’ ‘PG’

10:00

10:30

11:00

Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’ Wheel of Fortune KATU News at 11 Love Bites Firsts (N) ’ ‘14’ Å News The Mentalist Red Moon ‘14’ Å News Primetime: What Would You Do? ’ KEZI 9 News News Channel 21 TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ Family Guy ‘14’ Without a Trace ’ ‘14’ Å King of Queens Joe Bonamassa Live From the Royal Albert Hall ‘PG’ Love Bites Firsts (N) ’ ‘14’ Å News House of Payne Meet the Browns Roseanne ‘PG’ Mexico/Bayless Julia-Jacques Cooking Odyss Joe Bonamassa Live From the Royal Albert Hall ‘PG’

11:30 (11:35) Nightline Jay Leno Letterman (11:35) Nightline Family Guy ‘14’ King of Queens Yellowstone Jay Leno Roseanne ‘PG’ Hubert Keller Yellowstone

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

A&E AMC ANPL BRAVO CMT CNBC CNN COM COTV CSPAN DIS DISC ESPN ESPN2 ESPNC ESPNN FAM FNC FOOD FX HGTV HIST LIFE MSNBC MTV NICK ROOT SPIKE SYFY TBN TBS TCM TLC TNT TOON TRAV TVLND USA VH1

The First 48 Torn; Gun Crazy ‘14’ The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 Shot in the head. ‘14’ The First 48 (N) ‘PG’ Å The First 48: Missing Persons ‘PG’ The First 48: Missing Persons ‘PG’ 130 28 18 32 The First 48 ‘14’ Å (3:00) ›› “Constan- ›› “The Bone Collector” (1999, Suspense) Denzel Washington, Angelina Jolie, Queen Latifah. A paralyzed ›› “The Juror” (1996, Suspense) Demi Moore, Alec Baldwin, Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Premiere. A hit man is The Killing I’ll Let You Know When I Get (11:32) ›› “The 102 40 39 tine” (2005) detective guides the hunt for a serial killer. Å sent to sway a woman’s vote in a murder trial. There The police regroup. ‘14’ Juror” (1996) Whale Wars: The Aftermath ’ ‘14’ Life Uniqueness of feathers. ’ ‘PG’ My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Å My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Å My Cat From Hell Wildcat! ’ ‘PG’ My Cat From Hell ’ ‘PG’ Å 68 50 26 38 Whale Wars: The Aftermath ’ ‘14’ America’s Next Top Model ’ ‘PG’ Platinum Hit This is Platinum Hit ‘14’ Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC What Happens Housewives/NYC 137 44 Cribs ‘PG’ Å Extreme Makeover: Home Edition Lewis Family ’ ‘PG’ Å True Blue: Ten Years Comedy Club ‘14’ Comedy Club ‘14’ Blue Collar Comedy The Dukes of Hazzard ’ ‘G’ Å 190 32 42 53 Cribs ‘PG’ Å Nuclear Meltdown Mad Money Walt: The Man Behind the Myth Shark Vacuum Ninja Kitchen 51 36 40 52 Walt: The Man Behind the Myth Piers Morgan Tonight (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å Piers Morgan Tonight Anderson Cooper 360 Anderson Cooper 360 52 38 35 48 In the Arena (N) Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Scrubs ‘14’ Å Scrubs ‘14’ Å Daily Show Colbert Report South Park ‘MA’ South Park ‘MA’ South Park ‘MA’ Futurama ’ ‘14’ Futurama ’ ‘14’ Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Daily Show Colbert Report 135 53 135 47 South Park ‘14’ Desert The Yoga Show PM Edition Cooking Oregon City Club of Central Oregon The Buzz Epic Conditions Word Travels ’ Paid Program Visions of NW Ride Guide ‘14’ Outside Presents 11 Capital News Today Today in Washington 58 20 12 11 Tonight From Washington Sonny-Chance Phineas and Ferb Fish Hooks ‘G’ Wizards-Place Shake It Up! ‘G’ “Another Cinderella Story” (2008) Selena Gomez. Å Suite/Deck Shake It Up! ‘G’ Good-Charlie Wizards-Place Wizards-Place 87 43 14 39 Wizards-Place Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Deadliest Catch ’ ‘14’ Å Deadliest Catch Graduation Day ‘14’ Tornado Rampage 2011 ‘PG’ Å Swords: Life on the Line (N) Å Deadliest Catch Graduation Day ‘14’ 156 21 16 37 Cash-Chicago Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å 21 23 22 23 SportsCenter (N) 2011 National Spelling Bee Finals From Maryland. (N) NCAA Update College Softball NCAA World Series, Game 4 -- Florida vs. Missouri (N) Football Live Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Å NFL Live (N) NBA Tonight (N) NASCAR Now NBA Tonight 22 24 21 24 College Softball Boxing From April 2, 1981. Å Boxing UWF Wrestling UWF Wrestling AWA Wrestling Å Boxing: 1955 Jones vs. Robinson Boxing From Jan. 14, 1995. Å 23 25 123 25 Boxing From April 2, 1981. Å Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express 24 63 124 Still Standing ’ Still Standing ’ America’s Funniest Home Videos ›› “The Karate Kid” (1984) Ralph Macchio. A Japanese handyman teaches a teenager to defend himself. The 700 Club (N) ‘G’ Å 67 29 19 41 Gilmore Girls ’ ‘PG’ Å Hannity (N) On the Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Å Hannity On the Record, Greta Van Susteren Glenn Beck 54 61 36 50 The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å The Next Food Network Star The Next Food Network Star ‘G’ Iron Chef America All Star Grill-Off (N) 24 Hour Restaurant Battle (N) Chopped Grilling; classic condiment. 177 62 98 44 Food Star (4:00) › “John Tucker Must Die” Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ›› “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006) Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart. ›› “X-Men: The Last Stand” (2006) Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart. 131 Curb/Block Property Virgins Property Virgins Hunters Int’l House Hunters My First Place My First Place Selling New York Selling New York House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l 176 49 33 43 Curb/Block Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Modern Marvels Whiskey ‘PG’ Å Larry the Cable Guy Gettysburg Turning points, technology and facts of the Civil War. ‘PG’ Modern Marvels ‘G’ Å 155 42 41 36 Brad Meltzer’s Decoded ‘PG’ Å Unsolved Mysteries ‘14’ Å Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Unsolved Mysteries ‘14’ Å Unsolved Mysteries ‘14’ Å Unsolved Mysteries ‘14’ Å How I Met How I Met 138 39 20 31 Unsolved Mysteries ‘14’ Å The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Ed Show (N) The Last Word The Rachel Maddow Show The Ed Show Hardball With Chris Matthews Å 56 59 128 51 The Last Word That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Disaster Date ’ Disaster Date ’ The Real World Las Vegas ’ ‘14’ America’s Best Dance Crew America’s Best Dance Crew Son of a Gun (N) Son of a Gun (N) 192 22 38 57 The Seven ‘PG’ SpongeBob iCarly ‘G’ Å iCarly ‘G’ Å iCarly ‘G’ Å SpongeBob My Wife and Kids My Wife and Kids Hates Chris Hates Chris George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ That ’70s Show That ’70s Show 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Barfly (N) Mariners Pre. MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. (N) (Live) Mariners Post. The Dan Patrick Show (N) MLB Baseball 20 45 28* 26 Action Sports World Tour Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å iMPACT Wrestling (N) ’ Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Jail ’ ‘14’ Å 132 31 34 46 Jail ’ ‘14’ Å Star Trek: Enterprise Twilight ‘PG’ Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘PG’ Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘PG’ Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘PG’ Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘PG’ Star Trek: The Next Generation ‘PG’ 133 35 133 45 Stargate SG-1 ’ ‘PG’ Å Behind Scenes David Jeremiah Destined Reign This Is Your Day Praise the Lord Å Live-Holy Land The Evidence Grant Jeffrey Changing-World Praise the Lord Å 205 60 130 Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ Seinfeld ‘PG’ › “Rush Hour 3” (2007, Action) Jackie Chan, Chris Tucker. Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ Conan ‘14’ 16 27 11 28 Love-Raymond ›› “Godzilla, King of the Monsters” (1956, Science Fiction) (6:45) ›› “Rodan” (1957) Kenji Sawara, Yumi Shirakawa. A (8:15) ›› “Ghidora, the Three-Headed Monster” (1965) Yosuke Natsuki, Yuriko › “Godzilla vs. Monster Zero” (1966) Nick Adams. An astronaut (11:45) ›› “Dino101 44 101 29 Raymond Burr, Takashi Shimura. prehistoric bird-beast terrorizes Japan. Hoshi. Godzilla, Mothra and Rodan battle a flying dragon. goes to Planet X to fetch Rodan and Godzilla. saurus!” (1960) Police Women of Broward County Police Women of Broward County Police Women of Broward County Police Women of Broward County NY Ink (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Police Women of Broward County 178 34 32 34 Police Women of Broward County Bones Man in the Mansion ’ ‘14’ Bones ’ ‘14’ Å Bones The Killer in the Concrete ‘14’ Bones The Hole in the Heart ’ ‘14’ Bones The Change in the Game ‘14’ CSI: NY Outside Man ’ ‘14’ Å 17 26 15 27 Bones The Girl in the Gator ’ ‘14’ Regular Show Looney Tunes Scooby-Doo Hole in the Wall World of Gumball Adventure Time Regular Show MAD ‘PG’ King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad American Dad Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ 84 Bizarre Foods/Zimmern Man v. Food Miami ‘G’ Å Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Off Limits Los Angeles ‘G’ Å Bizarre Foods/Zimmern 179 51 45 42 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations (5:43) Sanford & Son ‘PG’ Sanford & Son Sanford & Son All in the Family All in the Family All in the Family Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond (11:12) Three’s Company ‘PG’ 65 47 29 35 The Jeffersons NCIS A murder victim in a taxi. ‘PG’ NCIS In the Zone ’ ‘14’ Å NCIS The team hunts a killer. ‘14’ NCIS The team hunts for a killer. ‘14’ NCIS Outlaws and In-Laws ’ ‘PG’ Law & Order: Special Victims Unit 15 30 23 30 NCIS Minimum Security ‘PG’ Å Saturday Night Live ’ ‘14’ Å Saturday Night Live ’ ‘14’ Å SNL Remembers Chris Farley ››› “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” (1986, Comedy) Matthew Broderick, Alan Ruck. ’ Å Mob Wives ‘14’ 191 48 37 54 Saturday Night Live ’ ‘14’ Å PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(4:00) ››› “Courage Under Fire” › “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” 1992 Kristy Swanson. TBA ›› “Smokey and the Bandit II” 1980 Burt Reynolds. (9:45) ›› “Young Guns” 1988, Western Emilio Estevez. ’ ‘R’ Å Strange Days ‘R’ ›› “Unfaithfully Yours” 1984, Comedy Dudley Moore. ‘PG’ Å ›› “Robin Hood: Men in Tights” 1993 Cary Elwes. ‘PG-13’ Å › “Porky’s II: The Next Day” 1983, Comedy Dan Monahan. ‘R’ Å › “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” 1992 Moto: In Out Moto: In Out Moto: In Out Moto: In Out AMA MX Highlights 2011 (N) The Daily Habit Stealth Rider ‘14’ Dirt Demons Dirt Demons AMA MX Highlights 2011 The Daily Habit Stealth Rider ‘14’ Big Break PGA Tour Golf Memorial Tournament, First Round From Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. Golf Central (N) Big Break Indian Wells Big Break Indian Wells PGA Tour Golf The Waltons The Obsession ‘G’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Frasier ‘PG’ Frasier ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ The Golden Girls The Golden Girls (4:00) ›› “Blue Chips” 1994, Drama Nick ›› “S.W.A.T.” 2003, Action Samuel L. Jackson, Colin Farrell. A Los Angeles SWAT Treme Aunt Mimi and Davis’ record com- Treme Slip Away Davis discovers new Treme Feels Like Rain Hidalgo does a Real Sex Xtra: Por- The Best of Katie HBO 425 501 425 10 Nolte. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å team must protect a criminal. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å pany. ’ ‘MA’ Å talent. ’ ‘MA’ Å favor for a councilman. ‘MA’ Å nucopia Morgan ’ ‘MA’ › “The Devil’s Rejects” 2005, Horror Sid Haig, Bill Moseley. ‘R’ (7:15) ››› “Bug” 2006, Suspense Ashley Judd, Michael Shannon, Lynn Collins. ‘R’ › “The Devil’s Rejects” 2005, Horror Sid Haig, Bill Moseley. ‘R’ Beyond Re-Ani. IFC 105 105 (3:15) ››› “Rob (5:35) › “Showtime” 2002 Robert De Niro. A TV crew follows (7:15) ››› “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” 2009, Fantasy Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson. New dangers ›› “Terminator Salvation” 2009, Science Fiction Christian Bale. Humanity fights back MAX 400 508 7 Roy” 1995 two real-life police officers on the job. Å lurk for Harry, Dumbledore and their friends. ’ ‘PG’ Å against Skynet’s machine army. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å Death of a Mars Rover (N) Known Universe (N) Break It Down 3,000-Foot Bridge ‘G’ Death of a Mars Rover Known Universe Break It Down 3,000-Foot Bridge ‘G’ Border Wars Lost in the River ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Dragon Ball Z Kai Speed Racer Power Rangers Avatar: Airbender Avatar: Airbender Dragon Ball Z Kai Dragon Ball Z Kai Speed Racer Power Rangers Fanboy-Chum The Troop ’ ‘G’ Invader ZIM ‘Y7’ Adven./Jimmy Adven./Jimmy NTOON 89 115 189 Beyond the Hunt Whitetail Nation Magnum TV Wardens Bow Madness Ult. Adventures Whitetail Pro Ted Nugent Trophy Quest Beyond the Hunt Wild Outdoors Outdoors Trophy Hunt Adv. Abroad OUTD 37 307 43 (5:15) ›› “Valentino: The Last Emperor” 2008, Documentary Donatella Versace. iTV. “Children of God” 2010 Johnny Ferro. The lives of two gay men (8:45) Scenarios “Beyond Gay: The Politics of Pride” 2009 Ken Coolen. An ex- Pride Comedy Jam (iTV) (N) ’ ‘MA’ Å ››› “The Reader” SHO 500 500 The life of a legendary fashion designer. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å and the wife of a pastor collide. ‘NR’ Å USA Shorts ‘14’ amination of pride celebrations internationally. ‘NR’ 2008 ‘R’ Speedmakers ‘PG’ Speedmakers Mega Kits ‘14’ American Trucker American Trucker Speedmakers ‘PG’ Speedmakers Mega Kits ‘14’ American Trucker American Trucker NASCAR Race Hub SPEED 35 303 125 Starz Studios ‘14’ (5:20) ››› “Chicago” 2002 Catherine Zeta-Jones. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å (7:20) ›› “Disney’s A Christmas Carol” 2009 ’ ‘PG’ ›› “The Taking of Pelham 123” 2009 Denzel Washington. ’ ‘R’ Å “Did You Hear-Morgans?” STARZ 300 408 300 (4:45) › “Hardball” 2001 Keanu Reeves. A gambler coaches a (6:35) “Harlem Hostel” 2010 Rafael Sardina. Several friends ›› “No Good Deed” 2002, Suspense Samuel L. Jackson, Milla Jovovich. Three bank “Nobel Son” 2007, Suspense Alan Rickman, Bryan Greenberg, Shawn Hatosy. A TMC 525 525 youth baseball team to work off a debt. ’ open an illegal youth hostel in Queens. ‘NR’ Å robbers hold a policeman hostage. ’ ‘R’ Å prize-winning scientist’s son is kidnapped. ’ ‘R’ Heads-Up Poker World Series of Poker ‘PG’ World Series of Poker ‘PG’ Heads-Up Poker World Series of Poker ‘PG’ World Series of Poker ‘PG’ Adv. Sports Adv. Sports VS. 27 58 30 My Fair Wedding With David Tutera My Fair Wedding With David Tutera My Fair Wedding With David Tutera Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å Ghost Whisperer Firestarter ’ ‘PG’ Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å WE 143 41 174 ENCR 106 401 306 FMC 104 204 104 FUEL 34 GOLF 28 301 27 HALL 66 33 103 33


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 E3

CALENDAR TODAY BOOK CLUB DISCUSSION: Discuss “A Visit from the Goon Squad” by Jennifer Egan; free; 6:30 p.m.; Camalli Book Co., 1288 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite C, Bend; 541-323-6134. YAMN: The Denver-based trance-fusion band performs; $7; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.

FRIDAY PATIO & BAKE SALE: Proceeds benefit church activities; free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-2959. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-408-4998 or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. REDMOND FRIDAY FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Redmond Greenhouse, 4101 S. U.S. Highway 97; 541-604-5156 or redmondfridaymarket@gmail.com. BEND HAIKU WEEKEND: Featuring displays of haiku-related art, a haiku wall, haiku contest and more; free; 5 p.m.; Liberty Theater, 849 N.W. Wall St.; 541-433-2200, haikubyanya@ gmail.com or http://sites.google.com/ site/haikuoregon/hsa-meeting. FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. MUSIC IN PUBLIC PLACES: Featuring a performance by the Summit Express Jazz Band; free; 5 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jayne Pearson Faulkner reads from her memoir “The Place of Belonging”; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. “OH YOU COWGIRL!”: A screening of the documentary, with a presentation by filmmaker Shirley Morris; proceeds benefit the Bend High Equestrian Team; $8, $5 children and students; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-410-0433 or http://thelonecowgirl.blogspot.com. BELLUS VOCIS AND CENTRAL SINGERS: The Central Oregon Community College choirs perform works from Claude Debussy, Moses Hogan and more, under the direction of James Knox; $6, $5 students and seniors; 7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7512. “DEPARTURES”: A screening of the 2008 PG-13-rated film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org. LAST BAND STANDING: A battle of the bands competition featuring local acts; tickets must be retrieved at participating venues; free; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; http://url.bb/LBS11.

SATURDAY DRESS DASH: Search for discounted wedding gowns; proceeds benefit Making Memories Breast Cancer Foundation; free admission; 7-10 a.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503-491-8091 or babc@makingmemories.org. GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit scholarships for children in Rwanda; free; 7 a.m.-2 p.m.; 824 N.W. Stonepine Drive, Bend; 541-306-0864 or www.kurerafund.org. AGILITY TRIAL: Bend Agility Action Dogs presents a day of dogs navigating obstacle courses; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-410-4646. GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the school’s Sparrows and Sparrow Clubs USA; free admission; 8 a.m.-2 p.m.; Seven Peaks School, 19660 S.W.

Mountaineer Way, Bend; 541-382-7755. PLANT SALE: A sale of vegetable and landscape plants; proceeds benefit the Opportunity Center of Central Oregon; free admission; 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 S.W. Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-382-7044. VFW BREAKFAST: Community breakfast with pancakes, sausage, ham, eggs, coffee and more; $7, $6 seniors and children; 8:30 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. “YEAR OF THE RIVER PART II” EXHIBIT OPENS: New exhibit explores sustainable uses of the Deschutes River and watershed; exhibit runs through Sept. 11; included in the price of admission; $15 adults, $12 ages 65 and older, $9 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. BEND HAIKU WEEKEND: The Haiku Society of America meets, with haiku readings and a haiku walk through Drake Park; free; 9 a.m., 4:30 p.m. walk; Liberty Theater, 849 N.W. Wall St.; 541-433-2200, haikubyanya@ gmail.com or http://sites.google.com/ site/haikuoregon/hsa-meeting. HIGH DESERT RHUBARB FESTIVAL: Dutch-oven cooks prepare a variety of rhubarb dishes; with live music, and vendors selling antiques, crafts, rhubarb and more; proceeds benefit La Pine Community Kitchen; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; L&S Gardens and Land Clearing, 50792 S. Huntington Road, La Pine; 541-536-2049. PATIO & BAKE SALE: Proceeds benefit church activities; free; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Holy Redeemer Catholic Church, 16137 Burgess Road, La Pine; 541-536-2959. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. LARKSPUR FESTIVAL: Featuring a plant sale, family activities, games, craft sales, live entertainment, dance demonstrations, food and more; free; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Larkspur Park, 1700 S.E. Reed Market Road, Bend; 541-388-1133. STREAM STEWARDSHIP DAY: Join the Upper Deschutes Watershed Council for a day of stewardship activities to keep local rivers and streams healthy; free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; McKay Park, 166 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-389-7275 or www.restorethedeschutes.org. YOUTH FLY-FISHING DAY: Ages 11-17 can learn to cast, tie flies and more; fishing licenses required; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pine Nursery Park, 3750 N.E. Purcell Blvd, Bend; COFYouthDay@ cofflyfishers.org. CRESCENDO BENDO: Cascade School of Music students and teachers perform a series of concerts; proceeds benefit the school’s scholarship fund; $2 first three concerts, $5 evening show; 3 p.m. guitar, 4 p.m. kids keyboard, 6 p.m. strings, 7 p.m. evening show; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WANDERING WINDS: The ensemble group talks about their instruments and performs; free; 3 p.m.; Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SITKA A LA ROAD: A open artist studio featuring writer Ellen Waterston; with information about the Sitka Center; free; 4-7 p.m.; The Nature of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-994-5485 or www.sitkacenter.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jayne Pearson Faulkner reads from her memoir “The Place of Belonging”; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866.

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

BENDFILM BASH: Learn about the upcoming BendFilm Festival; with live music and food; proceeds benefit BendFilm; $35, $65 per couple; 7-10 p.m.; Furnish., 761 N.W. Arizona Ave., Bend; 541-388-3378 or www.bendfilm.org/2011bash. THE SONGWRITERS CIRCLE: Texasbased pop-rock musician Daniel Whittington performs, with Erin Cole-Baker, Chris Beland and Justin Lavik; $5; 8-10:30 p.m.; PoetHouse Art, 55 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-728-0756.

SUNDAY AGILITY TRIAL: Bend Agility Action Dogs presents a day of dogs navigating obstacle courses; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-410-4646. HEAVEN CAN WAIT: 5K walk and run to benefit Sara’s Project; $20-$40; 9 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-706-7743 or www.heavencanwait.org. HIP-HOP CONCERT: Featuring performances by Sleep, Scarub, Mosley Wotta, SPL, Barisone, Leif James and more; $5, free for children; noon; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-388-6868 or madhappylounge@gmail.com. FIDDLERS JAM: Listen or dance at the Oregon Old Time Fiddlers Jam; donations accepted; 1-3 p.m.; Pine Forest Grange, 63214 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-447-5451. BROADWAY REVUE AND SING-ALONG: A performance of Broadway show tunes, with audience participation; free; 2 p.m.; Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W. 19th St., Redmond; 541-548-3367. CASCADE WINDS SYMPHONIC BAND: The band performs “Space,” music from Star Wars, Star Trek and more, under the direction of Dan Judd; donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-593-1635 or www.cascadewinds.org. LA PHIL LIVE — DUDAMEL CONDUCTS BRAHMS: A screening of the live concert, featuring the Los Angeles Philharmonic performing music by Brahms; conducted by Gustavo Dudamel; $20, $16 children; 2 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. NOTABLES SWING BAND: The senior band plays favorites from the 1930s-50s; $5; 2-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. CONDEGA CONNECT: Featuring music, food and information about Condega, Nicaragua; proceeds benefit Bend Youth Collective’s youth trip to Condega; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Common Table, 150 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-639-5546. TYRONE WELLS: The Californiabased rock/pop musician performs, with the Eric Tollefson Duo; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 day of show; 7 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silver moonbrewing.com.

MONDAY GOOD CHAIR, GREAT BOOKS: Read and discuss “Half Broke Horses” by Jeanette Walls; free; noon; Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7089 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. JAZZ SINGERS BENEFIT: Featuring performances by Michelle Van Handel and Cascade School of Music jazz singers; proceeds will fund the group’s PA system; $10; 6 p.m.; Level 2 Global Food & Lounge, 360 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, #210, Bend; 541-382-6866. U.S. HIGHWAY 20 JOURNEY 2011: Michael Czarnecki shares photos, stories, poems and prose from his journey along the highway; free; 6:30 p.m.; Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. CHARITY AND CHUCKLES: A comedy showcase performed by local

comedians; proceeds benefit tornado victims in Joplin, Mo; $3; 7 p.m.; Old Mill Brew Werks, 384 S.W. Upper Terrace Drive, Bend; 541-633-7670. EPWORTH CHORALE: The Boise First United Methodist Church choir performs; free; 7 p.m.; First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-1672.

TUESDAY U.S. HIGHWAY 20 JOURNEY 2011: Michael Czarnecki shares photos, stories, poems and prose from his journey along the highway; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BENEFIT DINNER: With live music by CinderBlue; reservations requested; proceeds benefit Camp Sunrise; $35; 5:30 p.m.; Terrebonne Depot, 400 N.W. Smith Rock Way; 541-548-7483. SPOKEN WORD SHOWCASE: Students from The Nature of Words and Cada Casa present spoken word performances; free; 6 p.m.; PoetHouse Art, 55 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233. GREEN TEAM MOVIE NIGHT: Featuring a screening of “Fuel,” which examines our dependence on foreign oil; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. PUB QUIZ: Answer trivia on topics from pop culture to politics; ages 21 and older; proceeds benefit the Kurera Foundation; $40 per team; 6:30-9:30 p.m.; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-306-0864, vivien@kurerafund. org or www.kurerafund.org. GUN RUNNER: The San Diegobased psychedelic cowboy rock act performs, with Oh Sugoi; $5; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free; 3-7 p.m.; Drake Park; 541-408-4998 or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. BOBBY BARE JR.: The Nashville, Tenn.-based alt-country musician performs, with Carey Kotsionis; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. “TICK, TICK ... BOOM!”: A preview of Innovation Theatre Works’ presentation of the autobiographical musical by Jonathan Larson about an aspiring writer struggling to make it in New York; $16; 8 p.m.; Bend Performing Arts Center, 1155 S.W. Division St.; 541-504-6721 or www.innovationtw.org.

THURSDAY June 9 SISTERS RODEO SLACK PERFORMANCE: Slack performance, with breakfast concessions; free; 8 a.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67667 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www.sistersrodeo.com. BIG BOOK SALE: A selection of books, puzzles and books on tape will be on sale; proceeds benefit the United Senior Citizens of Bend and the Bend Senior Center; 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. GOOD CHAIR, GREAT BOOKS: Read and discuss “The Zookeeper’s Wife” by Diane Ackerman; bring a lunch; free; noon-1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1055 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. “ARMCHAIR TRAVELER — MEXICO’S BAJA PENINSULA”: A slide show of photos from Alan and Bonnie Smith’s trip to Baja, with information about planning a safe visit; free; 2 p.m.; Des Chutes Historical Museum, 129 N.W. Idaho Ave., Bend; 541-617-4663 or http://osher.uoregon.edu. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bill Baber and Jarold Ramsey read from their joint poetry collection; free; 6:309:30 p.m.; Camalli Book Co., 1288 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite C, Bend; 541-323-6134.

M T For Thursday, June 2

REGAL PILOT BUTTE 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

BRIDESMAIDS (R) 2, 4:40, 7:20 EVERYTHING MUST GO (R) 2:20, 5, 7:40 THE GREATEST MOVIE EVER SOLD (PG-13) 2:25, 5:05, 7:45 THE HANGOVER PART II (R) 2:45, 5:30, 8 IN A BETTER WORLD (R) 2:10, 4:50, 7:30 MEEK’S CUTOFF (PG) 2:15, 4:55, 7:35

REGAL OLD MILL STADIUM 16 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347

BRIDESMAIDS (R) 1:45, 4:45, 7:35, 10:25 FAST FIVE (PG-13) 12:35, 3:35, 6:50, 9:45 THE HANGOVER PART II (R) 12:20, 1:15, 1:55, 3:20, 4:15, 4:55, 6:40,

7:20, 8:05, 9:25, 10, 10:45 KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) 1:05, 4:05, 7:10, 9:35 KUNG FU PANDA 2 (DP — PG) 12:30, 1:40, 3:30, 4:40, 6:35, 10:15 KUNG FU PANDA 3-D (PG) Noon, 3, 6:05, 7:45, 9:05 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES 3-D (PG-13) 12:55, 2, 3:55, 5, 7, 8, 10:05 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:20, 9:30 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (DP — PG13) 1:30, 4:30, 7:30, 10:35 PRIEST 3-D (PG-13) 9:55 RIO (G) 12:05, 3:05, 6:10 SOUL SURFER (PG) 9:10 THOR (PG-13) 3:45, 9:15 THOR 3-D (PG-13) 12:45, 6:25 WATER FOR ELEPHANTS (PG13) 1:25, 4:25, 7:50, 10:30 X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) Thu night/Fri morning: 12:01 a.m. EDITOR’S NOTE: Movie times in bold

are open-captioned showtimes. EDITOR’S NOTE: There is an additional $3.50 fee for 3-D movies. EDITOR’S NOTE: Digitally projected shows (marked as DP) use one of several different technologies to provide maximum fidelity. The result is a picture with clarity, brilliance and color and a lack of scratches, fading and flutter.

