Bulletin Daily Paper 6-04-13

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $

TUESDAY Jijne4,2013

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SPECIAL INSERT

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

LEGISLATURE

Governor pushesaid for timber

Footlone's bigmove

— Dozens of volunteers move thousands of pairs of shoes across the street to the store's expanded location.BS

More local business

counties

— Meet Bend's SteveBangsund,purveyorofland-based stand-up paddleboards.C6

By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

Grilling ideas —Frompork to potatoes, ideas for outdoor cookery as the temperature

• Tabitha Calhounseeksanswers, andclosure, about herdad's 1999 disappearance

rises.D3

urban foraging —Asect of city dwellers turns to alleys and

medians in search of something for their next meal.A3

Plus: Gardening — what you can plant now.D1 Obituary —U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, a liberal Democrat from New Jersey, left his mark on the lives of millions of

Americans.B5

ln national news —Police may collect DNA when booking

arrestees for serious crimes, the SupremeCourt rules. A2 Anthony Dimaano/ For The Bulletin

Tabitha Calhoun holds a picture of her and her father, Jerry Calhoun, at her home in San Francisco.uHe was a terrific, terrific father, which is fascinating considering the personal demons he would struggle with when I wasn't there," says Tabitha.

SALEM — The governor told lawmakers on Monday the state needs to have "the backs" of cash-strapped timber counties struggling to stay financially afloat. "We can't sit idly by and watch these counties and citizens slip into potentially grave situations in respects to public safety," Gov. John Kitzhaber testified to a House Rules Committee. The committee considered a handful of bills Monday aimed at providing relief for the counties, which have long relied on diminishing federal timber subsidies. The governor spoke of hearing "truly chilling testimony" coming out of counties where dwindling budgets have already forcedthem to release inmates early and cut the number of patrol officers. A story aired on National Public Radio last month included an audio clip from a woman who called 911 as an abusive ex-boyfriend tried to break into her house in Josephine County. SeeCounties/A4

EDITOR'5CHOICE By Sheila G. Miller •The Bulletin

Wall Street

buys big in weak home markets By Nathaniel Popper New York Times News Service

The last time the housing market was this hot in Phoenix and Las Vegas, the buyers pushing up prices were mostly small time. Nowadays, they are big time — Wall Street

big. Large investment firms have spent billions of dollars over the last year buying homes in some of the nation'smost depressed markets. The influx has been so great, and the resulting price gains so big, that ordinary buyers are feeling squeezed out. Some are already wondering if prices will slump anew if the big money stops flowing. "The growth is being propelled by institutional money," said Suzanne Mistretta, an analyst at Fitch Ratings. "The question is how much the change in prices really reflects market demand, rather than one-off market shifts that may not be around in a

couple years." Wall Street played a central role in the last

housing boom by supplying easy — and, in retrospect, risky — mort-

he Crook County Sheriff's Office has one cold case: the 1999 disappearance of Prineville resident Jerry Dale Calhoun. But if Jerry's daughter has anything to do with it, the case won't stay cold for too much longer. Tabitha Calhoun, 32, began investigating her father'sdisappearance in October, and has turned up new leads and developed new theories on what might havehappened to her dad as part of a memoir she is writing. "Even if I found bones, I would be so satisfied," she sa>d. Jerry, a machinist who worked at his father's shop in Terrebonne, was last seen by his wife, Jan, leaving their Prineville home on May 30, 1999. His family reported him missing six days later, the same day his car was found at milepost 69 on U.S. Highway 26 near Mount Hood. Search teams from Wasco

Cold caseclues tp

,t

Jerry Dale Calhoun went missing in May1999 from his Prineville

home. Days later, his car was found by the side of the road near

Government Camp.

Uncommon trial: pirates on U.S.soil By Shashank Bengali Tribune Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Long before a retired Southern California couple and two friendswere shot and killed aboard their sailboat off the Horn of Africa in February 2011, the threat from Somali pirates was

frighteningly clear. Since 2005, heavily armed Somalis in jury-

Carfound Courtesy Tahitha Calhoun

rigged speedboats had

Highway 26 near milepost 69

ille and Clackamas counties scoured the area where his Subaru was found, but uncovered no clues. His body has never been found. Tabitha grew up in

Beaverton. Her parents divorced when she was 3, but Jerry was always involved in his daughter's life. See Calhoun/A5

hijacked scores of oil tankers, cargo ships and private yachts, holding hundreds of crew members hostage for lucrative ransoms. The

.' Bend,

brigands had crippled ship-

Andy Zeigert i The Bulletin

ping in some of the world's busiest sea lanes, costing companies an estimated $5 billion a year. SeePirates/A6

In19th century D.C., aluxurybrothel at a time ofbattle By T. Rees Shapiro The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Mary Ann Hall was once among the most rich, popular and powerful women in Civil War Washington. Before she died in 1886 at 71, she had garnered a national reputation for integrity, charm and utmost discretion.

O

Read two other stories,

about a Confederate

soldier in the family tree

and overlooked stories denddulletin.com/extras Hall was the city's Civil War madam and a top-dollar prostitute.

Her legacy was lost to history until the mid-1990s, when archaeologistsuncovered the remnants of her large home under what is now the National Museum of the American Indian on the national Mall. The scientists discovered what was perhaps the most distinguished and luxurious

brothel in the city during the 19th century. The finely appointed establishment stood four blocks south of the Capitol, certainly a convenience for Hall's elite clientele who worked a short walk away. "It was first class, easily one of the top 10 brothels in the city," said Donna Seifert, an

archaeologist who helped dig up Hall's home. What remains not as well known are the particulars of Hall's life. One fact about Hall, however, was apparent to archaeologists: She loved to serve bottles of champagne to her clients. See Madam/A4

The Bulletin

+ .4 We userecycled newsprint

gage financing. Now, investment companies like the Blackstone Group have swooped in, buying thousands of houses in the same areas where the financial crisis hit hardest. SeeHousing/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 80, Low 47

Page B6

INDEX At Home D1 - 6 C lassified Et -6 D ear Abby D6 Obituaries B 5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports D6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 IV/Movies

AnIndependent Newspaper

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IRS COmmiSSianer —His agency under relentless fire, the new head of the Internal RevenueService acknowledged to Congress

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on Monday that American taxpayers no longer trust the IRS amid a

growing number of scandals — from the targeting of conservative political groups to lavish spending onemployeeconferences. But Acting Commissioner Danny Werfel declared he was "committed to restoring that trust." He said he has installed new leadership at the

agency and is conducting a thorough review of what went wrong and how to fix it.

TIIrkiSll prOtOStS —Turkish riot police launched round after By Robert Barnes

following an unrelated 2009 arThe Washington Post restforassault. WASHINGTON — A dividLaw enforcement has found ed Supreme Court ruled Mon- DNA to be a powerful tool in day that police may take DNA solving cold cases, and the fedsamples when booking those eralgovernment and 28 states arrested for serious crimes, allow the practice. narrowly upholding a MaryAs with other recent court land law and opening the door decisions involving the Fourth to more widespread collection Amendment's " right of t h e of DNA by law enforcement. people to be secure in their The court r uled 5-4 that persons, houses, papers, and government has a legitimate effects, a g ainst u n r easoni nterest in c o l lecting D N A able searches and seizures," from arrestees,just as it takes the justices split in an unusual photographs and collects fin- fashion. gerprints. Rejecting the view The dissenterswere three of that the practice constitutes an the court's liberals plus conserunlawful search, the majority vative Justice Antonin Scalia, said it was justified to establish who amplified his displeasure the identity of the person in by reading a summary of his custody. dissent from the bench. "DNA identification repre"The court has cast aside sents an important advance in a bedrock rule of our Fourth the techniques used by law en- Amendment law: that the govforcement to serve legitimate ernment may not search its citpoliceconcerns foras long as izensforevidence of crime unthere have been arrests," Jus- lessthere is a reasonable cause tice Anthony Kennedy wrote to believe that such evidence for the majority. will be found," Scalia said from The decision will reinstate the bench. Alonzo Jay King Jr.'s convicIn his dissent, Scalia wrote tion in a 2003 rape in Salisbury that the majority's attempts to on Maryland's Eastern Shore. justify the use of DNA as an He was connectedto the crime identification tool "taxes the after a DNA sample was taken credulity of t h e c r edulous."

He added, "Make no mistake about it: As an entirely predictable consequence of today's decision, your DNA can be taken and entered into a n ational DNA database if you are ever arrested, rightly or w rongly, and for whatever reason." Scalia was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Kennedy wrote that the decision was more limited than that, noting that DNA can be taken only from those suspected of "serious" crimes. He said that police have a legitimate interest in identifying the person taken into custody and that the DNA samples could make sure that a dangerous criminal is not released on bail. "By comparison to this substantial government interest and the unique effectiveness of DNA identification, the intrusion of a cheek swab to obtain a DNA sample is a minimal one," Kennedy wrote. Justice Stephen Breyer — who most often votes with Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan — joined the opinion, as did Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito.

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tors in the Syrian town of Qusair are treating hundreds of wounded

in battle-damaged homesand underground shop storerooms. Amid relentless shelling, there aresome1,000 wounded, at least 300 of them seriously and in need of immediate evacuation, one doctor coordinating medical efforts in the town said Monday. But so far, the

forces of President BasharAssad's regime, backed byfighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group, are barring any exit as they try to crush rebels and retake the town.

Miiitary SOXIIal aSSaIIitS —In a rare joint appearance, the uniformed leaders of the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps,

as well as the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are scheduled to testify today before a Senate panel about what the Pentagon has de-

scribed as an"epidemic" of sex crimes in the ranks. Lawmakers are floating a variety of bills to attack the problem but have not settled on

a single approach. Fort Hood shooting —The Army psychiatrist charged in the deadly 2009 Fort Hood rampage hinted Monday that he would try to justify the attack, revealing for the first time his defense strategy

after a military judge said hecould represent himself — and question the soldiers he is accused of shooting — during his upcoming trial. Maj. Nidal Hasan did not elaborate when announcing he would use a

"defense of others" strategy, which requires defendants to prove they were protecting other people from imminent danger.

Irall SallotlOIIS —The Obamaadministration escalated sanctions

mestic employer and revenue generator for the lranian government.

China SpaCe miSSian —China's next space mission begins this

spokesman, whom theagencydidnotname. Kerry preSSureS ISrael —Israel cannot afford to wait to make peace with its Arab neighbors, Secretary of State John Kerry argued Monday, saying that demographic forces and rising militancy are working against America's top ally in the region. "What happens in

the coming days will actually dictate what happens in the coming decades," Kerry said, referring to whether Israeli and Palestinian leaders will try again to broker peace.

GiOdai armS treaty —More than 65 countries signed the landmark treaty regulating the multibillion-dollar global arms trade Mon-

day and the United States announced it will sign soon, giving a strong

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Syria conflict —Cut off for three weeksby aregime siege, doc-

be launched on a rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China, the Xinhua news agency reported, citing the

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orbiting module, a spokesmanfor the space program said Monday. The astronauts will be on board aShenzhou10 capsule, which will

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dogan rejected the protesters' demands that he resign and dismissed the demonstrations as the work of Turkey's opposition. President

rency and seriously disrupt its automotive industry, a significant do-

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competing positions on the unrest. Prime Minister RecepTayyip Er-

pressure against Iran on Monday for the third time in a week, taking actions that could further weaken the country's already-devalued cur-

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round of tear gas against protesters on Monday, the fourth day of violent demonstrations, as the president and the prime minister staked

kickoff to the first major international campaign to stem the illicit trade in weapons that fuel conflicts and extremists. The announcement by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry that the U.S.— the world's largest arms dealer — will sign is critical, but the treaty's ultimate strength rests on support by all major arms exporters and

importers. — From wire reports

The Associated Press

Medical staff wait near a poultry processing plant that was engulfed

by a fire Monday in northeast China's Mishazi township. The massive fire broke out at the poultry plant early Monday, trapping workers inside a cluttered slaughterhouse and killing more than a hun-

dred people, reports and officials said. Chinese news reports said many of the workers who died were hindered from leaving the factory, the Baoyuanfeng Poultry Plant, because

the exits were blocked or inadequate. Survivors described panic inside the burning plant, as employees unfamiliar with any fire escapes trampled and jostled one another through smoke and flames to reach exits that turned out to be locked. The disaster comes at a time of growing international concern over factory safety in Asia, after accidents that have taken more than a thou-

sand lives. Theworst was a collapse of a garment factory complex in Bangladesh on April 24 that killed more than1,120. — New YorkTimes NewsService

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

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tr O zz O aeO ao OaDsO The estimated jackpot is now $15.4 million.

Prosecutor: Manninglet secrets intoenemyhands By David Dishneau and Pauline Jelinek

Prosecutors said they will p resent evidence that b i n The Associated Press Laden requested and obtained FORT MEADE, Md. — Pfc. from another al-Qaida memB radley Manning pu t U . S. ber A f ghanistan battlefield military secrets into the hands reports an d S t ate D epartof Osama bin Laden himself, ment cables published by prosecutors said Monday as WikiLeaks. the Army i n telligence anaWearing his dress blue unilyst went on trial over leaking form, the slightly built Manhundreds of thousands of clas- ning peered through his small sified documents. eyeglassesat a slide show of Manning's lawyers coun- the p r osecutor's h our-long tered by arguing that he was opening statement, watching a "young, naive but good- on a laptop computer at the intentioned" soldier w h o se defensetable.The slide show struggle to fit in as a gay man also was projected on three in the military made him feel larger screens in the courthe "needed to do something room, which had seats for only to make a difference in this about 50 people. world." Later, almost motionless, the Manning, 25, has admitted soldier from Crescent, Okla., turning over the material to sat forward in his chair, lookthe anti-secrecy website Wiki- ing toward his defense attorLeaks, pleading guilty earlier ney, David Coombs, throughthis year to charges that could out his 2 5-minute opening bring 20 years behind bars. statement. But the military pressed ahead C oombs s ai d Ma n n i n g with a court-martial on more struggled to do the right thing serious charges, including aid- as "a humanist," a word ening the enemy, which carries a graved on his custom-made potential life sentence. dog tags.

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TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Tuesday, June4, the 155th day of 2013. There are 210 days left in the year.

CULTURE

STUDY

HAPPENINGS

Gene

SOmaii pirateS — Three

therapy,

accused pirates face trial in Norfolk, Va., on charges of murdering four Americans off the horn of Africa in 2011.A1

City dwellers interested in healthier food, botany and sustainability are increasingly turning to urban

Turkey —A public workers union plans aone-day general

foraging to find ingredients for their next meal. Weeds, flowers and the like are harvested from the

strike, underscoring another grievance against Prime Minis-

alleys, median strips and parks in their neighborhoods. Now that's locally sourced food.

against the flu?

ter RecepTayyip Erdogan.

HISTORY Highlight:In1913, British

suffragist Emily Davison was struck and mortally injured after moving into the path of a

horse during the running of the Epsom Derby; her exact motives remain unclear. In 1783, the Montgolfier brothers first publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon, which did

not carryany passengers, over Annonay, France. In1812, the Louisiana Terri-

tory was renamedthe Missouri Territory. The U.S. House of

Representatives approved a declaration of war against Britain. In1892, the Sierra Club was

incorporated in SanFrancisco. In1919, Congress approved the19th Amendment to the

U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing citizens the right to vote

regardless of their gender, and sent it to the states for ratification. In1939, the German ocean liner St. Louis, carrying more than 900 Jewish refugees from

Germany, wasturned away from the Florida coast by U.S. officials. In1940, during World War II, the Allied military evacuation of more than 338,000 troops from Dunkirk, France, ended. In1942, the World War II Battle of Midway began, resulting in a decisive American victory against Japan and marking the turning point of the war in the Pacific. In1943, the president of Argentina, Ramon Castillo, was

overthrown in a military coup. In1954, French Premier Jo-

seph Laniel andVietnamese Premier Buu Loc signed treaties

in Paris according "complete independence" to Vietnam. In1972, a jury in San Jose, Calif., acquitted radical activist Angela Davis of murder and

kidnapping for her alleged connection to a deadly courthouse shootout in Marin County in 1970. In1986, Jonathan Jay Pollard,

a former Navy intelligence analyst, pleaded guilty in Washington to conspiring to

deliver information related to national defense to a foreign

government, specifically Israel. (He is serving a life prison term.) In1998, a federal judge sentenced Terry Nichols to life in prison for his role in the Okla-

homa City bombing. Ten years ago:Martha Stewart stepped down asheadof her media empire, hours after federal prosecutors in New York charged her with obstruc-

tion of justice, conspiracy, securities fraud and lying to investigators.

Five yearsago:Barack Obama,havingclinched the Democratic presidential

By Susan Svrluga

By Jon Cohen

The Washington Post

ScienceNOW

WASHINGTON Bill Schindler ran his hand over a patch of violets, ignoring the nearby rat trap and the brown

In 2009, a global collaboration of scientists, public health agencies and companies raced to make a vaccine against a p andemic influenza virus, but most of it wasn't ready until the pandemic had peaked. Now, researchers have come up with an alternative, fasterstrategy for when a pandemic influenza virus surfaces: Just squirt genes for the protective antibodies into people's noses. The method — which borrows ideasfrom both gene therapy and vaccination, but is neither — protects mice against a wide range of flu viruses in a new study. James Wilson, a leading gene therapy researcher at the University of Pennsylvania, credits the idea to a meeting with Bill Gates in April 2010. Wilson had studied whether a harmless gene therapy tool called adeno-associated virus (AAV) can serve as a gene delivery vehicle to treat inherited diseases like cystic fibrosis and hemophilia. Building off o f a n imal studies done by AIDS researchers, h e w o n dered whether a specially engineered AAV could deliver the genes encoding influenza antibodies to the cells that line people's airways. If it worked, these so-called epithelial cells would produce influenza antibodies right at the site where the virus attempts to establish an infection. Unfortunately, AAV had petered out in about three months in a monkey experiment in Wilson's study. Wilson says that three months of protection is "not optimal" during an influenza pandemic. Wilson sees his work as a stopgap measure until researchers figure out how to make a vaccine that triggers broadly neutralizing antibodies. But as of now, despite intense efforts, researchers have been unable to design a vaccine that triggers the production of these powerful molecules. "We still have

paper bag crumpled around an empty can of Colt 45 malt liquor. He was searching for flowers to eat. In the alley next to him, a

group of people were crouched in the dust, harvesting curlyleaf dock. They had all paid to eat weeds. After signing up for Schindler's "urban foraging" class at the Hill Center, a community center in Washington's Capitol Hill neighborhood, they spent the morning

,, <'-Mi.. I

rk IJ

rooting out scraggly greens from cracksinsidewalks, then cooking them into an elaborate, tasty lunch. With growing concern about overprocessing, pesticides, preservatives, steroids and antibiotics in food, some people are searching out wild food and sources so local that they step on them on the way to catch a train to work. "There are no w i l d b o ar here for me to hunt," attorney Jenny Hoffpauir said lightly after helping to gather leaves from the rusty base of a traffic light on Pennsylvania Avenue, "but I can get a little purslane." Foraging i s i n c r easingly mainstream. There are forag-

ing groups and digital maps such as www.fallingfruit.org. The former chef at Ripple restaurant i n W a shington's Cleveland Park neighborhood was an advocate of foraging, and his replacement, Marjorie Meek, said several of her cooks occasionally bring in things such as greens and nasturtiums from the city's Rock Creek Park to add to dishes. Still, the thought of truly urban found food gives her pause. "All the animals and everything, it's a little...," she said, letting the sentence trail off. Not to S chindler. "We're meant to b e h u nter-gatherers," he said. A prehistoric archaeologist and anthropologist at Washington College on Maryland's Eastern Shore, h e s t u dies early technologies and how p eople used them t o f e e d themselves. Schindler grew up hunting, fishing, trapping and searching for edible plants in the woods. Years as a Division I college wrestler, with the sport's constant emphasis on making weight, kept him focused on food and nutrition. A decade or so ago, he got serious about tr ansforming the way he and his family eat, so that he could know what was in the food and where it came from. Now he describes cornfields as"genocide" because all the other plant species are w iped out, cooks with animal fats such as tallow and schmaltz, and stays up til 2 a.m. some nights fer-

;

:

'i(W

i

Photosby Eva Russo/The Washington Post

Patrick and Laurie Miller, of Laurel, Md., sample freshly picked sorrel gathered during a class on urban foraging in Washington's Capitol Hill neighborhood. Students learned how to recognize and root out edible plants and fruits from the median strips and alleys of their neighborhoods, and then how to cook a meal using some of the ingredients they found. Welcome to urban foraging. the fresh-corn flavor. Not for

him, he said. "My dog's probably about to go to the bathroom on it. But if people want to, I'm all for it." Schindler t oo k o u t h is wooden digging stick — modeled after p r i m itive t o o ls — and went after some wild garlic in a weedy tree box. When he heard sirens, he said, only half-joking, "Are they coming for us?" I Schindler told his students to be cautious and to get to Elaine Nagey, of Sherwood Forest, Md., picks berries off of an know the plants well — well Asiatic Mulberry tree during a class on foraging in the Capitol Hill enough to know, for example, neighborhood of Washington, D.C. "I'm realizing I live in a grocery that the seed of the yew will store that no one else knows about," she said. stop your heart, but not the delicious berry around it. "Look at this!" he called out, lamb's-quarters and a siatic showing them a fat-stemmed menting things. He has never felt so healthy, dayflowers. poke plant. It's toxic, he said, "Look at this!" he kept say- unless you cook it properly. he said. "But it's worth it, because it The people who took the ing. "This is so fantastic to class — including a h ome- eat!" tastes so fantastic." maker, an artist, a computer Elaine Nagey was thinking B esides, he a r g ues, t h e security analyst and a curator about her yard near Annapolis, risks you k now ar e b etter at the Smithsonian's Freer and Md. These were all the things than those you don't — such Sackler Galleries in Washing- s he was yanking ou t a n d as what's in that ready-made ton — brought an interest in throwing away. "I'm realizing food you grab at the store. healthier food, botany and I live in a grocery store that On the class's way back to sustainability. no one else knows about," she the Hill Center kitchen to grind Schindler took it easy on said. sheep sorrel for pesto and feast them: He didn't push larvae, J ason Smith w a l ked b y on the fat bags of food they had earthworms orcrickets. with his beagle, Tanner, who found, Louise Cort stopped at He didn't e ven m e ntion stopped to eatsome greens. a run-down apartment buildthe meat available all around "Why n ot , i f th a t ' s t h e ir ing on a big corner lot. "Look!" she said with de(rats). thing?" he said, looking at the Instead, he told them how a group eating chickweed, their light. "A whole yard full of certain type of dogwood tree eyes closedto concentrate on weeds!" would produce fat, golf ballsized fruits they could pop in their mouths and savor. He pulled a giant chickenof-the-woods mushroom from an oak tree on the grounds of the Capitol. He handed them lemony leavesofwood sorrelto chew.

i

/

He

a ways to go," he says, "and until that happens, we'll just keep plugging away at this."

p u l led p a l e-green

mulberries from a tree and grinned as they gasped at the sweetness. "You're just eating summer right now," he said. Then he wandered over to an alley, plucking m allows and

nomination, picked Caroline Kennedytohelp him choose a

running mate. Oneyearago:Al-Qaida's second-in-command, Abu Yahya al-Libi, was killed in a U.S. drone strike in North Wa-

ziristan, Pakistan.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Bruce Dern is77.

e

Musician Roger Ball is 69. Actress-singer Michelle Phillips is 69. Actor Keith David is 57. Actress Lindsay Frost is 51. Actor-comedian Rob Huebel

Now offering PE MCO Insurance. Call today for a no-obligation insurance review.

is 44. Actor NoahWyle is 42. Rock musician Stefan Lessard

(The DaveMatthews Band) is 39. Actor TheoRossi is 38. Country musician Dean Berner

(Edens Edge) is32. Model Bar Refaeli (reh-FEHL'-eej is 28. Rock musician Zac Farro is 23. — From wire reports

Bill Schindler, who teaches a class on urban foraging in Washington's Capitol Hill neighborhood, holds a handful of lamb's-quarters. It's not just foraging for edible plants in urban areas. Ever tried larvae, earthworms and crickets?

David Chaney dchaneyoselco.org

501 NE Bellevue Drive Bend, OR 97701

541-312-1809

SELCO I N S II R A N C E S ER V I C E S D70343 4(2013


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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 20'I3

Counties

ing Josephine County. Curry C o unty C o m m isContinued from A1 sioner David B r ock S m ith In the case of a public safety fiscal emergency, the bill would T he dispatcher told h e r seemed more open to a possiallow for consolidation or merger of units of local governments nobody could respond. The ble income tax than his Joseto provide services. The bill also would allow for an imposition man was able to break into phine County counterparts, if of a temporary income tax assessment on residents of the the woman's house and latthe tax rate was kept low. affected counties. A county's governing body would have to er pleaded guilty to sexual A nother b il l b e i n g d i s approve the tax. assault. c ussed, House B i l l 2 2 0 6 , One bill up fo r c onsiderwould let the state take over ation, House Bill 3453, would some of the county's duties, allow the governor to impose such as collecting taxes and The bill would allow the secretary of state to assume electiona local income tax f o r 1 8 election-related o bligations. related duties in a county for which the governor has declared a months to help fund the counAnd yet another idea, embodpublic safety services emergency due to fiscal distress. The bill ty's public safety obligations. ied in House Joint Resolution also would allow the state to take over other functions of a county, Legislative leaders and coun2, would let voters in the counincluding providing services for veterans, collecting property ty officials would have to sign ties decide if they wanted to taxes and conducting building inspections. on to the idea before the tax merge with another county. could be imposed. The state R ep. Bruce H a n na , R would also kick in taxpayer Roseburg, a key l awmaker funds to match the county's sioners had to agree before would prohibit the state from in crafting th e l e gislation, contributions. the income tax could go into imposing an income tax. said it's a short-term fix. The "If these counties reach a effect. J osephine County C o m - long-term solution, he said, point where life and property But Rep. Paul Holvey, Dmissioner Cherryl W a l k er is harvesting the timber that are truly in danger, the tools Eugene, asked the governor, said, "People in J osephine dominates the counties. "Our federal timber policy I have now are prettymuch what if t h e c ounty doesn't County want to solve their isn't helping those counties to m obilizing t he Nati o n al sign on or agree there is a own problems." Guard," the governor said. state of emergency'? Curry County, which has be successful, quite the oppo"There is no spelled out ob- one of the lowest property If this bill w ere to pass, site," Hanna said. he said, it "at l east allows ligation I'm aware of," Kitz- tax rates in the state, asked He made the analogy of us to have a c o nversation haber said. voters to help fill a gap in the b eing on a b oat i n a l a k e with the majority of county But, he added, it s eems county's budget from declin- and w a t c h in g som e o ne commissioners." there is a "moral obligation" ing federal timber subsidies. struggling. "You wouldn't want your Lawmakers on th e c o m- to do something. Voters did not approve the mittee made it clear a k ey Several people from Jo- measure, which would have neighbor to sink if you could component of the legislation sephine C o u nt y te s t i fied raised about $4.5 million in help it," Hanna said. was local involvement. The against the bill, noting they the first year. A similar mea— Reporter: 541-554-1162, majority of county commis- believe a c o u nt y c h a r ter sure went down in neighborIdalze@bendbulletinicom

HouseBill 3453

HouseBill 2206

Smithsonian lnstitution via The Washington Post

A portion of an1852 lithograph by Edward Sachse shows the location of Mary Ann Hall's brothel (at arrow), which rarely attracted official scrutiny. It was four blocks south of the Capitol in Washington. One official D.C. count during the 1860s concluded that there were about 500 "bawdy houses" and nearly 5,000 prostitutes.

Madam Continued from A1 Although Hall's name comes up in census records and newspaper accounts, the details of her life and

career were largely forgotten until Seifert and her colleagues came along. With the support of the Smithsonian I n s t itution, Seifert and her team were dispatched to conduct a survey of t h e p r o posed Southwest site of the National M u seum o f t he American Indian.

Housing

While digging up the

Continued from A1 Blackstone, which helped define a period of Wall Street h yperwealth, h a s bo u g h t some 26,000 homes in nine states. Colony Capital, a Los Angeles-based i n v e stment firm, is spending $250 million a m o nth an d a l r eady owns 10,000 properties. With little fanfare, these and other financial companies have become significant l a ndlords on Main Street. Most of the f irms ar e r e nting ou t t h e homes, with the possibility of unloading them at a profit when prices rise far enough. While these investors have not touched many h ealthy real estate m a rkets, t h ey

l and, t he y f o u n d g i l t edged porcelain, c orset fasteners,seeds from exotic berries and coconuts and bones from expensive meats, including t u r t le. T hey also f o und " h u n dreds" of Piper-Heidsieck c hampagne c o rk s a n d wire bales in the midden, or trash heap, buried near Hall's property.

Single and apparently

are among the biggest buy-

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edge ofrising home prices nationwide.

Firms confident Some see the emergence of Wall Street buyers as a market-driven answer to the nation's housing ills. Investment companies are buying up rundown homes at a time when ordinary people can't or won't. Nationwide, 68 percent of the damaged homes sold in April went to investors, and only 19 percent to first-time h omebuyers, according t o Campbell Hous i n gPulse. That is helping to shore up prices and createconfidence in the broader markets. " When people w r ite t h e story of this housing recovery, these investors will be seen to have helped put the floor under the housing market," said David Bragg, an analyst at Green Street Advisors. "In some of the key markets, that contributed to the recovery." The story, though, often looks more complicated on the ground. Joe Cusumano, a real estate agent in Riverside County, Calif., said that in recent months 90 percent of his business had been for companies like Invitation Homes, a Blackstone subsidiary. Home values in Riverside County have risen by 15 percent in the last year, according to CoreLogic. B ut Cusumano s ai d h e wondered if faraway investors would properly maintain the homes they buy. He said that Invitation Homes had been willing to pu t m oney into the properties, but he was not so sure about the other players. He also worries what will happen when these investors start selling, as they inevitably will. "The thing that scares me is the values going up so quickly," said Cusumano. "That's what happened before and that's what's scaring me. Is

this going to happen again?" The idea of investors' buying homes and renting them out is nothing new. But in the past, landlords were almost always local. Now big investors are using agents like Cusumano to stake a claim to entire neighborhoods. In a sign of the potential peril ahead, some of the investment firms have recently

never married, Hall resided at 3 4 9 M a r y land Ave. in a three-story brick home starting in the 1840s. There, she ran a business that flourished in Washington for nearly 40 years, especially during the Civil War, when soldiers deploying to b attle passed through town. One count by D i strict of Columbia officials during the 1860s concluded that there were about 500 "bawdy houses" and nearly 5,000 prostitutes. Hall's br o t he l was ranked by the city's provost marshal as one of the best and biggest, with a peak of 18 "inmates." "All who were rich and i mportant went to M a r y Ann Hall's," said Robert S. Pohl, author of the 2012 book "Wicked Capitol Hill." An 1864 article in the Washington Evening Star referred to Hall's business as the "old and well established house" on Maryland Avenue. be kept green by many who The brothel "i n q u es- knew her sterling worth." t ion has had — i t i s n o exaggeration to say — a national reputation for the last quarter century," according to the paper. Seifert said an inventory of Hall's home shortly after

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ers in s t r uggling areas of the country where housing prices have been increasing the fastest. Those gains, in turn, have been at the leading

Emily Berl / New York Times News Service

Joe Cusumano, a real estate agent in Riverside, Calif., says that in recent months, 90 percent of his business has been for large housing investment groups. He worries about whether distant investors will properly maintain the homes they buy.

"It's just a strange market. We are in uncharted territory." — Joe Cusumano, real estate agent

taken the first steps to cash out. T he investment fund f i nanced by C o lony C apital filed last week to go public, the second firm to do so in May. Another early player in the business, the Carrington Holding Co., said last week that prices had risen too far, leading the firm to begin selling some of its holdings. Fitch Ratings warned last Tuesday that prices for singlefamily homes in the regions with the biggest housing rebounds had been outpacing the growth rate in the local economies and "could stall or possibly reverse" if big investors start selling. "We see economies that c ontinue to struggle — w e don't see them recovering enough to justify this drastic increase in prices," said Mistrettaat Fitch. Despite the recent gains, housing prices remain well below their precrisis highs. In Riverside,for example, home values are still down more than 40 percent from their 2006 records, according to CoreLogic. To the extent that the housing r ebound i s b e c oming overheated insome pockets, it does not carry th e most significant risks of the real estate boom that came crashing down in 2008. The new i nvestment groups are n ot h eavily i n d ebted, m a k i n g them less vulnerable to small movements i n r e a l e s t ate values, and the risks are not spread as widely through the financial system.

'Buyer's market' Nearly all of the big investors have insisted that they plan to rent the houses they are buying for years to come. The Blackstone unit, Invitation Homes, has opened 14 offices across the c ountry t o serve the homes it h a s bought, a spokesman for the

firm said. At A m erican Residential Properties, which went public in May, the chief executive, S teve Schmitz, said that i f other firms start selling their houses, " we'll step up o u r

buying." He added: "We still think t hat w e 'r e i n a buye r ' s market." Yet some investment com-

panies are already pulling back in the markets that had seen the fastest growth. In Phoenix, the percentage of all house purchases involving investors fell to about 25 percent in March from a high of 36 percent lastsummer, according to th e C ampbell H ousingPulse Survey. T h e same survey shows that investors have been increasing their presence in new areas like Florida and California. All of this has made it hard for house hunters like Jeff Martin, who is looking to buy a fixer-upper i n R i v erside County. Martin, 58, has made offers on 15 houses over the last year. Last Wednesday, he received his latest rejection.

On most of the houses, Martin has lost out to investors offering all cash. Martin, a retired Navy veteran, puts much of the blame on banks t hat h av e b een holding onto empty houses, lowering the supply of available homes. He said h e h a s t r o uble faulting the investors, given that he was involved in real estate financing during the last boom. But he is worried that if mortgage rates begin to rise he will lose out on his opportunity t o b uy . R i sing mortgage rates could a l so lead to a broader slowdown in the real estate recovery. C usumano said t hat t h e investors he works for have been trimming b ack t h eir purchases in the area. His agency closed on three houses for investors in May, down from eight in February. But the fevered pitch of the market has not died down. O n Friday, one of h i s c l i ents closed on a house just a month after it went on the market. There were eight bidders, despite a listing that said "NEEDS TLC!!" Cusumano's client won the house only after agreeing to go $500 over the asking price of $194,500. "It's just a strange market," he said. "We are in uncharted territory."

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her death catalogued its opulence. Hall had plush red furniture, carpets from Belgium, oil paintings, feather pillows, marble-topped tables and an icebox. Judging by the quality of the decor, Hall must have had high-profile clients, she said. Moreover, Seifert said, unlike other brothels, Hall's e stablishment r arely c a m e under official scrutiny. "She ran the kind of house that didn't c ause t r ouble," Seifert said. "It was a place of serious discretion.She ran a pretty straight business." Records indicate that Hall retired in the late 1870s. She later rented her home to a women's clinic. "The whole prostitute with a heart of gold — that was pretty much Mary Ann Hall," Pohl said. Hall died of a cerebral hemorrhage Jan. 29, 1886, according to her death certificate. Her net w o rt h w a s a b out $90,000, equivalent to $2 million in today's economy. Her home later served as a YMCA before it was demolished during the 1930s. The government eventually bought the property as part of an expansion of the Mall. H all's legacy lives on at Congressional Cemetery on Capitol Hill, where she was buried. Her plot is one of the cemetery'slargest, according to cemetery archivist and docent Dayle Dooley. Hall rests in the northeast section of the cemetery, next to her m o ther an d s i ster. Their plot is yards from the grave of FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. Hall's headstone is a large, pale monument with a somber, female figure sitting on top. Her Evening Star obituary gave no hint of Hall's profession. But it s eloquence reflected the influence she had in Washington's public and private circles. "With i n t egrity u n q uestioned, a heart ever open to appeals of distress,a charity that was boundless, she is gone but her memory will

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TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

"What I do know is somebody saw him at some point. It was Memorial Day weekend. There was traffic, it was a long drive. He was in contact with people who may have had any number of reasons to not let us know what plans he had."

Calhoun Continued from A1 They talked on the phone n early every d ay, an d h e picked her u p e very o ther weekend ready for whatever adventure they could find. When Tabitha was in sixth grade, her father confessed that he'd become addicted to methamphetamine. "From that point until I was about 16, it was a roller coaster of sobriety and of using," she said. "I can't count the number of times he got clean and then relapsed." But the drug abuse did not affect Jerry's role in Tabitha's childhood. "He was a terrific, terrific father, which is f ascinating consideringthe personal demons he would struggle with when I w a sn't t h ere," she sard. Jerry moved to Prineville in 1996 to try t o get clean once and for all. He worked in his dad's machine shop, got married, and seemed to be

"I started to think a little more critically about it," she said. "I'd long assumed he'd wandered off and killed himself. I'd never really even read through the police reports." S he i nterviewed f a m i ly members and law e nforcem ent. She has b egun t h e sometimes dangerous process of tracking down drug addictsand dealers from Jerry's past. In October, Tabitha started writing a memoir, which she hopes to call "How to Find a Skeleton in the Woods."

A new clue?

staying off drugs. "He was a totally different person. He was putting on weight; his skin cleared up," Tabitha said. But in the months leading up to his disappearance, according to family, Jerry was at a Redmond bar when he was approached by someone

Anthony Dimaano / For The Bulletin

Tabitha Calhoun looks through the original report concerning her father's disappearance at her home in San Francisco. Calhoun is investigating and writing a book about her father's disappearance in 1999.

looking for a drug connection. Tabitha wonders if Jerry might have relapsed at that point. Jerry was on an upswing when he d i sappeared, his older brother Gary Calhoun, 60, said. He wa s w o rking,

making good money andin the process of buying their father's machine shop. In the final two or three months before his disappearance, "he looked great, and we figured he had kicked the drugs completely," Gary said. But, th e f a m il y l e a rned after Jerry's disappearance, that wasn't the case. According to Gary, Jerry's wife told another brother that her husband would go on a binge about once a month, then return upset he couldn't kick his meth addiction. Tabitha and her father had an argument about child support a week and a half before Jerry's disappearance. They hung up on each other. It was the last time Tabitha spoke to Jerry.

Jerry called Larry to discuss sulclde. "He said before, 'If I can't get a hold on this thing, one of these days I'm just going to disappear, and nobody is going to know how to find me,'" Larry said. "I figured for a long time that's exactly what he'd done."

A search, but no clues

For three days, searchers combed the area around Jerry's car. According to a police report from the Wasco County Sheriff's Office, the search teams located no evidence t hat Jerry had been in t h e area, even though the search team leader estimated the ground search team had a 70 to 75 p ercent probability of detecting a person in the area, and the K9 units that were deployed had a 60 to 65 percent probability of detection. Inside the car, Larry said, was a propane tank. The poJerry goes missing lice reports indicate Jerry's Larry Calhoun, 61, lives in c ellphone and s everal f u l l Gresham and is the oldest of beers were also in the vehicle, the four Calhoun brothers. as well as a gas receipt from He and Jerry were working a few days prior and a receipt together on some projects for for adult videos. His wallet a Bend company, as well as was missing. for some of Larry's clients. T he c ar , T a b ith a s a i d , In early June 1999, Larry re- was never fingerprinted. No ceived a call from the compa- one traced the calls on his ny: Jerry hadn't delivered the cellphone. "I searched about a week parts. Larry called his father, who hadn't seen Jerry. for him," Gary said, "until I "I needed to go over there finally threw in the towel." to find out what was going For years, th e C a l houn on, at least as far as the parts family lived with their own and my (customers) were con- ideas of what happened. cerned," he said. Larry began to think the As L arr y h e aded d own location where Jerry's car U.S. Highway 26, he saw a was parked seemed strange, Subaru on the side of the road and considered foul play, that near milepost 69. It looked "he'd gotten himself into a like Jerry's car. bad situation." But he said he "I probably went another doesn't have anything to base couple miles before I thought that on. It's just speculation. the car looked too much like Gary thought his brother it, so I went back," Larry said. had likely killed himself. "For me personally, it's a Larry couldn't be sure it was his brother's car, but he little bit depressing, for sure," got the license number and Gary said. "You would think continued on. Later that day after all this time someone he verified it was his broth- would have found his bones. er's car, and Jerry's wife said I kind of expected that, beshe hadn't seen him in a few cause Mount Hood is welldays. t raveled w it h h i k er s a n d I t wasn't t h e f i r s t t i m e hunters and skiers." Jerry had gone missing. DurGary also thinks there's a ing his long battle with meth possibility that hi s b r other addiction, he'd often take off just left. "It wouldn't surprise me into the woods for a few days when he was high, Gary said, i f Jerry decided to pull u p because he would get para- stakes and start a new life, noid and think law enforce- if he didn't want to visit this ment was out to get him. life on other people," he said. Larry filed a missing per- "That wouldn't surprise me, sons report, then headed back but on the other hand if he over the mountains, where he did that I'm surprised that met searchers from Wasco he didn't get in touch with us and Clackamas counties near aftera few years or whatever. his brother's vehicle. So I think he's gone. Now I Upon learning about the wonder whether it was by his l ikely r e lapse, bot h G a r y choice or not." and Larry initially believed For Tabitha, it was a long their brother had gotten high, journey to even think about then left his car and gone into her father's disappearance. "One thing I've sort of comthe forest. Larry thought he might have been stuck in un- pared it to is l ike a glacier seasonably cold weather and slowly thawing out," Tabitha died from exposure, but both said. "After he disappeared, b elieved Jerry m i ght h a ve survival was first and forekilled himself. most. I had things I needed There had been signs Jerry to do. I had to go to work, and was depressed. Larry s aid I did, the next day. I had to Jerry sometimes thought he pay my rent. Those kinds of wouldn't be able to stay away things. Life doesn't stop for from meth much longer and you just because you have should kill h i mself instead. something tragic happen to A bout a month and a h a l f you." before h i s d i s appearance, A fter couple a of years, she

And then Tabitha caught a break, albeit a small one. Last month, Tabitha said, Gary got a call from a collection company asking for Jerry. Tabitha spoke with the collection agent and learned a card had been opened in Jerry's name on July 24, 1999, almost two months after his

disappearance.