MCMENAMINS OLD ST. FRANCIS SCHOOL 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

(After 7 p.m. shows 21 and over only. Under 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.) HANNA (PG-13) 6 SOURCE CODE (PG-13) 9

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

FAST FIVE (PG-13) 3:45, 6:30

Seeking friendly duplicate bridge? Go to www.bendbridge.org Five games weekly

Of current crop of clever comedies, which is best? By Betsy Sharkey Los Angeles Times

At first glance, it wouldn’t seem that “Bridesmaids,” “The Hangover Part II” and “Midnight in Paris” have much in common other than the fact that they are all comedies currently packing a theater near you. True, there’s a wedding somewhere in the offing in all three, but the “I do’s” and “Maybe I won’ts” are merely footnotes. The movies themselves are decidedly different comic beasts in taste, quality and style, and critical reaction has been just as varied (raves for “Bridesmaids,” cheers for “Midnight,” jeers for “Hangover II”). Audiences, on the other hand, as distinct as the films themselves, are universally embracing them in impressive numbers. The comedies’ comfortable coexistence (rather than the cannibalism that typically prevails) is such a rare occurrence, it’s hard to remember the last time it happened. And for fans of comedy, in whatever shape or form it comes in, that’s good news. Beyond all the self-promoting statistics used by studios (“best opening for an R-rated comedy starring women that opened before Memorial Day”), the collective success of “Hangover II,” “Bridesmaids” and “Midnight” is significant for a couple of reasons: First, Hollywood always backs a winner; there are already talks of another “Bridesmaids,” “The Hangover Part III” has got to be a greedy glimmer in some exec’s eye, and Woody Allen’s been averaging a comedy a year for about as long as most of us have been alive — maybe next time Rome will be in the title. Of the three, “Bridesmaids” is the most revolutionary: a femalecentric raunchy comedy, written by women and starring women as occasionally inappropriate, sometimes indelicate and always believable. “Midnight in Paris,” though not perfect, is charming enough and the filmmaker’s best since “Vicky Cristina Barcelona” in 2008. Meanwhile, “The Hangover Part II,” despite the massive

Trails THE HANGOVER PART II (R) 4:15, 6:45 KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) 4:45, 7 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) 4:45, 7:30

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

BRIDESMAIDS (R) 6:45 THE HANGOVER PART II (R) 7 KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) 6:30 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (PG-13) 6:30

PINE THEATER 214 N. Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014

KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) 3:40, 6 PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 EDITOR’S NOTE: Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Continued from E1 Rain is expected for the next several days at lower elevations, but there could be more sun for Central Oregon by Saturday, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That means you may be able to get out for hiking, biking or running this weekend. Trails along the Deschutes River corridor are in good condition, as well as Phil’s Trail and the trails at Tumalo Falls, which are clear up to the falls area. The Metolius-Windigo Trail is free of snow, but there may be trees blocking the way. Other trails are opening up slowly, and trail maintenance is happening as volunteer crews are able to work. As the snow recedes, expect to find fallen trees blocking trails in the backcountry, especially in the Three Sisters Wilderness and the Mount Jefferson area trails. Trails are damp in the Sisters area but opening up. The Black

box-office take, doesn’t come close to “The Hangover” high of 2009. Animals, strippers, Mike Tyson, etc. — the emperor just got new clothes for the trip to Thailand. Which does not, however, mean the film doesn’t have its share of laughs. And that brings me to the second point. This particular threesome gets the funny fundamentals right. Which is a relief, because so many recent movies have not. Consider a few of the forgettables: “No Strings Attached,” “Something Borrowed,” “Due Date,” “The Dilemma” “Hall Pass,” “Arthur,” “Just Go With It” … Thanks, but we’d rather not. So what are the common threads, and who did it best? They’re relatable: All three films are playing around with that most typical of adult maladies — pre-wedding jitters — albeit from opposites sides of the aisle, and the ocean: Kristen Wiig’s maid of honor fighting to keep her best friend status in “Bridesmaids”; Owen Wilson’s blocked writer wondering if he’s marrying the right one in “Midnight”; and Ed Helms’ Stu just hoping his soonto-be-brother-in-law is still alive. They’re physical: Here there are echoes of Jerry Lewis, Carol Burnett and the slapstick kings, the Three Stooges. It’s the clever use of a comic tradition that makes the most out of the body — from contortions to the pain-induced nyuk, nyuk, nyuk variety. They’re emotional: Just because there is fun to be had at everyone’s expense, a comedy still needs heart. Or, if you’re four guys bonding over a major screw-up, heart-lite. This is where “Bridesmaids” moves to the head of the class, a spot Allen and his films have occupied for years. There is a real sweetness in Wiig’s desperation to win the bride, then the boyfriend back. For my money, “Bridesmaids” is by far the best of the bunch. Fresh point of view, smart script, actors who play every type of funny just right, a director in Paul Feig who knew when to rein them in and when to let the girls go wild.

Butte Trail has snow at the summit but is open. The Jack Creek Trailhead is cleared and in good condition. Jack Lake Trail is still blocked with snow. The Peter Skene Ogden Trail in the Paulina Creek area is opening up, but biking is limited until more snow melts. Maintenance is expected to be done there over the weekend, but there is already a good six to seven miles of trail cleared. The Diamond Peak Wilderness is just starting to open at the lower elevations, but no trail maintenance has been done yet. Expect moderate to large numbers of blown-down trees. As you venture out, remember that a Northwest Forest Pass is required for some areas and dogs in the Deschutes River corridor are required to be on leash from May 15 to Sept. 15. Note also that dogs are restricted from the Bend Municipal Watershed. Lydia Hoffman can be reached at 541-383-0358 or at lhoffman@bendbulletin.com.


E4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN TUNDRA

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HEART OF THE CITY

SALLY FORTH

FRAZZ

ROSE IS ROSE

STONE SOUP

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

DOONESBURY

PICKLES

ADAM

WIZARD OF ID

B.C.

SHOE

GARFIELD

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PEANUTS

MARY WORTH


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 E5 BIZARRO

DENNIS THE MENACE

SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. SOLUTION TO YESTERDAY’S SUDOKU

CANDORVILLE

H BY J A C QUE L I N E BI GA R

GET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR

SAFE HAVENS

SIX CHIX

ZITS

HERMAN

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday, June 2, 2011: This year, you appear to be an endless source of ideas and suggestions. Sometimes you could be overwhelmed by everything that comes up for you and not know how to funnel this energy. Perhaps keeping a notebook where you can jot down ideas would be helpful. Many of them could be excellent. If you are single, you meet people with ease. Remember, whether attached or single, a relationship is a two-way street — it’s not all about you! A younger GEMINI often teases you. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You have a lot on your mind; choose to express yourself more. How you deal with someone could be unusually interesting and dynamic. Don’t hesitate to ask for more feedback. Tonight: Hang out with your friends. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH You can only use your budget as an excuse so much. Or can you? Try to rope in the situation and be realistic about your budget. Honor what is happening with a personal matter. Nothing replaces expert advice. Tonight: Your treat. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHHH Now is the time to express ideas that you might have had on the back burner. Others might not have immediate responses. Know what is

possible, and be willing to ask for just that. You have that extra clout necessary to hit a home run. Tonight: As you like. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Step back and see a situation for what it’s worth. Your ability to read through a personal matter comes through once more. Still, the time to act might not be here yet. Do more for yourself. Take a break from what was/is going on. Time is your ally right now. Tonight: Distance, please. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHHH Discussions lead to new discussions. You might be surprised by some of the ideas that could breeze in. Don’t wonder why. Take time to network. Tonight: Where your friends are. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH A younger person keeps adding to a conversation. Though this “pipsqueak” might annoy you at times, his or her ideas are excellent if you assess what you are hearing. Being reasonable usually comes naturally to you. Let it be so. Tonight: Could be late. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You can talk all you want, but when reality hits, you need more space. Intellectualizing and evaluating happen easily. Make a phone call to a younger person at a distance. Evaluate the possibility of a trip. Perhaps you have been a little too stationary. Tonight: Open up to positive changes. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You cannot keep making demands with a key person and then sitting back. This prodding

or back-and-forth effect could have him or her yelling. Know when you have had enough, and say so rather than manipulate the situation. Tonight: Talk over dinner. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Others seem to need your feedback and approval. You will soon find out why. Dealing with another person who you care about could be touchy. Know when to back off, for the sake of both of you. Tonight: Only say “yes.” CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH Discussions within your workplace, home or immediate circle reveal many interesting ideas and perspectives. By the time the talks have ended, you might wonder why this hasn’t happened sooner. Tonight: Spend time with a younger person. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Knowing what is expected helps a younger person or child make the correct decisions. Making suggestions rather than demands goes far. Allow this person to grow and express who he or she is. You will like the end results. Just be open to this person’s suggestions. Tonight: Share with a favorite person. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHH A family member or roommate enjoys what he or she is hearing. If you want peace and quiet, it isn’t here. You might need to go elsewhere. Listen and try to communicate your needs as well. Clarity and echoing and expressing yourself work. Tonight: Say “yes” to living. © 2010 by King Features Syndicate


E6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

C D

ORGANIZATIONS TODAY BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; see website for location; www.bendhabitat.org, 541-385-5387, ext. 229 or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. BINGO: 6 p.m.; Elks Lodge, Bend; 541-382-1371. BINGO: 6:30-9 p.m.; Summit Saloon & Stage, Bend; 541-383-3502. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. HARMONEERS MEN’S CHORUS: 7 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, Bend; 541-382-6287 or www.harmoneers.net. INTERFAITH SILENT MEDITATION: 6:30-7:30 p.m.; 258 S.W. Fifth St., Redmond; 541-923-7607. KIWANIS INTERNATIONAL OF PRINEVILLE: Meadow Lakes Restaurant, Prineville; 541-416-2191. REDMOND DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB: 12:30 p.m.; Redmond Senior Center; 541-322-9453. ROTARY CLUB OF BEND HIGH DESERT: 5:15 p.m.; 900 Wall Restaurant

Rooster Continued from E1 The hike is on the far side of Santiam Pass, about 20 miles east of Sweet Home. But while the weather looked promising when I left, it started to drizzle as I crossed the mountains and by the time I pulled up to the trailhead, it was pouring. I sat in the muddy lot weighing $4-per-gallon gas against the prospects of hiking in the rain before finally deciding I’d rather waste the $20 in gas money by returning another day than be wet and miserable. Still, I figured my editors wouldn’t be too happy with a blank page today or the launch of a “Draw Your Own Topo Map” contest in this space. So I gathered up my meteorological optimism again Monday and set off over the pass. Despite a brief drizzle en route, the sky was dry when I arrived. There are two standard routes up to Rooster Rock. The Trout Creek Trail climbs the 2,300 feet to the rocky outcropping in 3.3 miles. The Rooster Rock Trail accomplishes the same feat in about 2 miles. Many hiking partners hike up one trail and down the other, leaving a car at each trailhead. I parked at the Trout Creek Trail and after filling out my selfissue permit, started up the trail. Down low, the trail can get muddy, but eventually, there’s enough pine tree debris to keep the fullon mud puddles at bay. The trail climbs steadily, but at a fairly easy grade for the first two miles through towering Douglas Fir. At about 2.8 miles, the verdant trail meets up with the Rooster Rock Trail, and continues on for a steep half-mile to a rocky viewpoint. Just before the top, the trail passes the Rooster Rock spire. (Let’s just say, you might need a healthy imagination to see a rooster in that spire.) As I approached the top, a

and Bar, Bend; mari@classiccoverings.com or 541-388-4418. ROTARY CLUB OF REDMOND: Noon; Juniper Golf Course; 541-419-1889 or www.redmondoregonrotary.com.

FRIDAY BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; see website for location; www.bendhabitat.org, 541-385-5387, ext. 229 or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. BEND KNITUP: $1; 10 a.m.-noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, Bend; 541-728-0050. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. CASCADE DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB: 12:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-617-9107. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. TABLE TALK: 10 a.m.; Common Table, Bend; 541-633-7163.

BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY:

22

BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post #44, Redmond; 541-548-5688.

TUESDAY

BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 63144 Lancaster

BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 63144 Lancaster St., Bend; 541-385-5387, ext. 229 or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. BEND ELKS LODGE #1371: 7:30 p.m.;

63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-389-7438 or 541-382-1371. BINGO: 6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge & Club, Prineville; 541-447-7659. BIRDING BY EAR: 7:30 a.m.; Sawyer Park, Bend; www.ecaudubon. org or 541-318-8998. CENTRAL OREGON CHESS CLUB: 6:30 p.m.; Aspen Ridge Retirement Home, Bend; www.bendchess.com. CRIBBAGE CLUB: 6:30-9:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-317-9022. MODERN QUILT GUILD INTEREST GROUP: 5-8 p.m.; QuiltWorks, Bend; kayla.traver@vandals.uidaho.edu. RECESS — BREAK TIME FOR GROWN UPS: 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library; 541-312-1081. TUESDAY KNITTERS: 1-3 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-399-1133. SOROPTIMIST INTERNATIONAL OF REDMOND: Noon; Izzy’s, Redmond; 541-306-7062.

WEDNESDAY BEND AREA HABITAT FOR HUMANITY: 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; 63144 Lancaster St., Bend; 541-385-5387, ext. 229

Rooster Rock

20 126 126

126

242

Sisters Deschutes National Forest

Rooster Rock Trail

Trout Creek Trail To Sweet Home

Bike leg

Santiam River

20

Trailhead

20

To Santiam Pass

Trailhead (Start)

MILES

Trout Creek Campground

0

1/2

1 Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Rooster Rock is in the Menagerie Wilderness, and when the weather is clear, it provides a viewpoint of some of the region’s more famous pillars — Rabbit Ears, Turkey Monster, Chicken Rock. group of trail runners passed me. Clad in only shorts and singlets, with just water bottles in hand, they were planning on climbing to the summit rocks four times: up Trout Creek Trail to the top, down and back up on Rooster Rock Trail, then returning via Trout Creek again. And then they’d repeat it. If successful, they’d log some 9,000 feet in elevation gain and nearly 20 miles of trail. The runners departed the rocky knoll just after my arrival, leaving the summit to me alone. It started to drizzle, but after working up a sweat on the uphill, I really didn’t mind. It did, however, hinder the view. Rooster Rock is in the Menagerie Wilderness, and when the weather is clear, it provides a

viewpoint of some of the region’s more famous pillars — Rabbit Ears, Turkey Monster, Chicken Rock. The descent was a little trickier than the ascent, due to the wet conditions. I gingerly worked my way back down to the trail intersection and proceeded down the Rooster Rock Trail. Both trails are well-maintained and easy to follow. Neither, however, has much in the way of switchbacks to lessen the grade. Eventually I ran into the trail runners again. They had tagged the trailhead sign at the bottom and were working their way back up to the top. It’s about 2.6 miles between the trailheads along U.S. Highway 20 and mostly downhill. Since I drove alone, I had stashed a bike and a helmet at the Rooster Rock trailhead on my way in. It was a glorious way to end the hike, pedaling down the blacktop feeling like I had somehow beat the system. There’s little to no shoulder along that section of the highway, and at one point I had to swerve to avoid a deer carcass. But it’s a pleasant 10- to 15-minute ride. As long as it’s not raining. Markian Hawryluk can be reached at 541-617-7814 or at mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com.

Markian Hawryluk / The Bulletin

Sunlight peaks through the wet, green forest low on the Trout Creek Trail. The route can be linked up with the Rooster Rock Trail to complete a seven-mile loop, including two miles along the highway.

Will new documentary club enjoy the Oprah effect? By Ginia Bellafante New York Times News Service

Fifteen years ago, Oprah Winfrey introduced a book club to her talk-show viewers and thus began providing the publishing industry with its own version of an entitlement program. As a subsidizer of literacy, she brought Tolstoy and Faulkner to those not necessarily in possession of the Penguin Classics while primarily shepherding forgettable middlebrow women’s fiction onto the shelves of those who might otherwise have been satisfied with People magazine. Three of her 10 selections in 1997 were children’s books by Bill Cosby, which should in itself sustain the question of her value as a national educator. Her resources such as they are, Winfrey now has a network, OWN, and with it, she is bringing her considerable imprimatur to the world of documentary film. Each month, under the rubric of a documentary club, OWN broadcasts a feature-length effort that carries the editorial judgment of Oprah Inc. Broadly speaking, something has come to say “Oprah” if it chronicles the spirit’s triumph over extreme adversity; if it helps, heals, inspires, ennobles, persuades, teaches,

or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS CLUB: Noon-1 p.m.; Environmental Center, Bend; 541-420-4517. BEND KNITUP: 5:30-8 p.m.; Barnes & Noble Booksellers, Bend; 541-728-0050. CASCADE DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB: 12:30 and 7 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-788-7077. THE GOLDEN AGE CLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. KIWANIS CLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Izzy’s Pizza, Redmond; 541-548-5935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. NEWCOMERS CLUB OF BEND: Hospitality coffee for women; RSVP required; 10 a.m.; 541-610-5969 or www.newcomersclubofbend.com.. PRIME TIME TOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, Prineville; 541-416-6549. REDMOND AREA TOASTMASTER CLUB: 11:50 a.m.-1 p.m.; City Center Church, Redmond; 541-383-0396 or 541-410-1758. WEDNESDAY MORNING BIRDERS: 7 a.m.; Nancy P’s Baking Co., Bend; 541-383-4039.

Santiam Pass

20

Willamette National Forest

SUNDAY

St., Bend; 541-385-5387, ext. 229 or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. BEND KIWANIS CLUB: Noon; King Buffet, Bend; 541-389-3678. CASCADE CAMERA CLUB: 6:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-389-0663. CASCADE DUPLICATE BRIDGE CLUB: 12:30 p.m.; Bend Senior Center; 541-617-9107. MOUNT BACHELOR QUILTERS GUILD: 6:30 p.m.; Partners In Care, Bend; www.quiltsqq.com or mbqginfo@gmail.com. ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR: 7:30 p.m.; Masonic Lodge, Redmond; 541-526-0991. SCOTTISH COUNTRY DANCE: 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, Bend; 541-549-7311 or 541-848-7523. VFW DEXTER FINCHER POST 1412: 7 p.m.; Veterans Hall, Prineville; 541-447-7438.

MONDAY

SATURDAY

Area of detail

9 a.m.-3 p.m.; see website for location; www.bendhabitat.org, 541-385-5387, ext. 229 or rcooper@bendhabitat.org. CHAPTER ONE BOOK CLUB: 10 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library; 541-593-0315. DESCHUTES RIVER WOODS NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION: Noon; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, Bend; secretary@drwna.org. PRINEVILLE SOROPTIMIST: 60th birthday celebration; 2-4 p.m.; Prineville Soroptimist Senior Center; 541-447-3103 or 541-447-4342. REDMOND CHESS CLUB: 10 a.m.; Brookside Manor, Redmond; 541-410-6363. WRITE NOW!: 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library; 541-312-1081.

Datebook is a weekly calendar of regularly scheduled nonprofit events and meetings. Listings are free, but must be updated monthly to continue to publish. Please e-mail event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “Submit an Event” on our Web site at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.

In Exile Films

“Sons of Perdition,” which chronicles the lives of three teens who fled the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints, continues Oprah Winfrey’s “documentary club,” on OWN at 6 and 9 tonight. uplifts. The films appear to have been chosen according to more exacting, less hokey criteria. With a debut last month, the series continues this summer with three excellent entries: “The Sons of Perdition,” to be shown at 6 and 9 tonight, and “Serving Life” and “Life 2.0” later on. Implicit in the philosophy of Oprah’s Book Club was the idea that all reading is good. Winfrey has been both an absolutist and a friend of relativism, a believer in the cultural primacy of the book

and yet someone who seems to feel that spending an afternoon in the company of a melodrama like Wally Lamb’s “She’s Come Undone” is just as meaningful as spending it with “Great Expectations.” Some of this Oprah-think is upended by her latest venture, as the films make a strong case not only for the power of other media but also for the merits of a clean, emotionally unembellished brand of storytelling. Beyond the cloyingly therapeutic dimensions of Winfrey’s tastes there has been a longstanding interest in narratives of dislocation, not merely in the metaphoric, psychological sense but also along the more transparent lines of characters trapped in inhospitable worlds. It is this idea that has animated the film club’s initial selections. The first book chosen for her club in September 1996 was Jacquelyn Mitchard’s “Deep End of the Ocean,” a novel about a kidnapped boy who winds up with an adoptive family living a few blocks from his biological parents. The documentary series began with “Becoming Chaz,” a movie about Chastity Bono’s uncomfortable life as a woman and subsequent sexual reassignment. But the series acquires its

voice with “Sons of Perdition,” a chilling film by Jennilyn Merten and Tyler Measom, lapsed Mormons who examine young lives ruined by polygamy. The film is an essential addendum to HBO’s “Big Love,” which dramatized the abuses of fundamentalist Mormonism; it shows us just how accurate a portrayal the series rendered. “Sons of Perdition” can be vague and confusing at times, but it conveys the tragedies of religious extremism with none of the hysteria that too often attends these kinds of projects. The film focuses on three teenage boys who leave a large polygamous community in Colorado City on the Utah-Arizona border run by the notorious Warren Jeffs. It shows how ill-equipped the exiles are to make a transition to the mainstream. An obvious question surrounding the documentary club is whether it can produce an Oprah effect, the term used to describe the windfall Winfrey’s book club offered authors. Cable television is already a generous benefactor of the documentary genre, making it easy to consume worthy, journalistic cinema any night of the week. More to the point, viewers won’t have any need to

buy documentaries they’ll be seeing on OWN for the cost of their cable subscriptions. All Winfrey can offer is the keenness of her filter — so far, so good.

Food, Home & Garden In

AT HOME Every Tuesday BANA FREE YARD DEBRIS DUMP DAYS June 4th & 5th On the first Saturday and Sunday of June a large 30 yard dumpster will be located at: Instant Landscaping Company 63160 Nels Anderson Rd. • 10am - 3pm Residents of the Boyd Acres Neighborhood may use it free for bagged yard debris. See instantlandscaping.com for a map. PLEASE NOTE THAT NO GARBAGE IS ALLOWED AND YOU SHOULD EMPTY AND NOT LEAVE BAGS. Later in the day you should call 541-389-9663 to make sure there is still room in the dumpster. In addition, Instant Landscaping will be offering a $2.00 per cubic yard discount on any bulk landscape bark, gravel, or soil purchased that day. This service is provided through the cooperation of Instant Landscaping Company and Boyd Acres Neighborhood Association.

CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING & GALLERY

Featured Artist -Denise Rich Special Fundraiser for the Humane Society

First Friday Gallery Walk

June 3, 5-9pm Through June 834 NW Brooks Street 541-382-5884 • www.sageframing-gallery.com Thanks for 10 great years in Central Oregon


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IMPROVING YOUR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING Nutrition Healthy eating helps keep student athletes at the top of their game, Page F3

HEALTH

www.bendbulletin.com/health

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 2011

Alternative for aging Yoga recommended as a remedy for common afflictions that come with age By Anne Aurand The Bulletin

A

t some point, a lifetime of … well, life … will catch up with your body. Many people notice classic signs of aging around 60: They lose flexibility, strength, balance. Their backs hurt. Age deteriorates some body parts. Inactivity and extra weight accentuate many fitness challenges. And long-forgotten injuries can fester into physical problems, too. A sprained ankle or a car accident can FITNESS create uneven tension on joints, said Focus Physical Therapy owner Burke Selbst. “Flash-forward 40 or 50 years, (and) those injuries have created a lot of imbalances in the muscular skeletal system,” said Selbst. It manifests as pain. But “I’m so hopeful for people. There’s so much that people can do on their own,” he said. As far as a general treatment to address the typical fitness challenges goes, “there is a burgeoning emphasis on yoga for older folks,” Selbst said. “Restorative yoga, gentler yoga. I’ve seen a lot more classes like that come out, and I’d like to see more people participate in them.” It’s not unusual to see older folks in yoga classes. And, as the 76 million baby boomers — people who were born between 1946 and 1964 — grow as a percent of the national population, it’s not surprising that yoga is a rapidly growing fitness program. Yoga is said to help arthritis, hypertension and osteoporosis, according to some articles. See Aging / F5

Ron Lemp, 65, performs a bridge pose at his Bend home. Lemp says yoga has increased his strength, flexibility and balance and has reduced his back pain.

MORE ON SENIORS AND EXERCISE: www.nia.nih.gov/ HealthInformation/ Publications/ exercise.htm Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Illustration by Jennifer Montgomery The Bulletin

Skin cancer surgery lessens chance of needing an additional procedure By Markian Hawryluk The Bulletin

Cancer surgery is often followed by an uncomfortable waiting period for both surgeon and patient while the tissue is sent to a pathologist for analysis. It may be days before they know whether the surgeon was able to remove all of the cancer. If the analysis shows the cancer was not removed along with a margin of healthy tissue, the patient may need more surgery. To avoid that possibility, surgeons err on the side of caution, cutting more healthy tissue than absolutely necessary. But for certain types of skin cancer, there’s a better alternative to the cutand-wait strategy. A specialized operation known as Mohs surgery allows the

MEDICINE Inside

hole,” said Dr. Gerald Peters, a Mohs surgeon with Bend Memorial Clinic. “And that means maximum conservation of surrounding normal tissue.”

• The Mohs surgery method, Page F4 • Skin cancer prevention tips, Page F4

Growth rate

surgeon to look at the tissue sample removed during the procedure and know on the spot whether additional tissue needs to be removed. That allows the surgeon to cut away only the bare minimum of healthy tissue, minimizing scarring and raising cure rates. “Mohs surgery not only gives you the highest possible cure rate, but it also allows you to restrict the size of the excision to the smallest possible

The ability of the procedure to provide better outcomes with less collateral damage, combined with the large increase in skin cancer diagnoses, is making Mohs surgery one of the fastest growing treatments among Medicare beneficiaries. Diagnoses of non-melanoma skin cancer have grown from about 1 million in 1994 to about 4 million in 2010, and one in seven of those cancers is now being removed with Mohs surgery. See Mohs / F4

Tying payments to results Medicare changes how it reimburses hospitals By Betsy Q. Cliff The Bulletin

For the first time, Medicare has put in place a program to pay hospitals for the quality of health care they provide rather than solely for the number of services a patient receives. Part of what will determine payment is patient satisfaction scores. The idea is to incentivize hospitals to improve. “Under this new initiative, we will reward hospitals for delivering highquality care,” said Dr. Donald Berwick, the administrator of Medicare, in a news release. Medicare, which is run by the federal government, pays for care for people ages 65 and older and for those who are dis-

MONEY abled. It pays about one-fifth of all health care bills in the United States. Beginning in 2012, every hospital will see a 1 percent reduction in the amount that Medicare reimburses for each service. Medicare will take that savings, which it estimates to be about $850 million in the first year, and redistribute it based on quality and patient satisfaction scores. “We support this,” said Jim Diegel, CEO of St. Charles Health System, which runs three hospitals in Central Oregon, including the largest, St. Charles Bend. “We’re going to be paid more for performance. … I think that is here to stay in the future.” The reduction in initial payments will not be high enough, Diegel said, to affect the hospital or change its behavior. See Satisfaction / F6

INSIDE

MEDICINE

FITNESS

MONEY

Checking for concussion

Exercise tips

Planning to retire?

App helps parents and coaches recognize the signs, Page F4

Aerobic exercise keeps seniors going strong, Page F5

Don’t expect Medicare to cover all your health expenses, Page F6

Correction In a story headlined “On the front lines of health care,” which appeared Thursday, May 26, on Page F1, Denice Bauer, a home health aide with Partners in Care, was misidentified. The Bulletin regrets the error.


F2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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Please e-mail event information to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on “ Subm it an E vent” on our Web site at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

CLASSES FITNESS 101: Classes in yoga, Pilates, cardio, weight training and more; $32 in-district residents, $43 out-of-district residents; see website for class schedule; June 6-July 2, July 11-Aug. 6 or Aug. 8-Sept. 3; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, 800 N.E. Sixth St., Bend; www. bendparksandrec.org/Juniper_Swim_ _Fitness/Fitness or 541-389-7665. MEDICARE ABC’S AND D’S: PacificSource Medicare presents a series on making informed decisions about Medicare; free; 541-330-2577. • BEND SENIOR CENTER: 4:30-5:30 p.m. today • ST. CHARLES BEND: 6:307:30 p.m. June 14. • ACTIVE LIFE FITNESS: Tai Chi; 541-389-7536 or 541-788-7537. • ADVENTURE BOOT CAMP: www. bendbootcamp.com or 541-350-5343. • AFTERNOON FIT KIDS: Ages 5-12; 541-389-7665. • ANITA ELSEY: Feldenkrais; 541-408-3731. • ARTICULATION THERAPY CLASSES: 541-550-9424 or www.ashtangayogabend.com. • ASMI YOGA: 541-385-1140 or www.asmiyoga.com. • BABY BOOMERS & BEYOND: Yoga instruction; 541-948-9770. • BABY BOOT CAMP: Strollerfitness program; 541-617-6142 or www.babybootcamp.com. • BAKESTARR: Support for type 1 diabetics ages 18-24; 541-5984483 or www.bakestarr.com. • BALANCE YOGA CLASSES & RETREATS: Hilloah Rohr, 541-330-6621 or www.hilloah.com. • BEND FELDENKRAIS CENTER: 541-788-9232. • BEND SENIOR CENTER: Dance, Tai Chi, Feldenkrais Awareness Movement, Middle Eastern Belly Dance and more; 541-388-1133. • BEND YOGA: 503-998-8902. • BIKRAM’S YOGA COLLEGE OF INDIA: 541-389-8599 or www.bikramyogabend.com. • THE BODHI TREE, YOGA & HEALING ARTS: 541-390-2827. • BOOT CAMP FITNESS FOR WOMEN: 541-815-3783. • BOOST FAMILY FITNESS: 541-3905286 or www.boostfam.com. • BREEMA’S NINE PRINCIPLES OF HARMONY: 541-593-8812. • BRINGING THE BUDDHIST 8 FOLD PATH TO MINDFUL DAILY PRACTICE: Hilloah Rohr, 541-330-6621 or www.hilloah.com. • CENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITY COLLEGE: 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu. • CENTRAL OREGON GYMNASTICS ACADEMY: 541-385-1163 or www.cogymnastics.com. • CHICKS RIDE SKI CONDITIONING CLINICS: Elizabeth Goodheart at elizabethgoodheart2@gmail .com or 541-593-1095. • CHRONIC PAIN CLASSES: 541-3187041 or www.healingbridge.com. • CLASSIC HATHA YOGA/ANANDA INSPIRED: Lorette Simonet; 541-3859465 or www.wellnessbend.com. • COMPASSIONATE COMMUNICATION CLASSES: Peace Center, www. pcoco.org or 541-325-3174. • CORE: Yoga; 541-389-6595 or www.coreconditioning.info. • FIT FOR THE KING EXERCISE MINISTRY: 541-923-3925 or www.fitfortheking.info. • FITNESS GUIDE SERVICE: 541-388-1685 or www.fitness guideservice.com. • FOCUS PHYSICAL THERAPY: Yoga, feldenkrais; 541-385-3344 or www.focusphysio.com. • FUNCTIONAL FITNESS TRAINING: PEAK Training Studio, 541-647-1346. • GOLF FITNESS AND PERFORMANCE: Chris Cooper, 541-350-1631 or ccooper@taiweb.com. • HEALING BRIDGE PHYSICAL THERAPY: Feldenkrais, back classes, screenings, 541-318-7041 or www.healingbridge.com. • HEALTHY HABITS YOGA STUDIO OF REDMOND: www.facebook. com/healthyhabitsredmond or 541-526-1097. • HEALTHY HAPPENINGS: St. Charles Health Systems; smoking cessation, parenting preparation; 541-706-6390 or www.stcharleshealthcare.org. • HULA HOOP CLASSES: www.hoop dazzle.com or 541-312-6910. • IMAGINE HEALTH NOW: QiGong classes; 541-318-4630, maggie@ imaginehealthnow.com or www .imaginehealthnow.com. • INNERGYSTICS: Yoga, cardio, weight lifting and meditation; 541-388-7395. • IYENGAR YOGA OF BEND: Nadine Sims; 541-318-1186 or www.yogaofbend.com. • IYENGAR YOGA CLASSES: 541-948-9770 or robyncastano@ bendbroadband.com. • JAZZERCISE: www.jazzercise.com or 541-280-5653. • JUNIPER SWIM & FITNESS CENTER: 541-389-7665. • KIDS YOGA: 541-385-5437. • LAUGHTER YOGA: 541-420-2204. • LAUGHTER YOGA CLUB: 541389-0831 or www.pcoco.org.

Submitted photo

Take a yoga class through the Fitness 101 program offered at Juniper Swim & Fitness Center. See the Classes listing for details. • LIVING FITNESS: Personal training; 541-382-2332. • MOVEMENT THAT MATTERS: Redmond Senior Center; 541-548-6067. • NAMASPA: Baptiste Power Vinyasa Yoga; Suzie Harris; 541-550-8550 or www.namaspa.com. • NORTHWEST CROSSING: Yoga; 541-330-6621 or www.hilloah.com. • PILATES CENTER OF BEND: 541-389-2900 or www.pilatescenter ofbend.com. • PILATES CONNECTION: Mat, chair and equipment classes; 541-420-2927 or www.bendpilates connection.com. • PILATES MAT AND EQUIPMENT INSTRUCTION: FreshAirSports.com/ pilates or 541-318-7388. • PLAY OUTDOORS: Kids yoga; 541-678-5398. • QIGONG CLASSES: Michelle Wood, 541-330-8894. • REBOUND PILATES: 541-585-1500 or www.reboundpilates.com. • REDMOND AREA PARK AND RECREATION DISTRICT: 541-548-7275 or www.raprd.org. • REDMOND RUNNING GROUP: dedwards@bendbroadband.com. • SALLY’S HATHA YOGA: 541-3900927 or www.sallyshathayoga.com. • SILVER STRIDERS: 541-383-8077 or www.silverstriders.com. • SPIRIT OF PILATES INC.: 541-4205730 or www.spiritofpilates.com. • STROLLER STRIDES: Strollerfitness; 541-598-5231 or www.strollerstrides.com. • SUNDANCE FOOTCARE LLC: Marguerite Saslow conducts nail clinics; 541-815-8131 or canyonwren2646@yahoo.com. • TERPSICHOREAN DANCE STUDIO: Yoga; 541-388-8497. • THERAPEUTIC YOGA PROGRAM: 541-350-1617. • TUESDAY PERFORMANCE GROUP: 541-317-3568. • TULEN CENTER FOR MARTIAL ARTS AND WELLNESS: 541-550-8550. • WILLRACE PERFORMANCE TRAINING STUDIO: 541-350-3938 or willpower05@msn.com. • WOMEN’S BOOT CAMP: Dynamic Group Fitness: 541-350-0064. • WOMEN’S BOOT CAMP: Seven Peaks Elementary School; 541-419-9699. • YOGA FOR 55 +: 541-948-9770. • YOGA FOR PEAK PERFORMANCE: 541-322-9642 or info@ bend-yoga.com. • YOGA HEART OF REDMOND: 541633-0530 or www.ericamason.net. • YOGA JOURNEY: 541-419-6778. • YOGA TO GO: robyncastano@ bendbroadband.com or 541-948-9770. • ZUMBA: Dance-based fitness classes; Davon Cabraloff; 541-383-1994.

SUPPORT GROUPS ADHD ADULT SUPPORT GROUP: 541-420-3023. AIDS EDUCATION FOR PREVENTION, TREATMENT, COMMUNITY RESOURCES AND SUPPORT (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT): 541-322-7402. AIDS HOT LINE: 800-342-AIDS. AL-ANON: 541-728-3707 or www.centraloregonal-anon.org. AL-ANON PRINEVILLE: 541-416-0604. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS (AA): 541-548-0440 or www.coigaa.org. ALS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-977-7502. ALZHEIMER’S ASSOCIATION: 541-548-7074. ALZHEIMER’S/DEMENTIA CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-948-7214. AUTISM RESOURCE GROUP OF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-788-0339.

BEND ATTACHMENT PARENTING: 541-385-1787. BEND S-ANON FAMILY GROUP: 888-285-3742. BEND ZEN MEDITATION GROUP: 541-382-6122 or 541-382-6651. BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUPS: 541-382-5882. BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP/ADULTS AND CHILDREN: 541-383-3910. BRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-382-9451. BRAIN TUMOR SUPPORT GROUP: 541-350-7243 BREAST-FEEDING SUPPORT GROUP: 541-385-1787. CANCER FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. CANCER INFORMATION LINE: 541-706-7743. CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. CAREGIVER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-6802. CELEBRATE RECOVERY: New Hope Church, Bend, 541-480-5276; Faith Christian Center, Bend, 541-3828274; Redmond Assembly of God Church, 541-548-4555; Westside Church, Bend, 541-382-7504, ext. 201; Metolius Friends Community Church, 541-546-4974. CENTRAL OREGON ALZHEIMER’S/ DEMENTIA CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-504-0571 CENTRAL OREGON AUTISM ASPERGER’S SUPPORT TEAM: 541-633-8293. CENTRAL OREGON AUTISM SPECTRUM RESOURCE AND FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-279-9040. CENTRAL OREGON COALITION FOR ACCESS (WORKING TO CREATE ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITIES): 541-385-3320. CENTRAL OREGON DEPRESSION AND ANXIETY GROUP: 541-420-2759 CENTRAL OREGON DOWN SYNDROME NETWORK: 541548-8559 or www.codsn.org. CENTRAL OREGON FAMILIES WITH MULTIPLES: 541-3305832 or 541-388-2220. CENTRAL OREGON LEAGUE OF AMPUTEES SUPPORT GROUP (COLA): 541-480-7420 or www.ourcola.org. CENTRAL OREGON RIGHT TO LIFE: 541-383-1593. CHILD CAR SEAT CLINIC (PROPER INSTALLATION INFORMATION FOR SEAT AND CHILD): 541-504-5016. CHILDREN’S VISION FOUNDATION: 541-330-3907. CHRONIC PAIN SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-7730. CLARE BRIDGE OF BEND (ALZHEIMER’S SUPPORT GROUP): 541-385-4717 or rnorton1@brookdaleliving.com. COMPASSIONATE FRIENDS (FOR THOSE GRIEVING THE LOSS OF A CHILD): 541-4800667 or 541-536-1709. CORIL SUPPORT GROUP: 541 388-8103, ext. 203. CREATIVITY & WELLNESS — MOOD GROUP: 541-647-0865. CROOKED RIVER RANCH ADULT GRIEF SUPPORT: 541-548-7483. DEFEATCANCER: 541-706-7743. DESCHUTES COUNTY MENTAL HEALTH 24-HOUR CRISIS LINE: 541-322-7500. DEPRESSION AND BIPOLAR SUPPORT ALLIANCE: 541-5499622 or 541-771-1620. DEPRESSION SUPPORT GROUP: 541-617-0543. DIABETIC SUPPORT GROUP: 541-598-4483. DISABILITY SUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-8103. DIVORCE CARE: 541-410-4201. DOUBLE TROUBLE RECOVERY: Addiction and mental illness group; 541-317-0050. DYSTONIA SUPPORT GROUP: 541-388-2577. ENCOPRESIS (SOILING): 541-548-

2814 or encopresis@gmail.com. EVENING BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP: 541-460-4030 FAMILY PLANNING SERVICES (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER: 541-389-5468. GAMBLERS ANONYMOUS: Redmond 541-280-7249, Bend 541-390-4365. GAMBLING HOT LINE: 800-233-8479. GLUCOSE CONTROL LOW CARB DIET SUPPORT GROUP: kjdnrcd@ yahoo.com or 541-504-0726. GLUTEN INTOLERANCE GROUP (CELIAC): 541-389-1731. GRANDMA’S HOUSE: Support for pregnant teens and teen moms; 541-383-3515. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 541306-6633, 541-318-0384 or mullinski@bendbroadband.com. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7483. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUPS: For the bereaved; 541-771-3247. GRIEFSHARE (FAITH-BASED) RECOVERY CLASS: 541-389-8780. HEALING ENCOURAGEMENT FOR ABORTION-RELATED TRAUMA (H.E.A.R.T.): 541-318-1949. HEALTHY BEGINNINGS: Free screenings ages 0-5; 541-383-6357. HEALTHY FAMILIES OF THE HIGH DESERT (FORMERLY READY SET GO): Home visits for families with newborns; 541-749-2133 HEARING LOSS ASSOCIATION: 541-848-2806 or hlaco2@gmx.com. HEARTS OF HOPE: Abortion healing; 541-728-4673. IMPROVE YOUR STRESS LIFE: 541-706-2904. JUNIPER SWIM & FITNESS CENTER: 541-389-7665. LA LECHE LEAGUE OF BEND:

541-317-5912. LIVING WELL (CHRONIC CONDITIONS): 541-322-7430. LIVING WITH CHRONIC ILLNESSES SUPPORT GROUP: 541-536-7399. LUPUS & FIBROMYALGIA SUPPORT GROUP: 541-526-1375. MADRAS NICOTINE ANONYMOUS GROUP: 541-993-0609. MATERNAL/CHILD HEALTH PROGRAM (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. MEN’S CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-6802. NARCONON: 800-468-6933. NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS (NA): 541-416-2146. NATIONAL ALLIANCE ON MENTAL ILLNESS OF CENTRAL OREGON (NAMI): 541-408-7779 or 541-504-1431. NEWBERRY HOSPICE OF LA PINE: 541-536-7399. OREGON COMMISSION FOR THE BLIND: 541-447-4915. OREGON CURE: 541-475-2164. OREGON LYME DISEASE NETWORK: 541-312-3081 or www.oregonlyme.org. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS: 541-306-6844. PARENTS OF MURDERED CHILDREN (POMC) SUPPORT GROUP: 541-410-7395. PARISH NURSES AND HEALTH MINISTRIES: 541-383-6861. PARKINSON’S CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 541-317-1188. PARKINSON’S SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-6802. PARTNERS IN CARE: Home health and hospice services; 541-382-5882. PFLAG CENTRAL OREGON: For parents, families and friends of lesbians and gays; 541-317-2334 or www.pflagcentraloregon.org. PLAN LOVING ADOPTIONS NOW (PLAN): 541-389-9239. PLANNED PARENTHOOD: 888-875-7820. PMS ACCESS LINE: 800-222-4767. PREGNANCY RESOURCE CENTERS: Bend, 541-385-5334; Madras, 541-475-5338; Prineville, 541-4472420; Redmond, 541-504-8919. PULMONARY HYPERTENSION SUPPORT GROUP: 541-548-7489. RECOVERING COUPLES ANONYMOUS (RCA): 541-389-0969 or www.recovering-couples.org.

Every Saturday

SCLERODERMA SUPPORT GROUP: 541-480-1958. SELF-ESTEEM GROUP FOR WOMEN: 541-389-7960. SEXAHOLICS ANONYMOUS: 541-595-8780. SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASE TESTING (DESCHUTES COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT): 541-322-7400. SOUP AND SUPPORT: For mourners; 541-548-7483. SUPPORT GROUP FOR FAMILIES WITH DIABETIC CHILDREN: 541-526-6690. TOBACCO FREE ALLIANCE: 541322-7481. TOPS OR: Bend, 541388-5634; Culver, 541-546-4012; Redmond, 541-923-0878. VETERANS HOTLINE: 541-408-5594 or 818-634-0735. VISION NW: Peer support group; 541-330-0715. VOLUNTEERS IN MEDICINE: 541-330-9001. WINTER BEREAVEMENT SUPPORT GROUP: 541-475-3882, ext. 4030, or www.mvhd.org. WOMEN’S RESOURCE CENTER OF CENTRAL OREGON: 541-385-0747 WOMEN’S SELF-ESTEEM GROUP: 541-389-7960. WOMEN’S SUPPORT GROUP FOR ANGER, ANXIETY, OR DEPRESSION: 541-389-7960. WOMEN SURVIVING WITH CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 541-706-5864. WOMEN WITH HIDDEN DISABILITIES PEER GROUP: 541-388-8103, ext. 207. ZEN MEDITATION GROUP: 541-388-3179.

Get Back to Your Life S A C R O I L L I A C PA I N H E R N I AT E D D I S C S C I AT I C A N E U R O PAT H Y ARTHRITIS B A C K PA I N FA I L E D B A C K S U R G E RY TRIGGER POINT

Bend Spine & Pain Specialists

R A D I C U L O PAT H Y D E G E N E R AT I V E DISC DISEASE N E C K PA I N D A I LY H E A D A C H E

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate

SAVING GRACE SUPPORT GROUPS: Bend, 541-382-4420; Redmond, 541-504-2550, ext. 1; Madras, 541-475-1880.

M U S C L E S PA S M REFLEX S Y M PAT H E T I C DY S T R O P H Y SPINE ARTHRITIS

Theodore Ford, MD Board Certified Anesthesiologist Board Certified Pain Specialist Non-surgical Pain Management

(541) 647 - 1646 2041 NE Williamson Court, Suite B • Bend www.BendSpineandPain.com


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 F3

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Next week Tips on safe grilling can help you avoid poisoning or contamination.

Don’t be fooled by ‘healthy’ fast-food options

GOOD FOR YOU

Keep a fruit bowl on the counter so it’s easy to grab a piece when you get hungry.

By Andrea Walker The Baltimore Sun

Thinkstock

William Archie / Detroit Free Press

Hungry? Here are some ways to skip the chips and eat more fruits and vegetables In response to a recent survey by the Consumer Reports National Research Center that said about 70 percent of Americans fail to eat the recommended five servings of fruits and vegetables every day, the publication offered suggestions about how to add fruit and vegetables to your diet. Breakfast: Add fruit to yogurt, waffles or pancakes. Add grated carrots or sweet potatoes to pancake batter. Top whole grain bread with peanut butter and banana slices. Add bell peppers, broccoli, mushrooms, spinach and tomatoes to eggs. Lunch: Make an easy coleslaw with pre-shredded cabbage, carrots and other vegetables, mixed with some apple cider vinegar, olive oil and lemon juice. Make a tropical fruit salad with honey, lime juice and shredded coconut. Snacks: Keep a fruit bowl in a prominent place to encourage yourself to grab a piece when you’re

hungry. Serve strips of vegetables, such as bell peppers, with a flavored salsa. Make chips at home by tossing sliced parsnips, turnips or rutabagas with olive oil, salt and pepper, and then baking them on a cookie sheet. Dinner: Buy pre-cut vegetables at the store if you’re short on time. Thicken soups with chopped or pureed carrots. Fill soups with vegetables. Cook one-pan meals that mix meat with many vegetables. Make “steaks” out of slabs of vegetables such as cauliflower, sauté them in vegetable oils and seasonings, then bake them. Toss cranberries, apples, oranges or raspberries on top of poultry and pork. Dining out: Ask for double veggies to replace rice with an entree. Request extra tomatoes and lettuce on a sandwich. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin Source: Consumer Reports on Health, March 2011

For some products, expiration date isn’t a death sentence By Alexia Elejalde-Ruiz Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — There are telltale signs that a product has gone bad. Moldy bread. Clumpy milk. The layer of fur blanketing the cream cheese. But what about the toothpaste sitting in your pantry for years after a zealous bulk purchase? Many products carry expiration dates, but thrifty shoppers often wonder if they really must toss dated items that still “seem” perfectly fine. After all, how can headache medicine stop working from one month to the next? Expiration doesn’t necessarily mean the product turns putrid or ineffective once the date passes. Manufacturers set expiration by choosing a date and conducting stability tests to ensure the product will still be good at that time. Expiration dates tend to be conservative to account for a wide range of storage conditions and consumer handling, said Dr. John Bailey, chief scientist with the Personal Care Products Council, an industry trade group. But for some products, there can be a cushion. Here’s a guide to some items that commonly carry expiration dates. Saline solutions, eyedrops: Sterility is the greatest concern. The preservatives used to prevent microbial overgrowth become less effective over time, putting the solution at risk of contamination, said Dr. Thomas Steinemann, ophthalmology professor at Case Western Reserve University. Anything with sunscreen: The ingredients that absorb UV light and prevent it from reaching your skin can change or degrade with time and extreme temperature, diminishing the effectiveness of the sunscreen. But if the product still looks, smells and feels right, you can probably use it for a year past the expiration if you’re willing to take the risk. Drugs (liquid): Liquids are generally less stable than solid forms of drugs, so err toward abiding by the expiration date. Sometimes

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The expiration dates on some products, like milk, should be followed more carefully than on others, like sunscreen. it’s hard to see inside containers to determine if something is off with the liquid, but if it smells funny or looks cloudy or discolored, don’t take it. Drugs (solid): While patients should follow expiration dates on prescription drugs, taking expired over-the-counter drugs could just mean they won’t be as potent, said Robert Weber, senior director of pharmaceutical services at the Ohio State University Medical Center. The military, upon testing the stability of 122 types of expired drugs, found that many retained 90 percent of their potency five years after their expiration date. Toothpaste: The greatest concern is the reduction in the concentration of fluoride, which is key to cavity prevention. Anti-tartar and whitening agents also can degrade, making the product less effective. Beauty products: For cosmetics with active ingredients, such as anti-aging products, abide by the expiration date because the active ingredients can degrade quickly. Other cosmetics that don’t require expiration dates sometimes still carry them, often in the form of PAO (period after opening), which suggests how many months you should keep the product after opening it. The biggest risk is microbial growth. If it doesn’t look or smell right, it’s time to dump it.

Richard Hudson, 17, of West Bloomfield, Mich., prepares a healthy snack with his mother Kelly Hudson before dinner. Richard, a junior and varsity football player, has made major changes to his diet since learning more about nutrition a month ago.

Healthier diet can provide student athletes a leg up By Jo-Ann Barnas Detroit Free Press

DETROIT — It has been only a few weeks, but already Richard Hudson can see a difference. He can feel it, too. A junior at West Bloomfield (Mich.) High School, Richard decided he needed to change his eating habits before football season next fall. So he and his father dropped by a seminar last month at Henry Ford Hospital in West Bloomfield, to learn more about how making the right nutrition choices could improve his performance and help fuel his recovery after workouts. The talk was geared to high school athletes, their parents and coaches, so Richard wasn’t the only one hoping to be enlightened. “I figured we all could be eating a little bit smarter,” said Reg Hudson, Richard’s father. “Eating right helps keep you motivated and energized throughout the day.” Right off the top, Richard, 17, knew he was consuming too much junk food. He gave up chips, salsa and pop. Then he made sure he was starting his day with a healthier breakfast, like oatmeal or cereal and a piece a fruit. Before leaving home, he’d make two peanut butter and jelly sandwiches to bring to school — one to have with lunch, the other after school, before his workout. He also began eating smaller meals throughout the day. Most important, though, he drank more fluids — specifically water. “I just decided to make the transition, to eat more balanced meals,” he said. It wasn’t long before he noticed a difference in himself, inside and out. When Hudson stepped on a scale in early February, shortly after changing his diet (last year was his first season of high school football, and he’s been trying to gain weight), the 6foot-2 wide receiver was 170 pounds. Now he’s topping 175, which has his father — who played a year of football at Grand Valley State as a 6foot-4-inch defensive tackle — suggesting his son consider a new position on the football field: safety. “Before, I didn’t want to

work out because I felt tired, almost like I was slowing down at the end of the day — and I wasn’t gaining muscle,” Richard said. “Now, I feel like I have more energy and I can lift more and run longer.”

Eating well It’s no surprise that many high school athletes don’t take their nutrition needs as seriously as they should. “I work with so many different athletes, and it seems like no matter what the sport, there are some common concerns amongst them — and a lot of things that could be remedied by eating healthier and paying closer attention to hydration,” said Jeanne Stevenson, registered dietitian at the Center for Athletic Medicine at Henry Ford Health System. Stevenson works with athletes from high school and college to Olympians and pros. Stevenson was once a high school athlete herself — she played basketball in the early 1970s at Sacred Heart in Dearborn, Mich., — and when she looks back, she often remembers how tired she was in the fourth quarter. “Now I know what I needed then was something to eat,” she said. “There’s been a lot of research done in this area and we know what can help, whereas before we didn’t. We used to not drink (water) during practice. We had no idea, nobody did — it was kind of a thought that you were mentally tough if you didn’t drink. That’s old thinking. “Drinking enough fluids is the most important thing you can do.” How do you know if you’re drinking enough? Take a look at the color of your urine: The darker it is, the more you need to drink. “You should drink before you feel thirsty,” said Amy Gluck, supervisor of Clinical Nutrition Serves at Henry Ford Hospital. “Once you feel thirsty, you’re 2 percent dehydrated.” Many high school athletes grew up playing sports such as soccer, and it was customary to head straight for the sliced oranges at halftime. Stevenson is glad that ritual is still going strong. “I think it’s great, for several reasons,” she said. “It’s fluid — there’s quite a bit of water in an orange — and it’s a good source of nutrients: vitamin C, potassium and fiber.”

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Be prepared Because most competitions in high school begin after school, Stevenson said parents need to be mindful of their children’s nutrition in the hours between lunch and their activity. “For many athletes, lunch is your pregame meal,” she said. “So pack something for them. Think about it: If they don’t have anything with them, what’s going to be available at the school? What’s in the vending machine is really not the things that are good for you.” Back when she ran track at Dearborn High in the 1980s, Gluck wishes she would have consumed for lunch what she favors today: a turkey sandwich and fresh fruit. “When I was in high school, no one really paid attention much to what they ate,” said Gluck, 39, one of the state’s top age-group triathletes. “I remember grabbing one of those giant puffy white rolls, and that would be lunch.” Although it may be tempting, it’s best to avoid foods high in fat — such as french fries — when you’re in the lunch line. “If you eat a fatty meal before a workout, it digests very slowly and so you don’t always feel that good,” Stevenson said. “That can translate to poor performance.” Richard Hudson gets it now. His parents have also become more mindful of stocking their refrigerator and pantry with foods that are good for their entire family. The other day after school, Richard assembled his own meal — a tossed salad with turkey breast, tomatoes and strawberries, with a glass of water. In addition to being fuel for Hudson’s football conditioning, the meal met a basic requirement: “It tastes good,” he said.

Worst offenders The five worst “healthy” fast-food items are: • Wendy’s Baja Salad Contains 1,990 milligrams of sodium, more than should be consumed in an entire day. • McDonald’s Fruit & Maple Oatmeal Contains more sugar than a Snickers Bar. • Subway Fresh Fit 6” Turkey Breast Sub With cheese and mayo, this “low-fat” sandwich jumps to 24 grams of fat. Contains processed meat, which is linked to increased cancer risk. • Sonic Strawberry Smoothie Contains more sugar than five Twinkies. • KFC Kentucky Grilled Chicken Contains PhIP, a chemical classified as a carcinogen by the federal government. Source: Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine

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Think you’re being healthy and saving some calories by ordering the salad or oatmeal? Don’t be so sure, says the nonprofit Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. The group recently tested the nutritional content of some items that fast food establishments are promoting as healthy. The group found that they were far from it. Some of the items were packed with more fat, sodium and sugar than anyone should eat in an entire day. The group found the worst offenders were Wendy’s Baja Salad, with almost twice the recommended amount of sodium for an entire day, and McDonald’s Fruit & Maple Oatmeal, with more calories than a hamburger and more sugar than many candy bars. “Your health and your waistline will thank you for saying no to these so-called healthy foods,” PCRM nutrition education director Susan Levin said in a statement. “Fast-food chains hope to cash in on consumer ignorance with labels like “fat-free” and “low calorie.” KFC’s grilled chicken was also singled out. It’s marketed to health-conscious consumers as a “better-for-you” alternative over the chain’s fried chicken, but, the group said, it contains a carcinogen called PhIP that has been shown to increase the risk of breast cancer and other cancers.