Tabitha hoped the Crook County Sheriff's Office would dropped out of school and be able to use the credit acmoved to P o r tland, strug- count to get a court order for gling with insomnia and oth- a credit report. That way, she er troubles. thought, she could see how "The issue with dying ver- many other accounts were sus disappearing is you don't o ut there an d w h er e a n d know," she said. "Any day you when they'd been opened. wake up and that could be the But the sheriff's office was day you find something out unable to get that court order, or he reappears. Tabitha said, and she hasn't "I guess in a way I never yet found accessto Jerry's fiwanted to move on, so I just nancial records. put everything on ice." Crook County UndersherOnce m a r r ied, T a b itha iff John Gautney said his ofsaid, she felt secure enough fice followed up on the new to start looking into the past. credit card lead, but it led noAt first, Tabitha planned to where. "Quite frankly, (at this write about grief and Jerry's point) we have no leads," he struggle with addiction. said. "So basically as far as

AS

t hen and t r y ing t o g e t a s much information from them as I could," he said. Tabitha doesn't believe her father would kill himself, and she doesn't believe a person who was going to kill himself would buy gas and adult vid— Tabitha Calhoun eos in the days leading up to his suicide. Gary told Tabitha her father sold his gun before his disappearance, and we're concerned, our case is left a bar telling his dad he'd inactive." see him the next day. She's It's complicated by the fact suspicious of the area he disthat Jerry went missing in appeared from. Jerry often Wasco County, but the miss- spent time in th e Ochocos, ing person report was taken she said, and knew the area in Crook County. well. "Why drive all the way to Larger countiesoften have r etired detectives wh o i n - Government Camp, w h ere vestigate cold cases. Crook the woods aren't as dense or County does not. remote as the ones 30 min"We barely have enough utes from your b ackyard?" manpower to handle the hot Tabitha wondered. cases," Gautney said. "But if Tabitha knows the clues she leads come in, we'll follow up sees are nebulous. She knows and move that case back up s ome people m i ght t h i n k to the top and work the leads she's grasping at straws. until we can't go any farther." But, she said, "I'm not alone With the credit card infori n my d i ssatisfaction w i t h mation, Tabitha has a new the status quo assumption of theory. She believes her fa- what happened to him." "If there was some evither likely relapsed and found himself in financial trouble. dence to find out what really "My guess is it would have did happen, find his remains been something he felt was somewhere, it'd be horrible overwhelmingly unscalable," but it would at least be closhe said. To escape, she be- sure," Larry said. lieves Jerry h a d s o meone In a perfect world, Tabitha pick him up near Government said, she'd find some new Camp and take him some- shred of evidence that would where off the radar. When lead to a r e s olution. She he ran out of cash, Tabitha thinks that even this many believes, he opened a credit years later, there's a chance card account. for a break in the case. "It's been a really long time "What I do know is someand we were very close, so body saw him at some point," to imagine that he's missed she said. "It was Memorial every birthday and my wed- D ay weekend. There w a s ding and every milestone in traffic, it was a long drive. He my life, that's a little hard to was in contact with people imagine," Tabitha said. "It's who may have had any numpossible. Problems get so big ber of reasons to not let us in people's lives, and you feel know what plans he had. " I t h in k i t ' s compelling like the only solution is to run." enough to continue looking. T he credit c a r d m a k e s I might not find anything, but G ary think f ou l p l a y w a s that's secondary. The effort is what's important to me at this involved. "If I could turn the clock point." back, I would be searching — Reporter: 541-617-7831, for his acquaintances back smiller@bendbulletin.com

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

Pirates

"The moment the ships relax or the navies withdraw, the pirates will be back in force. It's very easy for them to remobilize."

bouti when pirates seized the 58-foot-long sloop on Feb. 18, Continued from A1 2011. But as three accused pirates Scott Adam, a former TV face trial today in N o rfolk, producer who h a d w o rked — Pottengal Mukundan, director, International Maritime Bureau IN 2011 ... on "The Love Boat" and "The Va., on charges of murdering • 176 attacks the four Americans, the first Dukes of Hazzard," and his • 25 ships captured U.S. trial of its kind in modwife had spent seven years • $160 million in ransom ern times, Somali piracy is in lowed pirates to operate from said Pottengal M u k undan, sailing the globe, distributing money sharp decline. safe havens along the lawless director of the International Bibles at many of their stops. An international naval opernorthern coast. But unclassiM aritime B ureau, a t r a d e After getting an SOS, the SO FAR THIS YEAR ... ation, combined with aggresfied U.S. naval intelligence re- group. "It's very easy for them U.S. Navy sent the Sterett, a • Three attacks sive prosecutions and shipports still include near-weekly to remobilize." destroyer, to tail the sailboat • Last successful attack board security measures, have sightings of suspicious fishing The four Americans aboard through the Gulf of Aden and was more than a year ago nearly halted the Indian Ocean boats — some carrying board- the Quest — Scott and Jean try to persuade the pirates to crime wave in the last two ing ladders and weapons — in Adam of Marina del Rey and surrender. But n e gotiations years. Dozens of nations have shipping lanes off Somalia. their friends, Robert Riggle broke down after four days. "The moment the ships re- and Phyllis Macay, of Seattle U.S.prosecutors saythepirates deployed warships, U.S. Navy U.S. officials say Somalia's drones have provided aerial growing p o l i tical s t a bility lax or the navies withdraw, the — were sailing west f r om then killed the four hostages. surveillance, European j ets could end the anarchy that al- pirates will be back in force," Mumbai, India, toward DjiNavy S EAL s s u bsequently have struck pirate lairs, and 21 countries have jailed more than 1,100 suspected pirates. Some governments, including Iran, China and India, also have taken unilateral action, sending warships to escort convoys of tankers and commercial ships through waters once infested with pirates. "It's really remarkable. I hope some historian is watching this," said Donna Hopkins, a U.S. diplomat who chairs the Contact Group on Piracy off the Coast of Somalia, an umbrella group of more than 60 countries and international organizations. "It's totally voluntary; it's not coercive; no one is in charge," Hopkins said. "The simple fact is that everyone hates pirates." Somali pirates, many armed with assault rifles and rocketpropelled grenades, staged 176 attacks in 2011, the year the four Americans were killed. The piratescaptured 25 ships and netted an estimated $160 million in ransom forthe ships and crews that year, according to Oceans Beyond Piracy, an advocacy group based in Colorado.

Somali pirates, then andnow

killed two men and captured 15 others. A federal judge in Norfolk lastyear sentenced one of the group to multiple life terms for trying to negotiate a ransom for the Quest and a second hijacked ship. Eleven others have pleaded guilty or have been convicted of piracy. Each was sentenced to life in prison. Prosecutors are expected to seek the death penalty for the final three — Ahmed Muse Salad, Abukar Osman Beyle and Shani N u r ani S h iekh Abrar — in their trial, set to start this week in U.S. District Court in Norfolk. They have pleaded not guilty.

L;

A drastic drop In contrast, the pirates have launched threeattacks so far this year. The last successful hijacking was more than a year

ago.

or

The international naval response costs more than $1 billion a year, but U.S. officials and shipping industry leaders consider that money well spent. Nearly three-quarters of the world's traded oil and half the container traffic passes through the Indian Ocean. " The sheer weight of t h e military effort has pretty much removed the pirates' ability to operate with impunity," said Royal Australian Navy Capt. R obert Slaven, director o f operations for the Combined Maritime Forces, which has ships from the United States and more than two dozen other countries. It is one of three naval coalitions that has sent armadas to the area. New s e curity m e a sures aboard merchant ships also have helped. Some crews now unroll razor wire over the sides to stop pirates from clambering aboard, fire high-powered water cannons or ear-piercing sirens to keep small boats at bay, or take refuge in fortified rooms. New industry guidelines instruct ships to travel in packs, and at greater speed, when transiting h i g h-risk a r e as. Experts say half the ships in the region now carry teams of armed guards, many hired from privateAmerican security companies, to ride shotgun against pirate attacks. U.S. officials say Somali pirateshave never hijacked a ship that had armed guards. "This has been a real gamechanger in the effort to combat piracy," Andrew Shapiro, an assistant secretary of State, told Congress in April. Kevin Doherty, president of Nexus Consulting Group, based in Arlington, Va., said his company had put armed guards on about 450 ships in the Indian Ocean since 2009. None have engaged in a gunfight, but they have fired warning shots three times, he said. "The Barbary pirates went away," said Doherty, referring to the North African privateers who terrorized the Mediterranean from the 16th to 19th centuries. "Same way, Somali piracy is on its way out."

Save on yourgrocery purchase of $50 or more with your safeway club card and this savings Award. *Use this savings Award on any shopping trip you choose at any oregon safeway store (except MiltonFreewater) and S.w. washington stores serving clark, wahkiakum, cowlitz, skamania and Klickitat counties by 6/11/13. This $10.00 savings Award excludes purchases of Alcoholic Beverages, Fluid Dairy products, Tobacco, Us postage stamps, T r i met Bus/commuter passes, Money o r ders, container Deposits, Lottery, Gift c ards, Gift ce rt ificates sales, Au pharmacy prescription purchases, safeway

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

www.bendbulletin.com/local

BRIEFING

Convicted felon found with guns

Fol lo w i ngup on Central Oregon'smost interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to newsCmbendbulletin.com. O To follow the series, visit www.bendbulletin.com/updates.

REDMOND'S EVERGREEN ELEMENTARY

tacted William Paden Hill, 23, in a vehicle at

Shopko after learning he may beselling methamphetamine. Hill,

a convicted felon, is not allowed to possess firearms. Police searched the car and found three handguns, two of which had serial numbers that

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

had been filed off. That evening, police

executed a searchwarrant on Hill's house at 2020 N.E. Holliday Ave., and found two sawed-

off shotguns, a knife

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and methamphetamine.

One of the shotguns was inoperable.

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Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour best waterfall photos for

another special version

of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at www.dendbnlletin

.com/waterfalls and

Photos by Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

we'll pick the best for publication.

Originally Redmond Union High School, built in1922, this building was most recently Evergreen Elementary School. It was purchased by the City of Redmond nearly three years ago and currently sits shuttered. Several buildings occupy the block-large property.

Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number.Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

• Renovation costs are estimated at $6 million By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ...................541-617-7829 Redmond ...........541-548-2186 Sisters ................541-548-2186 La Pine...............541-983-0367 Sultriver.............541-383-0367 DeSChgteS.........541-383-0376

Crook.................541-983-0367 Jefferson...........541-383-0367 State projects....541-410-9207 Salem .................541-554-1162 D.c.....................202-662-7456 Business ...........541-983-0360 Education..........541-383-0367 Health..................541-983-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety........541-983-0387 Special projects...541-617-7831

Mirror

Pon 's uture c oo remainsem near sti not e252 el'Cl S urc ase certain •

Bend Police arrested a man in the Shopko

parking lot on June 1 after finding him in possession of several handguns. Bend Police con-

~

WHATEyER

June marks the three-year anniversary ofthe closure of Evergreen E lementary i n Re d m ond's c i t y center. By September 2010 the new Sage Elementary had opened its doors, and within a m onth of t h e n ew school opening the city of Redmond had inked a deal with the Redmond School District to purchase Evergreen, which encompasses an entire city block, for the dirt-cheap price of $250,000. Earlydiscussions centered around the city renovating the building for a new city hall, but today Evergreen and its outbuildings sit empty, little changed sincethe classrooms were cleared out. "The policy of the council is to preserve the building," said Redmond Mayor George Endicott, adding the city has no plan to sell the site. "I think most people recognize what a beautiful building it is and continue to hope we can do something with it."

City of Redmond Public Works Supervisor Curt Petersen walks through a large classroom at Evergreen Elementary School on Friday during a tour. A hole in the sheetrock wall is among the signs of disrepair. Engineering an d a r c hitectural studies have estimated it will cost $6 million to renovate Evergreen, which served as Redmond's first high school for 50 years. The high cost of upgrades has stymied the city's efforts to move forward because a bond would be needed to

complete the project if no partner could be found. Early in the process the city entered talks with Deschutes County, which wanted to consolidate services in the north county to a single site. See School /B3

Mirror Pond project manager Jim Figurski said Monday it is taking longer than expected for a consultant to produce images of how the pond would look in the future under differentmanagement scenarios, but he expects they will be ready next week. Sediment is accumulating into mudflats behind Pacificorp's Newport Avenue Dam, which created Mirror Pond on the Deschutes River. Local officials have discussed possible solutions for years. Figurksi also met with officials behind closed doors Monday toupdate them on research into ownership of the land beneath Mirror Pond. Outside of that meeting, Figurski said he has seen documentation of who owns land under the pond, but did not identify the owner. Government agenciesneed permission from any landowners before they dredge the pond and Figurski said officials will probably keep the identity of the property owner secret until negotiations are complete. Figurksi, an employee of the Bend Park 8 Recreation District, presented the information to the Mirror Pond Steering Committee, which includes representatives of the city and park district, a private developer, PacifiCorp and the civic group Bend 2030. Figurski said he had already given preliminary feedback on images of the pond to consultant GreenWorks. GreenWorks developed aerial views of how Mirror Pond would look in the future under each scenario, plus views of the pond from a point in downtown Bend and from the Galveston Avenue bridge. There will also be a questionnaire to gauge residents' opinions of the four options, although Figurski did not present that list of questions Monday. Figurski will present information about the four alternatives at public meetings, which are listed on the website mirrorpondbend.com. Images of the alternatives for the pond will also be posted on the website. The first scenario under consideration is to make no changestothe Deschutes River and allow mud flats to continue developing in Mirror Pond. See Pond /B2

Sudmissions: • Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

CELEBRATING ACENTURY, PLUS SOME

• Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news@bettdbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

.-;tt@7' By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin *

• School news andnotes: Email news items and notices of general interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens'a cademicachievements to youth@bendbttlletitt.com. Email collegenotes, military graduations andreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

E

4PAi'

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

Fire seasongearsup; visible smokeis likely

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Pat Nixon reads a card signed by residents and staff at Pilot Butte Rehabilitation Center as her daughter, Linda Frantz, looks over her shoulder during a party for her 105th birthday on Monday. Nixon spent the day celebrating with four generations of her family who live in Central Oregon.

A prescribed fire is planned this week for woods near Sunriver and La Pine. Firefighters plan to burn as many as 266 acres in the Pringle Falls Experimental Forest, about 13 miles southwest of Sunriver and II miles northwest of La Pine, said Lauren Miller, a fire planner for the Deschutes National Forest. If the weather cooperates, fires today, Wednesday and Thursday may put up smoke plumes visible from the Wild River, Fall River Estates and Ponderosa Estates subdivisions. While the fires will be

about 25 miles from Bend, smoke could be on the horizon. "There definitely could be something seen from Bend," she said. The smoke won't be as dramaticas a prescribed fire on April 23 just south of Bend. That 213-acre fire put up smoke visible from much of town and prompted numerous calls to 911. In mid-May, firefighters burned about 382 acres in the experimental forest. The fires this week are part of the same research project. Miller said they'll likely be some of the last prescribed fires this spring in Central Oregon. See Fires /B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

E VENT TODAY 'ROUND NEVADACLASSIC CAR TOUR: A classic car show stops in Bend in support of Healthy Beginnings; $10 for no host sandwich bar; 11:30 a.m.; Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-6357 or http://nevada-rides.com/new/the2010-tour/cars-of-the-2013-tour/. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: Featuring a screening of "Happy," a documentary film exploring secrets of the emotion; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.;Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; 541-408-4998, bendfarmersmarket@gmail.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. SISTERSRODEO: The "Xtreme Bulls" bull-riding event followed by the rodeo dance; $15, children under12 free, $5 for dance; 6:30 p.m. for rodeo, gates open 4:30 p.m., 9 p.m. dance; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. THE HONEYCUTTERS:The North Carolina Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. THREE SINGER-SONGWRITERS: Downcast folk music by Sean Spellman (Quiet Life), Philippe Bronchtein (Hip Hatchet) and Bill More (Hawkmeatj; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. facebook.com/thehornedhand.

THURSDAY SISTERS RODEO SLACK PERFORMANCE:Slack performance, with breakfast concessions; free; 8 a.m., breakfast opens 7 a.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. sistersrodeo.com. FILM FESTIVALSCREENING: A

Fires Continued from B1 While the fi r es south o f Bend are planned, a bl a ze burning along the Deschutes River far d ownstream is a wildfire. The3,300-acreGordon Butte Fire started Sa turday, and high winds Sunday pushed the fire from the east to the west side of the river, said Lisa Clark, spokeswoman for the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. As of Monday evening, the fire was 50 percent contained and full containment was expected by Wednesday night. The fire is burning halfway between Wasco and Du fur, between river miles four and 10. "Therereallyare not many cities near there,"she said. "Access is definitely a challenge." The lower Deschutes River is still open to boating despite the fire burning on both banks south of its confluence with the Columbia River. The fire, which is spreading

through sagebrushand grassland in the Deschutes River canyon, is on a mix of la nd overseen by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management and private land. The BLM hasclosed

AL E N D A R screening of Central Oregon Film Festival winners; free; 3:30 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541-312-1032 or lizg© deschuteslibrary.org. SUMMER READINGPROGRAM: "DIRTY" BOOKS: Librarians discuss different types of "dirty" books from gardening to true crime accounts; free; 6 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "SWAN LAKEMARIINSKY LIVE": A special showing of the Russian ballet company's interpretation of Tchaikovsky's ballet; $12.50; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX,680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. GUATEMALA HABITATPROJECT LAUNCH PARTY: Acelebration of the last two years of work featuring a short video and a presentation by Judy Osgood; refreshments; free; 7-8 p.m.; Bellatazza Roastery, 20712 Carmen Loop, Bend; 541-610-6760 or www.guatemalahabitatproject. com. "THE LARAMIE PROJECT": Advanced Acting students present a staged reading inspired by the events surrounding the 1998 beating death of University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard; $5, free to COCCstudents with I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7532 or Iforeman©cocc.edu. "THE 100 STORY": A one-act play by Edward Albee about a chance encounter between a transient and a book publisher in New York City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. CHAMPIONSHIP: TheAmericana band performs, with Delta Halos and 01' Mount'n Due; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand,507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. reverbnation.com.

FRIDAY FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and foodin downtown Bend andthe

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

Freeadmission;9 a.m .-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-489-4239. THREE SISTERSMARATHON, ~ p SISTERS RODEOPARADE: MARATHONRELAYANDSK FUN Featuring rodeo queens, horses, RUN: The run features a backdrop musical groups, classic cars and of the Three Sisters Mountains more; free; 9:30 a.m.; downtown and parts of the Deschutes River; Sisters; 54 I-549-0121 or www. USATF certified; Portion of the sistersrodeo.com. proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society Relay for Life; CENTRAL OREGONSATURDAY $30 for 5K, $90 Marathon run/ MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts walk, $180-280 marathon relay, from local artisans; free admission; registration requested; 7 a.m. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across marathon, 8 a.m .5K FunRun;Eagle from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. Redmond; 541-388-1860 or www. ~ 'ti . centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. threesistersmarathon.com. CRUISE TOTHECENTEROF RUN BABYRUN: A 5k and 10k race Andy Tullis i The Bulletin file photo OREGON:Seecars in a variety of The Bend Farmers Market begins this week. It will be open 3-7 p.m. to benefitthe Madras Pregnancy makesand models;withvendors Resource Center; $20; 8:10 a.m., Wednesdays throughout the summer. and train rides; free for spectators, registration 7-8 a.m.; Sahalee Park, donations of nonperishable B and Seventh streets, Madras; 541- foodaccepted;10a.m .-3 p.m ., 390-0219 or www.runbabyrun.org. gates open 8 a.m.; Crook County Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541throughout Bend. 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. CENTRAL OREGONRETIRED Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., TEACHERSPLANT SALE: Featuring Prineville; 541-815-3320 or www. OPEN MIC: An opportunity for "THE LARAMIE PROJECT": annuals, perennials, decorations, ccrodders.com. community members to add their Advanced Acting students gardening supplies and more; voice to the literary scene; free; present a staged reading inspired SISTERS ART INTHEPARK: proceeds benefit the Redmond 5:30 p.m.-8:00 p.m., participants by the events surrounding the Featuring arts, crafts and a silent Opportunity Center Foundation please arrive at 5 p.m.; The Nature 1998 beating death of University auction benefiting the Make-Aand Central Oregon Community of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., of Wyoming student Matthew Wish Foundation of Oregon; free; College scholarship programs; Bend; 541-647-2233, info© Shepard; $5, free to COCCstudents 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Creekside Park, free admission; 8:30 a.m.-2 p.m.; thenatureofwords.org or www. with I.D; 7:30 p.m.; Central Oregon U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Zion Lutheran Church,1113 S.W. thenatureofwords.org. Community College, Pinckney Avenue; 541-420-0279 or www. Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. centraloregonshows.com. "HOW DIDWE GET HERE?" 541-382-7044. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7532 LECTURESERIES: David THE BACKYARDFARMERS I LOVE RHUBARBFESTIVAL: or Iforeman@cocc.edu. Montgomery presents"The Rocks MARKET: Free; 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Dutch-oven cooks prepare a variety Don't Lie: A Geologist Investigates "THE 100 STORY": A one-act play Celebrate the Season, 61515 of rhubarb dishes; with live music, Noah's Flood"; $10, $50 for series, by Edward Albee about a chance American Lane, Bend; 541-chicken vendors, a car show and more; $8 for Sunriver Nature Center encounter between a transient or bendsummermarket©gmail.com. proceeds benefit S.C.O.O.T.R; free; members, free for students with and a book publisher in New York 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; L8 S Gardens and SISTERSRODEO: Featuringa PRCA City's Central Park; $10; 7:30 p.m.; ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Land Clearing, 50808 S. Huntington rodeo performance with roping, Community College, Hitchcock Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Road, La Pine; 541-536-2049 or riding, steer wrestling and more; Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881, www.lsgardens.com. $12-$18, infants must have ticket;1 Bend; 541-593-4394. derek@volcanictheatrepub.com or p.m.; SistersRodeo Grounds,67637 LA PINEYA YA SISTERHOOD YARD www.volcanictheatrepub.com. ORGAN CONCERT:OrganistMark SALE: Featuring treasures for sale in U.S. Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or "COMPANY": A timeless and Oglesby performs "Patriarchs, www.sistersrodeo.com. conjunction with Rhubarb Festival; Prophets 8 Poetry: Old-Testament brilliant musical comedy by Stephen proceeds benefit Can Cancer; FILM FESTIVALSCREENING: A Organ Literature from Genesis Sondheim about a single man in a free;9a.m.-4 p.m.; LBS Gardens screening of Central Oregon Film to Jeremiah"; free, donations sea of married couples; $21 adults, and Land Clearing, 50808 S. Festivalwinners free 2p.m. accepted; 7 p.m.; St. Francis $18 students and seniors; 8 p.m., Huntington Road; 541-536-2170 or Downtown Bend Public Library, of Assisi Catholic Church & champagne black tie reception at 7 yayasisterhood130gmail.com. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1032 or School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. lizg©deschuteslibrary.org. LET'S PULL TOGETHER:Features 54 I -382-3631. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626. an event to eradicate noxious weeds EXHIBIT TOUR AND FILM SISTERS RODEO: A PRCArodeo BROTHERS OFTHELAST WATCH: followed by lunch, music, prizes SCREENING:Features a special performance with steer wrestling, The Portland rock band performs, and beverages; bring a weeding tour of the John Muir exhibit and a roping and more; family night; with The Religious Rite; $5; 8 tool; check website for lunch and screening of "John Muir in the New $12, childrenunder12free; 7 p.m.; p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. site locations specific to Bend, World," a documentary exploring Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879. Redmond, and La Pine; Sisters Muir's life and legacy; free for Highway 20; 541-549-0121 or www. JIVE COULIS: The Ashland funkon June15; free;9a.m.-noon for members, $3 non-members; sistersrodeo.com. weeding; noon at lunch locations; rock-blues band performs; $5; reservation requested; 6 p.m.; High Bend location; 541-610-3309 or "ROBOT 8 FRANK": A screening 9:30 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. of the PG-13 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., www.letspulltogether.com. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Bend; 541-388-8331. MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: www.highdesertmuseum.org. f

have yet to determine the specific cause, Clark said. About 80 firefighters with The bal qs OREGON the BLM and U.S. Forest Service, with four fire engines and Gordon a helicopter, are on the fire, Butte Clark said. The North Sherfire .Maupin man County Rural Fire Protection District is also fighting the fire on private land. The fire started on the first WarmSprings day of BLM fire restrictions CS along the Lo wer Deschutes Camp River. On Saturday, the agency Madras Sherman implementeda ban on campfires and grills on the river, © Sisters Prineville J as well as the John Day River portions of the Crooked ~ g$ 7 R edmong and River. White gas or propane Bend stoves are still permitted, as is smoking as long as it is in a closed vehicle or in a boat on Prescrided the water. burn Campfires and gr i lls a r e e LaPi n e still OK in the La Pine Fire I District, although the district Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin Monday closed residential debrisburning forthe rem ainder land in and near the burn area of wildfire season. The district to camping. will likely allow debris burnThe fire is threatening the ing again in late September Harris Ra nch hi s toric s ite, or early October.Campfires Clark said. Abandoned in the must be in e s tablished fire early 1900s, the watertower at rings, and the district requires the old ranchis a landmarkfor campers to have a bucket of boaters. water and a shovel on hand. Investigators said the fire is — Reporter: 541-617-7812, human-caused although they ddarlingC<bendbuiietin.com WAS HINGTo N

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million, a ccording to the presentation. Continued from B1 Under the fourth option, at A second optionis to dredge an estimated cost of $10.9 milthe pond and remove sediment lion, PacifiCorp would remove but leave the dam in pl ace, the Newport A venue Dam, costing an estimated $3.5 mil- and local agencies would alter lion. Even under this scenario, the river channel to keep water the riverbank would look dif- flowing past private homes on ferent at Drake Park. The park the north side of Mirror Pond district plans to remove exist- and prevent riparian vegetaing walls along the river, "be- tion from growing thick and cause the existing stone and blocking their views, Figurski concrete wall is failing and it sa>db was never reallyconstructed As for the ownership of the carefully," Figurski s aid. A pond, Figurski said governmore natural bank line, Fig- ment agencies would have to urski said, would benefit the order a title search before enhabitat and environment. tering negotiations with any A third scenario calls for the property owner, but the results city or park district to dredge probably would "not be public sediment from the river and until af ter t he tr a nsactions deposit most of it nearby, to were made." "It's not a pu b lic ma tter, build out the riverbank. This would cost an estimated $5.6 it's a p r i vate matter," Fig-

urski said of t h e pr o perty negotiations. The McKay family, whose ancestors were early l andowners in Ben d , c la i m s ownership of most of the land under the pond, although no one has produced documents publicly to substantiate this. There is no evidence in the Deschutes County Assessor's records that the McKay family owns or pays taxes on land under the Deschutes River. Figurski said the title information he examined was commissioned by Bill Smith, a member of t h e st e ering committee who is a l so t h e developer of the Old Mill District. Figurski would not say which title company provided the information. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletirLcom

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TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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AROUND THE STATE Caf Smekieg ball —The Oregon Legislature has voted to make it a crime to smoke in a car with kids. The House approved the bill in

a43-15voteon Monday.Itnow goesto Gov.JohnKitzhaber,anda

By Jeff Barnard

spokeswoman says he intends to sign it. The bill would prohibit driv-

The Associated Press

ers from smoking in cars if a person under18 is present. Supporters say the bill would protect children whoare especially vulnerable to

GRANTS PASS — A new plan for balancing scarce water in the Klamath Basin between fish and farms won't harm salmon or other fish protected by the Endangered Species Act, federal scientists said Monday. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric A d m inistration Fisheries Service and U . S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued what is called a biological opinion for operations on the Klamath Project, a federal irrigation project straddling the Oregon-California border. It covers the effects of the irJeff Barnard/TheAssociated Pressfile photo rigation project's operations An irrigation canal waits for water on the Klamath Reclamation Project near Klamath Falls. Federal on shortnosed suckers and scientists have decided that a new plan for balancing scarce water in the Klamath Basin between fish Lost River suckers in Upper and farms won't harm salmon and other fish protected by the Endangered Species Act. Klamath Lake and other reservoirs, as well as coho salmon, green sturgeon and eulachon ture from the past water man- The plan "provides more certainty in terms of in the Klamath River. agement system,"she said. "It The evaluationrepresents a is onethat provides more cer- water for the (farmers).... And it provides lake "landmark" level of coordina- tainty in terms of water for the levels to help protect endangered suckers." tion between the federal agen- (farmers). It provides a block of — Irma Lagomarsino, NOAA fisheries supervisor cies, as well as integration of water for the river. And it prothe needs of the different fish vides lake levels to help protect species, with an eye toward try- endangered suckers." ing to keep the irrigation projThe Bureau of Reclamation Phillips said low snowpack of water and know what our ect supplied with water, said said this new plan gives them in the mountains and little rain supply is at the beginning of a Laurie Sada, field supervisor far more flexibility than they this spring left them with less season," Greg Addington, difor the Klamath office of Fish had in 2001, when they had to water than in 2010, when they rector of the Klamath Water and Wildlife. shut off irrigation to farms to had to start irrigation late due to Users Association, which repWater levels in l akes for maintain water for fish. lack of water. But the new plan, resents project farmers, said "In the past, volume and dis- implemented before it gained in an email. "Up until now, we suckers and releases down the Klamath River for salmon are tribution of water for coho salm- formal approval, allowed them have never had that luxury. We tied to natural events, such as on, the Klamath Project and to start water deliveries on time like the coordinated approach, rain and snowmelt. That allows suckers were not coordinated," in the spring. which is unique." for storing more water in the said Jason Phillips, Klamath Irrigators said they were unThe Hoopa Valley Tribe is winter, and provides that win- Area managerforthe Bureau of happy there was not enough not satisfied. Spokeswoman ter flows will not be static, said Reclamation. "We factored into water this year but happy the R egina Chichizola said t h e Irma Lagomarsino, supervisor our analysis when the coho are new plan is in place to deal with agencies failed to use the best forthe NOAA fisheries north- needing water and when farm- the shortage. available science, and the plan "It gives us an ability, in ern California office. ers are likely to take water and gives more water to farmers at "In general, it's a huge depar- when suckers need habitat." the future, to manage a block the expense of salmon.

the harmful effects of second-hand smoke. Opponents agree that second-hand smoke is dangerous, but say that the state shouldn't

regulate what drivers do in their own cars. PaSSWOrd laW —TheOregon Legislature has passed a bill prohibiting public and private universities from demanding students or

applicants turn over their usernamesandpasswords to social media sites. In a 57-1 vote on Monday, the Oregon House sent the bill to the

governor's desk. Thebill is partly a response to media reports that some colleges require student-athletes to share links to their social media accounts with coaches and other college staff as a condition of participation. It also would not prohibit the institution from requiring students "friend" or connect with them. The Legislature passed a similar bill safeguarding employees' information last month.

Peftlalld feSefVelrS —The city of Portland is giving up an eightyear battle with federal regulators over covering drinking water reservoirs. The city has resisted costly rules requiring reservoirs to be covered but the last request for a delay was denied. The plan calls for disconnecting a reservoir at Mt. Tabor and closing one of two reservoirs at Washington Park. The other will be covered with a reflection pool, so it will look the same. Two new covered reservoirs will be built at Kelly Butte and Powell Butte.

COpper theft —Coos County authorities are investigating multiple reports of copper theft. The World newspaper reports that the county had four such thefts in recent weeks, and Pacific Power has been victimized seven times since March. Pacific Power spokesman Tom Gauntt says the utility has found culprits in other counties by

offering reward money. He says it has yet to reach that point in Coos County. Sgt. Pat Downing of the CoosCounty Sheriff's Office says he expects copper theft to persist even though scrap metal buyers are now required by law to get identification from sellers.

MMA trainer SentenCed —A mixed-martial-arts trainer has been sentenced to four years in federal prison for selling pot grown under the guise of the OregonMedical Marijuana Program onthe black market. Robert Hisamoto was sentenced Monday in Medford,

three months after he pleadedguilty to conspiracy to manufacture and distribute marijuana. According to a federal affidavit, Drug Enforcement Administration agents found far more than he was legally

allowed to possess during a search of Hisamoto's Ashland home. Despite the excess, many of Hisamoto's patients said they never received their marijuana. Agents determined Hisamoto was selling the pot on the black market. — From wire reports

Ohio mandiesafter jumpfrom Punchbowl Falls Portland elephant The Associated Press HOOD RIVER — Divers on Monday recovered the body of a Cincinnati, Ohio, man who died after jumping off Punchbowl Falls in the Columbia River Gorge, a sheriff sald. The body of Jason Endicott, 25, was found in about 12 feet of water below the cliff where he jumped, Hood River County Sheriff Matt English said. Endicott was part of a group of five people who hiked to the top of the falls late Sunday afternoon, English said. Four of the five jumped into the water. One of the three who survived

was treated for hypothermia. Endicott's body was taken to a funeral home, the sheriff satd. Members of the team that recovered the body hiked 2t/2 miles up the trail with their g ear, then coped w it h t h e rough water below the falls. The hikers who took the

the falls when the temperatures rise. The water looks i nviting a fter a h i k e , b u t

ket that she gave to the jumper who suffered hypothermia. "By the time I got there, jumping is risky, English said, there were about seven peowith the threat of currents ple, and everybody was just and thick sediment making sitting on him with their body the water shallower that it warmth trying to keep him appears. warm because he was so wet A sign a t t h e t r a i lhead and cold," she said. warns that cliff jumping into Sunday's rescue operation plunge actually dropped 80 the shallow pool below the was the second of the weekfeet, jumping from a p o i nt waterfall is illegal and may end at Punchbowl Falls. about 30 feet above the 50result in a $300 fine. On Friday, a search and "There have been problems rescue team helped a man foot-tall falls, The Oregonian reported. here in th e past," Sheriff's who suffered neck and back A television meteorologist Sgt. Pete Hughes said. "It's a injuries after jumping off the estimated the water tempera- dangerous thing to do." falls. The man, whose identity ture to be about 45 degrees. Witness Claudette Rushing was not available, was taken People regularly jump off had an emergency foil blan- to a hospital.

School Continued from B1 But when a foreclosed building in south Redmond became available for $1.4 million in 2011, the county jumped at the chance to have a less expensive option. That building also remains empty and the county has not yet moved any offices. "We're not in a dire rush, we have existing facilities," said Tom A n d erson, Deschutes County Administrator. "But we would like to move forward." County and city o f ficials held a m e eting i n M a r ch, hoping to clarify everyone's position on t h e E v ergreen site, but came away with no consensus. Both groups were worried about space and whether there was enough room for all of Redmond's cityservices and the county's. While the entire block has plenty of space, Evergreen's main historic building isonly 35,000 square feet. "I want us to find a long-term solution (for a new city hall)," said Redmond City Councilor Joe Centanni in an interview after the March meeting. The county, he added, would need to agree to phase out its offices in Evergreen asthe city grew and needed more spaceifthe partnership was to be a viable option. While Commissioner Tony DeBone assured city officials at the March meeting that Redmond would always be the main occupant at Evergreen, Anderson said any relocation of county serviceswould be expected to last 20 to 50 years. Outside of sufficient space

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Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

City of Redmond Public Works Supervisor Curt Petersen walks past weeds on the playground at Evergreen Elementary School. and costs for both parties, the chief concern on Redmond's side of t h e t a ble c entered around the services the county was considering moving to Evergreen: health and juvenile services, a s atellite district attorney's office, community development, and parole and probation. Interim City Manager Sharon Harris told the county representatives she's particularly concerned about the idea of a parole and probation office at the site. As the owner of two rental properties in the n eighborhood, H a rri s s a i d she would testify against such a move if there was a public hearing. County Commissioner Tammy Baney cited the "NOTEs" effect (if NIMBYs are 'not in my backyard', NOTEs are 'not over there either') in locating crucial public services. "Where can we locate something where it doesn't impact anyone at all?" she said. Clear-

ly frustrated with the delay in the Evergreen negotiations, she told the group, "It's time to move from discussion to action." In an interview after the March meeting Anderson said the county hasn't ruled anything out. There's room for everyone if the Evergreen site is

reconfigured — maintaining the historic structure — but the county is steadfast in its goal of consolidating all its services in one place, he added. In a later interview, Endicott suggested that a site near St. Charles Redmond might be better for the county, since many medical services are in the neighborhood, and pointed to a future for Evergreen that might involve some sort of public-private partnership.

"Things (in the economy)

with an office downtown, is anxious for Evergreen to convert to city hall for one main reason: When city services move from their current site across from Centennial Park, that block can be redeveloped into commercial uses t h at will b r ing m or e c ustomers downtown. Finding the perfect occupant for Evergreen is a tough problem, he added. Commercial uses might be too much of a hardship for the neighborhood, but finding municipal uses with no negative consequences is also difficult. Keeping Evergreen in good condition while it awaits its future isn't too difficult, according to Public Works Director Bill Duerden. City crews check on the building periodically and repair vandalism as soon as possible. The site hasn't attracted any more vandalism than other public buildings, he said, and less than Redmond

park buildings. "I was inside it the other day, and it doesn't look much different than it did when the school moved out," Duerden said. Outside the funding concerns,there's going to have to be compromise if the city is going to find a use for Evergreen any time in the coming years, Centanni said. "There's an impact for any use of the building but there's also an impact to leaving it empty too long. We don't want an eyesore." During the meeting, Councilor Ed Onimus concurred, stating, "I'd rather sell Evergreen if it's just going to sit

seem to be turning around a bit, maybe in a few years we'll be ready to move forward," he empty." satd. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, Centanni, a n a c countant Ipugmire@bendbulletin.com

has tuberculosis The Associated Press PORTLAND — The Oregon Zoo has quarantined an elephant that tested positive for tuberculosis. "Rama," an A s i an elephant that was born at the Portland-based zoo in 1983, tested positive on Friday. He shows no symptoms of the disease, poses no threat to visitors and is expected to make a completerecovery, zoo staff said. "We're confident Rama is going to be fine," zoo director Kim Smith told The Oregonian. "It's a very treatable disease.We've caught it early with Rama. We feel very good about this." Treatment with d r ugs, however, is expensive, costing more than $50,000, the newspaper reported. None of th e o ther elephants in the zoo's herd

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of eight Asian elephants are showing signs of tuberculosis, but they will be retested. The zoo testedsome staffmembers Friday and will continue this week. It's unknown how R a ma contracted the disease. Tuberculosis spreads among people and between people and animals through airborne bacteria carried in droplets. To become infected, you must be directly exposed to the bacteria while it's airborne. An estimated 3percent of the elephants in the United States have thedisease,according to a 2000 study published in the journal Zoo Biology.

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The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPEB

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us riders are likely to soon be paying more in Cenrr 'E

tral Oregon. The Central Oregon Intergovernmental Council's board is scheduled to look at fee increases at its meeting on Thursday. It's something that must happen if the Cascades East Transit service is going to be stable. The proposed changes aren't unreasonable, despite the fact that it means another dive into local wallets. First o f a l l , C O I C h a sn't changed its bus fare policy since Cascades East Transit opened. The bus service relies basically on general fund revenues to pay for the service. But it has had budget cuts. It has eliminated some routes. And rather than reduce services, it's looking for a way to keep the system running. For instance, a fixed-route trip in Bend would go from $1.50 to $2. A monthly pass would go from $30 to $50. There's also a proposed shift in how the bus service bills for regional trips. Currently, the charge is $3.75, no matter what the distance is. The change would bill based on distance. A shorter trip between Redmond and Sisters or Bend and Redmond would still be $3.75. Longer trips between Bend and La Pine would goupto$5. There are still discounted fares available for people who qualify, though those would also increase

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A fixed-route trip in Bend

would go from $1.50 to $2

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A monthlypass would go from $30 to $50. There's also a proposed shift in how the bus service bills

for regional trips.