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F4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M Mohs Continued from F1 An analysis presented at a medical conference earlier this year found that the rate of Mohs surgery under Medicare increased by 236 percent between 1999 and 2009, with more than half a million patients undergoing the procedure in 2008. The procedure, named after Dr. Frederick Mohs, who developed it in the 1940s, starts with the surgeon cutting away the visible tumor and then the layer of skin that sits below the tumor. The skin is divided into segments and each segment is dyed a different color to help the surgeon know its original location. With the patient still in the room, the surgeon examines the segments under a microscope to see whether any roots of the cancerous tumor extend all the way through the segment into the remaining tissue. If any cancer remains, the surgeon can then cut away additional tissue only in the section where the cancer is found. Once all the samples show the remaining tissue is cancer-free, the physician can determine how best to allow the wound to heal. The entire procedure is done under local anesthetic and can usually be completed the same day. “The lynchpin of the entire process is comfort at the microscope,” Peters said. “You have to be able to read your own slides. (Other specialists) just don’t get the training that dermatologists do. In residency we read more skin pathology than pathologists do in their residencies.” In contrast, skin cancer removed the standard way is cut away in a canoe-shaped segment. After the surgery, the segment is sliced like a loaf of bread, with each slice about 1/2500th of an inch thick. Peters said the pathologist usually examines only 2 or 3 of those slices to see whether the cancer is fully contained within the tissue sample. That means only a small portion of the margin is examined, whereas in Mohs surgery, the surgeon can examine the entire margin. With less aggressive skin cancers, cut with wide, 4- to 5millimeter-thick margins, traditional excision can provide a 95 percent cure rate. For higherrisk cancers, where Mohs is the recommended method of excision, Mohs surgeons can get a 99 percent cure rate with only a 1-millimeter margin. “We’re saving a lot of tissue by doing that as well as getting a higher cure rate,” Peters said.

Setting limits Most Mohs procedures are done on non-melanoma skin cancers on the head and neck, where the need to spare healthy tissue is paramount. Although

Next week Better stroke care in Central Oregon.

The Mohs surgery process The roots of a skin cancer may extend beyond the visible portion of the tumor. If these roots are not removed, the cancer will recur. 1

Tumor Skin Tumor

2 The visible portion of a tumor is surgically removed.

3 A layer of skin is removed and divided into sections. The surgeon then color codes each of these sections with dyes and makes reference marks on the skin to show the source of these sections. A map of the surgical site is then drawn.

The undersurface and edges of each section are microscopically examined for evidence of remaining cancer. 4

If cancer cells are found under the microscope, the surgeon marks their location onto the "map" and returns to the patient to remove another layer of skin — but only from precisely where the cancer cells remain. 5

Source: American College of Mohs Surgery

6 The removal process stops when there is no longer any evidence of cancer remaining in the surgical site. Because Mohs surgery removes only tissue containing cancer, it ensures that the maximum amount of healthy tissue is kept intact. Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

Skin cancer prevention tips Ultraviolet light from the sun and tanning beds causes skin cancer and wrinkling. If you want to look as if you’ve been in the sun, consider using a sunless self-tanning product, but continue to use sunscreen with it. • Generously apply sunscreen to all exposed skin using a sun protection factor (SPF) of at least 15 that provides broad-spectrum protection from both ultraviolet A (UVA) and ultraviolet B (UVB) rays. Reapply every two hours, even on cloudy days, and after swimming or sweating. • Wear sun-protective clothing such as a long-sleeved shirt, pants, a wide-brimmed hat and sunglasses, where possible. • Seek shade when appropriate, remembering that the sun’s rays are the strongest between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.

skin cancer is more likely to occur on skin that is typically exposed to sunlight, it can occur anywhere on the body. There is some disagreement among physicians about which skin cancers in other areas should be treated with Mohs surgery and which can be safely cut away with traditional surgery. In recent years, the Medicare program has cut back on the rates it pays Mohs surgeons and has limited the types of skin cancers for which it will approve a Mohs procedure. “They have arbitrarily decided that trunk and extremity lesions shouldn’t get Mohs surgery,” Peter said. “And it’s a struggle for these Medicare beneficiaries to get those paid for.”

• Use extra caution near water, snow and sand, as they reflect the damaging rays of the sun, which can increase your chance of sunburn. • Avoid tanning beds. Artificial UV light is just as damaging. • Get vitamin D safely through a healthy diet that includes vitamin supplements. • Early detection of skin cancer can save your life. Carefully examine all of your skin once a month. A new or changing skin lesion in an adult should be evaluated. Source: American Cancer Society

Most doctors rely on national guidelines developed by skin cancer experts, but many stretch the parameters to include more patients. A recent analysis, for example, found that in Los Angeles about 42 percent of surgeries for non-melanoma skin cancers were done using the Mohs procedure, while in San Francisco and Oakland, Mohs accounted for only 28 percent of surgeries. Mohs accounts for a higher percentage of skin cancer excisions in the western half of the U.S. than in the eastern half. Dr. Will Delgado, a Mohs surgeon with Bend Dermatology Clinic who’s done more than 9,000 surgeries, said he rarely removes skin cancers below the neck with

Mohs surgery. “You can comfortably take more tissue there without really affecting the outcome and yet cosmetically, it’s not that significant,” he said. “If I’m going to excise something from your cheek, I want to minimize the scarring that I give you.” While the surgery is remarkably effective, Medicare and other insurers won’t pay for it in cases where traditional excision is just as effective, because the initial procedure, at least, is more expensive. A recent comparison found the cost of Mohs to average about $1,600, while standard excision costs about $1,300. (Actual fees charged by the doctor or facility might be higher.) However, once the costs of sending the tissue to a pathologist are factored in, standard excision might not be any cheaper. And if the surgery is performed in a surgery center or a hospital, instead of a doctor’s office as is usually the case with Mohs, the costs might be even higher. The lower recurrence rates with Mohs also provide additional savings. Some 5 percent of patients undergoing traditional excision will require more surgery because their cancer wasn’t completely removed. For Mohs surgery, the rate is less than 1 percent. “If everybody in this community, every head and neck cancer had Mohs surgery, there’d be a lot less recurrence and a lot less scars,” Delgado said. “If the difference is essentially shown to be cost effective, why wouldn’t you want those margins examined the way (Mohs surgeons) do?” The decision on Mohs versus traditional surgery, however, often depends on the physician who first sees the patient. Most cases handled by Mohs surgeons are referred by other doctors. On a national level, there is concern that some general surgeons and even some dermatologists are reluctant to refer all appropriate Mohs candidates, in order to keep the revenue for themselves. Peters said he hasn’t seen inappropriate referral patterns in Central Oregon, but acknowledges that many patients don’t understand they’re missing an opportunity for a better result by not opting for Mohs surgery initially. Patients who don’t want to drive from remote areas of Central Oregon into Bend for Mohs surgery might opt for traditional excision with a local surgeon first. But if that surgery doesn’t successfully remove all of the cancer, it can lower the chances that Mohs surgery will be as effective later on. “Skin cancers that have recurred after previous work are often discontinuous, where as the Mohs technique relies on the continuity of the growth to track the tumors out. If you’ve broken it up by doing something else first, your cure rate necessarily goes down,” Peters said. “Your first chance is always your best chance for a cure.”

VITAL STATS Swimmer’s ear Swimmer's ear is a bacterial infection. A recent report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that incidence of swimmer's ear began peaking in June and stayed high through August. It also revealed the following: More than 2.4 million people contract swimmer's ear each year in the United States. The average cost for a treatment visit is about $200. In the U.S., people spend nearly $500 million a year to treat swimmer's ear. Children between the ages of 5 and 14 are at highest risk, though adults develop the condition as well. The prevalence of swimmer's ear is highest in the South and lowest in the Western states. Photo: Thinkstock Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Signs of a concussion? There’s an app for that By Christian Torres The Washington Post

When a child suffers a potential concussion while playing a sport, parents and coaches alike might search anywhere nearby for help. Now they can start by picking up a smartphone. Gerard Gioia, chief neuropsychologist at Children’s National Medical Center, helped develop the “Concussion Recognition & Response” application for parents and coaches. It’s available for iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad and Android devices for $3.99. “This application is really built for the non-medical provider,” Gioia said in an interview, adding that it uses data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s “Heads Up” materials, which he also helped develop. App users answer yes-no questions about signs of a concussion, such as memory and balance problems, vomiting and confusion. There are also yes-no questions about symptoms including headache, blurry vision and sensitivity to light. The app user is alerted that there’s a “Concussion suspected” or “A concussion is NOT suspected at this time.” The app can also be used to e-mail data to a physician, go through an at-home monitoring guide or a “Return-to-Play” guide

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The “Concussion Recognition & Response” app is available for the iPhone, above, iPod Touch, iPad and Android devices. with tips on recovery. There’s a research component, too. Upon opening the app for the first time, users are asked to submit data to an anonymous research project. “There’s quite a challenge in recognizing youth concussions, especially because they often don’t have athletic trainers and doctors at events,” Gioia said. “With this research, we can see how effective we are in educating coaches and informing parents to make the call on the field.”

Markian Hawryluk can be reached at 541-617-7814 or mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

When it comes to beating illness, the mind matters, doctor says By Jane Glenn Haas The Orange County Register

Do you know your limits? Do you have a sense of yourself, of your inner life force? Dr. Marc Siegel says your “inner pulse” can alert you to what’s going on in your body, its positive and negative effects on the mind, illness and healing. Siegel, associate professor of medicine at the New York University School of Medicine and a Fox News senior correspondent, says heart disease, cancer, even death can be prevented if you understand that “inner pulse.” He is the author of a new book discussing “The Inner Pulse: Unlocking the Secret Code of Sickness and Health.” And he has said: “You don’t have to get sick, don’t have to die and can rise out of your wheelchair to walk again. Prayer counts, meditation matters, exercise is crucial and understanding your inner pulse can allow you to master your body and defeat many illnesses, which modern doctors will tell you are incurable. You can defy the odds by learning

to know your inner pulse and responding to what it tells you. Disprove anyone who would write you off too soon.” Is this an alternative medicine book? No! A lot of alternative healing is unproven. I am endorsing a more open-minded approach, more listening to the patient. You are talking about patients who defy the odds. People like Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, for example. Are you talking about prayer and faith? You may have it — an indomitable spirit — and not know it. For example, you suddenly have seizures and are in the hospital and the doctor says you have two weeks to live. A different doctor, with a different lens, says we should operate because this woman has a strong will to survive, even at 86. The will to survive and a positive life force play a role. Sometimes a patient is aware of it, sometimes it’s the family. The art of medicine, frankly, is knowing when to give up on a

Q: A: Q: A:

patient. I think patients owe it to themselves not to be written off. You write that a strong inner pulse is your radar that you will survive; a weakening inner pulse warns you your health is deteriorating. The inner pulse cannot be measured but it can be sensed. Intuited, if you will. It comes down to, how strong is your will to live? Look for a doctor who believes in your intuition and your will to live. Are you also talking about faith, as in faith in God? I’m not ruling out that faith plays a role. But I am a doctor trained in a very empirical model, a traditional model. And I’m also an author. I came to notice that every patient is different, every solution different. A good doctor knows that. There are patients who defy the odds and they have a common thread. The physical repetition of exercise gives them a liberation, a routine, a better ability to sense they are improving. And meditation can put you more in contact with your inner pulse.

MARY JAMES, RN RETIRES! Partners In Care Hospice and Home Health would like to thank

Q:

Mary James, RN

A:

for her dedicated service in end-of-life care.

Q: A:

Mary James retires from Partners In Care after 41 years of nursing. She will be missed, not only for her sunny disposition, but her expertise in end-of-life care. She is described by many as, level-headed, reliable and a mentor to nearly every employee who has come to work at the Hospice House. Although Mary James in “Retiring”, she may never truly retire. Travel is in her summer plans, but she’ll continue to teach caregivers therapeutic touch, along with sharing the wisdom in her life’s work in end-of-life care.

2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend ◆ 541-382-5882 ◆ www.partnersbend.org


THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 F5

F

Next week Exercises can help women with incontinence.

Aging Continued from F1 It is more commonly known to build strength and increase flexibility. One report showed that yoga improved one-leg standing, flexibility, energy and a sense of well-being in healthy men and women older than 65. The study, published in Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine in 2006, was authored by a professor in the departments of neurology and behavioral neuroscience at Oregon Health & Science University. The International Journal of Nursing Studies in 2009 published a study showing that adults older than 60 who had no previous training in yoga saw improvements in their sleep, mental health and physical health after six months of yoga. Selbst, who is a physical therapist and certified Feldenkrais practitioner, cited studies that showed that Feldenkrais classes, which emphasize intentional movements that are sometimes Focus Physicompared to cal Therapy yoga, have owner Burke been shown to Selbst, a improve balphysical ance in older therapist people, thereand certified fore potenFeldenkrais tially preventpractitioner, ing dangerous says gentle falls. movement And, “all the and exercise research we’re help 60seeing says somethings basic strengthtake care of ening and contheir bodies. ditioning programs are effective at any age. That was not the conventional wisdom a few years ago,” Selbst said. “Even the oldest people can benefit from a strengthening program.” In 2009, PLoS One published a report from the Canadian Study of Health and Aging that showed that exercise lowered older people’s mortality rates, and that it had the greatest benefits for those who were most frail at the beginning of the study. An exercise routine doesn’t have to be anything fancy, Selbst said. “Mainly walking, some squats, step climbs, heel raises, some inclines to get the heart rate up,” he said, adding that exercises that strengthen the upper body, core and back muscles will improve posture. For normal-weight individuals, “self-selected” exercise will in most cases be enough, Selbst said. “However, in overweight or sedentary people, it probably won’t be. Given a greater potential for training injuries in this group, professional guidance, at least at first, is recommended,” he said.

When life catches up with the body Warren Pestka, a retired electrician, started feeling aches and pains in his early 60s. For so many years he climbed ladders, lifted heavy objects in awkward ways, contorted his body to fit into tight spaces. A bull-riding accident in his younger years might have created some later pains, too. Four or five years ago, a sciatic nerve issue in his lower back, buttocks and leg made him miserable. He didn’t want to live on Advil. He visited chiropractors and massage therapists. “Nothing solved anything. I thought this would just be part of my life,” he said. After he retired about a year ago, he joined a gym in Sunriver near his home, and he works out regularly. He started taking EL-

IN MOTION Aerobic exercise can strengthen hearts of seniors, study shows Balancing act Another approach to improving balance: Walk barefoot on cobblestones. The vestibular system in the inner ear, in conjunction with vision and the sense of touch, communicates with the motor system to keep us upright and balanced.

When people are regularly inactive, the muscles in their hearts diminish with each passing decade of life. But seniors older than 65 who did aerobic exercise most days of the week were shown to preserve and strengthen their hearts to even greater masses than those of healthy subjects between 25 and 34 years old, according to a study that was presented recently at the American College of Cardiology’s annual scientific meeting in New Orleans. “One thing that characterizes the aging process by itself is the

loss of muscle mass, particularly skeletal muscle,” said Dr. Paul Bhella, with John Peter Smith Hospital in Fort Worth, Texas, the presenting author of the study. “But we are showing that this process is not unique to skeletal muscle, it also happens in cardiac muscle. A heart muscle that atrophies is weaker, less capable of responding to increasing demands such as those associated with physical activity.” The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin

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Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Warren Pestka, 69, regularly attends ELDOA classes, which use gentle exercises to improve spinal health and relieve back pain from old injuries and years of physical labor.

Older population in Central Oregon 65 years and older population according to the 2005-09 American Community Survey

Deschutes County

Jefferson County (Pop. 19,959) 2,524- 65+

12.6%

(Pop. 158,629)

Crook County (Pop. 22,566)

Sunriver La Pine 20,705- 65+

13.6%

3,701 -65+

16.5%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

DOA classes, which consist of yoga-type exercises specifically aimed at spinal health. ELDOA, from the French “Etirements Longitudinaux avec Decoaption Osteo-articulaire,” was developed in the 1970s by a French osteopath and medical doctor. Now, at 69, Pestka’s back hasn’t hurt in more than nine months, he said. Selbst said there’s a lot of disagreement about the best treatment for sciatica; physical therapy, chiropractic care and acupuncture are some of the tools. But, he said, “my message is just movement.” No longer is bed rest recommended, he said. Movement should be safe and gentle. Walk three times a week for 20 minutes, he suggested. Don’t hike the butte or start running. In his early 60s, Bend resident Ron Lemp, who is now 65, said he experienced loss of strength, flexibility and balance, and has noticed that it takes longer to recover from an injury than it used to. But he’s been dealing with it by becoming active. He practices yoga at least twice a week. Depending on the season, he’ll walk, hike, ski, snowshoe or golf. “I believe all of these things have helped, but it is the yoga which I think has helped the most,” Lemp said. It also “helps me stay positive mentally,” he said. On that note, he said he’s grateful that he doesn’t have cancer, diabetes, heart disease or something wrong with his joints. “My biggest issue has been

INTEGRATIVE CARE FOR YOUR MIND & BODY

Source: “The Body has a Mind of its Own; How Body Maps in Your Brain Help You Do (Almost) Everything Better,” by Sandra Blakeslee and Matthew Blakeslee (pgs. 30-31).

Madras Camp Sherman Prineville Sisters Redmond Bend

James Collins, a biomedical engineer at Boston University, knew that sensory receptors in the soles of the feet dull with age, making an older person sway. So Collins invented insoles that add a vibration to the sole. He found that the brain picked up signals from the feet, and the posture and balance of 80-year-olds improved. Walking on cobblestones is a lowtech way to keep the vestibular system in shape. Studies in Europe have shown that balance deteriorates more slowly in elderly people who walk regularly on cobblestones than those who walk on modern sidewalks. People in China walk barefoot on cobblestones in parks.

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

a bad lower back, which I have dealt with for many years,” he said. He blames excess weight and a sedentary life as a banker. He retired in 2000, moved to Bend in 2007 and is now trying to do something physical every day. His back is better than ever, he said, and he’s stronger, more flexible and has improved his balance.

Balance Vision, the vestibular system in the inner ear and the sensory neurons in the joints are all involved with one’s balance. As bodies age, the vestibular and nervous systems don’t function as sharply. “We just lose sensitivity in the inner ear as well as in the joints,” said Selbst, the physical therapist. “Of those three systems, the quickest impact is a quick, good, eye prescription. Next, back to working on strength and conditioning. Folks with balance problems, they are not tending to be real active. They’re not getting (sensory input) from their muscles and joints.” Suzie Harris, a certified instructor for Baptiste power yoga and owner of Namaspa, a Baptiste-affiliate studio in Bend, includes a meditative aspect to her classes that helps people focus their minds and think more clearly, she said. That mental exercise can have a positive effect on what’s called proprioception, in which a body’s nervous system coordinates with its surrounding environment and mo-

tor skills, potentially improving one’s balance. Harris said she sees many 60somethings in her yoga classes who have not been active. She believes yoga is a great place for them to start. It stretches and strengthens all muscles in the body. “Yoga is ideal for folks who are recognizing they have been inactive. It’s reversible. You can start back. It just takes a gentle practice,” she said.

Life gets harder Tully Ellsberg is a 63-year-old retired minister who experienced a stark physical decline after the death of her husband in 2005. That kind of stress, she said, seems more prevalent with age, too. “People my age lose people,” she said. “We deal with stress of deaths more. Divorces. Now with this economy, job losses.” The stress of the trauma triggered weight gain. She tried diets and aggressive exercise such as tennis to drop the weight, but the diets didn’t stick and the tennis blew out her back. Finally, she decided to try yoga. It’s terrifying, she said, for a 60-year-old beginner to go to a yoga class. So she started with a private lesson. She lost weight and gained the strength and confidence she needed to attend public yoga classes and workshops. She does a lot of yoga now. “People my age lose touch with their bodies. It’s part of society. We drive instead of walk places. We don’t work in agricultural jobs that require us to move,” she said. “I had aching joints and felt old and weak. But yoga gets the blood flowing, … makes you feel young again.”

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Anne Aurand can be reached at 541-383-0304 or at aaurand@bendbulletin.com.

Need to take baby steps toward fitness? Try walking By Ellen Warren Chicago Tribune

“People try all these insane diets,” then give up when they don’t lose weight and don’t feel any better, says Vik Khanna, executive director of Health and Wellness for Mercy Health Ministry in Chesterfield, Mo. Instead, he recommends doing something that comes naturally — walking. “It’s one of the things that is very underrated,” Khanna says. “Walking is the universal best exercise. It’s accessible. Most of us can do it into our

80s and 90s.” Not only will you feel better, you can also improve your memory and maybe even live longer. How’s that for multitasking? A study published earlier this year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that regular walking improved older people’s ability to remember things. Also, says Khanna, “studies show that older adults who walk faster live longer.” So, once you get up and start putting one foot in front of the other, then pick up

your speed. “The problem is, most of us stroll,” Khanna says. Going faster will make you feel even better, and you might lose weight. Walking at 2 mph, a 150-pound person burns about 171 calories, taking more than 20 hours to lose a pound. At 3 mph, it would take 15 hours to lose a pound. Just one hour of walking at 3 mph, and you’ll burn off the effects of a 99-cent bag of M&M’s.

For Advertising Information Contact Kristin Morris, Account Executive Call 541.617.7855 kmorris@bendbulletin.com


F6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M

Next week Medicare’s three-day rule creates complications at hospitals.

WHEN MEDICARE FALLS SHORT

V ITA L STATS

Retirees face health care cost squeeze

Legal challenge Legal challenge More than two out of five emergency room physicians in a recent survey said fear of lawsuits was the biggest challenge to cutting emergency department costs. More than half of those surveyed (53 percent) said the main reason they conduct the number of tests they do is the fear of being sued.

By Guy Boulton Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MILWAUKEE — Think you won’t have to worry about health care costs once you’re covered by Medicare? Think again. Women who retired last year will need an average of $93,000 in savings to pay for health care expenses in retirement, according to an estimate by the Employee Benefit Research Institute. Men will need $65,000. That’s an average. And that’s just for the people who retired last year. The amount will be considerably higher for people retiring in coming years. And these estimates don’t include the cost of a nursing home or other longterm care. Yet few people are aware of how much they will spend on health care in retirement despite being covered by Medicare. “They don’t have a clue,” said Jim Fritsch, a retiree. “They’re not ready for it.” Fritsch spends a bit more than $300 a month on supplemental insurance, and he’s fairly typical. One in four people covered by Medicare spent 30 percent or more of their income on health expenses, including long-term care, in 2006, according to a brief by the Kaiser Family Foundation, which does research on health policy. That percentage is certain to increase as the rise in health care costs continues to outpace incomes. Median out-of-pocket spending on health care — meaning roughly half will spend more and half less — is

Biggest challenge to cutting ER costs Lack of patient medical history 2%

Fear of lawsuits

44% Cost shifts by hospitals to offset low payments by Medicare, Medicaid or uninsured patients

9% 12%

9%

The need to run expensive tests Patients' demands for expensive tests

20%

None of the above 4%

Increase in uninsured patients using emergency services because no doctor will treat them Source: American College of Emergency Physicians

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

PEOPLE Please send information about people involved in health issues to communitylife@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.

Karen Walz, the clinic director at Therapeutic Associates Redmond Physical Therapy, has received a distinguished service award from the Oregon Physical Therapy Association. The award acknowledges individuals who make outstanding contributions to physical therapy clinical Karen Walz John Battle practice. Walz is a graduate of the Stanford University School of Medicine. She is an orthopedic certified specialist via the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties, and she is a former president of the Oregon Physical Therapy Association. John Battle has joined the staff of Bend Memorial Clinic’s occupational medicine department as a nurse practitioner. Battle is a graduate of the University of California, San Francisco and of Santa Clara University. He is a former employee of Tuba City Regional Health Care. Mountain View Hospital has been selected to review the efficacy of the National Implementation of TeamSTEPPS initiative. The program promotes strategies and tools for improving patient safety. AgeWiseMD and KneadMassage have opened an office in Bend. The two businesses will provide age-related disease prevention and massage. The office is located at 650 S.W. Bond St., Suite 150.

Satisfaction Continued from F1 In 2013, the first year it will have an impact, St. Charles expects a reduction in payment of about $2 million. “This is a small test of change,” said Jeff Selberg, chief operating officer for the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, a Massachusetts nonprofit organization that studies the health care system. “I think the agency wants to be fair, they want to try this, they want to evaluate the impact, see if there are unintended consequences.” Over time, up to 2 percent of payments will be initially withheld, which could represent a significant chunk of money for hospitals, which often already operate on slim margins. Diegel said that regardless of whether the dollar amount was enough to change behavior, St. Charles is committed to increasing its quality and satisfaction scores “as the right thing to do.” It’s unclear how much St. Charles will get back based on its quality and patient satisfaction scores. The payments will be calculated using a somewhat complex formula that takes into account both whether a hospital does better than other hospitals and whether it has improved over time. Hospitals will essentially be graded on a curve, with hospitals earning the highest ratings getting the most in bonus payments. The measures that will be used can be found publicly through a website run by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, www.hospital compare.hhs.gov. Diegel said St. Charles already looks at quality and patient satisfaction scores. They are given to the hospital’s board, he said, and to medical staff. Diegel said patient satisfac-

Patient satisfaction scores Percent of patients who agreed with the following statements: U.S.

Oregon St. Charles St. Charles Bend Redmond

Nurses always or usually communicated well

95%

96%

94%

96%

Doctors always or usually communicated well

95%

96%

93%

97%

Patients were always or usually helped quickly after using the nurse call button

89%

91%

90%

91%

Pain was always or usually well controlled

93%

94%

92%

94%

Hospital staff always or usually explained medication use

79%

81%

81%

83%

Hospital room and bathroom always or usually kept clean

91%

92%

85%

95%

Area around room was always or usually quiet at night

88%

88%

86%

91%

Patients who gave hospital a ‘9’ or ‘10’ for an overall rating

67%

67%

65%

72%

Patients who said they would definitely recommend the hospital 69%

72%

73%

79%

Note: Data for Pioneer Memorial Hospital in Prineville and Mountain View Hospital in Madras were not available Source: Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

“The sooner physicians and hospitals and individuals are paid on the basis of the outcomes, the better off we’re all going to be.” — Jeff Selberg, chief operating officer for the Institute for Healthcare Improvement tion scores are “more subjective” than quality measures, but still they “usually (have) enough validity to be telling you something.” Often, Diegel said, patient satisfaction scores will dip when there is turmoil at the hospital, such as when “we’re in the thick of union negotiations.” “There are some correlations to patient satisfaction with disruptions in the (work) force,” he said. With payment tied to quality scores, Diegel said, more hos-

pitals are likely to take notice and perhaps become better. “It begins to pave the way to get everyone’s attention.” Selberg echoed that sentiment, saying that paying for quality will ultimately improve health care. “The sooner physicians and hospitals and individuals are paid on the basis of the outcomes, the better off we’re all going to be.” Betsy Q. Cliff can be reached at 541-383-0375 or bcliff@bendbulletin.com.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Thinkstock

One in four people covered by Medicare spent 30 percent or more of their income on health expenses in 2006, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. projected to reach 19 percent this year and to exceed 25 percent of retirees’ income in 2020. Those figures include longterm care, which costs more than $70,000 a year. It’s a cost that few people can bear for long, and that everyone hopes to escape. Yet an estimated 24 percent of the people who retired last year will need more than a year of nursing home care, and 9 percent will need more than five years of care, according to the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. All this awaits retiring baby boomers — a sizable number who haven’t saved enough for retirement and who are less likely to have pensions. At the same time, Medicare is seriously underfunded. And economists across the political spectrum agree that the program in its current form isn’t sustainable. “The fact is the program is not solvent, and there are going to be changes to it at some point,” said

Paul Fronstin, a senior research associate with the Employee Benefit Research Institute. “The question is what those changes will look like.” House Republicans, spearheaded by Rep. Paul Ryan, RWis., have proposed capping the value of Medicare coverage in future years. That would shift some costs to future retirees, although Ryan’s proposal would include subsidies for people with limited incomes. For their part, Democrats

have placed their hopes largely in slowing the rise in Medicare spending through a mix of price controls and reforms to make the health care system more efficient. What is clear is no one expects Medicare coverage to become more generous. The result could be larger copayments, higher premiums and fewer benefits. “One way or another, it comes down to needing more money,” said Anthony Webb, a research economist with the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. Yet many people already are spending a large share of their income on health care, and that percentage will increase even without significant changes in Medicare. How much more some people can afford is a question. Half of all Medicare beneficiaries had incomes of less than $21,000 last year, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. They also had few assets. Among those covered by Medicare, half had: • Less than $2,095 in retirement accounts. • Less than $60,025 in home equity • Less than $30,287 in financial assets.