M IVickel's Worth

under the proposal. We hope the increases will not cause many riders to abandon the service. The bus rides are still a good deal,even a bargain. With the increase,fares do not cover 25 percent of the cost of the service. COIC staff i s s t ill t h i nking about other f u n ding o p tions. Should it operate the bus service, or should it be a done by a transit district or districts? Should it seek funding tailored to each community or an overall approach'? And which tool should it use? A property tax, a payroll tax, a transit utility fee or a local sales tax? For now, riders should pay more to keep up the service, before asking tax-paying voters to

A gift for graduates: Help Bachmann and Medicare them register to vote I have a challenge for a young

is a big moment in a young person's

pay

should get basic tidying up

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bers or the numbers of local government agencies to whom people can report problems with vacant properties. If owners fail to take care of problems, the city or county can step in and give the owner at least 30 days tocorrect the problem, unless the condition is so bad it's a threat to public health or safety. If a property owner continues to ignore problems, the city can step in,have the work done and attach a lien to the property in order to recover its costs. We suspect that will be a lastditch choice, however. Cities and counties in Oregon generally are not so well off that they can spend money tidying up abandoned residential properties and then wait months or years to collect for the cost of that work. Yet with foreclosed property, they may have to do just that. Don't expect the abandoned house down the street with the run-down lawn t o b e come a showplace overnight b e cause of the new law. You can expect, however, that the worst of problems will be addressed, and relatively quickly.

this I can't with good conscience support a "news" source that can't cover something as big as this. I i nvestigative r eporter. I w o u l d know it was a h oliday weekend love to see if s oon-to-be-retired and news can be slow, but here was C ongresswoman and t e a p a r t y a great opportunity for you to refirebrand, 57-year-old Michele port on something that affects evBachmann,will be using a governery person in this town who buys ment health plan when she reaches and eats food. Medicare age. Jody Oak Michael Hudson Bend Bend

It's that time of year again. Graduations are upon us and students are now preparing to embark on the next stage of their lives. Whether going on to school or entering the military or the workforce, this

Foreclosedproperties ome neighborhoods in Oregon have been harder hit by foreclosuresthan others. A bill that cleared the state Legislature last week and is on its way to the governor could be a boon to those who remain behind. House Bill 2662 gives local governments the power to step in, should vacant properties become so run down that they begin to have an impact on surrounding property values. It also lays out rules for mortgage holders that make it easier to trace who is responsible for abandoned properties. The measure applies only to residential properties. Among other things, the law will require that owners of foreclosed properties, often banks and other lenders, inspect them at least monthly and do what must be done to prevent or identify and fix problems that will have an impact on the property values of neighbors or create a health hazard or public nuisance. Squatters and trespassers are among those problems. In addition, property owners must post their telephone num-

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life. As the celebrations begin, why not give a new graduate a gift that will last for years to come; why not help them register to vote? Voting brings u s t ogether as Americans — it i s the one time when we are all equal. It doesn't matter if you're rich or poor, or young or old; elections are our opportunity to elect leaders who lift up our communities and make them better. Help the new grads in your life get started by registering to vote or updating their registration if they have moved. As a member of the League of W omen Voters, I'm proud to b e part of a network of community volunteers that help make sure all young people have the chance to ask questions about issues, understand why voting is important, and get registered. We have helped tens of thousands of high school and college students get registered, including here in Deschutes County. Visit the League's one-stop shop for voting i nformation, Vote411. org, to start the registration process. Or, contact the league at lwvdeschutes.org. Grads wil l t h a nk you for helpingthem become active voters; it's a gift for them and for their community!

Why not cover the MarchAgainstMonsanto? Where were you on Saturday May 25, 2013, Bulletin reporters'? I was participating in the March Against Monsanto protest in our f air city a l ong w it h a b out 2 00 others. We couldn't be missed as we respectfully made our way fr om Pioneer Park, through downtown, along Franklin and Third streets and back to the park. We were sup-

ported by people in cars honking

Christian values are important for U.S.

This United States was founded on the Christian values. But the Bibles, prayer and flag pledge went out. No wonder we have gun shooti ngs, bombings an d s u ch. W e kicked God ou t o f e v e rything. T he p r esidents w e h a d we r e God-fearing. There were a few that did not abide by God.Then we got one in that takes God out of the White House and no w onder we have problems. Gun laws or anything else is not going to help. Prayer is the only hope for this country. We let all foreigners in and look what we got.

and waving, people on the street asking us what we were protesting. The next morning I b ought the Sunday edition of The Bulletin thinking that I would see a great story and several pictures about Mary Linn this event. La Pine Boy was I disappointed! There was no mention anywhere in your Too muchfora rem odel? paper. This was a nationwide protest that was covered by our local Oh ... so Deschutes County spent T V station KTV Z 21. This w as about a half a million dollars on renot a political protest, so it wasn't modelinga court "room." about being on the left or the right Makes sense to me, how about of an issue. you? This was about what is put in Also, I understand they will be doour food and not having the right ing another one. Don't blame them Dalyte Hartsough and Geri Hauser, to know about it. I had recently for that price, right? co-presi dents,League ofWomen thought about renewing my subBob Roth Voters of Deschutes County scription to your paper, but after Redmond

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In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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limited to one letter or Op-Ed piece every 30 days.

State inancial in ormation shoul e accurate By Dave Kyle n open letter to the Oregon J oint Committee on W a y s and Means: Several weeks ago you asked for suggested priorities so t hat y o ur committee can m ake r ecommendations to the Oregon Legislature. I attended the Bend hearing, and most people who spoke talked about funding needs. I am addressing the need for changes in the budget process, which I believe is a primary root cause of the state's financial mismanagement. My background is in accounting and finance and includes business turnarounds. The first step in dealing with a turnaround situation like the state of Oregon is understanding the true financial position so that required changes can be reflected in a budget. This means that financial information must be accurate and easy to understand. As members of the committee you know that the Or-

egon constitution requires the adoption of a balanced spending plan, but it defers the definition and standards of a budget to GASB (Governmental Accounting Standards Board), which is a private, nongovernmental organization. I am concerned thatOregon depends on GASB because the result has been a flawed budget process that allows s ignificant expenses to be incurred but not expensed or funded. These are called unfunded liabilities. The problem is particularly bad with regard to funding pension expense. This is a process that is less strict than the standards used in the private sector. In short, you claim to have a balanced budget when you do not. It is the use of these grossly misleading standards that have allowed the Legislature to often avoid a ddressing unpopular topics l i k e the need to reduce labor expense in order tomatch revenue because la-

IN MY VIEW bor expensesare understated in the budget.Recently, GASB has begun to tighten these standards. This is a major reason why PERS expense has jumped. Even with these changes,there is too much room to understate expense. I suggest the following priorities: 1. Request whatever legal change is required so that there will be no additional future unfunded or unexpensed liabilities. This would probably mean ending the unknown financial risk associated with a PERS stock portfolio and changing to a fixed annual employer contribution or to an employee-controlled retirement plan such as a 401K. It should be the employees who incur the risk if they decided to invest in the stock market. If the state decides to increase taxes, at least people will understand the true cost of labor. 2. Expense and fund current un-

funded liabilities of around $16billion over 16 years. In short, absorb $1 billion per year of expense that should have been expensed in the past. This expense should be reported as a separate line item in the budget so that current costs are not distorted. Funding should be accomplished without using new debt obligations. This is a

I am addressing the need for changes in the budget process, which l believe

is a primary root cause of the state's financial

mismanagement.

pay-as-you-go philosophy and also probably means a degree of financial austerity over 16 years to offset this unreported overspending that built up over many years. 3. Fund an annual budget process. Events change too quickly for the Legislature to adequately provide budget oversight with a two-year budget. In addition, the political process will be more active with a one-year budget than with the current two-year budget process. This will help you receive the voter input you desire. 4. Fund and require annual external reviews oraudits.Fire managers who ignore the audit process. This

will help the budget process by uncovering good and bad practices. There is too much at risk not to change the use of inadequate GASB standards in the budget process. Only when you, th e L egislature, provide actual expenses through an improved budget process will voters have accurate and understandable financial i n formation. Only then can you expect to have a financially well-run state and to get the informed direction from voters that you requested. — Dave Kyle lives in Bend.


TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES RObert 'BObby' Darla Rae Hoiness, formerly of Bend July 26, 1942 - May 30, 2013 Arrangements: Crown Memorial Center, Milwaukie, Oregon (503) 653-7076 Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to a local hospice, or The Arc.

David G. Bremner, of John Day Sept. 7, 1942 - May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services will be held.

David Philip Billings, of Bend Oct. 19, 1955 - May 30, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, www.niswonger-reynolds. com, 541-382-2471 Services: A family memorial will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Disabled Veterans: COVO, 123 NW Franklin Ave., Bend, OR 97701

Edna Jo Mathers, of Bend March 21, 1921 - June 2, 2013 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: Memorial Service will be held at 11:00 a.m., Saturday, June 8, 2013, at The First Missionary Baptist Church, 21129 SE Reed Market Rd, Bend, OR 97702 Contributions may be made to:

Alzheimer's Association Oregon, 1650 Northwest Naito Parkway, Suite 190, Portland, OR 97209 or Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701

Kathryn 'KJ' Jean

(Labbay) Wesley,of La Pine Nov. 20, 1946 - May 26, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, OR 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life Gathering will be held in New York at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org 541-382-5882

Shirley Rae Baker, of Bend Jan. 15, 1934 - May 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned in Bend at this time. Contributions may be made

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Fedruary10, 1926- May 29, 2013 R obert M o r r i s o f Re d mond, Oregon passed from this life to his next, on May 29 at the age of 87. Bobby was born i n B o i se, Idaho and m oved t o Klamath Falls a c ouple o f months later. Bobby and his family m oved t o Bobby Morris Prineville in 1938. I t w a s th ere that h e met a n d m a r r i e d t h e l ove of his life, Mary A n n H ulse, i n 1 9 5 4 . Bob b y worked in th e w o ods and did locksmithing and custodial work. H e and M ary w ere m e m b er s of th e Redmond A s s e m bl y of God church an d G i d eons I nternational. H e i s s u r vived by his wife, Mary, of 58 years; two children, Ric hard " D i ck " M o r r i s a n d Cheryl N o g a ; a n d tw o g randchildren, Jacob a n d Janelle Noga. A viewing was held June 3 b y A ut u m n Fu n e r a l s Redmond. Gr aveside serv ices will b e h e l d 10 : 0 0 a .m. Tuesday, Jun e 4 a t Juniper H aven C e metery, N. Main St., Prineville, OR, followed by a c e l ebration of life at I:00 p.m. at Redm ond A s sembly o f G o d , 1 865 W . A nt l e r A ve. , Redmond. M e m o r ial contributions can be made to Gideons International.

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Teague Hatfield, owner of the FootZone running store in downtown Bend, leads a group of volunteers helping move his shoe inventory across the street to his new expanded location on Monday. Hatfield estimated that there were several thousand pairs of shoes The move across Wall Street gives FootZone about one-third more

FootZone is expected to open today in its new home at 842 N.W. Wall St. Hatfield plans to keep the store that has served as FootZone's home

space, according to a newsrelease. It will allow the business to increase and display more inventory and havespace to hold running clin-

for18 years open as a new business, OutsidelN Bend, an outdoor lifestyle store that will offer additional brands andchildren's shoes, ac-

ics and events like Ask the Expert.

cording to the news release.

moved by dozens ofvolunteers in less than anhour.

auten er was ew erse senator » - y p i y

Death Notices are free and

By Angela Delli Santi The Associated Press

I

TRENTON, N.J.— The next time a flight attendant reminds you there's no

FEATURED OBITUARY teenager getting carded at a liquor store, think of Frank Lautenberg. The liberal Democratic senator from New Jersey left his mark on the everyday lives of millions of Americans, whether they know it or not. In the 1980s, he was a driving force behind the laws that banned smoking on most U.S. flights and made 21 the drinking age in all 50 states. Lautenberg, a multimillionaire businessman who became an accomplished — if often underestimated — politician, died Monday at a New York hospital after suffering complications from viral pneumonia. His funeral will be held Wednesday morning in New York City. At 89, he was the oldest person in the Senate and the last of 115 World War II veterans to serve there. "He improved the lives of countless Americans with his commitment to our n ation's health and safety," President Barack Obama said in a statement, "from improving our public transportation to protecting citizens from gun violenceto ensuring that members of our military and their families get the care they deserve." The Senate observed a moment of silence in Lautenberg's memory, and at t h e W h i te House the flag was lowered to half-staff. Lautenberg served nearly three decades in the Senate in two stints, beginning with an upset victory in 1982 over Republican R ep . M i l l icent Fenwick, the p i pe-smoking, pearl-wearing patrician who was the model for the cartoon character Lacey Davenport in "Doonesbury." Possessed with neither a dynamic speaking style nor atelegenicface,he won his lastrace in 2008atage 84,becoming the first New Jersey politician ever elected to five Senate terms. "People don't give a darn about my age," Lautenberg said then. "They know I'm vigorous. They know I've got plenty of

ic

Mel Evans/The Associated Press file photo

Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., stands with wife Bonnie Englebardt Lautenberg, in February in Paterson, N.J. Lautenberg, a multimillionaire businessman who became an accomplished politician, died Monday. He was 89.

Filling hiS Seat —The death of sitting U.S. Sen.Frank Lautenberg gives New Jersey Gov.Chris Christie the opportunity to pick his immediate replacement. A number of Republicans in the New Jersey Legislature are contenders, as is former state GOP Sen. Bill Baroni, now a top executive at the Port Authority of New

York and NewJersey. Christie could even gowith a Democrat, such as NewarkMayorCory Booker. In terms of electing a permanent replacement, there are conflicting state statutes, but there

seem to be a few options. The replacement selected by Christie could serve until an election that would be held this November or November 2014, or Christie — who is on the ballot himself this

November — could call a special election this year, which would most likely occur in October.

perfund toxic-waste cleanup program. He was the author of a 1984 law that threatened to withto: hold federal highway money Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, from states that did not adopt Bend, Oregon 97701 a drinking age of 21, a measure www.partnersbend.org that passed amid rising alarm over drunken driving. At the John Edward Randall time, some states allowed peoJr., of Burns ple as young as 18 to drink. May 6, 1945- May29, 2013 By 1988, every state was in Arrangements: compliance with the law, which Baird Funeral Home has been widely credited with (541) 382-0903 reducing highway deaths. www.bairdmortuaries.com A former smoker, LautenServices: berg was one of two prime No services will be held. sponsors of the 1989 law that banned smoking on all domestic flights of less than six hours, DEATHS one of several anti-smoking laws he championed. The meaELSEWHERE sure helped pave the way for today's numerous restrictions on where people can light up. Deaths of note from around Despite poor health t h at the world: left him in a wheelchair, he reGil Henry, 88:Avocado farmturned to the Senate in April er who developed a system alfor several votes on gun leglowing ready-to-eat avocados islation. He voted in favor of to be sold in grocery stores, enhanced background checks rather than ripened for weeks energy." for gun purchases and reinat home, making them f ar Over the years, he was a reli- statement of a ban on assaultmore popular. Died May 18 in able Democratic vote on such style weapons. Both measures Escondido, Calif. issues as unions, guns and the failed. Jean Bach, 94: Longtime environment. A native of one of Lautenberg had announced r adio p r oducer a n d f i l m - the most congested and heav- earlier this year that he would maker who was best-known ily industrialized and polluted not seek another term in 2014, for theOscar-nominated jazz states, he worked to secure a nd Newark M a yo r C o r y documentary "A Great Day in hundreds of millions of dolBooker, a fellow Democrat, Harlem." Died May 27 in New lars for mass transitprojects, said he would run for the seat. York. ardentlydefended Amtrak and Senate Republican leader —From wire reports pushed for money for the Su- Mitch McConnell called Laut-

— The Record (Hackensack, N.J.)

enberg "a patriot whose success in business and politics made him a great American success story and a standout even within the fabled Greatest Generation." R epublican G o v . Chr i s Christie, who frequently tangled with Lautenberg, said: "I think the best way to describe Frank Lautenberg — and the way he would probably want to be described to all of you today — is as a fighter. Sen. Lautenberg fought for the things he believed in, and sometimes he just fought because he liked to." " I give hi m p r aise on a life well-lived," the governor added. Along w it h L a u tenberg's legislative a ccomplishments, he had a string of electoral coups, including his upset over Fenwick, whom he called "the most popular candidate in the country," and a victory in a strange, abbreviated, backfrom-retirement campaign two decades later. He initially retired in 2000 after 18 years in the Senate, saying he did not have the drive to raise money for a fourth campaign. He served on the boards of three companies, two graduate schools and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. But New Jersey Democrats recruited Lautenberg out of retirement in 2002 as a replacement for Robert Torricelli, who

had abandoned his re-election bid just five weeks before Election Day in a campaign finance scandaL Republicans went to court to prevent the ballot "switcheroo." When that failed, they attacked Lautenberg as a political relic ill-suited for dangerous times. But Lautenberg surged to an easy victory over Republican Douglas Forrester and returned to the Senate in 2003 at age78,resuming his role as a leading liberal. He was in the headlines in December 2008 — this time as an apparent victim. After Bernard Madoff was accused ofa $50 billion fraud scheme, Lautenberg's family foundation said the bulk of its investments were managed by him. A lawyer for the foundation declined to discuss any possible losses, but tax records in 2006 indicated Madoff managed more than 90 percent of the foundation's nearly $14 million in assets. Lautenbergmade his fortune as chairman and CEO of Automatic Data Processing, a New Jersey-based payroll services company he hadfounded with two friends in 1952. It became one of the largest such companies in the world. During his first stint in the Senate, he was often in the shadow of New Jersey's other senator, Bill Bradley, a former pro basketball player and 2000 presidential c andidate. But he proved a formidable and bruising foe, carving out influence on the environment and transportation, two issues that matter greatly to New Jersey, the most densely populated state.

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obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Deadlines:Death Notices

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 20'I3

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central, LP ©2013.

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Sunsettoday.... 8 44 p.m N ew First F ull Sunrise tomorrow .. 5:23 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:45 p.m Moonrise today....3:04 a.m Moonsettoday ....5:13 p.m June8 June16 June23 June29

Pi •

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....6:51 a.m.....10:36 p.m. Venus......6:34 a.m.....10:11 p.m. Mars.......444 a.m...... 7:46 p.m. Jupiter......6:07 a.m...... 9 28 p.m. Satum......504 pm...... 346 am. Uranus.....2:35 a.m...... 3:11 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 73/39 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Record high........ 92 m 1970 Month to date.......... 0.00" Record low......... 26 in 1962 Average month todate... 0.1 0" Average high.............. 69 Year to date............ 2.74" Averagelow .............. 40 Average year to date..... 5.1 2" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.03 Record 24 hours ...1.33 in1934 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

WATER REPORT

Y esterday Tuesday W e d . Bend,westofHwy 97.....Low Sisters..............................Low The following was compiled by the Central Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend, eastof Hwy.97......Low La Pine...............................Low Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

Redmond/Madras........Low Prinevine..........................Low

Salem ....... 74/48/0 00 ....82/52/s ... 81/52/s Sisters.........80/36/0.00.....80/43/s......81/44/s The Dages......79/51/0.00.....84/57/s......85/59/s

Quebec

Sask a toon Winnipeg 73/45 64/46 •

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 5:24 a.m Moon phases

PLANET WATCH

Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain

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F l urries Snow

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Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 43,081...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . 151,785..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 77,899 . . . . 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... . . . 27,578 . . . . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 136,190..... 153,777 the need for eye and skin protection. Index is R iver flow St at i o n Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie ...... . 416 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,280 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ..... . . . 61 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 78.3 0 2 4 6 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 122 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 1,677 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res.. ... . . . . . 53 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 12.6 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 78.3 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM LOWI or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 9

IPOLLEN COUNT

Ice

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......94/67/0 00 101/73/pc101/71/pc GrandRapids....67/41/0.00..69/49/pc. 67/54/sh RapidCity.......71/49/000..65/45/pc. 65/46/pc Savannah.......90/75/0 00..87I71/pc...86/69/t Akron ..........67/54/0.00...70/50/s...76/57/t GreenBay.......72/41/0.00..60/47lpc...56/48/t Reno...........88/56/0.00...90/58/s. 95/62/pc Seattle..........71/52/0.00...79/54/s.. 77/55/s Albany..........69/62/000...72/46/s. 77/52/pc Greensboro......81/66/069..81/60/pc. 80/63/pc Richmond.......84/70/0.02... 80/58/s .. 82/61/s Sioux Falls.......73/42/0.00... 68/50/t. 64/50/sh Albuquerque.....90/64/000...90/62/s.. 91/61/s Harusburg.......79/66/017...75/52/s.. 77/56/s Rochester, NY....64/51/0.00... 67/45/s. 70/52/pc Spokane....... 72/46/trace... 79/51/s.. 86/52/s Anchorage ......56/46/0.00...57/44/r...59/45/r Hartford,CT .....78/65/0.67...76/46/s. 78/52/pc Sacramento......87/57/0.00... 90/59/s .. 90/61/s Springfield, MO ..76/46/0.00.. 79/62/pc...76/62/t Atlanta .........86/69/023..86/73/pc...83/68/t Helena..........59/44/032..65/43/pc. 77/49/pc St. Louis.........70/58/000..79/64/pc...81/64/t Tampa..........85/77/000... 86/74/t...85/73/t Atlantic City.....75/68/0.55...75/53/s.71/58/pc Honolulu........84/75/0.00...90/76/s.. 89/75/s Salt Lake City....75/55/000...82/54/s .. 84/59/s Tucson.........102/75/000 ..101/70/s. 101l70/s Austin..........92/61/000..94/70/pc. 94/71/pc Houston ........91/68/0 00..93771lpc.93/73/pc SanAntonio.....90/66/000 ..9870/pc. 94771Ipc Tulsa...........80/52/000 ..86/67/pc...82/65/t Baltimore .......80/619044...77Ms. 78/58/pc Huntsville.......85/66/000..85/64/pc...86/66/t SanDiego.......68/64/000..69/62/pc. 70/62/pc Washington,DC.82/69/042... 80/60/s. 80/58/pc Bigings.........61/50/0.10 ..58/42/pc. 72/48/pc Indianapolis.....68/48/0.00..75/59/pc. 78/63/pc SanFrancisco....73/51/000..66/52/pc. 67/53/pc Wichita.........80/53/000... 82/65/t...76/61/t Birmingham .. 86/69/000..88/6$pc. 88/69/t Jackson, MS.... 85/71/000. 90/69/pc. 91/69/pc SanJose........77/53/000 .. 75/54/pc 76/54/pc Yakima.........83/49/000 85/53/s .. 87/57/s Bismarck........55/46/006 ..58/47/sh. 64/47/pc Jacksonvile......90/72/000... 87/72/t...87/72/t SantaFe........87/56/000... 83/55/s .. 79/52/s Yuma..........l02/78/000 ..101/71/s. 103/72/s Boise...........75/49/000...83/52/s .. 87/55/s Juneau..........58/37/0.00... 54/43/r...52/46/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........76/64/071 ...74/52/s.74/52/pc Kansas City......73/46/000... 75/62/t. 74/58/pc BudgeportCT....75/64/079...74/52/s. 72/55/pc Lansing.........67/39/000 ..68/48/pc. 67/53/sh Amsterdam......57/45/000.. 72/43/s 64/45/pc Mecca.........117/90/000 118/91/s.120/91/s Buffalo.........58/47/000...64/48/s. 74/53/pc LasVegas......103/79/000..101/76/s. 101/78/s Athens..........79/58/000 ..81/61/pc .. 79/62/s Mexico City .....81/59/000... 78/53/t 79/52/1 Burlington, VT....70/62/000...67/40/5. 70/51/pc Lexington.......75/60/000 ..78/59/pc. 82/66/sh Auckland........61/43/000 ..63/57/sh.54/48/pc Montreal........66/57/000..66/48/pc.. 68/52/s Caribou,ME.....77/61/0.00...63/40/s.. 65/40/s Lincoln..........76/48/000... 72/52/t. 73/54/pc Baghdad.......107/78/000..103/81/s.104/80/s Moscow........79/54/000..83/60/pc.74/51/sh Charleston, SC...83/70/230 ..86/70/pc...85/70/t Little Rock.......80/59/000 ..85763/pc.88/67/pc Bangkok........93/79/5.46... 92/79/t...95/80/t Nairobi.........75/54/0.0075/57/pc...72/54/t .. Charlotte........82/66/233..83/65/pc...81/65/t LosAngeles......73/64/000..68/6llpc. 68/62/pc Beiyng..........93/63/000 ..90/64/pc. 94/69/pc Nassau.........84/77/000... 89/76/t...81/77/t Chattauoogs.....84/66/000..85/65/pc...87/66/t Louisville........72/62/000..81/62/pc.85/66/pc Beirut..........82/73/000...79/64/s ..78/65ls New Delh/......102/84/000 ..111/93/s.11379 7/s Cheyenne.......82/46/000 ..68/45/pc.63/47/pc MadisonWl.....70/41/000 ..63/50/sh. 65/52/sh Berl/8...........64/52/000 ..72/45/sh.. 70/50lc Osaka..........82/66/000 .. 79/65/pc. 80/66/pc Chicago...... 68/43/000..67/54/pc.70/56/sh Memphis....... 80/62/000.87/67lpc.90I70/pc Bogota .........64/46/001... 70/48/t...71l45lt Oslo............61/48/003 ..60749/sh.60/48/sh Cincinnati.......71/57/000 ..76/56/pc. 82/64/pc Miami..........87/75/0.25...84/74/t...84/76/t Budapest........63/52/000 ..74/54/sh. 72/57/sh Ottawa.........66/52/014...68/46/s .. 68/50/s Cleveland.......61/54/000 ..71/52/pc. 78/57/pc Milwaukee......66/41/000..53/48/sh. 58/51/pc BuenosAires.....68/48/000...66/51/c. 67/50/pc Paris............63/46/000...72/48/s. 72/54/pc Colorado Spnngs.90/50/000... 78/53/t. 73/53lpc Minneapolis.....70/51/0.00 ..64/53/pc. 61/52/sh CaboSsnLucas ..93/72/000 ..90/68/pc.. 91/68/s Rio deJaneiro....73/72/000 .. 73/64/pc.. 75/63/s Columbia,MO...71/55/000 ..77/62/pc...75/61/t Nashvige........77/60/0 00..84/63/pc. 86/68/pc Cairo...........91/37/0.00.. 94/65/s .. 94/68/s Rome...........72/54/0.00..67/59/pc.. 72/59/s Columbia,SC....88/73/020 ..88/68/pc...84/69/t New Orleans.....89/73/0 00..89/73/pc. 90/77/pc Calgary.........57/46/1.30... 66/46/s .. 73/46/s Santiago........70/41/0.00... 63/61/s.. 64/62/5 Columbus, GA..89/70ltrace..89/76/pc.90/70/pc NewYork.......77/68/087...76/54ls. 76/56/pc Cancun.........sl/73/035... 86/80/t...84/78/t Sao Paulo.......64/59/000..66/53/pc.. 73/55/s Columbus OH....68/59/000 ..75/53/pc. 81/61/pc Newark Nl......79/70/0 55... 78/53/s .. 76/56/s Dublin..........64/46/0.00..65/48/pc .. 60/49/c Sapporo ........57/52/0.01 ..68/52/pc. 70/55/pc Concord,NH.....80/63/0.08... 73/40/s. 73/47/pc Norfolk, VA......80/73/0.08... 77/57/s .. 80/63/s Edinburgh.......68/45/000... 62ISO/c. 62/50/sh Seoul...........75/61/000 .. 77/65/pc.. 78/65/c Corpus Christi....91/73/000 ..88/76/pc. 87/78/pc Oklahoma City...82/56/0.00 ..86768/pc...81/67/t Geneva.........6450/000 .. 70/49/pc.68/53/sh Shaogha/........84/63/000 ..75/69/pc. 76/70/pc DallasFtWorrh...88/62/0.00..92/72/pc.92/72/pc Omaha.........76/50/0.00... 70/55/t. 72/54/pc Harare..........sl/48/0.00...74/48/s ..74/48ls Singapore.......90/77/0.66... 90/80/t...89/80/t Dayton .........67/51/000 ..75/54/pc. 79/61/pc Orlando.........87/74/0.00... 86/71/t...86/72/t HongKong......95/82/0.00... 84/78/t...82/77/t Stockholm.......72/50/0.00... 61/50/r. 70/55/sh Denver....... 92/57/000... 80/53/t. 76/55/pc PalmSprings....102/72/0.00..102/71/s. 104I74/s Istanbul.........72/59/006... 76/63/s ..77/67ls Sydney..........63/50/000 ..68/52/pc .. 64/53/c DesMoines......72/47/0.00... 67/57/t. 72/55/pc Peoria ..........68/48/0.00..75/59/pc...77/60/t lerusalem.......94/69/0.00... 78/59/s ..78/60ls Taipei...........86/79/0.00... 81/74/t.83/74/pc Detroit..........68/46/000 ..68/52/pc. 70/55/pc Philadelphia.....79/70/086... 79/57/s. 77/58/pc Johannesburg....68/47/0.00...61/4us ..65/46ls TelAviv.........88/72/0.00...84/64/s 84765l .. s Duluth..........64/37/000 ..50/40/pc. 49/43/sh Phoesix........103/79/0.00..104/77/s. 105/77/s Lima...........63/57/000..73/63/pc. 72/63/pc Tokyo...........75/57/000 ..76/62/pc. 76/64/pc El Paso..........97/65/0.00 ..100/75/s. 101/74/s Pittsburgh.......67/59/0.00... 72/49/s. 77/59/pc Lisbon..........86/64/0 00 .. 79/55/s 73/52/c Toronto.........63/45/0 03 68/50/s .. 64/54/s Fairbanks........61/53/0.00...60/43/r...62/44/r Portland,ME.....75/61/0.03...70/45/s. 70/48/pc London.........66/46/0.00... 71/41/s.68/44/pc Vancouver.......64/52/0.00... 68/55/s. 64/52/sh Fargo...........64/45/000...62/50/t.65/47lsh Providence......73/64/078...77/51ls.76/53/pc Madrid .........81/50/000..86/59/pc.. 85/57/s Vienna..........55/50/008 ..68/56/sh. 71/51/pc Flagstaff........79/41/000...79/42/s .. 80/43/s Rale/gh.........82/68/OA4 ..81l61Ipc. 82/63/pc Manila..........95/81/000...93/81/t. 92/80/pc Warsaw.........77/57/013..75/60/sh.67/54/sh

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a service to irrigators and sportsmen.

To report a wildfire, call 911

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

~l4

Stanley, Idaho

84 52

Legend Wweather,Pcp precipitation, s sun,pcpartial clouds,c clouds,h haze,shshowers, r rain,t thunderstorms,sf snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice, rs-rain-snow mix,w-wind, f-fog,dr-drizzle, tr-trace

I •

•Ca l ar 9 y 66/46 I

x

• 25o

HIGH LOW

82 52

• 31 La

o www m (in the 48 contiguous states):

HIGH LOW

79 49

Roseburg.......80/52/0.00.....86/53/s......87/54/s

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

Brookings Pine

Mostly sunny and warm

82 53

• 90'

Yesterday's state extremes

Rome

82/42

Grants~

• Beach

Christmas Valley

Chemult emu

86/53

81/44

Mostly sunny and warm

HIGH LOW

Astoria ........ 63/53/0.00....67/51/pc...... 64/50/f BakerCity......70/36/0.00.....78745/s......84/49/s Brookings......89/67/0.00....73/53/pc.....69/52/pc Burns..........74/36/0.00.....80/44/s......85/47/s Eugene........75/45/0.00.....82/50/s......82/49/s Klamath Falls .. 79/42/000 ....83/44/s ... 84/45/s Lakeview.......79/45/0.00 ....81/51/s..... 84/53/s La Pine.........79/31/NA.....79/39/s......79/41/s Medford.......85/48/0.00.....92/53/s......91/54/s Newport.......59/50/0.00....64/49/pc.....63/48/pc North Bend...... 61/50/NA....62/52/pc...... 62/53/f Ontario........78/48/0.00.....85/55/s......90/58/s Pendleton......77/44/0.00.....83/53/s......87/56/s Portland .......74/51/0.00.....82/55/s......80/54/s Prineville.......73/36/0.00.....82/47/s......83/49/s Redmond.......75/36/0.00.....83/45/s......84/51/s

p

• Fort Rock 82/39

79/38

76/43

• Bandon

warm

OREGON CITIES

EAST Mostly sunny and warm.

• Mitcheg79/48

La Pine 79/39

• • Crescento Lake Wm Crescent

64/51 •

CENTRAL Mostly sunny and

warm.

Baker City

.

WEST Coastal clouds; otherwise, mostly sunny.

• Brothers 81/46

Oa k ridge

Coos Bay

osep La Grande ze47 Unlo~ 7443

' e mox o 83/45 Sunriver Bend

82/5 0

79 /52

73 / 41 \

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'Madras d 82/47

CamP Sherman

RuggS

83/50

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Albany~

64/49

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82/52•

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Salem

85/55

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McMinnville 79/51 o

Lincoln City 65/51

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Mostly sunny and warm

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I,

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CENTRAL OREGON

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Te n nis, C3 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 NHL, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 201 3

BEACH VOLLEYBALL

PREP LACROSSE

GOLF

Area players get all-league honors

nti ue

Central Oregon players were amongthose recognized whenOregon's state high school lacrosse associations released all-conference

notion, acu recruits ca Ies

teams for the 2013

season. Eleven areaplayers were named to the Oregon High School

Lacrosse Association's High Desert League first team, including four each from Summit

and Bend High. Storm players on the HDL first team are midfielders

Quinn Rasmussenand Dylan Seefeldt, attackman Griffin Reinecke

and long stick midfielder Luke Ross. LavaBear

By Bill Morris

h

first-teamers are attack-

New York Times News Service

man JamesRockett,

When Joan Smalland Carolyn Argento met at the Lawrence Yacht and Country Club on Long Island for a round of golf on a recent Saturday morning, they shared a bad feeling. It was not about the gloomy weather forecast. The women wanted to walk the golf course, but all the club's caddies were usually snatched up by the men who tee off early on weekends. That meant Small and Argento, under club rules, would have to ride a cart or wait until 3 p.m. to walk the course carrying their own bags. Neither prospect held much appeal. Then they got a pleasant surprise. Thanks to the club's recent push to attract and trainnew caddies,there were plenty on hand that morning — green but eager, like colts aching to gambol across an open pasture. Small and Argento were paired with Kyle Singh and Zachary Pratt, two juniors at nearby Lawrence High School who had never swung a golf club or set foot on a golf course. The women smacked their tee shots, and the four marched down the first fairway, beginning a four-hour session of hands-on schooling for the two novice caddies. "It's a different game when you walk," said Argento, who

midfielder Brandon Fitzpatrick, defenseman

Quinn Fettig and goalie Lake Larsen. Fitzpatrick and Ras-

mussen also received honorable mention in voting for OHSLA allstate teams. Also from Central

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Members of the Junior Sand Volleyball League practice together Monday evening at the Old Mill volleyball courts in Bend.

Oregon, Mountain View attackmanFinnLeahy and defensemanMax Tague werenamedto the first team, aswas

f •

Sisters defenseman Porter Ford.

A number of other local players were named to the HDL's second

team or received honorable mention.

• Beach volleyball courts in the Old Mill District are on borrowed time,andenthusiasts mayseeka new home

The OregonGirls Lacrosse Association

By Emily Oller

also released its all-

F our beach v o lleyball c o urts l i e wedged between the Deschutes River and the Les Schwab Amphitheater in Bend. Localresidents are accustomed to seeing the sand courts, but they may know little about them. In 2010, several die-hard volleyball players and supporters saw a need to add the sand version of the sport to what they recognized as a booming volleyball interest in Bend. Those enthusiasts created the Bend Volleyball Association (BVA), which obtained a temporary lease on land owned by the Old Mill District to construct four regulation-size courts.

league teams, andthe South League includes three players from the Bend United squad,

which includes players from Bend, Summit and Mountain View high

schools. The BendUnited all-league selections are attacker Katie Alhart

and midfielder Tori Landin, both of Summit,

and defender Hannah Buckner, of BendHigh. Complete all-league

The Bulletin

Bend's Ben Staley, aided by former professional volleyball players, among others, took the lead in building the courts. These volleyball devotees are members of the BVA, which ran the courts until last fall, when Staley approached a club volleyball organization in Bend — Oregon Volleyball Academy (OVA) — to take over the facility. Staley recognized that an organization like OVA was needed to manage the courts. According to Staley, the courts are temporary, and due to limited available land at the Old Mill, the courts in time will probably get replaced by a commercial or residential structure. With its established ties to the local

volleyball community and its organizational resources, OVA's youth volleyball program, Staley believes, would be able to generate the interest and gather the support needed to build permanent courts elsewhere in Bend. "When we do have tomove," Staley says, "we wiII need help." According to OVA d i rector Turner Waskom, OVA was equipped to take over stewardship ofthe beach courts. He and his wife, Summit High School volleyball head coach Jill Waskom, have many years of experience with managing teams and courts. "Volleyball has been what we've done since we got out of college, and that's been 22 years now," Turner Waskom says. "So it was an easy transition to beach volleyball." SeeSand /C4

lists in Scoreboard,C2. — Bulletin staff report

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Home runlifts Sooners overVols

started playing four years ago.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

re on a stoRiceinre ionas

OKLAHOMA CITY — Lauren Chamberlain hit a two-run home run down the left-field line in the bottom of the 12th inning, lifting topseededOklahoma toa 5-3 win against TennesGame 1 of the Women's

College World Series finals. Chamberlain followed Brianna Turang's leadoff

double by smashing a

The Sooners capitalized on adropped pop-

playing for 15 years, added: "When you walk, your whole body is involved in the game. You have a sense of perspective. When you ride, you've got the food and the drinks in the cart. It's almost like a picnic." By the end of the round, Singh and Pratt were each $30 richer — and much wiser after receiving an abundance of pointers from their employers. "It's a nice game," said Singh, who is on his school's basketball, football and track teams and is considering taking up golf. "There's a lot of strategy." Such words are music to Peter Procops, the club's

• The Ducks'seasoncomesto a close after the owls take an11-4victory

seeon Monday nightin

high drive that soared over the foul pole for her 30th home run of the season, tying for the NCAA lead. Game 2 of the bestof-three championship series is tonight.

"You're not discombobulated worrying about the cart. You focus on the game, not on where to park." Small, who has been

Brian Davies i The Associated Presa

Rice's Shane Hoelscher slides into home after hitting a triple and scoring when the throw got by Oregon third baseman J.J. Altobelli in the first inning of Monday night's regional tournament game against Oregon. Oregon catcher Shaun Chase tries to make a play.

The Associated Press EUGENE — Freshman catcher Hunter Kopycinski had four hits and four RBIs and Rice scored seven runs in the first three innings in the Owls' 11-4 victory Monday night to win the NCAA tournament's Eugene RegionaL Rice (44-18) advances to its first super regional since 2009 with the upset of the eighth-seeded Ducks (48-16) and will play at North Carolina State this weekend. "Definitely a cloud nine

feeling right now," said Kopycinski, who made his first start of the postseason. Kopycinski, who also scored twice, led the Owls' 15-hit attack. Ford Stainbeck also had three hits. Playing for the fourth time in as many days, the Owls gave Zech Lemond his first start of the season and the sophomore closerdelivered with an eight-hit, four-run performance over6'/sinnings that included seven strikeouts and one walk. SeeOregon /C4

teaching pro, who grew up nearby in Nassau County and started caddying at neighboring Rockaway Hunting Club when he was 11. SeeCaddies /C4

up to rally from three runs down in the11th af-

ter Tennessee'Madison Shipman broke ascoreless tie with a three-run home run off of national player of the year Keilani Ricketts. — The Associated Press

NBA PLAYOFFS

Heat beat Pacers, return to finals By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

'A

+~dzrpp g~

Oklahoma's Lauren Chamberlain reacts as she runs toward home plate following her home run against Tennessee.

MIAMI — Their season, their legacy, their reign atop the NBA was all at stake, and the Miami Heat responded in a manner befitting defending champions — with a blowout. LeBron James scored 32 points and grabbed eight rebounds, ailing Dwyane Wade matched his postseason high with 21 points, and the Heat ran away from the Indiana Pacers 99-76 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals on

NBAFinals San Antonio Spurs at Miami Heat • When:Thursday, 6 p.m. • TV: ABC Monday night. In the NBA Finals for the third straight year, the Heat will play the San Antonio Spurs in a series that starts Thursday in Miami.

"They're just an amazing group of guys," said Heat managing general partner Micky A r i son, not long after handing the East championship trophy to Chris Ander-

sen, who held it aloft as teammates standing around him celebrated. "They've given us an incredible season so far, but it's a long way from over." Itcould have ended on Monday, of course. The Heat had alternated wins and losses with the Pacers in the first six games of the series, and were coming off their worst offensive outing of the year in Game 6. T hey responded with a r o u t, despite shooting just under 40 percent, well below their norm. SeeHeat/C4

II

lndiana's David West, below, and Miami's Dwyane Wade vie for the ball during the first half of Game 7 in the Eastern Conference finals Monday night in Miami. Wilfredo Lee Irhe Assoaated Press

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C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY

COREBOARD

TENNIS French Open, quarterfinals

5 a.m. 10 a.m.

French Open,quarterfinals

Tennis ESPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, Texas atBoston

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB, Chicago White Sox at Seattle SOFTBALL

College, World Series, championship Oklahoma vs.Tennessee

5 p.m.

HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Chicago at Los Angeles CYCLING

6 p.m.

Criterium Dauphjne Ljbere, Stage (tapedj

9 p.m.

MLB Root

ESPN NBCSN NBCSN

TENNIS French Open,

BASEBALL MLB, Miami at Philadelphia MLB, Chicago White Sox at Seattle

MLB, Texas atBoston

5 a.m.

ESPN2

10 a.m.

MLB

1 2:30 p.m. 4 p.m.

Roo t ESPN2

SOFTBALL

College, World Series, championship, OklahomaatTennessee HOCKEY NHL, playoffs, Pittsburgh at Boston CYCLING

5 p.m.

ESPN

5 p.m.

NBCSN

Criterium Dauphine Libere, Stage 4(tapedj 9 p.m.

SPORTS IN BRIEF Bend's Heinly turned away from U.S. Open

— Bend amateur golfer Jesse

conference will monitor each school's hits and contact are still being worked out. Scott ex-

pects everything to be in place by late July.