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THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 G1

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T h e

B u l l e t i n :

ITEMS FOR SALE 201 - New Today 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 Tubs and Spas 253 - TV, Stereo and Video 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260 - Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. & Fixtures

General Merchandise

202

Want to Buy or Rent NOW BUYING ESTATES Top Prices Paid! 541-450-1270 WANTED: Cars, trucks, boats, RVs, travel trailers, motorcycles, running or not. Call Dan, anytime, 408-599-6451

208

208

208

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies FREE working cats for barn/ shop, companionship. Fixed, shots. Will deliver! 389-8420

Cashmere, thin & matted, was found waiting by a restaurant door. All winter she lived under the dumpster & staff fed her, but the business closed & someone who went by daily saw her still there. She's been groomed & is healthy, & needs a safe, loving home. Visit her & many other nice cats at nonprofit, all-volunteer CRAFT rescue, 389-8420, 647-2181 or visit www.craftcats.org for directions, hours, more.

Pets and Supplies The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

1 7 7 7

263 - Tools 264 - Snow Removal Equipment 265 - Building Materials 266 - Heating and Stoves 267 - Fuel and Wood 268 - Trees, Plants & Flowers 269 - Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found 275 - Auction Sales GARAGE SALES 280 - Garage/Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282 - Sales Northwest Bend 284 - Sales Southwest Bend 286 - Sales Northeast Bend 288 - Sales Southeast Bend 290 - Sales Redmond Area 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 - Livestock and Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358 - Farmer’s Column 375 - Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce and Food

200

Chihuahua, absolutely tiniest teacup, rare colors, 1st shots, wormed $250, 541-977-4686

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

S . W .

Kittens/cats avail. thru rescue group. Sanctuary, 389-8420, 647-2181; kitten foster home 815-7278. Fixed, shots, ID chip, more. Hours, directions, photos at www.craftcats.org.

LAB PUPS AKC, black & yellow, Chocolate Lab AKC Puppies titled parents, performance $450 Parents titled, Ready pedigree, OFA cert hips & el6/24/11 541-419-0935 bows, $500. 541-771-2330 amiew@crestviewcable.com www.royalflushretrievers.com Cocker Spaniel, American 10 Labradoodles, Australian mo., neutered male, chocoImports - 541-504-2662 late, vaccinated, housebrowww.alpen-ridge.com ken, friendly, to good home only. $250. 541-639-7703 Dachshund AKC mini puppies, AKC SHIH TZU Small, See: www.bendweenies.com home raised. 3 Female, 2 $325, Bend, 503-470-0729 Males. Dews, 1st Shots, DACHSHUND Mini AKC Wormed. $400-$550 Ready Lots of toes! Mylie has extra Male $350 Ready 5/28! 6/9/2011. Call toes on all 4 feet, a bob tail & Prineville, 541-633-3221 541-526-1443 a sweet personality. All she Aussie Mini, 1 yr old male, blue Dachshund / Patterdale Terrier needs now is a great new cross, 10-wk old male, 1st Merle with blue eyes, very home! Visit her & many othshots, $50. 541-480-0032 lovable, $450. 541-408-1587 ers at CRAFT rescue. Call 541-389-8420, 647-2181 or Aussie's Mini/Toy, AKC, all col- Doberman Pups, blacks & visit www.craftcats.org for blues, family raised, tails, ors, must see, family raised, directions, hours, more. dewclaws, shots, wormed, 1st shots, wormed parents $400 ea. 530-739-3280 on site 788-7799, 598-6264 POODLE Pups, AKC Toy Lovable, happy tail-waggers! Bichon Frise, healthy neutered DO YOU HAVE Call 541-475-3889 male, 9 yrs. Grandma can no SOMETHING TO SELL longer care for. Free to good FOR $500 OR LESS? Pug (AKC) & CKC or AKC adult home. 541-480-9238 Non-commercial Rottweiler Stud Service Border Collie/New Zealand advertisers may needed. Call 541-610-7096 Huntaway puppies, working place an ad with our parents, wonderful dogs, "QUICK CASH Pug -mix 8 wks, shots, 3-boys, $200. 541-546-6171 SPECIAL" $150 each, for personal 1 week 3 lines companions. 541-389-0322. Have an item to $12 or Saltwater Aquarium 2 weeks $18! sell quick? If it’s 125g, oak stand, pc light, Ad must pumps, skimmer, live rock, under $500 you include price of single item fish. $650. 541-548-7947 of $500 or less, or mulcan place it in tiple items whose total Schnoodle, Beautiful black with does not exceed $500. The Bulletin salt and pepper legs. Born 4/9/11. Sweet disp., socialClassiieds for Call Classifieds at ized with kids, 1st shot, pup $ 541-385-5809 kit. $450. 541-410-7701 10 - 3 lines, 7 days www.bendbulletin.com $ Scottie female pup, 8 weeks, 16 - 3 lines, 14 days papers, 1st shot, parents on (Private Party ads only) English Bulldog, 3-yr old female, site, $500. 541-317-5624 red/white, spayed, gorgeous & very sweet. Forced to Shih/Schnauzer, family-raised Boxer pups, AKC & CKC Regist. pups. Socialized, 1st shot, re-home, to approved home Only 3 left, all shots. pup kit. $350. 541-410-7701 only. $800. 541-419-3924. $500-$650. 541-325-3376

O r e g o n

9 7 7 0 2

245

246

265

269

270

Golf Equipment

Building Materials

Golf Cart, gas powered, good condition, $1900. Call 541-639-7510 Golf Club set, w/bag & balls, very good cond., $50, 541-388-3246.

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Lost and Found

Toy Poodle puppies for sale, Senior discount, home raised and spoiled. 541-771-0522

Guns & Hunting and Fishing

210

Furniture & Appliances !Appliances! A-1 Quality & Honesty!

A-1

W a s h ers &

D ry ers

$125 each. Full Warranty. Free Del. Also wanted W/D’s dead or alive. 541-280-7355.

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Recliner, Relax The Back Zero Gravity, burgundy cloth, $200, 541-385-9646.

Second Hand Mattresses, sets & singles, call

541-598-4643. Top Grain leather

loveseats, forest green, very good condition, $1200 or $650 individually. 541-593-7474

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D . For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Antiques & Collectibles

Jack Russells, Reg., just 2 left, 9 wks, 1st shots, tails docked, $150. 541-385-8934

B e n d

208

212

Heeler pups 1 red M, 1 blue M loving, shots & vet cert. $300/ea. (503)349-3991

A v e . ,

Pets and Supplies

German Shepherd Pups, AKC, $700. www.sbhighdesertkennels.com 509-406-3717

Goldens, Adorable! AKC Reg. 3 males & 1 female, ready now! $500. Terry 541-788-8877

C h a n d l e r

Antiques Wanted: Tools, fishing, wood furniture, toys, sports gear. 541-389-1578 Christmas Village, North Pole Series, 5 shops, + accessories, $175, 541-382-5045. Furniture

Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron & 1060 SE 3rd St., Bend • 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com Large Coke Collection, Die Cast cars, glassware, trays, bottles, train set, pictures, also Oil Lamps (20), small, good condition & Variety, 541-416-3661. The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

246

Guns & Hunting and Fishing 12g Mossberg 9200 semi-auto shotgun, syn. stock, 28”, like new, $200. 541-647-8931 12g Mossberg shotgun, syn stock, 28” bbl, home protection, $200. 541-647-8931 22LR JC Higgins semi-auto rifle wood stock, with case, & ammo, $170. 541-647-8931 22mag Savage SS rifle, $375. 22 cal Remington 572 pump rifle, $275. 541-647-8931 22 Rifle, Remington Nylon 66, $250. 410 single shot shotgun, $100. 541-771-5648 .44 Mag Super Red Hawk, 7.5” Barrel, ammo, holster & dies, $750, 541-350-2993. 7.62 X 39 old SKS semi-auto rifle, wood stock, mag & case, $200. 541-647-8931 7mm S&W rifle, Leupold 3x9, $500. 40cal pistol XD-40, like new, $475. 541-647-8931 AMMO, 50 BMG (150), $2.70 ea. Please call 541-639-5282 for more info. Ammunition, 1 case Norinco, 7.62x39mm, $300 OBO, 541-948-7295.

AUCTION

Sun. June 12 at 10:00am 121 Deady Crossing – Sutherlin Loaders, Backhoes, Excavators, Grader, Rollers, Trucks, Trailers, Rock Crusher, Man Lifts, Pickups, Cars, Busses, Tools, ATVs, 150 Firearms & More! www.I-5auctions.com or 541-643-0552 for details 10% buyer premium I-5auctions CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900.

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines $12 or 2 weeks $18! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com GUNS Buy, Sell, Trade 541-728-1036.

GUN 240

Crafts and Hobbies 48” Weaving Loom, with books, weaving yarn, reeds, other accys, $950. 541-416-0538

241

Bicycles and Accessories Boys’ Schwinn stunt bike, red, awesome! Great cond. $100 OBO, 541-382-5123 Men’s Peugeot 10-spd 26” bike, $100 or best offer, 541-382-5123 Women’s Schwinn 18spd Mt. Bike, sky blue, almost new, $150 OBO. 541-382-5123

SHOW

June 4th & 5th Deschutes Co. Fairgrounds Buy! Sell! Trade! SAT. 9-5 & SUN. 10-3 $8 Admission, 12 under free. OREGON TRAIL GUN SHOWS 541-347-2120

HANDGUN SAFETY CLASS for concealed license. NRA, Police Firearms Instructor, Lt. Gary DeKorte Thur. June 9, 6:30-10:30 pm. Call Kevin, Centwise, for reservations $40. 541-548-4422

Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, 503-351-2746

W o o d

Flo o r S u p e r S t o r e

248

Health and Beauty Items F a ti g u e , i n s o m n i a , c o l d h a n d s, s kin d ry n e s s, c h r o nic p ain ? •Current treatments offering no relief? • Been told to “Live with it”? •Tired of taking drugs that don’t fix the problem or make it worse? There is Hope! Call for FREE DVD Thyroid Health Secrets Revealed. Call 866-700-1414 and find out how to get better today!

253

TV, Stereo and Video Wide screen TV stand, 2-levels, seabreeze tempered glass, $55 OBO. 541-382-5123

255

Computers THE BULLETIN requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

257

Musical Instruments STEINWAY 1925 - walnut finish, 5’7” Grand, rebuilt and regularly maintained in perfect cond. Only $20,000. Redmond 541-504-9761.

260

Misc. Items BUYING AND SELLING All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fleming, 541-382-9419.

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash

SAXON'S FINE JEWELERS

541-389-6655

BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. Pool Table 8’, 1” slate, Oak cab., leather pockets, all acces, nice! $800. 541-408-2199 Wanted - paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. McIntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

265

Building Materials Bend Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 740 NE 1st 541-312-6709 Open to the public .

• Laminate from .79¢ sq.ft. • Hardwood from $2.99 sq.ft. 541-322-0496 266

Heating and Stoves Beckwell Pellet Stove, T-22 , good working cond., pipe/ pad, $950, 406-980-1907; 704-530-4051 (Terrebonne)

Elliptical Exerciser, Pro-Form XP110 2009, exc. condition, $200 OBO, 541-385-7965.

Retiring Hunter: Guns, ammo, decoys, call 541-815-1112.

Most jobs completed in 5 days or less. Best Pricing in the Industry.

SIG P239 .40 S&W, 2 mags, box, manual. etc. $475. Call Dan, 541-410-5444 SKS Norinco semi-auto rifle, 7.62 x 39, wood stock, mag & case, $200. 541-647-8931

270

Lost and Found Found Children’s Bikes, on west side, by laundry-mat, call to ID, 541-647-9504. Found Kids Bike, around 5/25, on Westside, call to identify, 541-382-1032. Found, misc. jewelry at the Redmond Municipal Airport, call to ID, 541-504-3499.

REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society in Bend, 541-382-3537 Redmond, 541-923-0882 Prineville, 541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.

Farm Market

300 308

Farm Equipment and Machinery International Tractor, loader, new tires, diesel, new rear blade, $6250, 541-536-3889.

325

Hay, Grain and Feed

Wanted: Ringneck Pheasant Rooster; Breeding pair New Zealand white rabbits, 541-317-1948.

267 All Year Dependable Firewood: Dry Lodgepole Avail. Semi dry mixed cords Split Del. 1 for $135 or 2 for $250 Cash check, credit Bend 541-420-3484 Lodgepole Seasoned rounds: 1 cord $129; 2@$124ea; 3@ $119ea. Split: 1 cord $159; 2@$154 ea; 3@$149 ea. Bin price 4’x4’x4’, $59 ea. Cash. Delivery avail. 541-771-0800

LOST Dog

341

"CHIRPA" - 8 year old female, gray Pekingese Shih Tzu. Lost in The Greens at Redmond on Sunday 5/29. Reward for return. OK to call anytime!! Michael: 541-325-6217 Tracey: 541-325-6206

Horses and Equipment

269 Lost Newfoundland male, black, Cline Falls Hwy 126/Helmholtz Wy, 5/24. 541-280-7781

BarkTurfSoil.com

541-389-9663

Lost Orange Cat, long hair, fluffy very friendly, ‘Tigger’, Tumalo area, Cline Falls Hwy 1 mi. N. of Tumalo store & High Ridge Dr., 4/15, Reward, 541-385-0194.

B & D electric mowers; regular $75 OBO good condition; Mulcher $150 OBO new; 18" cut. 541-447-6468

Lost White Bichon male, Sat. 5/29, Nugget St & Ponderosa area Bend south. Friendkly, may have collar, “Tikanni” (ti-kah-ni) Please call 541-610-9377.

Instant Landscaping Co. BULK GARDEN MATERIALS Wholesale Peat Moss Sales

Craftsman rotary lawnmower, Briggs & Stratton power propelled, electric start, 22” multi-cut, used 1 season, excellent cond, $100. 541-475-6331 JUNIPER TIES & BOARDS Full Measure Timbers “ Rot Resistant ” Raised Bed Garden Projects Instantlandscaping.com 541-389-9663 For newspaper delivery , call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809 or email classified@bendbulletin.com

Hummingbirds Are Back!

COLT STARTING We build solid foundations that stay with the horse forever. No 30 day wonders, 90s rates. Steeldust Stables 541-419-3405 www.steelduststable.com

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Farmers Column

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

70 ACRES

NE corner of Bend. Fenced, fertilized & irrigated, for rent or lease. Please call 541-382-6818 A farmer that does it right & is on time. Power no till seeding, disc, till, plow & plant new/older fields, haying services, cut, rake, bale, Gopher control. 541-419-4516 Haying Contractor will mow rake & bale for percentage, or will buy standing hay. Call 541-948-2125

Woodburn Auction Consigned Farm Machinery & Equipment Auction 2 Day Sale Saturday & Sunday June 4th & 5th, 2011 At: 9:00 AM Sharp

Woodburn Auction Yard

1/2 mile south of Woodburn, Oregon on HWY 99E

Saturday, June 4th

Small amounts of miscellaneous tools, approximately 50 tractors, forklifts, & of various sizes. Approximately 70 cars, trucks, pick ups & trailers. Customers purchasing vehicles must have current proof of insurance before the purchase of a vehicle - no exceptions!!! All titled vehicles need to be checked in by 4:00PM on Friday, June 3rd, with the titles in the consignors name. Dealers need updated certificates.

Sunday, June 5th

Misc. farm equipment Everything sold on an as is basis Loading facilities & hauling available. Some items may have a reserved bid Consignments accepted until 5:00pm on Friday,June 3rd. NO RECEIVING OR LOADING OUT ON TUESDAYS PLEASE NOTICE: There is a 5% buyers fee added to all purchases. Terms of sale are cash,credit card, debit card (not over $500.00) No credit card checks, or credit union checks. All personal checks will be direct deposited with ID. Note: 9% buyers fee on Visa, Mastercard, Discover, with ID on the day of the sale. All bills must be pd for the day of the sale. Lunch on Grounds • Not Responsible for Accidents No children under the age of 13 please. Children 13 and older are welcome but must be accompanied by a parent at all times. Auctioneers:

Skip Morin, Emery Alderman

541-647-8261 Sisters Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale Quality items. LOW PRICES! 150 N. Fir. 541 549-1621 Open to the public.

S U P E R T O P S OIL w w w .hersheysoilandbark.com Screened, soil & compost mixed, no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949.

Fuel and Wood

Mossberg 12g shotgun, syn stock, 18” bbl, home protection, $200. 541-647-8931

Exercise Equipment

Landscaping stones (border & stepping) & logs (4x4s & 2x4s), $50 all. 541-317-5154

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, Hay for Sale - Grass & advertising for used wood- Found RX Glasses, on RiverGrass/Alfalfa mix, 3 tie and stoves has been limited to woods Dr., 5/21, in case, call 3x4 bales. Call 541-548-3086 models which have been 541-815-7914. Advertise your car! certified by the Oregon DeAdd A Picture! partment of Environmental Lost Cat, Female Maine Coon, Reach thousands of readers! Quality (DEQ) and the fedlong hair, grey, white chin, Call 541-385-5809 eral Environmental Protecgreen eyes, indoor kitty, “Sky”, tion Agency (EPA) as having around 5/11, Bear Creek Rd & The Bulletin Classifieds met smoke emission stanTeal, 541-280-0835, Reward. Wheat Straw: Certified & Beddards. A certified woodstove ding Straw & Garden Straw; may be identified by its cer- Lost Coat, White, dbl breasted, Barley Straw; Compost; Guess, cell phone in pocket, tification label, which is per541-546-6171. on West Side, 5/22, manently attached to the 333 541-383-3904. stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising Poultry, Rabbits, for the sale of uncertified and Supplies woodstoves.

Mossberg 12g 500 pump, syn stock, 28” bbl, chokes, like new, $200. 541-647-8931

Cabinet Refacing & Refinishing. Save Thousands!

“Horizon” Treadmill, low mileage, with all programs & profiles, fold-up deck, $500. CASH ONLY. Call 541-388-5679

Hardwood Outlet

WIN. Model 101, Pigeon Grade Featherweight, 12ga. 95%, $1650 OBO. 541-728-1036

Remington Model 700 ADL 300 WinMag, Nikon Buckmaster 4.5-14 w/ BDC. $725 firm. 541-647-0667.

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The

Sale Conducted by:

Forum Center, Bend 541-617-8840 www.wbu.com/bend

Woodburn Auction Yard Inc. Phone: (503) 981-8185 ext. 1 Fax: (503) 982-7640 WOODBURNAUCTION.COM woodburnauction@aol.com


G2 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

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

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PLACE AN AD

Edited by Will Shortz

Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines *UNDER $500 in total merchandise 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16.00

Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

Garage Sale Special

OVER $500 in total merchandise 4 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $17.50 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32.50 28 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60.50

4 lines for 4 days. . . . . . . . . $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

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

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702 PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.

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

Employment

400 421

Schools and Training TRUCK SCHOOL www.IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-438-2235

FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities 476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

CAUTION

READERS:

Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please investigate thoroughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when responding to ANY online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320

454

Looking for Employment CNA/Companion, A.M.’s, run errands, personal care, Redmond area. 541-604-5685

For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 503-731-4075 If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Kevin O’Connell Classified Department Manager The Bulletin

I provide housekeeping & caregiving svcs, & have 20+ yrs experience. 541-508-6403

541-383-0398

Need Help? We Can Help! REACH THOUSANDS OF POTENTIAL EMPLOYEES EVERY DAY! Call the Classified Department for more information: 541-385-5809

Administrator Harney Behavioral Health has an immediate opening for a full time Residential Program Administrator who will provide management and oversight of a ten bed adult psychiatric residential facility located in Burns, Oregon. This program provides active treatment to dually diagnosed clients in a home like setting with a focus on helping the individual return to a more independent lifestyle. The treatment philosophy is recovery oriented and designed to be completed within 6 to 12 months. A master’s degree and experience in behavioral health care is strongly preferred. Salary range begins at $40,000 per year and includes excellent benefits. Send resume an letter of interest to Chris Seigner, Harney Behavioral Health, 348 West Adams, Burns Oregon 97720. Phone (541) 573-8376. Position open until filled. Aide - Part Time for outpatient physical therapy clinic in Redmond. CPR eligible. Computer skills, exercise science or medical/health care related experience preferred. Fax resume to 541-504-9153.

Need Seasonal help? Need Part-time help? Need Full-time help? Advertise your open positions. The Bulletin Classifieds

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280

281

Estate Sales

Estate Sales

Fundraiser Sales

Estate / Multi-family Yard Sale! 21165 Wilderness Way. Fri & Sat., June 3-4, 8:30am-4:30 pm. For information or early viewing, call 541-389-0577

Estate Sale

Fri-Sat, June 3rd & 4th, 9-4, 3391 NE 29th St., Redmond Display cases, wrought iron patio, marble dressers, silver.

Estate Sale - Phase 1

Fri-Sat-Sun, June 3-4-5, 9am-4pm, 21375 Puffin Dr., Bend. Variety of used furniture too numerous to list (wood & other). NO EARLYBIRDS - CASH ONLY. Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Pam Cattell

MOVING

SALE

1420 NW Baltimore, Bend FRIDAY, JUNE 3rd • SATURDAY, JUNE 4th Hours 9:00 to 5:00 Crowd control admittance numbers

issued at 8:00 a.m. on Friday.

(Sale is just west of 14th St. Streets are alphabetical in this area) Pine dining table with 6 chairs and two leaves; Nice sofa ; White LG three year old refrigerator w/bottom freezer; Two wing back chairs; Small chest freezer; Queen size metal canopy bed; Twin size log bed; Waterfall style bedroom set; Drum set; keyboard; guitar; Foosball and combo game table; Lovely pram; wood cradle; Lots of Costume and other jewelry; Electrical kitchen appliances; Treadmill; Doors and rear hood and ragtop unit for VW 60's car; Over 20 tires --rims and more; Lamps; lots of linens; lots and lots of baby clothes and toddler clothes - up to 6 yrs; Ladies clothing; Singer sewing machine; Small computer desk; Luggage; Dog grooming table??; Hoover and Dyson vacuums; Books, cookbooks, Game CD's, VCRs, DVDs; Slot cars and HO train unit; toys and other games; Pots and pans and misc. kitchen items; Lots of nice Christmas items--Have Christmas in July; Two "V" walkers for invalids; LOTS and LOTS of other items. Handled by: Deedy's Estate Sales Co. LLC 541-419-2242 days 541-382-5950 eves www.deedysestatesales.com

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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! 385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com

Land Surveyor Bend civil engineering firm seeks land surveyor for all types of surveying; boundary and topography surveys, constr. staking, etc. Field & office work. Submit resume or qualifications to admin@dp2llc.com.

The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Body and Paint Tech RV dealership is in need of and experienced body and paint technician. This position requires the ability, knowledge and experience to perform all duties related to body work including fiberglass repairs, taping, masking, sanding, and painting of large areas for a variety of RV’s. Employee must supply own tools, pass background check and drug testing. 40 Hr. work week, Mon.- Fri., benefits package includes medical, dental, RX and Vision. Wage DOE. EOE. Send resume to Box 16390171, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708.

Chiropractic Tecnnician -Enthusiastic team player wanted for a Chiropractic Technician position. Must be customer focused, able to handle multiple interruptions and maintain a friendly attitude. Chiropractic experience is not necessary. Full-time Skills Tests given. (541) 388-0839 Call between 9am 10am and Noon - 2:30pm. Delivery Driver Must have valid CDL class A, driver for local deliveries. Willing to work in building material yard, heavy lifting required. Bobcat and forklift exp. a plus. Application at: 63265 Jamison St., Bend.

The Bulletin Classifieds is your Employment Marketplace Call 541-385-5809 today!

Diesel Mechanic ASE Ford

Long-term family-operated business (since 1954), has immediate opening for an ASE Certified Ford Diesel Mechanic to work on pickup trucks. We will provide cross-training on Cummins, Detroit Diesel & Caterpillar. References, background check and drug screen req.; must be willing to re-locate to Roseburg. We provide Medical/Dental insurance; pay DOE. To apply, please phone David Gregory at 541-672-7400. Also, visit southernoregondiesel.com

for more company info.

282

The Bulletin is your Employment Marketplace Call

541-322-7253

541-385-5809 to advertise! www.bendbulletin.com

Food Service Experienced Line Cook needed. Apply in Person with resume at 1045 NW Bond St., Bend.

HEALTHCARE

OB/GYN Practice Administrator East Cascade Women’s Group, consisting of six physicians and a staff of 21 employees, seeks a proven leader with minimum of 5 years’ Healthcare Administrator experience. Bachelors Degree in Business, Healthcare Administration, or related field preferred. Must communicate and relate well with our staff and patients. We offer competitive salary and benefits. Please email resume to: ecwgobgyn@gmail.com

Judicial

Drug Treatment Court Coordinator

Medical - Full Time Family Nurse Practitioner needed at our On-Site Health Clinic Located in Bend, OR at the Deschutes County powered by Healthstat. We are looking for Family Nurse Practitioner interested in joining a company focused on improving health and providing hands-on patient coaching & care. Through the care you provide, you impact the health of the employee. Healthstat hires clinicians who understand the health impact that can be made by managing chronic conditions and providing patients unencumbered access to care. Clinicians working in Healthstat worksite clinics assist patients in reaching personal health goals. The Clinician engage employees in personal health improvement, deliver primary care services, and act as a resource and advocate for employee health care needs. Contact Melissa Parks at 704-529-6161. You may also fax your resume to 704-323-7931 or email to melissa.parks@healthstatinc.c om Learn more about us at www.healthstatinc.com.

Oregon Judicial Department, Crook and Jefferson County Circuit Courts, Prineville and Madras, Oregon. Full time position. Salary: $3,692 $6,010/month. For the complete job announcement and to apply visit http:// courts.oregon.gov/OJD/jobs and click on "Paid Positions." EOE.

Remember.... Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site will be able to click through automatically to your site.

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286

Sales - Full time. Wage + commission and benefits. Apply in person at 304 NE 3rd St., Bend.

What are you looking for? You’ll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

Loans and Mortgages

500

FREE BANKRUPTCY EVALUATION visit our website at www.oregonfreshstart.com

528

Loans and Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

541-382-3402 LOCAL MONEY We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 extension 13.

541-385-5809

573

Business Opportunities Youth Instructor Oregon State University Extension Service is recruiting for a full-time (1.0 FTE), fixed-term, 4-H Youth Instructor position to provide the development and management of a diverse portfolio of programming that meets the needs of youth on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. Salary is commensurate with education and experience. To review posting and apply, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jo bs/ Posting 0007393. Closing date: 6/06/11. OSU is an AA/EOE.