Heinly fell well short of qualify-

ing Monday for the IJ.S. Open after shooting a 24-over-par

Big Tenhooks up with

83-81 — I 64 in a sectional qualifier in Cle Elum, Wash. Heinly

Ten and the Pinstripe Bowl

— a 21-year-old Summit High School graduate vvhowas oneof

PinStriPe Bawl — TheBig have agreed to an 8-year deal that the conference hopes will help claim New York as its terri-

tvvo golfers to make it through

tory. Commissioner Jim Delany

a local qualifier last month in second-place finisher. Theonly

is at Yankee Stadium for the announcement of the deal with the three-year-old bowl game that will begin in 2014. He ap-

tvvo golfers from the 34-player field at Tumble Creek Club to

with Yankees owner Hal Stein-

Nampa, Idaho — finished 25 strokes behind the qualifier's

peared at a news conference

break par for the dayadvanced

brenner and team president

to the U.S. Open, which is scheduled for June13-16 at

Randy Levine. The Big Ten will take the Big 12's place in the

Merion Golf Club in Ardmore,

game.

Pa.

Deacon Jones dead at

BASKETBALL Kidd retiring from NBA

— Jason Kidd retired Monday from the NBA after 19 seasons,

ending one of the greatest careers for a point guard in league history. Kidd vvon an NBA title

74 — David "Deacon" Jones, a Hall of Fame defensive end credited with terming the word

sack for hovv heknocked down quarterbacks, has died. Hewas 74.The Washington Redskins

say that Jones died of natural causes at his home in Southern

and two Olympic gold medals, is second on thecareer list in assists and steals, andwas a10-

California. Redskins general manager BruceAllen, whose father, George, coachedJones

time All-Star. But he struggled

with the Los Angeles Rams,

badly in the playoffs for the

calls Jones "one of the great-

Knicks shortly after turning 40 and decided to walk away with

est players in NFL history. Off the field, he vvas a true giant."

tvvo years andmorethan $6

Jones vvastheleader ofthe Rams'Fearsome Foursome unit

million left on the deal he signed last summer. His retirement

from 1961 -71, and then played

comes two daysafter fellow 40-

for San Diego for tvvoseasons

year-old Grant Hill, with whom Kidd shared Rookie of the Year

Blaylock faces charges

before finishing his career with Washington in1974. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in1980and vvas voted to the league's 75th anniversary all-time team.

ties say former NBA All-Star

Former Bills QB Kelly

honors in 1995, announced his retirement.

in fatal CraSh —Authori-

Daron "Mookie" Blaylock has

dattling CanCer — Buffalo

been charged with vehicular

Bills Hall of Fame quarterback

Police Chief Franklin Allen says the 46-year-old Blaylock is

JimKell ysayshehasbeen diagnosed with cancer in his upper jaw bone andwill have surgery on June 7.Kelly is suffering from squamous cell

homicide in a head-on crash in suburban Atlanta. Jonesboro

2013 High DesertLeague First Team Attack —JamesRockett, jr., Bend;FinnLeahy, sr., MountainView;Griffin Reinecke,jr, Summ it. Midfield — Brandon Fitzpatrick, sr., Bend;Quinn Rasmussen, jr., Summit; DylanSeefeldt, sr., Summit. Long stick midfield Luke Ross,jr., Summit. Defense — QuinnFettig, soph., Bend; Porter Ford, jr., Sisters;MaxTague, jr., MountainView. Goalie —LukeLarsen,jr., Bend. Attack —DylanSmith, jr., Summ it; CadeHinderlider, soph.,Bend,Troy LaLonde,jr., Summit. Midfield —KinnonRoy,jr., Harney;Scott Nelson, jr., Sisters NickRasmussen,fr., Summit. Long stick midfield — CaseyLane,soph., Sisters. Defense —SamSimmons, sr., Summit; Andrew Miller, sr.,Bend;BrendanKent, jr., Summit. Goalie — ElSi i mmons, sr.,Summit. Honorable Mention Attack —DrewCorrigan, sr., Sisters; ZachValoppi, jr, Sisters;Eli Pite,soph.,Bend. Midfield Carter Christiansen,jr., Hermiston; IsaiahGlatz,sr., Sisters; JensStadeli, jr., Sisters;Seth Migard, jr., Summ it, HaydenBaney, sr., Bend;Logan Sall, sr., MountainView;ChaseReinhart, jr., Mountain View;KylerStevens,Redmond; AaronHenry, Redmond. Long stick midfield — lanTobiason,jr., Summit. Defense — Colton Cooper,sr., Sisters; Jake Curry, sr., Bend;TroySprague,sr., MountainView, Dan Schimm oger, sr., MountainView; JoshKoehler, Redmond. Goalie — TaylorKlus, fr., Harney;Jon Decker, Redmond.

Girls Lacrosse NBCSN

Listings arethemostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmade by TVor radio stations.

LOCAL GOLF

Boys Lacrosse

SecondTeam

WEDNESDAY

men's and women's quarterfinals

PREPS

also charged with driving on a suspended license and failure to carcinoma, but he has recently

2013 SouthLeague First Team

Attack — KatieAlhart, sr., Bend United; Alyssa

Fox, WestSalem;SarahEvans,Corvagis. Midfield —JacklynHumprey,Roseburg; Hannah Hughes,Marist; BrookeGemmel, Marist; ToriLandin, sr., BendUnited, BrieDunnen, Sheldon. Defense Alex Barnes,Roseburg;Emm a Kinrade,Marist, HannahBuckner,sr., BendUnited. Goalie — CassieFaderreckt, WestSalem. SecondTeam Attack —MattieWest, Roseburg; ShelbyDodril, Sheldon;RachelReese,Sheldon. Midfield — Harlie Johnson,Roseburg; Hope Raszka ,SouthSalem;KileyJack,SouthEugene;Alexa Olsen,Corvallis; Aman duhSuderman,West Salem. Defense — ElsieCruzCuevas,Sheldon;Jazmine Roa,WestSalem; Hailey Staiger,Corvagis. Goalie — CaireDeacruz, Roseburg.

BASEBALL College NCAADivision I Baseball Regionals AH Times PDT Double Elimination At English Field

Blacksburg, Va. Friday, May31 Oklahoma 7, Coastal Carolina3 Uconn 5,Virginia Tech2 Saturday, June1 Virginia Tech 9, Coastal Carolina I, Coastal eliminated Oklah oma5,Uconn3,12innings Sunday,June 2 VirginiaTech3, UconnI, UConneliminated Oklahoma10,Virginia Tech4, OUadvances At Davenport Field Charlottesville, Va. Friday, May 31 Virginia 2,Army1 Elon10,UNCWilmington 7 Saturday, June 1 UNCWilmington9, Army5, Armyeliminated Virginia 2,Elon0

Sunday,June 2 Elon 6,UNCWilmington 4, UNC Weliminated Virginia11,Elon3, UVAadvances At Boshamer Stadium Chapel Hill, N.C. Friday, May31 Towson 7, Florida Atlantic 2 NorthCarolina6, Canisius3 Saturday, June1 FloridaAtlantic14, Canisius6, Canisius eliminated NorthCarolina8,Towson 5 Sunday,June 2 FloridaAtlantic 6,Towson 5,Towson eliminated FloridaAtlantic 3,NorthCarolina2 Monday, June3 North Carolina12, FloridaAtlantic11, 13 innings, NorthCarolinaadvances At Doak Field Raleigh, N.C. Friday, May31 William 8Mary4, Mississippi 2 N.c. State 4, Binghamton1 Saturday, June 1 Mississippi 8,Bingham ton 4, Binghamton eiminated N.c. State I,William 8Mary0 Sunday,June 2 William 8 Mary 4, Mississippi 1,Mississippi eliminated N.c. State9, Wiliam 8 Mary2 NCSUadvances At Carolina Stadium Columbia, S.C. Friday, May 31 Liberty 8,Clemson3 SouthCarolina7, Saint Louis 3 Saturday, June 1 Clemson10,SaintLouis2, SLUeliminated SouthCarolina19,Liberty 3 Sunday,June 2 Liberty 3,ClemsonI, Clemsoneliminated SouthCarolina4, Liberty 2, 5Hinnings, susp., rain

Monday, June3 SouthCarolina6, Liberty 4, SouthCarolina advances At Jim Patterson Stadium Louisville, Ky. Friday, May 31 Miami 7,OklahomaState1 Louisville 8,BowlingGreen3 Saturday, June 1 Oklahoma State 7, Bowling Green3, Bowling Green eliminated Louisville 6,Miami4 Sunday,June 2 Oklahoma State 7, Miami1, Miamieliminated Louisvige12,OklahomaState3, Louisville advances At Dick HowserStadium Tallahassee, Fla. Friday, May 31 Troy 5,Alabama2 FloridaState10,SavannahState0 Saturday, June1 Alabama 3, SavannahState2

FloridaState11,Troy0

Sunday,June 2 Troy 9,Alabama8, Alabamaeliminated FloridaState11,Troy4, Florida St.advances At Bart Kaufman Field Bloomington, Ind. Friday, May 31 Austin Peay 4, Florida 3 Indiana5, Valparaiso4 Saturday, June1 Valparaiso5, Florida4, Floridaeliminated Indiana15,Austin Peay6 Sunday,June 2 Austin Peay 5, Valparaiso 4, Valparaiso eliminated Indiana 6, Austin Peay1, Indianaadvances At Hawkins Field Nashville, Tenn. Friday, May 31 Rlinois 6,GeorgiaTech4 Vanderbilt 9,ETSUI

Saturday, June1 GeorgiaTech5,ETSU1, ETSUeliminated Vanderbilt10, lllinois 4 Sunday,June 2 GeorgiaTech6,Rlinois 3, lginoiseliminated GeorgiaTech5,Vanderbilt 0 Monday, June3 Vanderbilt 7,GeorgiaTech1 Vanderbilt advances At Dudy Noble Field StarkviHe, Miss. Friday, May 31 SouthAlabama9, Mercer4 MississippiState5, Central Arkansas3 Saturday, June 1 Central Arkansas6, Mercer5, 11 innings, Mercer eliminated MississippiState6, SouthAlabama2 Sunday,June 2 CentralArkansas3, South Alabama0 CentralArkansas5, Mississippi State2 Monday, June3 MississippiState6, Central Arkansas1, Mississippi St.advances At Alex BoxStadium Baton Rouge, La. Friday, May31 LSU11,JacksonState 7 SamHoustonState4, Louisiana-Lafayette 2 Saturday, June1 Louisiana-Lafayette15,JacksonState1, JSUeliminated LSU 8,SamHoustonState 5 Sunday,June 2 Louisiana-Latayette7, SamHouston State 5, SHSU eliminated LSU 5,Louisiana-Lafayette1i LSUadvaces At Tointon Family Stadium Manhattan, Kan. Friday, May 31 KansasState20,Wichita State11 Bryant 4,Arkansas1 Saturday, June1 Arkansas3, Wichita State1, WSUeliminated KansasState7, Bryant1 Sunday,June 2 Arkansas12,Bryant3, Bryanteliminated KansasState4, Arkansas3, KSUadvances At PK Park Eugene Friday, May31 Rice 3,SanFrancisco 2,11 innings Oregon3, SouthDakotaState2 Saturday, June 1 San Francisco4, SouthDakotaState3, 13 innings, SDSUeliminated Rice1, Oregon 0 Sunday,June 2 Oregon6, SanFrancisco1, SanFrancisco eiminated Oregon11,Rice0 Monday, June3 Rice11,Oregon4, Riceadvances At Goss Stadium CorvaHis Friday, May31 UC SantaBarbara6, TexasA8M4 OregonState5, UTSA4 Saturday, June 1 Texas A8M 6,UTSA1,UTSA eiminated OregonState3, UCSanta Barbara2 Sunday,June 2 TexasA8M5, UCSantaBarbara4, UCSBeliminated OregonState6, TexasABM1, OSUadvances At Goodwin Field FuHerton, Calif. Friday, May31 ArizonaState4, NewMexico 3 Cal StateFullerton4, Columbia1 Saturday, June 1 Columbia6, NewMexico 5, 13innings, UNMeliminated Cal StateFullerton1, ArizonaState0 Sunday,June 2 ArizonaState10, Columbia5, Columbiaeliminated Cal StateFullerton6,ArizonaState1, CSFadvances At Jackie RobinsonStadium Los Angeles Friday, May 31 Cal Poly9, SanDiego2 UCLA5,SanDiego State3 Saturday, June1 San Diego6,SanDiegoState3, SDSUeliminated UCLA6, CalPoly4 Sunday,June 2 San Diego8,Cal Poly5,Cal Polyeliminated UCLA6 SanDiego0, UCLAadvances Super Regionals June 7-10 NorthCarolina(55-9)vs.SouthCarolina (42-18)

N.c. State(47-14)vs.Rice(44-18) Cal StateFullerton(51-8)vs.UCLA(42-17) Oklahoma (43-19) vs. LSU(55-9) Vanderbilt (54-10)vs.Louisville (4912) Indiana(46-14)vs.FloridaState(47-15) Virginia (50-10)vs. Mississippi State(46-18) KansasState(44-17) vs.OregonState (48-10)

SOFTBALL College NCAADivision I World Series At ASA Hall of FameStadium OklahomaCity AH TimesPDT Double Elimination x-if necessary

ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3) Monday, June3:Oklahoma5,Tennessee3,12 innings,Oklahomaleadsseries1-0 Today, June4:Tennesseevs.Oklahoma,5p.m. x-Wedne sday,June 5:Tennesseevs.Oklahoma,5 p.m.

(Best-of-7)

Spain

EASTERNCONFERENCE Miami 4, Indiana 3 Wednesday, May22:Miami103, Indiana102,OT Friday,May24: Indiana97, Miami 93 Sunday,May26: Miami114, Indiana96

SOCCER

Tuesday ,May28:Indiana99,Miami92 Thursday,May30: Miami90, Indiana79 Saturday,June1: Indiana91, Miami 77 Monday, June3 Miami99,Indiana76 WESTERNCONFERENCE SanAntonio 4,Memphis 0 Sunday,May19:SanAntonio105, Memphis 83 Tuesday, May21: SanAntonio93, Memphis 89, OT Saturday,May25. SanAntonio 104, Memphis 93, OT Monday,May27: SanAntonio 93,Memphis 86 NBA FINALS

Miami vs. SanAntonio Thursday,June6: SanAntonio at Miami, 6p.m. Sunday,June9: SanAntonioat Miami, 5p.m. Tuesday, June11 Miamiat SanAntonio 6p.m. Thursday,June13: MiamiatSanAntonio, 6p.m. x-Sunday, June16: MiamiatSanAntonio,5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June18:SanAntonioat Miami, 6p.m. x-Thursday, June20: SanAntonio atMiami, 6p.m.

Heat 99, Pacers 76 INDIANA(78)

George 2-92-4 7, West6-152-314, Hibbert7-11 4-518, Hill 4 142-213, Stephenson4-8 0-010, Augustin 0-02-22, THansbrough 2-2 2-26, Young0-1 0-00,Mahinmi0-00-2 0,Green1-50-02,Johnson 1-1 0-02, Pendergraph1-20-02, B.Hansbrough 0-1 0-00. Totals28-8914-2078.

MIAMI (99) James8-1715-16 32,Haslem1-41-2 3, Bosh

3-13 2-2 9,Chalmers3-81-2 7, Wade7-16 7-721, Miller 0-30-00, Allen3-61-1 10,Andersen1-35-6 7, Cole3-41-2 8,Lewis1-20-02, Anthony0-0 0-0 0, Jones0-00-00. Totals 30-76 33-38 99. Indiana 21 16 18 21 — 76 Miami 19 33 24 23 — 99

WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION AH Times PDT

Eastern Conference W 3 3 I

L 0 0 1

Pct GB 1.000 1 000 .500 I'/~

1 1

1 1

.500 1'/z .500 1'/z

I

2

.333 2

W I 1 I

L Pct GB 0 1.000 1 .500 ia 1 500 i/2

Western Conference

Minnesota

Los Angeles San Antonio Seattle Phoenix Tulsa

Eastern Conference W L T PtsGF Montreal 8 2 2 2 6 22 Newyork 7 5 4 2 5 23 Houston 6 4 4 22 1 9 S porting KansasCity 6 5 4 2 2 18 Philadephia 5 5 4 19 19 NewEngland 5 4 4 19 15 Columbus 4 4 5 17 1 6

Chicago TorontoFC D.c.

Monday's Summary

Atlanta Chicago Indiana Newyork Washington Connecticut

MLS MAJOR LEAGUESOCCER AH Times PDT

I

I

500

0 0

2 4

.000 1ia .000 2'/~

I/2

Monday'sGames No games scheduled Today's Games No games scheduled Wednesday'sGame IndianaatNewYork, 8a.m.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEYLEAGUE AH Times PDT CONFERENCE FINALS

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

Boston 2, Pittsburgh 0 Saturday,JuneI: Boston3,Pittsburgh 0 Monday, June3: Boston 6, Pittsburgh1 Wednesday, June5: PittsburghatBoston, 5p.m. Friday June 7: Pittsburghat Boston,5p.m. x-Sunday, June9: Boston at Pittsburgh, 5p.m. x-Tuesday,June11: PittsburghatBoston, TBD x-Wednesday, June12. BostonatPittsburgh, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 2, LosAngeles 0 Saturday,June1. Chicago2, LosAngeles1 Sunday,June2: Chicago4, LosAngeles 2 Today, June4:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. Thurs day,June6:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. x-Sat urday,June8:LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. x-Monday ,June10:ChicagoatLosAngeles,6p.m. x-Wedne sday,June 12:Los Angeles atChicago, TBD

TENNIS Professional FrenchOpen Monday

At Stade RolandGarros Paris

Purse: $28.4million (GrandSlam) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Men Fourth Round TommyHaas(12), Germany, def. Mikhail youzhny (29), Russia6-1, , 6-1,6-3 NovakDlokovic(I), Serbia, del. PhilippKohlschreiber(16),Germany, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4,6-4. RafaelNadal(3), Spain, def. KeiNishikori (13), Japan,6-4,6-1,6-3. StanislasWawrinka (9), Switzerland,def. Richard Gasouet(7),France,6-7(5),4-6,6-4,7-5, 8-6. Women Fourth Round Victoria Azarenka(3), Belarus, def. Francesca Schiavone, Italy, 6-3,6-0. Maria Kirilenko (12), Russia, def.Bethanie MatekSands,UnitedStates,7-5, 6-4. MariaSharapova(2),Russia,def.SloaneStephens (17), United States,6-4, 6-3. JelenaJankovic(18), Serbia, def.JamieHampton, UnitedStates,6-0,6-2.

FrenchOpenShowCourt Schedules Today At StadeRolandGarros Paris Playbeginsat2a.m.PDT Court Philippe Chatrier Agnieszka Radwanska(4), Poland,vs. SaraErrani (5), Italy Jo-WilfriedTsonga(6), France,vs. Roger Federer (2), Switzerland Court SuzanneLenglen SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, vs. Svetlana Kuznetsova,Russia Tommy Robredo(32), Spain,vs.David Ferrer(4),

GA 15 19 14

13 24 9

13 3 7 2 11 9 17 1 7 5 8 12 19 I 1 0 2 5 6 24

Western Conference

W L T Pts GF FC Dallas 8 2 4 28 2 3 R ealSalt Lake 7 5 3 24 21 Portland 5 1 7 22 2 2 Los Angeles 6 5 2 20 2 1 Colorado 5 4 5 2 0 15 Seattle 5 4 3 1 8 16 Vancouver 4 4 4 16 1 6 SanJose 3 6 6 1 5 13 C hivas USA 3 8 2 11 13 NOTE. Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

GA 17

15 14 15 12 13 17 23

26

Wednesday'sGame

ColumbusatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m.

Saturday's Games

D.c. UnitedatNewEngland, 4:30p.m. PortlandatChicago,5:30 p.m. Los Angeleat s RealSalt Lake,6:30p.m. VancouveratSeattle FC,7:30 p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL MLB —Suspended St. Louis Cardinas C Yadier Molina forone-gamefor making contactwith umpire Mike Everitt onSunday. American League CHICAGO WHITESOX—Reinstated INFGordon Beckham lrom the 15-day DL.Designated INFTyler Greene for assignment. DETROIT TIGERS—Designated OFQuintin Berry for assignment MINNES OT A TWINS —Designated LHP Tyler Robertson for assignment.Selectedthecontract ofOF CleteThomasfromRochester (IL). NEW YORKYANKEES— Reinstated LHP Andy Pettitte fromthe15-day DL.OptionedOFBrennan Boesch to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL) TORONTDBLUE JAYS— Optioned RHP Mickey Storey toBuffalo(IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Traded38 JuanFranciscoto Milwaukeefor LHPTomKeeling,andassigned Keel-

ing toMississippi(SL) LOS ANGELESDODGERS Rec alled OF Yasiel Puig lromChattanooga(SL).