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

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Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend

5th Annual Super Sale: HUGE SALE! Sat. 6/4, 7 a.m. Antiques, treasures, furniture & Garage Sale Sat. ONLY 8:30-3, 824 NW Stonepine Dr., kids more! Huge church-wide yard 20725 Beaumont Dr., furniMulti families donating everytoys, snow tires, Cabi clothsale. Saturday June 4 ture: corner entertainment thing from furniture to baby ing. Top quality everything! 8am-2pm. Support Youth unit, teak table & chairs, etc, clothes! All proceeds benefit Missions. Eastmont Church art supplies, table & bed linthe American Cancer Society. 62425 Eagle Rd 97701. Corens, books, CD’s, baby items, Located at Desert Streams 284 ner of Neff & Eagle. tools & so much more! Church, corner of 27th and Bear Creek, Bend. June 3rd Sales Southwest Bend 8-3, June 4th 8-12. Estate Sale: Fri.-Sun., 8-?, Garage Sale Fri & Sat, June 3-4 20777 Living Good Way, Garage Sale Saturday, June 4th 9:00-2:00. No earlybirds, 282 9-3. 17151 Island Loop Way, outdoor & indoor furniture, please. 2269 NE Meadow (Sunriver/Three Rivers area.) lots of yarn, craft supplies. Sales Northwest Bend Lane (Off of Shepard Rd., by Tools, restaurant equipment, Stover Park) clothing, electronics, furniGARAGE SALE 8am-2pm - Satture, appliances & more! urday only, June 4. HouseHH FREE HH hold items. 2450 NW Wyeth Sale - Quality Garage Sale Kit Moving/Estate Place. ALL MUST GO!! Moving Sale: Sat.-Sun., 9-3, new, and antiques. Saturday, 19954 Covey Ln, Everything 9am-4pm, 2473 NE Salvia Garage Sale, Friday only, 8-11 Place an ad in The Bulletin goes! Furniture, appl., tools, Way, Mountain View Park. am. Outdoor gear, home defor your garage sale and small stuff, books, much more! cor, coffee table, tablesaw, receive a Garage Sale Kit kids toys & clothes, etc. 1154 Moving Sale: Sun. 8-3, 21292 FREE! Multi-Family Garage Sale DRW NW Remarkable Drive. Beall Ln., Great baby clothes & 19386 Indian Summer Rd. gear, garage storage items, Garage Sale One day only Sat. KIT INCLUDES: Sat & Sun., 6/4 & 6/5 tools, home decor, great items June 4, 9-3. 20753 So. Loop • 4 Garage Sale Signs 9am-4pm. 541-728-4828 Place in Starwood north of • $1.00 Off Coupon To Use Bend off Tumalo Road. Toward Your Next Ad The Amazing Upscale Yard Sale MULTIFAMILY SALE: Fri/Sat Something for everyone! • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Sat., June 4th, 9 am, 672 NE 9-2 18972 Choctaw Rd Success!” HUGE NW BEND NEIGH11th, Bend. Fabulous finds (DRW) Lots of everything: • And Inventory Sheet BORHOOD SALE- NW for your home, garden, porch tea cups, books, toys, clothes Knoxville, NW Rockwood, NW & patio. Recycled, up-cycled, (kid & adult), truck access. PICK UP YOUR Stannium, Furniture, 35mm reclaimed, refinished, vinGARAGE SALE cameras, Thomas the Train, tage, retro, mod, old, new & KIT AT: Relay For Life Yard Sale: name brand clothes- all ages, in-between! Quality clothing 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Sat. 8am, 1297 SW sporting goods & memorasizes 6 to plus sizes in curBend, OR 97702 Wheeler, to Benefit American bilia, toys, huge (empty) wine rent styles. Lots of men’s Cancer Society Relay for Life. bottles, appl, collectible Hawaiian shirts. You’ll love plates, vintage Fisher Price our plants, herbs, furniture dollhouse & much more!, Seven Peaks School All and treasures galore! From school Garage Sale BenEnjoy the good weather & Hwy 97, take Greenwood efiting Sparrow Clubs GARAGE/MOVING SALE, Shop find deals throughout the east, turn right on NE 11th, U S A . Sat. June 4th 8-2 pm., whole neighborhood.No Early find the big pink trees in the inside & out. All things must at Seven Peaks School, Birds. Follow the neon or2nd block, and follow the go! 2553 NE Lynda Lane, 19660 Mountaineer Way. ange arrows. Sat. 8 - 2. butterflies to the backyard! 7:30-3:30. Sat. 6/4 only.

528

Finance & Business

2 Family Estate Sale: Fri., Sat., & Sun., 8-5, 1009 SE Castlewood Dr., Antiques, collectibles, tools, misc., furniture, 40 years of items.

GARAGE SALE Misc items plus lots of pottery! 61541 E Lake Dr, (follow signs from 15th & Reed Mkt Rd.) Fri-Sat-Sun, June 3-4-5, 8am-4pm. Garage Sale - Sat., 8-2. Furniture, tools, freezer, weights, skis, copiers, artwork, misc home decor. Follow signs from Knott Rd & Country Club to 20577 Cambridge Ct. Huge Garage Sale: Fri. & Sat, 8-5, Sun. 8-12, 61550 Ward Rd, tools, camping gear, clothes, furniture, appl, elec. equip., big screen TV, stereos, VCR, collectibles, household items & much more

Multi-Family Sale: Baby crib & furniture, adult & kids clothes, desk, fridge, home decor, auto accessories, too much to list, 20976 Greenmont Dr, Sat. 7-3:30. Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale NEIGHBORHOOD SALE Collectibles, nice appliances, farm equipment. Lots more. Fri & Sat 9 - 3. 21685 Obsidian Ave - off Ward Rd.

Buy a Business. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200.

Private deals. Established Oregon businesses plus franchise opportunities. Some low down payment and sweat equity options. CrossPointeCapital.com 541-610-5799.

Sales - Independent Contractor

NEED A SUMMER JOB? If you can answer YES To these questions, WE WANT YOU 1. Do ur friends say u talk 2 much? 2. Do u like 2 have fun @ work? 3. Do u want 2 make lots of $$$? 4. R u available afternoons & early evenings?

Work Part-Time with Full-Time Pay Ages 13 & up welcome

DON'T LAG, CALL NOW

OREGON NEWSPAPER SALES GROUP 541-306-6346

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Sales Redmond Area

Sales Redmond Area

1+1=2!!! Unique Double Estate Sale! Furniture, kitchen, china, many fine collectibles, guns, tools & more. Items from around world. Fri & Sat. 9-4, 10707 NW 27th St, Terrebonne (off Lower Bridge Way)

Sat.-Sun 9-4, 516 NE Negus Lp. (E. over Maple St. Bridge, 1st Right, 1st Left), Box for pickup, boots, glass & cookware, linens.

BIG SALE: Many, many, many treasures of all kinds, PLEASE COME. Fri-Sat. 9-3,3139 SW Timber Ct (Between Timber & Umatilla on SW 31st)

Garage Sale: Fri. Only, 8-5, commercial restaurant equip, housewares, yarn, skis, clothes, crafts, & yard stuff, 1500 Block of NW Spruce PL. Huge Alley Sale! Sat. June 4, 9-5, behind 6-plex at 130 SW Canyon Dr (off Black Butte) Something for everyone! Moving Sale! Fri-Sat, June 3-4, 9-3. Beds, mattresses, adult & children’s clothing, sofa, table & chairs, children’s books, stuffies, toys, adult & child’s bike... 3743 SW Xero Ave.

MULTI-FAMILY SALE - Friday, June 3, 10-4, Sat., June 4, 8-4, 2853 SW Cascade Ave. Something for everyone!! Plant Sale: Perennials, annuals & garden items, low prices, Sat. June 4th, 8:30-1:30, Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 Black Butte, sponsored by Central Or. Retired Educators Association. Proceeds to benefit the Opportunity Foundation of Central OR.

Valleyview HOA Annual Yard Sale! June 3, 4 & 5. 9 am - 6 pm. Various yards within the Valleyview subdivision. Cross streets: Valleyview Drive & 37th, Redmond, OR 97756.

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

292

Sales Other Areas

NOTICE Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKS! From The Bulletin and your local Utility Companies

www.bendbulletin.com Powell Butte Yard Sale - Fri & Sat., June 3-4, 8am-6pm. 5½ miles south of post office to 14152 SW Lupine, follow signs


To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

Rentals

600 630

Rooms for Rent STUDIOS & KITCHENETTES Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro. & fridge. Util. & linens. New owners, $145-$165/wk. 541-382-1885

631

Condo / Townhomes For Rent Long term townhomes/homes for rent in Eagle Crest. Appl. included, Spacious 2 & 3 bdrm., with garages, 541-504-7755.

682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 732 - Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condo/Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 642

650

Apt./Multiplex Redmond

Houses for Rent NE Bend

Available now, cute duplex, SW area, 3 Bdrm 2 bath, garage, private fenced yard, W/D hkup. $700/mo.+ deposit. Call 541-480-7806.

SPRING BLAST! Studios $375 1 Bdrm $400 Free Move-in Rent! • Lots of amenities. • Pet friendly • W/S/G paid THE BLUFFS APTS. 340 Rimrock Way, Redmond Close to schools, shopping, and parks! 541-548-8735 Managed by

GSL Properties

DELUXE 2 BEDROOM $495 per mo.

632

Apt./Multiplex General The Bulletin is now offering a MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home or apt. to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 1, 2 and 3 bdrm apts. available starting at $625.

Alpine Meadows Townhomes 541-330-0719 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

ALL LIKE NEW! 3 Bdrm 2.5 bath duplex. Garage, nice fenced yard, gas fireplace, tile, no pets, no smoking, W/S paid, $850 + dep. 541-382-2260 Beautiful 2 Bdrms in quiet complex, park-like setting. No pets/smoking. Near St. Charles.W/S/G pd; both w/d hkup + laundry facil. $595$625/mo. 541-385-6928.

636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 1550 NW Milwaukee W/D hookup. $615/mo. Large 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, Gas heat. W/S/G Pd. No Pets. Call us at 541-382-3678 or

Visit us at www.sonberg.biz GREAT LOCATION 2 bdrm, 1 bath townhouse in quiet 6-plex between Old Mill & downtown. W/D included, $585. 129 Adams Place (off Delaware). 541-647-4135 SHEVLIN APARTMENTS Near COCC! Newer 2 Bdrm 1 Bath, granite, wood floors, underground parking/storage area, laundry on site, $650/mo. 541-480-3666

642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond 1/2 OFF 1ST MONTH! Studio apt., $410 mo., 613 SW 9th, w/s/g/ + cable paid. No smoking/pets. 541-598-5829 until 6 p.m.

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

incl. storage room and carport, smoke free bldg., fenced dog run, on-site laundry, close to schools, park and shopping. O BSIDIAN APARTMENTS www.redmondrents.com 541-923-1907

648

Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. The Bulletin is now offering a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

650

Houses for Rent NE Bend 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1200 sq.ft., big wood stove, util. room, 1/2 acre lot, RV parking, dbl garage w/openers, $895. 541-480-3393 or 610-7803

654

Houses for Rent SE Bend A quiet 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 1748 sq.ft., living room w/wood stove, newer carpet & inside paint, pellet stove, big 1/2 acre fenced lot, dbl garage w/opener. $1195. 541-480-3393,541-610-7803

658

Houses for Rent Redmond 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, large fenced yard, no cats, dogs neg., no smoking, $775/mo., 3126 Pumice Ave, please call 541-480-2543.

Clean 4 Bdrm + den, 2 bath, 14920 SW Maverick Rd, CRR. No smoking; pets negotiable. $900/mo. + deposits. Call 541-504-8545; 541-350-1660 Crooked River Ranch, 5 acres horse property fenced, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, W/D hookup, $800 plus deps. 541-420-5197,209-402-3499 Eagle Crest gated 3 Bdrm 2½ bath home w/3-car garage & workshop. Reverse living, pvt hot tub, beautiful mountain views, 2200 sq ft. Pool, tennis & exercise facilities. $1400/mo + security dep and utils/maintenance. Lease w/option; owner may carry. Call 541-923-0908.

Newly

687

746

870

875

880

Commercial for Rent/Lease

Northwest Bend Homes

Boats & Accessories

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Office/Warehouse Space, 6400 sq.ft., (3) 12x14 doors, on Boyd Acres Rd, 541-382-8998.

The Bulletin offers a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809 Warehouse/Office space, 1235 sq ft, large roll-up door. 20685 Carmen Lp. No triple net; $500/mo, 1st + dep. 541-480-7546; 541-480-7541

693

Ofice/Retail Space for Rent An Office with bath, various sizes and locations from $200 per month, including utilities. 541-317-8717

Real Estate For Sale

700 730

New Listings

687

Commercial for Rent/Lease Office / Warehouse 1792 sq.ft. & 1680 sq.ft. spaces, 827 Business Way, Bend. 30¢/sq.ft.; 1st mo. + $300 dep. 541-678-1404 Office/Warehouse located in SE Bend. Up to 30,000 sq.ft., competitive rate, 541-382-3678.

748

Northeast Bend Homes Mtn. View Park (Gated) 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, many ammenities, open floor plan, living, dining & family room, w/view windows, looking east to large & private back area. Master bdrm. w/French doors to wrap-around covered porch, master bathroom w/soaking tub & separate shower, $173,500, consider lease to buy contract, 2416 NE Crocus Way. Cell: 480-357-6044.

750

Redmond Homes $121,837 - REDMOND Great 3 bedroom, 2 bath Redhawk home in Northwest Redmond. MLS#201101630 Call DON CHAPIN, Broker 541-350-6777 Redmond Re/Max Land & Homes Real Estate Eagle Crest ~ Owner will carry with down. Gated 3 bedroom, 2½ bath home with 3-car garage & workshop. Reverse living, private hot tub, beautiful mountain views, 2200 sq ft. Enjoy Eagle Crest’s pool, tennis & exercise facilities. $399,000. Call 541-923-0908.

Over 40 Years Experience in Carpet Upholstery & Rug Cleaning Call Now! 541-382-9498 CCB #72129 www.cleaningclinicinc.com

732

Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale SWEET HOME RV PARK RV park on 6 acres overlooking the lake, large clubhouse, seasonal pool, store/gift shop, 81 camp & RV sites, 51 with full hookups, 2 furnished condos, manager’s apartment, camping cabins, tent areas, turn-key business $895,000 Ellen Clough, ABR, CRS, Broker, 541-480-7180 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend JohnLScott.com/Bend

745

Homes for Sale

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

762

Homes with Acreage PARADISE FOUND 37 Acres, 33 Acres Irrigation, Upgraded 2936 sq ft 3 bedroom, 3 bath, with a shop, barns. Killer views! $1,295,000. www.bendranchproperty.info Call Candice Anderson 541-788-8878 John L. Scott, Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

Boats & RV’s

800 850

Snowmobiles

NOTICE: All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

Mobile Homes

860

Motorcycles And Accessories

The Bulletin

$20,000. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths 1232 sq. ft. 1992 Redman. Large living room ~ sunny kitchen with eating area, generous master suite with private bath. Separate laundry room includes washer/ dryer. An exceptional value in 55+ Suntree Village MHP. Call Marilyn Rohaly, Broker, 541-322-9954 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend www.JohnLScott.com

Harley Davidson Heritage Softail Classic 2006, Vance-Hines pipes, crash bar w/foot pegs, Power Command, Stage 1 backrest w/luggage rack, Dyno-tune, all work performed by Jerry’s Custom Cycle, exc. cond, $13,900 OBO. 541-549-4834, 588-0068

Harley Davidson Police Bike 2001, low mi., custom bike very nice.Stage 1, new tires & brakes, too much to list! A Must See Bike! $9300 OBO. 541-383-1782

Harley Davidson Ultra Classic 2008, clean, 15K mi, lots of upgrades, cstm exhaust, dual control heated gloves & vest, luggage accessories, $15,500 OBO. 541-693-3975

GAS

SAVER!

Honda Gold Wing GL 1100, 1980. 23,000 miles, full dress plus helmets, $3500 or best offer. Call 541-389-8410

Barns

Computer/Cabling Install

Electrical Services

QB Digital Living

Quality Builders Electric

"POLE BARNS" Built Right! Garages, shops, hay sheds, arenas, custom decks, fences, interior finish work, & concrete. Free estimates . See Facebook Business page, search under M. Lewis Construction, LLC CCB#188576•541-604-6411

•Computer Networking •Phone/Data/TV Jacks •Whole House Audio •Flat Screen TV & Installation 541-280-6771 www.qbdigitalliving.com CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C

• Remodels • Home Improvement • Lighting Upgrades • Hot Tub Hook-ups 541-389-0621 www.qbelectric.net CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C

Building/Contracting

Debris Removal

Handyman

JUNK BE GONE

ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES

l Haul Away FREE NOTICE: Oregon state law For Salvage. requires anyone who Also Cleanups & Cleanouts contracts for construction Mel 541-389-8107 work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active fifi’s Hauling & More. Yard clean up, fuel reduction, conlicense means the contractor struction & misc. clean up, is bonded and insured. 10 yd. hyd. trailers, 20 ft. Verify the contractor’s CCB flatbed, 541-382-0811. license through the CCB Consumer Website www.hirealicensedcontractor.com

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

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!

Concrete Construction

Old World Cobblestone Inc. Paver Installation Specialists Ask about special Spring Prices! oldworldcobblestoneinc.com 541-408-6947 • CCB 82623

JJ&B Construction - Quality Concrete work, over 30 yrs experience. Sidewalks, RV Pads, Driveways.... Call Josh 541-279-3330 • CCB190612 K.A. Veltman Concrete L L C Custom Concrete Work Foundations and Flatwork No Job Too Big or Too Small! 541-923-2168 • CCB #191425

Home Improvement

Boats & Accessories

12’ alum. Klamath, 9.8 Merc., 2 new seats, Calkins trailer, $1200 obo. 541-504-0874 16’ Fiberform, 55HP Johnson Motor, elec. trolling motor, $2750, extras, 541-382-5805

17½’ 2006 BAYLINER 175 XT Ski Boat, 3.0L Merc, mint condition, includes ski tower w/2 racks - everything we have, ski jackets adult and kids several, water skis, wakeboard, gloves, ropes and many other boating items. $11,300 OBO . 541-417-0829

YUCK

Concrete / Paving

Drywall ALL PHASES of Drywall. Small patches to remodels and garages. No Job Too Small. 25 yrs. exp. CCB#117379 Dave 541-330-0894

More Than Service Peace Of Mind.

Spring Clean Up •Leaves •Cones and Needles •Broken Branches •Debris Hauling •Defensible Space •Aeration/Dethatching •Compost Top Dressing Weed free bark & flower beds ORGANIC

PROGRAMS

Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing •Edging •Pruning •Weeding •Sprinkler Adjustments

The Bulletin Classiieds

All types remodeling/handyman Decks, Painting, Carpentry Randy Salveson, 541-306-7492 CCB#180420

Margo Construction LLC Since 1992 • Pavers •Carpentry •Remodeling • Decks • Window/Door Replacement • Int/Ext Paint CCB 176121 • 541-480-3179 I DO THAT! Home Repairs, Remodeling, Professional & Honest Work. Rental Repairs. CCB#151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

Kelly Kerfoot Construction: 28 years exp. in Central OR, Quality & Honesty, from carpentry & handyman jobs, to quality wall covering installations & removal. Senior discounts, licenced, bonded, insured, CCB#47120 Call 541-389-1413 or 541-410-2422

Handyman Service Repair & Remodel We Move Walls Small jobs welcome. Another General Contractor, Inc. CCB# 110431. 541-617-0613, 541-390-8085

Canoe, Mad River, Red, 16’, 3’ beam, good cond., $225, 541-593-9771. Kayak, 18’ Necky, Tesla, white/ blue/red, 26” width, rudder, good cond., $2400 new; sell $750. 541-593-9771. Sea Kayaks - His & Hers, Eddyline Wind Dancers, 17’, fiberglass boats, all equip incl., paddles, personal flotation devices, dry bags, spray skirts, roof rack w/towers & cradles -- Just add water, $1850/boat Firm. 541-504-8557.

Fertilizer included with monthly program

Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts

541-390-1466

Marathon V.I.P. Prevost H3-40 Luxury Coach. Like new after $132,000 purchase & $130,000 in renovations. Only 129k orig. mi. 541-601-6350. Rare bargain at just $97,400. Look at : www.SeeThisRig.com

880

Motorhomes

swing keel, pop top, fully loaded, $11,000, call for details, 541-480-8060 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

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

Beaver Patriot 2000, Walnut cabinets, solar, Bose, Corian, tile, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, w/d, $99,000. 541-215-0077

Beaver Santiam 2002, 2 slides, 48K, immaculate, 330 Cummins diesel, $75,000. Call for details: 541-504-0874

Best Buy Hurricane 32’ 2007, 12K mi.,

Houseboat 38 x10, triple axle trailer incl. 20’ cabin, 12’ rear swim deck plus 6’ covered front deck. Great price! $14,500. 541-788-4844

Used out-drive parts Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 Need help ixing stuff around the house? Call A Service Professional and ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

875

2 Wet-Jet personal water crafts, new batteries & covers, “SHORE“ trailer, incl spare & lights, $2450 for all. Bill 541-480-7930.

Oregon Classified Advertising Network

Cherry Wood, leather, queen, 2 slides, 2 tv’s 2 air, jacks, camera, like new, non smoker, $61,000, 541-548-5216.

Dodge Brougham Motorhome, 1977, Needs TLC, $1995, Pilgrim Camper 1981, Self contained, Cab-over, needs TLC, $595, 541-382-2335 or 503-585-3240. Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp. diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires, under cover, hwy. miles only, 4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp. propane gen & more! $55,000. 541-948-2310.

Hurricane 2007 35.5’ like new, 3 slides, generator, dark cabinets, Ford V10, 4,650 mi $64,900 OBO. 541-923-3510

Winnebago 32VS 2000, Class A Adventurer. Super slide, 31K mi., new Toyo tires, 11 1/2 ft. overall height, perfect cond,$37,999. 541-312-8974

Winnebago Access 31J 2008, Class C, Near Low Retail Price! One owner, nonsmoker, garaged, 7,400 miles, auto leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, microwave, 3-burner range/oven, (3) TVs, and sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, and very clean! Only $76,995! Extended warranty available! Call (541) 388-7179.

Winnebago Class C 2003, 28’, tow pkg, gen, 2 slides, awning, V-10 Ford 450, one owner, non-smkg, exc care, see to appreciate! $34,000 541-815-4121 541-593-7257 Winnebago Sightseer 30B Class A 2008 $79,500 OBO Top of the line! cell 805-368-1575

881

Travel Trailers HOLIDAY RAMBLER IMPERIAL 35’ 1993, queen size walk around bed, full bath, FSC, solid oak interior, good condition, $6,750. 541-604-1349. JAYCO 31 ft. 1998 slideout, upgraded model, exc. cond. $10,500. 1-541-454-0437.

YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 EXPOSURES FOR ONLY $250! Oregon Classified Advertising Network is a service of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association.

Week of May 30, 2011

Career Assistance

Help Wanted

MEDICAL MANAGEMENT careers start here - Get connected online. Attend college on your own time. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. Call 800-481-9409, www.CenturaOnline.com.

DRIVERS/COMPANY-Lease - Work for us or let us work for you! Unbeatable career opportunities.*Trainee, *company driver, *lease operator, earn up to $51k. *Lease Trainers earn up to $80k. 877-369-7104. www. centraltruckdrivingjobs.com.

Help Wanted FRAC SAND HAULERS with complete bulk pneumatic rigs only. Relocate to Texas for tons of work. Great company/pay. Gas cards/ quick pay available. 888-880-5922.

Legal Services DIVORCE $135. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295, www.paralegalalternatives.com, divorce@usa.com.

DRIVERS - REEFER solo lessee. Average $1.12/mile (+fuel IF YOU used the antibiotic surcharge). Paid CDL training drug Levaquin and suffered a tendon rupture, you may be available & benefits! entitled to compensation. Call Call Prime Inc. today, Attorney Charles Johnson, 800-277-0212, www.primeinc.com. 1-800-535-5727.

LAWN & LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE Does your lawn have snow mold problems? We can help! SPECIAL 20% OFF Thatching & Aeration Weekly Maintenance • Thatching • Aeration • Lawn Over-seeding Bark • Clean-ups Commercial / Residential Senior Discounts

Providing full service maintenance for over 20 years! FREE AERATION & FERTILIZATION with new seasonal Mowing Service!

“Because weekends WERE NOT made for yard work!”

541-382-3883

NOTICE: OREGON Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise to perform Land scape Construction which in cludes: planting, decks, fences, arbors, water-fea tures, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be li censed with the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be in cluded in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before con tracting with the business. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.

Ferris Building & Landscape Maintenance Remodeling, Pole Barns, Landscape Maint., Tree Service & Haul Away. CCB #68496 Harry Ferris 541-408-2262

Collins Lawn Maintenance Weekly Services Available Aeration, One-time Jobs Bonded & Insured Free Estimate. 541-480-9714

V Spring Clean Up! V Thatch, Aerate, weeding, raking & monthly maint. 541-388-0158 • 541-420-0426 www.bblandscape.com

Nelson Landscape Painting, Wall Covering Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial • Sprinkler activation & repair • Thatch & Aerate • Spring Clean up • Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly & monthly maint. •Flower bed clean up •Bark, Rock, etc. •Senior Discounts

WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. Small Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. Wallpapering & Woodwork. Restoration a Specialty. Ph. 541-388-6910. CCB#5184

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB#8759

Remodeling, Carpentry

Find It in

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

RGK Contracting & Consulting 30+Yrs. Exp. •Additions/Remodels/Garages •Replacement windows/doors remodelcentraloregon.com 541-480-8296 CCB189290

The Bulletin

Rooing AMERICAN ROOFING Quick, efficient, quality work New • Re-roofs • Repairs Free Estimates CCB #193018 Call Jorge - 541-497-3556

Call The Yard Doctor for yard maint., thatching, sod, hydroseeding, sprinkler sys, water features, walls, more! Allen 541-536-1294 LCB 5012

Same Day Response

The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809

JAYCO SENECA 2008 36MS, fully loaded, 2 slides, gen., diesel, 8k miles, like new cond., $109,000 OBO. Call for details 1-541-556-8224.

(This special package is not available on our website)

J. L. SCOTT

Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. Small or large jobs. On-time promise. Senior Discount. All work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured CCB#181595

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

Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care

Since 1978

I do not want to clean gutters again! Then Call B&R 541-389-8008 1-800-580-8008 and we will! ccb#103411

25’ Catalina Sailboat 1983, w/trailer,

Watercraft

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140

M. Lewis Construction, LLC

20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

Like Brand New Harley Davidson Heritage Softail, 2009. 682 miles, 7 yr extended warranty, upgraded parts, engine guard bar. Bike has been lowered; mint cond. Upgraded grips. $15,500. 541-420-5855

14x50 2 bdrm, 2 bath sgl. wide in park. Super Good Cents package, drywall, vaulted ceiling, good condition, $12,500. 541-306-7951. To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

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

Summer Price Yamaha 600 Mtn. Max 1997 Now only $850! Sled plus trailer package $1550. Many Extras, call for info, 541-548-3443.

BANK OWNED KTM 400 EXC Enduro 2006, like Single level with mountain new cond, low miles, street 773 views. 19.2 acres with irrigalegal, hvy duty receiver hitch Acreages tion. Home is 2916 sq. ft., 3 basket. $4500. 541-385-4975 bedrooms, 3 baths w/large shop and hay storage area. 2 Adjacent 1-Acre Lots in 865 Oregon Water Wonder$350,900 ATVs land off Century Dr., 55405 Peggy Lee Combs, Broker Gross Dr. S., 1 lot w/septic, 541-480-7653 $49,000, 1 without, $39,000, John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend will carry and/or build to www.JohnLScott.com/Bend suit, 541-698-7720. Foreclosures For Sale POLARIS PHOENIX All Central OR Avail. Buy on the $795,000 - Redmond 109+/2005, 2X4, 200cc, new acres w/64 acres COI. Full Court steps w/Cashier’s Checks rear end, new tires, runs Cascade Mtn. views. Oregon Group Realty, LLC excellent, $1800 OBO, 541-948-4397 MLS#201006080 541-932-4919. Call TRAVIS HANNAN, PrinciGOLF COMMUNITY pal Broker, 541-788-3480 Single-level home in golf Redmond Re/Max Land & Yamaha YFZ450 course community on Bend’s Homes Real Estate Sport ATV 2008 Westside. 3 bed, 2 bath, 2215 SF on landscaped .36 Powell Butte: 6 acres, 360° Blue, Low hours very clean, acre lot. Hardwood floors, freshly serviced. $4290. views in farm fields, sephickory cabinets, granite Will consider offers. See at tic approved, power, OWC, counters, and beautifully JD Powersports, Redmond. 10223 Houston Lake Rd., landscaped. $389,900 541-526-0757 • Richard $114,900, 541-350-4684. Amber Shults, Broker 541-419-0712 541-419-5219 775 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend 870 Manufactured/ www.JohnLScott.com/Bend

Remodeled - 1200 sq ft, 2 Bdrm 2 Bath on ½ acre lot. Great views & room Golf Course Rim View, 3 for RV. $850. 541-923-6513 bdrm. 4 bath, large shop, office, bonus room, 1.7 acres, 675 Crooked River Ranch, RV Parking $399,999 OBO, 541-350-5425

RV Parking 30’X20’, outside of La Pine, secure area, $300/ month, hookups are possible, Please call 541-876-5106

NW CROSSING TOWNHOME 1813 sq ft, 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths with 2 master suites! Located directly across from Lewis & Clark Park, it has great views, peaceful and private street and many upgrades! $279,900 Kathy Caba, Broker, ABR 541-771-1761 John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend JohnLScott.com/Bend

Check out OCANs online at classifieds.oregon.com!

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

THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 G3

Tile, Ceramic Steve Lahey Construction Tile Installation Over 20 Yrs. Exp. Call For Free Estimate 541-977-4826•CCB#166678


G4 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

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

935

975

975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Paying Top Dollar For Your Vehicle!

Smolich Auto Mall

Smolich Auto Mall

Smolich Auto Mall

Over 150 used to choose from!

Over 150 used to choose from!

Over 150 used to choose from!

Smolich Auto Mall Over 150 used to choose from!

932

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Antique and Classic Autos

Call Mike Springer 541-749-4025

Chevy Corvette Coupe 2006, 8,471 orig miles, 1 owner, always garaged, red, 2 tops, auto/paddle shift, LS-2, Corsa exhaust, too many options to list, pristine car, $37,500. Serious only, call 541-504-9945

Canopies and Campers

Terry Ultralight 22’ 2003 NW Edition. Large bathroom, queen bed, microwave, frig/freezer, 3 burner stove/oven, good condition, $6800. La Pine area. Call 541-968-3130

350 auto, new studs, located in Sisters, $3000 OBO, 907-723-9086,907-723-9085

Chevy

Wagon

1957,

4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28’ 2007, Gen, fuel station,exc.

cond. sleeps 8, black/gray interior, used 3X, $29,900. 541-389-9188. 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

882

Fifth Wheels

When ONLY the BEST will do! 2003 Lance 1030 Deluxe Chrysler 300 Coupe 1967, 440 engine, auto. trans, ps, air, Model Camper, loaded, pheframe on rebuild, repainted nomenal condition. $17,500. original blue, original blue 2007 Dodge 6.7 Cummins interior, original hub caps, Diesel 3500 4x4 long bed, exc. chrome, asking $9000 or 58K mi, $34,900. Or buy as make offer. 541-385-9350. unit, $48,500. 541-331-1160

Corvette 1956, rebuilt 2006, 3 spd., 2, 4 barrel, 225 hp. Matching numbers $62,500, 541-280-1227.

Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by Carriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, satellite sys, frplc, 2 flat scrn TVs. $70,000. 760-644-4160 Cedar Creek 2006, RDQF. Loaded, 4 slides, 37.5’, king bed, W/D, 5500W gen., fireplace, Corian countertops, skylight shower, central vac, much more, like new, $39,900, please call 541-330-9149.

Everest 32’ 2004, 3 slides, island kitchen, air, surround sound, micro., full oven, more, in exc. cond., 2 trips on it, 1 owner, like new, REDUCED NOW $26,000. 541-228-5944

Be Ready for summer vacations! 27’ 1995 Terry 5th wheel with BIG slide-out, generator and extras. $9,900 OBO. 541-923-0231 days.

Pettibone Mercury fork lift, 8000 lb., 2-stage, propane, hard rubber tires. $4000 or Make offer. 541-389-5355. Towmaster Equipment Trailer, 14,000 lb capacity. Tandemn axle, 4-wheel brakes, 18’ bed, heavy duty ramps, spare tire mounted, side mounted fork pockets, all tires in good condition. $4795 or best offer. 541-420-1846.

Truck with Snow Plow!

Smolich Auto Mall

CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005

Over 150 used to choose from!

(Photo for illustration only)

• 4WD, 68,000 miles. • Great Shape. • Original Owner.

HYUNDAI

smolichmotors.com 541-749-4025 • DLR

366

$19,450!

Ford Explorer 1999 XLT V6 4.0L 106K, 4WD,CD, tape deck, tow bar, auto, fully loaded $4995, Peter 541-408-0877

One owner! VIN #165744

925

and in excellent condition. Only $18,000! (541) 410-9423, (541) 536-6116.

Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.

DLR# 0225

Over 150 used to choose from!

We Buy Scrap Auto & Truck Batteries, $10 each Also buying junk cars & trucks, (up to $500), & scrap metal! Call 541-912-1467

Dodge pickup 1962 D100 classic, original 318 wide block, push button trans, straight, runs good, $1250 firm. Bend, 831-295-4903

Ford 2-Dr. Sedan 1951, exc., original, ready to cruise, $8500, 541-388-0137. Ford Mustang 1969, Must Sell, 1 owner, car has been parked since 1972, very low mi., blue on blue with all parts complete & matching numbers, body work completed & in primer state, rebuilt trans, long block rebuilt, still at shop, add $2065, making total w/engine, $5565. 541-514-4228.

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1177 • DLR#366

manual, crew cab, 4 door, spray in bedliner, clearance lights, air bags, custom wheels and large tires, 87k. Looks like new inside & out!

$26,000 OBO. 541-433-2341 • 541-410-8173

Ford F-150 2006 LOOKS BRAND NEW! Supercab Lariat 5.4L V8 eng.,approx. 20K mi! 4 spd auto, rear wheel drive. Black w/lots of extras: Trailer tow pkg, Custom bedliner, Pickup bed extender, Tan leather trimmed captain chairs, only $18,000. 541-318-7395

Ford Explorer 2005

Over 150 used to choose from!

366

Over 150 used to choose from!

Buicks -Nice luxury cars, 30 mpg highway. 1995 Limited LeSabre, 111k, $3900, gold; 1998 Custom LeSabre, 91k at $4500, silver; 2005 LeSabre Custom 84k, $6900; 2006 Lucerne, 76k, $7900. Call 541-815-3639 or 541-318-9999

Smolich Auto Mall Over 150 used to choose from!

Hyundai Sonata 2010 32K Miles! Warranty! Vin #658777

Only $16,555

Toyota Camry 2004 Vin #880152

Sale Price $10,998

NISSAN

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1178 • DLR

366

HYUNDAI

smolichmotors.com

Chrysler PT Cruiser Convertible 2006

Suzuki Grand Vitara AWD 2010

smolichmotors.com

2,000 Extra Low Miles, & Warranty!! VIN #100784

541-389-1178 • DLR

366

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1177 • DLR#366

Now Only $19,999

Over 150 used to choose from!

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1177 • DLR#366

Jeep Commander 2007

Toyota Sienna XLE AWD 2005, 58k mi., white/grey, all records, clean carfax, 60k service done. Super clean, non-smoking, garaged. $20,000 541-362-1031

541-389-1178 • DLR

366

Jeep Wrangler 2004, right hand drive, 51K, auto., A/C, 4x4, AM/FM/CD, exc. cond., $14,500. 541-408-2111

Smolich Auto Mall

CHEVY ASTRO EXT 1993 All Wheel Drive mini van, 3 seats, rear barn doors, white, good tires and wheels. Pretty interior, clean, no rips or tears. Drives excellent!!!. Only $2500. (541) 318-9999 or (541) 815-3639

Chevy Gladiator 1993, great shape, great

Jeep Wrangler 2010

KIA Amanti 2005, silver, exc. condition, 57,500 mi., leather, sliding moonroof, heated seats, auto windows, locks, seats. Infinity 6 disc premium sound system, new tires, brakes last fall. Beautiful inside & out. $10,700. 541-977-5838.

2010

VW Super Beetle 1971, $3000, great cond., with sunroof, 541-410-7679.

Paying Top Dollar For Your Vehicle!

fully loaded, good cond., convertible, polished alloy wheels, $3150, Please call 541-385-5095.

We will pay CASH for your vehicle. Buying vehicles NOW!

MERCEDES C300 2008

Call Mike Springer

Mazda Miata 1995,

940

Chevrolet 1-ton Express Cargo Van 1999, with tow package, good condition, $4800. Call 541-419-5693

Jaguar SV6 2000 4-dr. Has new: tires, brakes, rotors, calipers, radio, battery. AC great! 84K mi, like new, $7500. 541-923-2595

C70-T5,

Convertible Hardtop, 11,500 mi., Celestial Blue w/Calcite Cream leather int. Premium & Climate pkgs. Warranty & Service to 10/2014. KBB SRP $33,540. Reduced! Now $29,900 OBO. 541-350-5437

Over 150 used to choose from!

Vans

mileage, full pwr., all leather, auto, 4 captains chairs, fold down bed, fully loaded, $3950 OBO, call 541-536-6223.

541-385-5809

Volvo

Smolich Auto Mall

Dodge Avenger 2008

Over 150 used to choose from!

Ford T-Bird 1955, White soft & hard tops, new paint, carpet, upholstery, rechromed, nice! $32,000. 541-912-1833

Chysler La Baron Convertible 1990, Good condition, $3800, 541-416-9566

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Infiniti J30 1993 118.6K miles. 1 owner. Great shape. 4 separate studded tires on wheels incl. $3200. 541-382-7451

Now Only $11,245

NISSAN

DLR# 0225

FORD Pickup 1977, step side, 351 Windsor, 115,000 miles, MUST SEE! $3800. 541-350-1686

Nice clean and fully serviced . Most come with 3 year, 36,000 mile warranty. Call The Guru: 382-6067 or visit us at www.subaguru.com

Smolich Auto Mall

Only $9999

Only $24,988

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

SUBARUS!!!

Buick Park Avenue 1996, loaded, 27 mpg,

50K Miles! Warranty! VIN #348919

Must See!! Very Clean! Vin #A81777

AWD, Limited, Navigation, & More! 33K Miles & Warranty! Vin #530244

Ford F150 2010 Super Cab Lariat 4dr, Premium pkg, navigation, moonroof, camera, loaded, 12,000 miles #B7423. Priced $4983 below book at $25977. 541-598-3750

convertible, 2 door, Navy with black soft top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929.

541-749-4025 • DLR

Smolich Auto Mall

Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199

International Travel All 1967,

44K Miles! Warranty! VIN #210631

Now Only $11,999

New body style, 30,000 miles, heated seats, luxury sedan, CD, full factory warranty. $23,950.

Like buying a new car! 503-351-3976.

541-749-4025

HYUNDAI

Hwy 20 in Bend smolichmotors.com smolichmotors.com 541-389-1177 • DLR#366

Mercedes GL450, 2007 All wheel drive, 1 owner, navigation, heated seats, DVD, 2 moonroofs. Immaculate and never abused. $27,950. Call 503-351-3976 Ford Mustang Convertible LX 1989, V8 engine, white w/red interior, 44K mi., exc. cond., $6995, 541-389-9188.

FORD TAURUS LX 98 with 74K miles, gold color, one owner, non smoker, 27 mpg, V-6 motor, nice car and almost new! $3900 541-318-9999 or 541-815-3639

Mercury Grand Marquis 1992, 4-door, 130K miles, $995, please call 541-388-4850

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

Thousands Less than New! Only 3K Miles! Vin #158726

Cadillac El Dorado 1977, very beautiful blue,

MUST SELL

70 Monte Carlo All original, beautiful, car, completely new suspension and brake system, plus extras. $5000 obo. 541-593-3072 Chevy Corvette 1980, yellow, glass removable top, 8 cyl., auto trans, radio, heat, A/C, new factory interior, black, 48K., exc. tires, factory aluminum wheels, asking $7500, will consider fair offer & possible trade, 541-385-9350.

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

exc. cond., 4WD, new tires, shocks, interior seat cover, everything works, 121K orig. mi.,original operators manual and line setting ticket incl. Nissan Frontier 2008 King Cab SE, 4 cyl., air, running $5000 OBO, 503-559-4401 boards, 27,000 miles, #441361 $18,377 541-598-3750

Chrysler Towne & Country 1994 AWD 148K dependable, wellmaint., $3,000 541-389-3414 HYUNDAI

smolichmotors.com 541-749-4025 • DLR

366

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Automobiles

Mercury Monterrey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in storage last 15 yes., 390 High Compression engine, new tires & license, reduced to $2850, 541-410-3425.

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

Toyota Tacoma 2002, X-Cab, 4X4, 145K, 5-spd. manual trans., 3.4L V-6, loaded, $10,995. 541-598-5111. Plymouth 4-dr sedan, 1948, all orig., new tires, exlnt driver, all gauges work, 63,520 miles, $8500. 541-504-2878

Plymouth Barracuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, (Original 273 eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597

WILLYS JEEP 1956 New rebuilt motor, no miles, Power Take-off winch. Exc. tires.

Asking $3,999 or make offer. 541-389-5355

933 CHEVROLET 1970, V-8 automatic 4X4 3/4 ton. Very good condition, lots of new parts and maintenance records. New tires, underdash air, electronic ignition and much more. Original paint, truck used very little. $5700, 541-575-3649

Toyota Tundra 2008 4WD, 5.7L, V-8, awesome truck $27,995, 541-923-4995.

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

DLR# 0225

Pickups

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $39,500. 541-420-3250

smolichmotors.com

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

NISSAN

UNBELIEVABLE

366

Now Only $4995

99% Complete, $12,000, please call 541-408-7348.

Antique and Classic Autos

real nice inside & out, low mileage, $2500, please call 541-383-3888 for more information. Mobile Suites, 2007, 36TK3 with 3 slide-outs, king bed, ultimate living comfort, quality built, large kitchen, fully loaded, well insulated, hydraulic jacks and so much more.$59,500. 541-317-9185

541-749-4025 • DLR

Smolich Auto Mall

Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories

932 KOMFORT 27’ 2000 5th wheel, fiberglass with 12’ slide. In excellent condition, has been stored inside. Only $13,500 firm. Call 541-536-3916.

Porsche Cayenne Turbo 2008, AWD, 500HP, 38K mi., exc. cond, meteor gray, 2 sets of wheels and new tires, fully loaded, $59,750 firm. 541-480-1884 Subaru Outback 2006 Limited. Dual moonroofs, leather, 43k miles. #354651. Only $20, 495 541-598-3750

Smolich Auto Mall

Saab 9-3 SE 1999

Sale Price $21,388 12 ft. Hydraulic dump trailer w/extra sides, dual axle, steel ramps, spare tire, tarp, excellent condition. $6500 firm. 541-419-6552

931 Hitchhiker II 2000 32’ 2 slides, very clean

NISSAN

$2700, 541-419-5060.

541-389-5016 evenings.

Over 150 used to choose from!

Dodge 5.9 Diesel 1993

366

Porsche Cayenne 2004, 86k, immac.,loaded, dealer maint, $19,500. 503-459-1580.

Chevy Bonanza 1978, runs good. $4800 OBO. Call 541-390-1466.

Utility Trailers

smolichmotors.com

Sport Utility Vehicles

541-389-1178 • DLR

Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl white, very low mi. $9500. 541-788-8218.

HYUNDAI

smolichmotors.com

541-389-1178 • DLR

smolichmotors.com Cardinal 34.5 JRL (40’) 2009, 4 slides, convection oven + micro., dual A/C, fireplace, extra ride insurance (3 yr. remaining incl. tires), air sleeper sofa + queen bed, $52,900 OBO, must see to appreciate, 406-980-1907, Terrebonne

Sale Price $18,555

Sale Price $14,450

Trucks and Heavy Equipment

GMC Ventura 3500 1986, refrigerated, w/6’x6’x12’ box, has 2 sets tires w/rims., 1250 lb. lift gate, new engine, $5500, 541-389-6588, ask for Bob.

54K miles! Warranty! Vin #205588

935

Ford 2 Door 1949, Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. for Snowbirds, solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $14,900. 541-923-3417.

52K Miles! Warranty! Vin #Z35138

Hyundai Santa Fe AWD 2008

4X4, 5 Cyl., Automatic, Warranty! Vin #176919

916

Chevrolet 3500 Service Truck, 1992, 4x4, automatic, 11-ft storage bed. Liftgate, compressor & generator shelf inside box, locked storage boxes both sides of bed, new tires, regular maintenance & service every 3K miles, set up for towing heavy equip. $4995 obo. 541-420-1846

Only $12,744

NISSAN

DODGE RAM SLT HD 2004 4x4 3/4 ton, diesel, 6 speed

Autos & Transportation

900

55K Miles & Warranty! Vin #631269

BMW 3 Series Sport Wagon 2007

Hwy 20 in Bend smolichmotors.com

Smolich Auto Mall Chevy El Camino 1979,

Northland 880 Grizzly 2002, 8½’ cabover camper, exc. cond, garaged when not in use, $9500 obo. 541-549-4834, 588-0068

Nissan Xterra AWD 2004

Chevy LT Colorado Crewcab 2006

885 Springdale 29’ 2007, slide, Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504

We will pay CASH for your vehicle. Buying vehicles NOW!

MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS 1988, new tires, new breaks, runs great, GREAT M.P.G.! $1,650. 541-419-6552.

Only $24,988

882

Terry Fleetwood Fifth Wheel 2007, 295RL Great shape & ready to roll. $15,500 For info call 888-583-1888 Code# 52184 or Taxt 52184 to 35620, or Call Scott at 541-408-6908

933

Pickups

Chevy 3/4 Ton 1989, 4x4, 100K miles, 350 engine, Great cond. $3900. Call 541-815-9939

881 Komfort 31’ 2006, Model, 271TS. Like new, only used 4x. 14’ slide-out, 27” TV, AM/FM/CD stereo, DVD player & surround sound. 21” awning, couch w/queen hideabed, AC, heavy duty hitch w/sway bars, daylight shades, pwr front jack, & more! $25,000. 541-382-6731

933

Pickups

Jeep Wrangler Sport 2000, red w/tan hard top, 113K, extra set near new studs on rims, $7600, 541-447-8904

Mercury Mountaineer 1997 V8 5.0L Engine AWD Automatic 169K miles $3895, Peter 541.408.0877

Audi A4 1999, dark blue, automatic sunroof, runs great, comes w/studded snow tires, $5,000. Jeff, 541-980-5943

Audi S4 2005, 4.2 Avant Quattro, tiptronic, premium & winter wheels & tires, Bilstein shocks, coil over springs, HD anti sway, APR exhaust, K40 radar, dolphin gray, ext. warranty, 56K, garaged, $30,000. 541-593-2227

The Trust Deed to be foreclosed pursuant to Oregon law is referred to as follows (the "Trust Deed"): 1.TRUST DEED INFORMATION: Grantor: Terry J. Duffin and Ann P. Duffin, as Tenants by the Entirety. Beneficiary: Columbia State Bank successor in interest to Columbia River Bank*. Trustee:Deschutes County Title. Successor Trustee:Heather J. Hepburn, 360 SW Bond Street, Suite 400, Bend, Oregon 97702, (541) 749-4044. Recording Date: August 9, 2006. Recording Reference:2006-54579. County of Recording:Deschutes. A modification of the Trust Deed was recorded on July 13, 2007, as Document No. 2007-38683, in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. *An Assignment assigning Columbia River Bank's interest to Columbia State Bank was recorded on November 19, 2010, as Document No. 2010-46239, in the records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 2.LEGAL DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY (the "Property") : Parcel II: That portion of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 15, Township 16 South, Range 11 East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon, lying Northeasterly of the relocated McKenzie-Bend Highway. 3. DEFAULT: The Grantor or any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, is in default and the Beneficiary seeks to foreclose the Trust Deed. The default for which foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to do the following: Failure to make monthly payments on the note of $2,000.20 due December 20, 2009 and continuing through February 20, 2011, secured by the above referenced trust deed. 4. AMOUNT DUE: By reason of the default described above, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following: Principal balance of $183,318.39, together with unpaid interest of $26,259.67 through October 5, 2010, late fees of $3,467.70 through October 5, 2010, Trustee's fees, attorney's fees, costs of foreclosure and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of the Trust Deed. Interest continues to accrue on the unpaid principal balance at the rate of 18% per annum from October 6, 2010, until paid. 5.ELECTION TO SELL: Both the Beneficiary and Trustee have elected to foreclose the Trust Deed by advertisement and sale as provided under ORS 86.705 to 86.795, and to cause the Property to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the Grantor's interest in the described Property which the Grantor had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution by the Grantor of the Trust Deed, together with any interest the Grantor or Grantor's successor in interest acquired after the execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed, including the expenses of the sale, compensation of the Trustee as provided by law and the reasonable fees of the Trustee's attorneys. A Notice of Default has been recorded as required by ORS 86.735(3). 6. DATE AND TIME OF SALE: Date: July 14, 2011. Time: 11:00 A.M. (in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110). Location: Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon 97701. 7. RIGHT TO REINSTATE: Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the Trustee conducts the sale, to have this foreclosure dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by doing all of the following: a. payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due, other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred; b.curing any other default that is capable of being cured, by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed; and c.paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. If you believe you need legal assistance with this matter, you may contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. If you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines, you may be eligible for free legal assistance. Contact information and a directory of legal aid programs for where you can obtain free legal assistance is available at http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, and the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. We are a debt collector attempting to collect a debt and any information we obtain will be used to collect the debt. DATED: March 10, 2011. /s/ Heather J. Hepburn. Heather J. Hepburn, Successor Trustee.


To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • Thursday, June 2, 2011 G5

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LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND Residential Meter Upgrade Phase 2 WA11CA NOTICE OF INVITATION TO BID The City of Bend invites sealed bids for construction work to upgrade identified 3/4 inch and 1 inch City of Bend existing residential water meter installations to current City standards. The invitation to bid, plans, specifications, addenda, planholders list, prequalification information, prequalified contractors, mandatory pre-bid attendees, and notification of bid results for this project may be viewed, printed or ordered on line from Central Oregon Builders Exchange at http://www.plansonfile.com by clicking on "Public Works Projects" and then on "City of Bend" or in person at 1902 NE 4th St., Bend, Oregon. Entities intending to bid should register with the Central Oregon Builders Exchange as a planholder in order to receive addenda. This can be done on-line or by contacting Central Oregon Builders Exchange at: (541) 389-0123, Fax (541) 389-1549, or email at admin@plansonfile.com. Bidders are responsible for making sure they have all addenda before submitting bids. The deadline for submitting bids is: June 28, 2011, at 2:00 PM. Bids will be opened and read at Bend City Hall Council Chambers (located on 1st Floor) immediately after the deadline. Bids must be physically received by the City at the location listed below by the deadline. No faxed or electronic (email) bids shall be accepted. Bids shall be delivered to: Gwen Chapman, Purchasing Manager, City Hall, Administrative Office, 2nd floor, 710 Wall Street, Bend, Oregon 97701 or mailed to her at: City of Bend, PO Box 431, Bend, Oregon 97709. The outside of the envelope or box containing the bid shall include the bidders name and be marked: Residential Meter Upgrade Phase 2 WA11CA. Prequalification is a requirement. Bidders must have a prequalification approval letter from ODOT or the City of Bend on file with City at the time the bids are opened. Prequalification forms may be obtained from Gwen Chapman at 541-385-6677. New applications for prequalification must be delivered to: City of Bend Purchasing, 710 NW Wall St., Bend, Oregon 97701 at least five days before the bid deadline. This project is subject to the provisions of ORS 279C.800 through 279C.870 regarding payment of prevailing wages. Prevailing Wage rates are applicable to this project regardless of bid amount. A mandatory Pre-Bid meeting will be held on June 14, 2011, 10:00 AM at the Council Chambers at Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon

Questions should be directed to: Project Manager: Chris Brelje, 541-317-3031, cbrelje@ci.bend.or.us Purchasing Manager: Gwen Chapman, 541-385-6677, gchapman@ci.bend.or.us Published June 2, 2011 Gwen Chapman Purchasing Manager LEGAL NOTICE PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 87 Notice is hereby given that the following vehicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 6/13/11. The sale will be held at 10:00 am by Western Recreation, 2807 SW High Desert Dr., Prineville, OR. 2004 Terry 290 RLS TT Plate: R757285 VIN: 1EA1R292041591900 Reputed Owners: Richard & Josephine Combee & NW Community CU Amount due on lien: $4667 LEGAL NOTICE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Westbrook Homes, NW, Inc., as Grantor, to U.S. Bank Trust Company, N.A. as Trustee, in favor of U.S. Bank N.A. as Beneficiary, dated January 3, 2007, recorded on January 4, 2007 in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, Record No. 2007-00663 and amended by the various amendments recorded as Amendment to Oregon Trust Deed recorded on February 4, 2008 in Record No. 2008-05202, June 23, 2008 in Record No. 2008-26727 and October 6, 2008 in Record No. 2008-40743, all in the records of Deschutes County, Oregon and which assigned to Acquired Capital I, L.P. in the Assignment of Oregon Trust Deed, Security Agreement and Assignment of Rents and Leases, recorded on October 25, 2010 in Record No. 2010-42332 in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, covering the following described real property situated in that county and state: Lots One (1), Four (4), Seven (7), Nine (9) and Eleven (11), WESTBROOK VILLAGE, PHASE III, Deschutes County, Oregon Michael E. Knapp was appointed successor trustee by an Appointment of Successor Trustee dated January 14, 2011 recorded on January 20, 2011 in the records of Deschutes County, Oregon as Record No. 2011-02473. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay when due the following sums: The principal sum of $374,999.99, due and payable in full on or before December 1, 2008, plus interest at the rate of Wall Street Prime plus 0.5% per annum, amounting to $24,880.08 as of July 21, 2010; delinquent property taxes, if any; cost of foreclosure report; attorney’s fees; together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of this foreclosure and any

further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust. By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to-wit: The principal sum of $374,999.99, due and payable in full on or before December 1, 2008, plus interest at the rate of Wall Street Prime plus 0.5% per annum, amounting to $24,880.08 as of July 21, 2010; prepayment premium, if applicable; cost of foreclosure report; attorney’s fees, trustee’s fees, together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of this foreclosure and any further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust. WHEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned trustee will on August 12, 2011, at the hour of 10:00 a.m. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110 at the following place: Deschutes County Justice Building, 1100 NW Bond Street, Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the real property described above which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor’s successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of the sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying those sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. For more information, contact Michael E. Knapp, Successor Trustee, Michael E. Knapp P.C. 2355 State Street, Salem, Oregon 97301; (503) 391-0664.

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE TO:Darrell W. Tappert 16902 Jacinto Road Bend, OR 97707 Other Interested Parties Pursuant to ORS 86.745, the undersigned Trustee provides you with the following information: Reference is made to that certain Residential Trust Deed, Security Agreement, Assignment of Lease and Rents and Fixture Filing (hereinafter "Trust Deed"), dated December 18, 2009 and recorded December 18, 2009 under instrument number 2009-53272, in the official real property records of Deschutes County, Oregon, wherein Darrell W. Tappert, is named Grantor, James D. Mullins Attorney at Law is named Trustee, and Dolores Y. Thoreson, by and through her Guardian, is named Beneficiary; and, pursuant to the Appointment of Successor Trustee by Beneficiary, dated January 26, 2010, and recorded in the real property records of Deschutes County, OR, under instrument number 2011-04375, Charles A. Isely is named as Successor Trustee of said Trust Deed; and which Trust Deed encumbers the following described real property in said County: Lot Thirty (30), Block Thirty (30), DESCHUTES RIVER RECREATION HOMESITES, UNIT 5, recorded August 7, 1963, in Cabinet A, Page 107, Deschutes County, Oregon. Tax Lot Number: 20 10 12C0 21100. Account No. 116024. Property Address: 16902 Jacinto Road, Bend, OR 97707. Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the real property described herein to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3), in the real property records for Deschutes County, Oregon on February 22, 2011 under recording number 2011-06768; the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: A. Monetary Defaults: Delinquent Installments: 1.Monthly payments of $750.00 from July 1, 2008 through February, 2011 in the total amount of $24,000.00 in satisfaction of a General Agreement, dated May 1, 2007, which has been merged into that Order Granting Summary Judgment and Judgment RE: Defendant Darrell W. Tappert on December 10, 2009 under Clark County, Washington Superior Court Case No. 09-2-02271-6 (hereinafter referred to as the "Note"). Subtotal of Monetary Defaults as of February 15, 2011: $24,000.00. The monetary defaults listed Section A.1 herein are in addition to title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said defaults. The amount of monetary defaults, listed herein, shall increase by each delinquent payment and applicable late fee. B. Non-monetary default for which foreclosure is made: N/A. By reason of said defaults, the Beneficiaries have declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: unpaid principal balance of $133,145.92, accruing interest at the rate of 12% per year, beginning December 10, 2010; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said defaults; and any further sums advanced by the Beneficiaries for the protection of the Premises and their interest therein. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that, Charles A. Isely, Attorney at Law, the undersigned Trustee will on Friday, July 15, 2011 at the hour of 10:00 AM in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by grantor of the Trust Deed, together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 must be timely communicated in a written request that complies with the statute addressed to the Trustee either by personal delivery to the Trustee's physical offices located at 105 W. Evergreen Blvd., Suite 200, Vancouver, WA 98660, or by certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the Trustee at the same address. Notice is given that any persons named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have his foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance necessary to cure the default by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, and the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include the respective successors in interest, if any. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal aid programs, go to http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. Dated this 11th day of March, 2011 by: /s/ Charles A. Isely, Attorney at Law, Trustee. FAIR DEBT COLLECTION NOTICE: The amount of your debt as of the date of this Notice is $24,000.00, plus applicable costs and fees. The amount of your debt will increase by each delinquent payment, plus additional late fees and interest. The name of your creditors is the Estate of Dolores Y. Thoreson. We will assume the debt is valid unless, within thirty (30) days after you have received this notice, you notify our office that you dispute this debt or any portion thereof. If you send us written notice within the thirty (30) day period that you dispute this debt or any portion thereof, we will obtain verification of the debt, or a copy of the judgment against you, and mail you a copy of the verification or judgment. If you send us a written request within the thirty (30) day period, we will send you the name and address of the original creditor if it is different from the current creditor named in this letter. Further please note: We are attempting to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS COURT: Deschutes County Circuit Court. CASE #: 11CV0356ST. CASE NAME: THE STATE OF OREGON, Plaintiff, v. $29,880.00 IN U.S. CURRENCY, Defendant, In Rem. Claimant: Michael Paul Garrison. Notice to all Potential Claimants: Read These Papers Carefully! If you have an interest in the defendant in rem named above, you must "appear" in this case or the other side will win automatically. To "appear," you must file with the court a legal document called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof of service on the plaintiff's attorney. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in 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) 452-7636. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: May 26, 2011. SUMMARY STATEMENT of the object of the Complaint and the demand for relief: On April 19, 2011, the property described above and named as defendant in rem was seized for civil forfeiture from Michael Paul Garrison, in Deschutes County, Oregon, by the Oregon State Police. The property is subject to forfeiture pursuant to ORS chapter 131A, because it constitutes the proceeds of, or was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating, the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances including the unlawful manufacture, delivery or possession of marijuana. The demand for relief in the above-entitled case is forfeiture of the defendant in rem described above. "Forfeiture" means that all right, title and interest in the property will belong to and vest in the State of Oregon and any person with an interest in the property will have that right, title and interest extinguished without compensation. DATED this 16th day of May 2011. /s/ Jennifer Gardiner, OSB 040614, Assistant Attorney General and Attorney for Plaintiff, 610 Hawthorne Ave SE - Ste. 210, Salem, OR 97301; Telephone (503) 378-6347; jennifer.gardiner@doj.state. or.us

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LEGAL NOTICE The following units will be sold at public auction on June 4, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. at North Empire Storage Center, 63048 Lower Meadow Dr., Bend, OR 97701 for non-payment of rent and other fees. Auction to be pursuant to auction rules and procedures to be posed at auction site. Shawna Holder #324, Dave Bartlett #347, Tim Kelly #941, Chris Fleming #1204, Dan Pena #212, SAC Enterprises #1023, Siri Roberts #208, Kyle Steinbaugh #443, Christine Friesner #938 & #920, Joel Gray #224, David Taylor #900, KC Hobbs #615. For more information call 541-330-1111. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: xxxxxx4580 T.S. No.: 1320794-09. Reference is made to that certain deed made by Melanie A. Rhoads, as Grantor to Western Title & Escrow Company, as Trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., As Nominee For Loancity.com, A California Corporation., as Beneficiary, dated October 06, 2004, recorded October 13, 2004, in official records of Deschutes, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. xx at page No. xx, fee/file/Instrument/microfilm/reception No. 2004-61438 covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Lot 3, block 1, the Winchester Arms, Deschutes County, Oregon. Commonly known as: 1821 & 1823 NE Wichita Way Bend OR 97701. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Failure to pay the monthly payment due December 1, 2010 of principal and interest and subsequent installments due thereafter; plus late charges; together with all subsequent sums advanced by beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust. Monthly payment $1,150.19 Monthly Late Charge $45.43. By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $140,115.62 together with interest thereon at 5.875% per annum from November 01, 2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that, Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation the undersigned trustee will on August 16, 2011 at the hour of 1:00pm, Standard of Time, as estab-

lished by Section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the Bond Street entrance to Deschutes County Courthouse 1164 NW Bond, City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" includes their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: April 11, 2011. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation 525 East Main Street P.O. Box 22004 El Cajon CA 92022-9004 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation Signature/By: Tammy Laird R-377769 05/12/11, 05/19, 05/26, 06/02 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: T11-76132-OR Reference is made to that certain deed made by, DAN HUNTER REY AND CONNIE J. REY, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to REGIONAL TRUSTEE SERVICES CORP., as trustee, in favor of "MERS" IS MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 10-17-2007, recorded 10Â23-2007, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. at page No. , fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2007-56462 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 133029 LOT 37, BLOCK 8, FIRST ADDITION TO WHISPERING PINES ESTATES, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON.

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Reference is made to a trust deed made by HARRY W. CAMPBELL and MARITA F. CAMPBELL, jointly and severally, as Grantor, to AmeriTitle, as Trustee, in favor of Pensco Trust Company Custodian, FBO Gary L. Boehmer Account #BO1HW as to an undivided forty percent (40%) interest; Pensco Trust Company Custodian, FBO Sybil L. Peters Account #PE1FJ as to an undivided forty percent (40%) interest; and Robert Allan and Dolores Watson Spurr, Trustees of the Robert Allan and Dolores Watson Spurr Revocable Trust as to an undivided twenty percent (20%) interest, as Beneficiary, dated July 17, 2008, and recorded on July 18, 2008 in the Deschutes County Official Records as Instrument No. 2008-30415, covering the following described real property situated in the above-mentioned county and state, to-wit: Real property in the County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, described as follows: 15782 Jackpine Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739, 15792 Jackpine Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739; and 15794 Jackpine Road La Pine, Oregon 97739, more particularly described on Exhibit A attached hereto and incorporated herein. EXHIBIT A: Real property in the County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, described as follows: PARCEL 1: Beginning at the Center North one sixteenth corner of Section 16, Township 22 South, Range 10 East of the Willamette Meridian, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, marked by a 1/2" rebar; thence South 89°09'10" West 333.21 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 00°26'11" West 1108.30 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 89°33'49" East 189.37 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING", thence continuing North 89°33'49" East 214.30 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 00°21'17" East 217.46 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence continuing South 00°21'17" East 744.70 feet to a point on the North line of Lot 1 of Block 1 of C.L. and D. RANCH TRACT marked by a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 89°31'53" West along said north line of Lot 1 a distance of 68.80 feet to a point on the north-south center section line of said Section 16, said point also being the northwest corner of said Lot 1, marked by a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence south 00°21'17" East along said north-south center section line 143.71 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL 2: Beginning at the one-quarter corner of Sections 9 and 16, Township 22 South, Range 10 East of the Willamette Meridian, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, marked by a 1/2" rebar; thence North 88°47'40" East along the north line of the Northwest one-quarter of the Northeast one-quarter of said Section 16 a distance of 1197.31 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "SCES"; thence departing said north line South 46°38'19" West, 650.63 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 88°47'40" West 652.66 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 02°21'17" West 217.46 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 89°33'49" West 214.30 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 00°26'11" West a distance of 216.35 feet to a point on the north line of the East half of the Northeast quarter of the Northwest quarter (E1/2 NE1/4 NW1/4) of Section 16 marked by a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 88°47'04" East along said north line 145.83 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL 3: Commencing at the Center North one sixteenth corner of Section 16, Township 22 South, Range 10 East of the Willamette Meridian, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, marked by a 1/2" rebar; thence North 00°21'17" East, along said north-south line, 143.71 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 89°31'53" East, along the north line of Lot 1 of Block 1 of C.L. & D. RANCH TRACT, a distance of 68.30 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING", the POINT OF BEGINNING; thence from said point North 00°21'17" West 744.70 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence North 88°47'40" East 652.66 feet to a point on the northerly line of Lot 13 of said Block 1 of C.L. & D. RANCH TRACT marked by a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence South 46°38'19" West, along the boundary line of said C.L. & D. RANCH TRACT, 280.91 feet to a 1/2" rebar; thence continuing along said boundary line South 02°50'06" West 436.36 feet to a 5/8" rebar with cap stamped "TYE ENGINEERING"; thence continuing along said boundary line south 58°31'53" West 245.15 feet to a ½" rebar; thence continuing along said boundary line South 89°31"53" West 213.01 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING. The undivided twenty percent (20%) interest of Robert Allan and Dolores Watson Spurr, Trustees of the Robert Allan and Dolores Watson Spurr Revocable Trust was assigned to Pensco Trust Company FBO Cindi Claflin IRA #CL1BN by that certain Memorandum of Modification of Trust Deed and Assignment of Beneficiary's Interest in Trust Deed dated July 17, 2008, recorded November 30, 2009, at Instrument No. 2009-50312 in the records of Deschutes County, Oregon. The undersigned was appointed as Successor Trustee by the Beneficiary by an appointment dated March 22, 2011, and recorded on March 30, 2011, in the Deschutes County Official Records as Document No. 2011-11723. The address of the trustee is 693 Chemeketa Street NE, Salem, OR 97301. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statues 86.735(3), the default for which the foreclosure is made in grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: The sum of $250,000.00 in principal, together with interest and late fees. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $250,000.00, plus interest thereon at the rate of 17% per annum from August 1, 2009, until paid, plus late fees in the amount of $1,375.00, plus the cost of foreclosure report, attorney's fees, and trustee's fees; together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of the default, this foreclosure and any further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust. WHEREFORE notice is hereby given that the undersigned trustee will on August 11, 2011, at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, a.m., in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110. at the main door of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1100 NW Bond Street, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the real property described above which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor's successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of the sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying those sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest if any. DATED: April 5, 2011. Gina Anne Johnnie, Successor Trustee.

Commonly known as: 21095 QUAIL LANE BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86,735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: INSTALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS AND / OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 01/01/2011 PLUS LATE CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADVANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE. Monthly Payment $2,565.54 Monthly Late Charge $111.71 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $446,878.52 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6% per annum from 12-01-2010 until paid;

plus ail accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 09-16-2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753

of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at WWW.FIDELITYASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: May

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G6 Thursday, June 2, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

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03, 2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR TITLE SERVICES INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 JAMES M. DAVIS, ASST. SEC. ASAP# 3988857 05/19/2011, 05/26/2011, 06/02/2011, 06/09/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: T10-62188-OR Reference is made to that certain deed made by, IRVING K. ORTON AND SUSANNE C. ORTON, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of ABN AMRO MORTGAGE GROUP, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 03-15-2007, recorded 03-20-2007, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. at page No. , fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2007-16531 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 195540 LOT ONE HUNDRED FOURTEEN (114), AWBREY GLEN TOWNSITES, PHASE SIX, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 3690 NW COTTON PLACE BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: INSTALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS AND / OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 09/01/2009 PLUS LATE CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADVANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE. Monthly Payment $5,566.08 Monthly Late Charge $278.30 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $877,440.09 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.25% per annum from 08-01-2009 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 09-02-2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187, S10, Oregon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire

amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at WWW.FIDELITYASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: April 25, 2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR TITLE SERVICES INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 JAMES M. DAVIS, ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASAP# 3981993 05/12/2011, 05/19/2011, 05/26/2011, 06/02/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: T10-59075-OR Reference is made to that certain deed made by, CHAD ELLIOTT AND LOIS ELLIOTT, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" IS MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 05-13-2008, recorded 05-19-2008, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No, at page No. , fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2008-21554 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 115423 LOT THIRTEEN (13) BLOCK TT, DESCHUTES RIVER WOODS, RECORDED MARCH 22, 1952, IN PLAT BOOK 6, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 19089 PUMICE BUTTE RD BEND, OR 97702 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: INSTALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS AND / OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 07/01/2009 PLUS LATE CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADVANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE, Monthly Payment $2,159.85 Monthly Late Charge $71.86 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately doe and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $299,909.43 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.875% per annum from 06-01-2009 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 09-06-2011 at the hour of

11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by-payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at WWW.FIDELITYASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: April 22, 2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR TITLE SERVICES INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 JAMES M. DAVIS, ASST. SEC. ASAP# 3988863 05/19/2011, 05/26/2011, 06/02/2011, 06/09/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE: Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Westbrook Homes, NW, Inc. as Grantor, to U.S. Bank Trust Company, N.A. as Trustee, in favor of U.S. Bank N.A. as Beneficiary, dated June 8, 2006, recorded on June 20, 2006 in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, Record No. 2006-42394 and amended by the various amendments to that certain Trust Deed, recorded on July 9, 2007 in Record No. 2007-37785, February 4, 2008 in Record No. 2008-05203, June 23, 2008 in Record No. 2008-26726 and October 6, 2008 in Record No. 2008-40742, all in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, and which was assigned to Acquired Capital I., L.P. in the Assignment of Oregon Trust Deed, Security Agreement and Assignment of Rents and Leases recorded on October 25, 2010 in Record No. 2010-42331 in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, covering the following described real property situated in that county and state: Lot 8 Westbrook Village, Bend, OR 97702, more fully described as follows: Lot Eight (8), WESTBROOK VILLAGE, PHASE II, Deschutes County, Oregon. Michael E. Knapp was appointed successor trustee by an Appointment of Successor Trustee

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0210597837 T.S. No.: 11-00466-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of October 24, 2008 made by, DAVID WHITSON, as the original grantor, to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the original trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as the original beneficiary, recorded on October 31, 2008, as Instrument No. 2008-44137 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of Trust"). The current beneficiary is: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 175964 The portion of Lot Numbered One (1) in Block Numbered Five (5) of DANA-BUTLER, Deschutes County, Oregon, more particularly described as follows, to-wit; Beginning at the Southeast comer of said Lot Numbered 1; thence Northerly along the East line of said Lot a distance of 249.67 feet; thence Westerly along a line parallel with the North line of said Lot numbered 1 a distance of 175 feet; thence Southerly along a line parallel to the East line of said Lot numbered 1 a distance of 249.67 feet, to the Southerly line of said Lot numbered 1; thence Easterly along said South line a distance of 175 feet to the point of beginning. EXCEPTING THEREFROM Parcels One (1) and Two (2) of Partition Plat 1995-15, a parcel of land located in a portion of Lot One (1), Block Five (5), of DANA-BUTLER in Section Twenty (20), Township Fifteen (15) South, Range Thirteen (13), East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon. EXCEPTING THEREFROM that portion of Lot One (1), Block Five (5), DANA-BUTLER, Deschutes County, Oregon, more particularly described as follows: Commencing at the Southeast corner of said Lot 1; thence North 00º14'21" West along the East line of said Lot, a distance of 70.00 feet to the true point of beginning; thence continuing North 00º14'21" West along the East line of said Lot 1, a distance of 75.00 feet; thence South 89º21'34" West along a line parallel with the South line of said Lot 1, a distance of 107.20 feet; thence South 00º14'21" East along a line parallel with the East line of said Lot 1, a distance of 75.00 feet; thence North 89º21'34" East along a line parallel with the South line of said Lot 1, a distance of 107.20 feet to the East line of said Lot 1 and the true point of beginning. Commonly known as: 2995 SW 23RD STREET, REDMOND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; and which defaulted amounts total: $14,649.53 as of May 24, 2011. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $150,035.31 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.00000% per annum from April 1, 2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on September 29, 2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and 'Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: May 25, 2011 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Michael Busby, Authorized Signature ASAP# 4007580 06/02/2011, 06/09/2011, 06/16/2011, 06/23/2011

dated February 22, 2011, recorded on February 28, 2011 in the records of Deschutes County, Oregon as Record No. 2011-07675. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor’s failure to pay when due the following sums: The principal sum of $133,698.65, due and payable in full on or before December 1, 2008, together with interest on the principal balance at the rate of Wall Street Prime plus 0.5% per annum; delinquent property taxes, if any; cost of foreclosure report; attorney’s fees; together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of this foreclosure and any further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust. By reason of the default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to-wit: The principal sum of $133,698.65, with interest on the principal balance at the rate of Wall Street Prime plus 0.5% per annum, amounting to $8,870.69 as of July 21, 2010; prepayment premium, if applicable; cost of foreclosure report; attorney’s fees, trustee’s fees, together with any other sums due or that may become due under the Note or by reason of this foreclosure and any further advances made by Beneficiary as allowed by the Note and Deed of Trust. WHERE-

FORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned trustee will on August 12, 2011, at the hour of 10:00 a.m. in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: Deschutes County Justice Building, located at 1100 NW Bond Street, Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the real property described above which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by grantor of the trust deed together with any interest which the grantor or grantor’s successors in interest acquired after the execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of the sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying those sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by

ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word “grantor” includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words “trustee” and “beneficiary” include their respective successors in interest, if any. For more information, contact Michael E. Knapp, Successor Trustee, Michael E. Knapp P.C. 2355 State Street, Salem, Oregon 97301; (503) 391-0664. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: T10-62664-OR Reference is made to that certain deed made by, SUE ANN SMITH as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" IS MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 05-232006, recorded 06-01-2006, m official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No, at page No., fee/Tile/instrument/micro file/reception No. 2006-38163 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 100537 LOT NINETEEN (19), BLOCK ONE (1), NORTH PILOT BUTTE ADDITION, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 1333 NE DEMPSEY DRIVE BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: IN-

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LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SALE Carl W. Hopp, Jr., Successor Trustee under the Trust Deed described below, hereby elects to sell, pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes Sections 86.705 to 86.795, the real property described below at 10:00 a.m. on September 28, 2011 in the lobby of the office of Carl W. Hopp, Jr., 168 NW Greenwood Avenue, Bend, Oregon 97701. All obligations of performance which are secured by the Trust Deed hereinafter described are in default for reasons set forth below and the beneficiary declares all sums due under the note secured by the trust deed described herein immediately due and payable. GRANTOR: LARRY'S LAND COMPANY, LLC. BENEFICIARY: MID OREGON FEDERAL CREDIT UNION. TRUST DEED RECORDED: April 8, 2005, in Volume 2005, at page 21200 Official Records, Deschutes County, Oregon. PROPERTY COVERED BY TRUST DEED: See Exhibit "A": EXHIBIT “A”': Property Description - A tract of land located in the Northwest One-quarter of the Southeast One-quarter of Section Nine (9), Township Seventeen (17) South, Range Twelve (12), East of the Willamette Meridian, Deschutes County, Oregon, being more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Center One-quarter corner of said Section 9, thence along the East-west centerline of said Section 9, North 89° 53' 59" East 194.51 feet to a point on the Easterly right of way of Clausen Drive; thence South 19° 16' 29" West along said Easterly right of way 139.10 feet; thence leaving said Easterly right of way South 62° 05' 34" East 204.29 feet to the True Point of Beginning; thence South 62° 05' 34" East 273.99 feet to a point on the Westerly right of way of the Dalles-California Highway; thence South 24° 11' 32" West along said Westerly right of way 321 .31 feet to the Northerly right of way of Grandview Drive; thence North 64° 47' 20" West along said Northerly right of way 65.46 feet; thence 87.28 feet along said Northerly right of way along a 120.00 foot radius curve right, the chord of which bears North 43° 5712" West 85.36 feet; thence 113.93 feet along said Northerly right of way along a 180.00 foot radius curve left, the chord of which bears North 41° 15' 00" West 112.03 feet; thence North 59° 20' 34" West along said Northerly right of way 4.58 feet; thence leaving said Northerly right of way North 19° 16' 29" East 260.00 feet to the True Point of Beginning. DEFAULT: Failure to pay: 1. Installment payments as follows: December 1, 2010 $4,926.07; January 1.2010 $4,992.11; February 1,2011 $4,992.11; March 1, 2011 $4,992.11; April 1,2011 $4,992.11; TOTAL $24,894.51. 2. Late charges of $500.00; 3. Taxes $20,848.06; 4. Other - Trustee's Sale Guarantee: $1,688.00. SUM OWING ON OBLIGATION SECURED BY TRUST DEED: Principal balance of $719,328.44 with interest at 5.380 percent per annum from February 28, 2011, until paid. Notice is given that any person named pursuant to Section 86.753, Oregon Revised Statutes, has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by curing the above-described defaults, by payment of the entire amount due (other than such portions of principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), and by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale. NOTICE TO TENANTS: If you are a tenant of this property, foreclosure could affect your rental agreement. A purchaser who buys this property at a foreclosure sale has the right to require you to move out after giving you a 30-day notice on or after the date of the sale. If you have a fixed-term lease, you may be entitled to receive after the date of the sale a 60-day notice of the purchaser's requirement that you move out. To be entitled to either a 30-day or 60-day notice, you must give the trustee of the property written evidence of your rental agreement at least 30 days before the date first set for the sale. If you have a fixed-term lease and cannot provide a copy of the rental agreement, you may give the trustee other written evidence of the existence of the rental agreement. The date that is 30 days before the date of the sale is August 29, 2011, the name of the trustee and the trustee's mailing address are listed on this notice. Federal law may grant you additional rights, including a right to a longer notice period. Consult a lawyer for more information about your rights under federal law. You have the right to apply your security deposit and any rent you prepaid toward your current obligation under your rental agreement. If you want to do so, you must notify your landlord in writing and in advance that you intend to do so. If you believe you need legal assistance with this matter, you may contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included within this notice. If you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines, you may be eligible for free legal assistance. Contact information for where you can obtain free legal assistance is included within this notice. OREGON STATE BAR, 16037 SW Upper Boones Ferry Road, Tigard, Oregon 97224, (503)620-0222, (800)452-8260, http://www.osbar.org. DIRECTORY OF LEGAL AID PROGRAMS: http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. Dated this 2nd day of May, 2011. CARL W. HOPP, JR., Successor Trustee, 168 NW Greenwood Avenue, Bend, OR 97701. (541)388-3606.

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LEGAL NOTICE OREGON TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No: L522904 OR Unit Code: L Loan No: 1000017531/HAUN Investor No: 4003069181 AP #1: 106654 Title #: 110039666 Reference is made to that certain Trust Deed made by BRADFORD D. HAUN, KAREN HAUN as Grantor, to WESTERN TITLE AND ESCROW as Trustee, in favor of BANK OF THE CASCADES MRTG. CENTER as Beneficiary. Dated April 22, 2003, Recorded April 28, 2003 as Instr. No. 2003-27802 in Book --- Page --- of Official Records in the office of the Recorder of DESCHUTES County; OREGON AND AN ADDENDUM TO NOTE DATED 04/22/03 covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: LOT 5 AND THE EAST 1/2 OF LOT 6, BLOCK 153, SECOND ADDITION TO BEND PARK, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. TOGETHER WITH THAT PORTION OF VACATED ALLEY THAT INURES THERETO BY REASON OF VACATION ORDINANCE NO. NS-1666, RECORDED OCTOBER 4, 1996 IN VOLUME 424, PAGE 2883, DESCHUTES COUNTY RECORDS. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said Trust Deed and a Notice of Default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE $216,475.25 INTEREST @ 4.8750 % FROM 01/01/10 THRU 03/10/11 $12,605.17 ACCRUED LATE CHARGES $259.32 IMPOUND/ESCROW DEFICIT $3,073.87 RECOVERABLE BALANCE IN THE AMOUNT OF $823.00 $823.00 Sub-Total of Amounts in Arrears:$233,225.21 Together with any default in the payment of recurring obligations as they become due. ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and Trust Deed, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to reinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior liens or encumbrances, property taxes, and hazard insurance premiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. The street or other common designation if any, of the real property described above is purported to be : 45 SW ROOSEVELT AVENUE, BEND, OR 97702 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above street or other common designation. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said Trust Deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: Principal $216,475.25, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from 01/01/10, and such other costs and fees are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the undersigned trustee will, on July 18, 2011, at the hour of 10:00 A.M. in accord with the Standard Time, as established by ORS 187.110, INSIDE THE MAIN LOBBY OF THE DESCHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW BOND, BEND , County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, (which is the new date, time and place set for said sale) sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantor had or had power to convey at the time of execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with any interest which the Grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in O.R.S.86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation of the Trust Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. It will be necessary for you to contact the undersigned prior to the time you tender reinstatement or payoff so that you may be advised of the exact amount, including trustee's costs and fees, that you will be required to pay. Payment must be in the full amount in the form of cashier's or certified check. The effect of the sale will be to deprive you and all those who hold by, through and under you of all interest in the property described above. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The Beneficiary may be attempting to collect a debt and any information obtained may be used for that purpose. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If available, the expected opening bid and/or postponement information may be obtained by calling the following telephone number(s) on the day before the sale: (714) 480-5690 or you may access sales information at www.tacforeclosures.com/sales TAC# 937449 PUB: 06/02/11, 06/09/11, 06/16/11, 06/23/11 DATED: 03/10/11 CHRISTOPHER C. DORR,LLC, OSBA # 992526 By CHRISTOPHER C. DORR, ATTORNEY AT LAW DIRECT INQUIRIES TO: T.D. SERVICE COMPANY FORECLOSURE DEPARTMENT 1820 E. FIRST ST., SUITE 210 P.O. BOX 11988 SANTA ANA, CA 92711-1988 (800) 843-0260

STALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS AND / OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 06/01/2009 PLUS LATE CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADVANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE. Monthly Payment $ 1.205.74 Monthly Late Charge $52.13 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said stints being the following, to-wit: The sum of $181,989,83 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.875% per annum from 05-01-2009 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 09-02-2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURT-

HOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97703 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this no-

tice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at WWW.FIDELITYASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: April 25, 2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR TITLE SERVICES INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 JAMES M. DAVIS, ASSISTANT SECRETARY ASAP# 3981749 05/12/2011, 05/19/2011, 05/26/2011, 06/02/2011

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: T11-76067-OR Reference is made to that certain deed made by, DOUGLAS J. LAUDE AND NANCY J. LAUDE as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of SOUTH VALLEY BANK & TRUST, as Beneficiary, dated 12-14-2005, recorded 12-15-2005, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. at page No. , fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2005-86093 , and as modified by the Modification of Deed of Trust recorded on 10-04-2006, Book , Page , Instrument 2006-66941 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: VPN: 177284 A PARCEL OF LAND LOCATED IN THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) OF SECTION 28, TOWNSHIP 17 SOUTH, RANGE 14 EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) OF SAID SECTION 28, THENCE NORTH 87º17'48" WEST ALONG THE NORTH LINE OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) 2626.64 FEET TO THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4); THENCE SOUTH 01º09'54" EAST ALONG THE WEST LINE OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) 1309.26 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH DIAMETER REBAR: THENCE LEAVING SAID WEST LINE SOUTH 86º40'43" EAST, 1314.52 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH DIAMETER REBAR; THENCE NORTH 01º10'20" WEST 1098.48 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH DIAMETER REBAR; THENCE NORTH 79º50'50" EAST 684.44 FEET TO A 5/8 INCH DIAMETER REBAR; THENCE SOUTH 88º24'33" EAST 634.96 FEET TO THE EAST LINE OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) OF SAID SECTION 28; THENCE NORTH 01º10'54" WEST ALONG THE EAST LINE OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER (SE 1/4) 60.00 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING. Commonly known as: 62605 DODDS ROAD BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes; the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: INSTALLMENT OF PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PLUS IMPOUNDS AND / OR ADVANCES WHICH BECAME DUE ON 05/01'2010 PLUS LATE CHARGES, AND ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, BALLOON PAYMENTS, PLUS IMPOUNDS AND/OR ADVANCES AND LATE CHARGES THAT BECOME PAYABLE. Monthly Payment $3,621.48 Monthly Late Charge $157.34 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of 5488,861,63 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6,25% per annum from 04-01-2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 09-01-2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR 97701 County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86,753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. For sales information, please contact AGENCY SALES AND POSTING at WWW.FIDELITYASAP.COM or 714-730-2727 Dated: April 25, 2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY AS TRUSTEE C/O CR TITLE SERVICES INC. P.O. Box 16128 Tucson, AZ 85732-6128 PHONE NUMBER 866-702-9658 REINSTATEMENT LINE 866-272-4749 JAMES M, DAVIS, ASST SEC ASAP# 3982010 05/12/2011, 05/19/2011, 05/26/2011, 06/02/2011

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