MIAMI MARLINS —Designated LHPWade LeBlanc for assignment.OptionedOFJordan Brownto NewOrleans(PCL). Reinstated18 Casey Kotchman from the60-dayDL.Recalled LHPEdgar 0 mosfrom Jacksonville(SL) PHILADELP HIAPHILLIES—Activated OFMichael Youngfromthebereavement list. SentINFMichael Martinez to LehighValley (IL). PITTSBIJRGHPIRA TES—Recalled RHP Jared Hughes lrom Indianapolis (IL). Selectedthecontract of RHPRyanReidfrom Indianapolis. PlacedRHP JeanmarGomez onthe15-day DLandRHPPhil Irwin on the60-dayDL. Optioned OFAlex Presleyto Indianapolis. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NEWYOR KKNICKS—Announced the retirement of G JasonKidd. FOOTBALL National Football League DALLASCO WBOYS—Signed TE Dante Rosario. ReleasedTEPaul Freedman. DETROILI TONS—ReleasedDBLionelSmith. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signed OL R.J. Mattes. NEW YORKGIANTS—SignedWRKeith Carlos. PITTSBL IRGH STEELERS— Signed RB Le'Veon Bell andLBJarvis Jonestofour-year contracts. SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS— Signed S Raymond Ventrone to atwo-year contract. WaivedFBJason Schepler. TAMPABA YBUCCANEERS—NamedNelson Luis director olcommunications. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreed to termswith GAnttiRaantaona one-yearcontract. DETROIT RED WINGS Assigned D Danny DeKeysertoGrandRapids (AHL). MONTREA L CANADIENS—Announced they wil not renewthe contract of goaltender coachPierre Groulx. COLLEGE BIG TEN CONFERENCE—Announced it is adding men'and s women'slacrosseasavarsity sport in 2015.AdmittedJohnsHopkinsasanaffiliate member for men'slacrosse. CULVER -STOCKTON—NamedMikeWarrenmen's volleyballcoach. EASTCAROLINA—Signed football coach Ruffin McNeill to a three-yearextensionthrough the2017

season. HOUSTO N—Named Dallas Blacklockdirector of high schoolfootball relationsandToryTeykl associate director offootball operations. MANHA TTAN—Announced the resignation ot women'stennis coachScott Blumberg. WAGNE R—Named Sarah Tanner assistant swim-

mingcoach. WOFFO RD—NamedTim Johnsonmen's basketball assistantcoach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 89 2 315 44 10 The Dages 839 239 7 I John Day 62 0 251 17 5 McNary 6 38 228 16 2

maintain his lane in the Friday

undergone tests to show that

crash. Police say Blaylock was

the cancer is isolated in his

driving an SUV that crossed the center line and struck a van.

javv and has not spread to other parts of his body. The an-

A van passenger, 43-year-old

nouncement was madeMonday

Monica Murphy, died hours later. Her husband survived.

morning, just before the start of the quarterback's Kelly For

Atlanta Medical Center spokes-

Kids charitable foundation's an-

woman Nicole Gustin said Blaylock was in fair condition

nual celebrity golf tournament. "Doctors have told me that my

Monday. He initially was on life support.

prognosis for recovery is very good," he says.

Bruins cruise to 6-1 victory over Penguins

FOOTBALL Pac-12 to limit contact

CYCLING Giro stage winner fails

By Will Graves

iII PraCtiCe —In an effort to cut down on concussions, head trauma and other injuries, the

dOPing teSt — Giro d'ltalia stage winner MauroSantambrogio tested positive for EPO from asamplegivenontheopening

Pac-12 Conference is establishing a league-wide policy to limit

day of the race last month and

the amount of contact made

has beentemporarily suspended by cycling's governing body.The ning this season. Commissioner International Cycling Union also Larry Scott said Monday that asked the Italian cycling federaduring football practices begin-

the conference will limit hits to numbers "less than what the

NCAA permits," while many of the schools already have their

ovvn "self-imposed limits." Novv, there will be anacross-

the-board rule in an effort to

tion to proceed with a disciplin-

ary case. Hecould bestripped of his victory in mountainous Stage14 and his ninth-place finish overall. He tested positive

in a urine sampleMay4, the first

stage of the three-week race, decrease headtrauma and UCI said. — From wire reports other injuries. Details of how the

BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AH Times PDT CONFERENCE FINALS

NHL PLAYOFFS

The Associated Press

PITTSBURGH — The Boston Bruins keep talking about fortunate bounces and a dash of luck, insisting the margin between themselves and the Pittsburgh Penguins is thin. At the moment, it looks like a chasm. Brad Marchand scored twice during a four-goal first period and the Bruins routed Pittsburgh 6-1 in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals on Monday night to take a 2-0 lead in the best-ofseven series. "It doesn't matter what the series is at right now," Marchand said. "If they get the next one, they're right back in it. The next one is the one that's most important." It'sa phrase the top-seed Penguins repeated after losing Game 1 on Saturday

night to fall behind in a series for the first time in the playoffs. The inspired play they needed never materialized. S idney Crosby a n d E v g eni M a l kin were heldscoreless for the second straight contest to send the NHL's highest-scoring team slouching to Boston for Game 3 on Wednesday with its season on the line. "Tonight was terrible, there's no other way to describe it," Crosby said. "A loss is a loss. It's frustrating. You don't like giving one like that. We really didn't do a lot of things to give ourselves a chance to win. This one we have to forget pretty

quickly." It won't be easy. David Krejci, Nathan Horton, Patrice Bergeron and J ohnny B oychuk a l so

Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday.

Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd B onneville 85,080 34,456 3,504 9 3 3 T he DaUes 68,609 32,064 88 1 36 2 J ohn Day 54,816 28,150 97 7 48 9 M cNary 47,927 21,004 1,513 7 2 2

scored for Boston while Tuukka Rask stopped 26 shots. Pittsburgh's top-ranked power playwent zero for 2 and the Penguins were never in it after the Bruins scored three times in 17 minutes to chase Tomas Vokoun. Brandon Sutter netted Pittsburgh's lone goaL Vokoun gave up three firstperiod goals on 12 shots before being replaced by Marc-Andre Fleury. "We've gottenaway from our game," Pittsburgh coach Da n B y l sma s aid. "We've gotten off our game plan." The Bruins had more than a l i t t le something to do with it. Pouncing on every mistake — of which there were plenty to choose — Boston buried the Penguins early. Not bad for a team that needed an improbable third-period rally in Game 7 of the first round against Toronto to advance.


TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

TENNIS

0'o ovic, Na a oncourse orFrenc By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

P ARIS — L ess t han 4 8 h ours after learning of t h e death of his childhood coach, Novak Djokovic was on court at the French Open, determined to complete a career Grand Slam in honor of the woman he likened to a "second mother." Still grieving, Djokovic began shakily Monday. Six of the match's first seven unforced e rrors were his. A fter o ne

poor exchange, he chucked his racket hard enough to break it. He dropped a set for the only time in four matches so far. After recovering quickly to dispatch 16th-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany 46, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 and reach the quarterfinals at a 16th consecutive major t ournament, Djokovic spoke from the heart about the passing of Jelena Gencic, who was 76. "It hasn't been easy, but this is life. You know, life gives

you things (but also) takes away close people," Djokovic said. "We were very c lose throughout my whole life, and she taught me a lot of things that are part of me, part of my character." G encic connected with a 6-year-old Novak at a tennis camp, then worked with him for five years. "I feeleven more responsible now to go all the way in this tournament," said the No.

I-ranked Djokovic, who owns six Grand Slam titles but none from Roland Garros. "I want to do it for her." He will need to beat three more opponents to a ccomplish that, starting with 12thseeded Tommy Haas, who at 35 became the oldest French Open quarterfinalist s i n ce 1971 by eliminating Mikhail Youzhny 6-1, 6-1, 6-3 in less than I t/a hours. By the second set, Youzhny was so out of sorts he destroyed a racket by slamming it nine times against his sideline seat. Haas is a four-time Grand Slam se m i f i nalist w ho climbed to No. 2 in the rankings at age 24. But r ecent times have been difficult because of serious injuries and o perations, including to h i s right shoulder and hip, and he missed more than a full season. "Who would have thought two years ago I'd be in this position today?" Haas asked. "I wouldn't have." He's certainly persistent. The 12 French Open app earances it t ook H aas t o reach his f i rst q u arterfinal in Paris is a record. And he needed 13 match points in the third round to get past John Isner in five sets. "It's easy sometimes to ... throw the white towel and say, 'I'm done. I have achieved a lot of things. I don't really have to worry so much financially

ensemis

4, 6-3, part of a rough day for Americans. The other two in action also exited in straight sets: 54thranked Jamie Hampton lost to 18th-seeded Jelena Jankovic 6-0, 6-2, an d 6 7 th-ranked Bethanie Mattek-Sands was N rt+, s a ~ beaten by 12th-seeded Maria Kirilenko 7-5, 6-4. Kirilenko now meets two-time Australian Open champion Victoria Azarenka, a 6-3, 6-0 winner over 2010 French Open titlist Francesca Schiavone. Fifteen-time major champion Serena Williams, the only U.S. singles player left, plays her quarterfinal against 2009 French Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova today, when No. 4 Agnieszka Radwanska faces No. 5 Sara Errani. The men's q u arterfinals today are 17-time major champion Roger Federer against No. 6 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga, and No. Michel Euler/The Associated Press 4 David Ferrer against No. Novak Djokovic returns a shot against Philipp Kohlschreiber, rear left, in their fourth-round match at 32 Tommy Robredo, the first the FrenchOpen inParis on Monday. Djokovic won the match 4-6,6-3,6-4,6-4. man in 86 years to win three c onsecutive G r a n d Sl a m matches after dropping the and I can live a good life.' gether a 6-4, 6-1, 6-3 victory by two sets when he got into opening two sets. But at the same time," Haas over No. 13 Kei Nishikori of an extended and animated For Federer, this is the 36th explained, "maybe there was Japan. argument with the chair um- Grand Slam quarterfinal in a Nadal, who beat Djokovic something in me still that said, pire, demanding that a l i ne row, a record for the 45-year 'You know what'? I can maybe in last year's final and is 56- judge be replaced. Wawrinka Open era. Djokovic's streak still do something.' " I in hisFrench Open career, s lowly, steadily t u rned t h e isn't even half as long, but it If Djokovic can get past declared: "I played much bet- match around and edged No. ranks third. Haas, he'll find a familiar foe ter today than the first three 7 Richard Gasquet 6-7 (5), 4-6, T he last t i m e t h e S e r b in the semifinals: seven-time matches. No d o ub t a b o ut 6-4, 7-5, 8-6. failed to get that far at a maMaria Sharapova moved jor tournament was the 2009 French Open champion Rafa- that." el Nadal, who played his first Consider that something of into the quarterfinals by beat- French Open, where he lost relatively routine opening set a warning for No. 9 Stanislas ing 17th-seeded Sloane Ste- to Kohlschreiber in the third of the tournament and put to- Wawrinka, who was trailing phens of the United States 6- round. •

~IW

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

Boston Baltimore NewYork Tampa Bay Toronto Detroit Cleveland Minnesota Chicago Kansas City

Texas Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston

W L 35 23 32 25 32 25 31 25 24 33 Central Division W L 30 25 30 27 25 29 24 31 23 31

West Division W 35 35 25 25 21

L 21 24 33 33 37

Pct GB .603 ,561 2r/t 581 2r/r

.554 3 .421 t Or/t

Pct GB .545 .528 1 .463 4r/r .438 8 426 8t/t

Pct GB .825 .593 tr/t

431 11 .431 11 .362 15

Tampa Bay (M.Moore8-0) at Detroit (Ani.sanchez55),408p.m Texas(Grimm5-3) at Boston(Oempster 2-8), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (Ti Iman4-2) atHouston (Harret 4-8),5:10 p.m. Minnesota(Oeduno1-1) at KansasCity (Mendoz a 1-2), 5:10p.m. Oakland (Griffin 5-4) at Milwaukee(Lohse1-8), 5:10 p.m. ChicagoCubs(Feldman5-4) at LA Angels(Weaver 1-1), 7:05p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Peavy8-3) atSeattle (F.Hernandez 8-4), 7:1 0p.m. Toronto(Jo.Johnson0-1) atSanFrancisco(uncecum 3-5), 7:1 5pm Wednesday'sGames ClevelandatN.Y.Yankees,10:05 a.m. OaklandatMiwaukee,11:10 a.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatSeatle,12:40 p.m. TorontoatSanFrancisco,12:45 p.m. Chicago Cubsat LA. Angels,4:05 p.m. Tampa BayatDetroit, 408p.m. Texas at Boston,4:10p.m. BaltimoreatHouston, 5:10p.m. Minnesota at KansasCity, 5:10p.m.

Central Division

W L 38 19 38 22 35 23 23 32 21 35 West Division W L Arizona 32 25 SanFrancisco 30 27 Colorado 30 28 SanDiego 28 31 Los Angeles 24 32

St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago Milwaukee

Monday's Games Philadelphia 7, Miami2 Cincinnati 3,Colorado0 Atlanta 7,Pittsburgh2 Oakland10,Milwaukee2 St. Louis 7,Arizona1 L.A. Dodgers2,SanDiego1

MARINERS TAKE WHITE SOX

Heyward and Freddie Freeman each hit a two-run homer, helping Kris Medlen and Atlanta beat Pittsburgh. Medlen (2-6j pitched

SEATTLE — Raul Ibanez hit a

two-run homer andJoe Saunders pitched into the seventh inning to lead Seattle over slumping Chicago. TheWhite Sox have lost seven straight games, their longest slide since dropping seven

seven solid innings for his first win since April 9, ending acareerworst, five-game skid over his previous nine starts. The right-

hander allowed anunearned run

in a row in September 2011.

and seven hits, lowering his ERA to 3.14.

Seattle ab r hbt ab r hbt OeAzacf 4 0 1 0 EnChvzrf 3 0 2 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 Baylt 4000 Riosrf 3 1 1 0 Seager3b 4 1 1 0 Konerktb 4 0 1 0 KMortstb 4 1 1 1 Viciedolt 4 1 1 0 Ibanezdh 4 1 1 2 A.Ounn dh 3 0 1 1 Frnkln 2b 3 1 1 0

Kppngr3b 4 0 1 1 Msndrscf 3 0 0 0 F lowrsc 3 0 0 0 Sucrec 3 0 1 1 B ckhm2b 3 0 0 0 Ryanss 1 0 0 0

.491 7 .483 7r/t .407 t t r/r .278 t gt/t

Pct GB .667 .821 2r/r .803 3'/r .41 8 14 .375 t 8r/r

Pct GB 561 .526 2 517 2r/t

.458 8 .429 7'/r

Today's Games Miami (Nolasco3-6) at Philadelphia(Pettibone3-1), 4:05 p.m. N.Y.Mets(Hefner1-5) at Washington (Zimmermann 8-3), 4 05 p.m. Colorado(Nicasio 4-2) at Cincinnati(H.Baitey3-4), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh(Locke5-1) at Atlanta (Minor 7-2), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (Griffin 5-4) atMilwaukee(Lohse1-8), 5:10 p.m. Arizona(Skaggs1-0) at St. Louis(Wacha00), 5:15 p.m. ChicagoCubs(Feldman 5-4) at LA Angels(Weaver 1-1), 7:05p.m. San Diego (Richard 1-5) at LA. Dodgers(Litty 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Toronto(JoJohnson0-1) atSanFrancisco(Lincecum 3-5), 7:1 5p.m. Wednesday'sGames PittsburghatAtlanta, 9:10a.m.

Ted S. Warren /The Assomated Press

Seattle's Raul Ibanez hits a two-run home run in the third inning of Monday night's game against the Chicago White Sox in Seattle. The Mariners went on to take a 4-2 victory.

sixth inning and New York beat Cleveland to spoil Nick Swisher's Rios (13),Konerko(7), Viciedo(7), K.Morales(17). first game back in the Bronx. HR — lbanez(10). CS—Ryan(2). 8—En.Chavez. Andy Pettitte lasted only 4z/s Chicago IP H R E R BB SO innings in a wild return from the Joh.Oanks L,0-2 8 7 4 3 1 5 Thornton 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 disabled list — his 500th career 0 0 0

1

start. Shawn Kelly (3-0) and three

JSaundersW,4-5 81-3 5 1 1 1 MedinaH,3 12-3 0 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen8,13-16 1 1 1 1 1 PB — Flowers. T—2.32. A—13,491(47,476).

5 2 2

other relievers held the lndians

Astros 2, Angels1

scoreless the rest of the wayto help NewYork win for the second time in nine games. Cleveland New York ab r hbt ab r hbt

ANAHEIM, Calif.— Chris Carter homered, Erik Bedard pitched

seven strong innings for his first victory of the season, and

Pct GB .614

Pittsburgh

T otals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 2 94 7 4 Chicago 0 10 000 001 — 2 Seattle 013 000 00x - 4 OP—Seattle1.LOB—Chicago5,Seattle 4.28-

2-3 0

last-place Houston completed a four-gamesweep ofLosAngeles. Brandon Barnes drove in thegoahead run in the sixth inning as the Astros finished a perfect sixgame road trip with their seventh win over the big-bodget Angels in 10 meetings this season. Los Angeles ab r hbt ab r hbi B Barnscf 3 0 0 1 Aybarss 4 0 2 0 Houston

A ttuve2h 4 0 1 0 Troutct 3 0 2 1 JCastroc 4 0 0 0 Pujolsdh 4 0 0 0 J Mrtnztf 3 0 0 0 Trumorf 3 0 0 0 C.Penadh 3 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 0 Carter1b 3 1 1 1 Callasp3b 4 0 1 0

Pareds rf 3 0 0 0 Nelson pr 0 0 0 0 C rowerf 0 0 0 0 lannettc 3 0 0 0 Omngz3b 3 1 1 0 Hamltnph 0 0 0 0 MGnzzss 2 0 0 0 BHarrs1b 3 0 0 0 Conger ph 1 0 0 0 S hucktf 3 1 1 T otals 2 8 2 3 2 Totals 3 21 7 Houston 0 00 011 000 — L os Angeles 0 0 1 0 0 0 000 —

0 1 2 1

BedardW,1-2 W.WrightH,5 Fields H,t

7 5 1 1 1 2 3- 0 0 0 0 1-3 1 0 0 0

2 0 0

1

2

B ourncf 5 2 3 0 Gardnrcf 4 1 1 2 Aviles2h-ss 4 0 2 1 Cano2b 5 1 1 0 ACarerss 2 0 0 0 Teixeirtb 3 1 1 4 Kipnis 20 1 0 0 0 Hafner dh 4 1 1 1 Swisher1b 4 1 0 1 Overayrf 3 0 1 0 MrRynl3b 3 0 0 0 VWetlstf 0 0 0 0 Csantndh 4 0 2 2 Isuzukitf-d 3 1 1 0 Raburnlt 1 0 0 0 OAdms3b 4 0 0 0 B rantlyph-If 1 0 0 0 J.Nix3b 0 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 0 0 Brigncss 4 0 2 0 S tubbsrf 4 1 1 0 AuRmnc 3 2 2 0 Totals 3 3 4 8 4 Totals 3 37 107 C leveland 001 03 0 0 0 0 — 4 N ew York 004 0 0 2 1 0 x — 7

1 0 0 1

BlantonL,t-9

8 3 2 2 0 11 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:38. A—30,010(45,483).

Yankees 7,Indians 4 NEW YORK — Mark Teixeira hit

a grand slam for his first homer of the season, Brett Gardner had a tiebreaking single in the

Phillies 7, Marlins 2 PHILADELPHIA— Domonic

MastersonL,8-4 6 1-3 9 7 7 3 Allen 2-3 0 0 0 1 d.smith 1 1 0 0 0

New York

42-3 7 4 4 KetteyW,3-0 11 - 3 0 0 ChamberlainH,4 1 0 0 O.RobertsonH,)2 1 0 0 Rivera8,20-21 1 1 0 WP — Pettitte 2. T—2'58.A—40,007(50,291). Pettitte

0 0 0 0

3 1 1 0 0

5 1 0

3 2 2 0 1

National League

Dodgers 2, Padres1

Yasiel Puig had a successful major league debut andLosAngeles beat San Diego. StephenFife (1-0) allowed one run and five hits in 5'/a innings to earn his first major

league win. San Diego Los Angeles ab r hbt ab r hbt EYCarrss 3 0 2 0 P uigrf 4020 Amarstcf 4 1 2 0 Punto20 4 0 1 0 Headly3b 4 0 t t AdGnzt tb 3 1 1 1 Gyorko2b 4 0 2 0 RHrndzc 3 0 0 0 Oenorfi If-rf 2 0 0 0 VnS(yktf 3 1 2 1 Blanksb1-If 4 0 1 0 Ethiercf 3 0 0 0

Atlanta

ab r hbt ab r hbt SMartect 4 0 2 0 Smmnsss 5 1 1 0 Walker2b 3 1 1 0 Heywrdrf 5 1 2 2 G Jonesrf 4 0 0 0 J.Uptonlf 4 2 1 0 Csnchzlb 4 1 2 1 FFrmn1b 3 2 1 2 Snidertt 4 0 0 0 McCnnc 3 1 2 2 RMartnc 2 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 3 0 2 1 McKnrc 2 0 0 0 R.Pena3b 0 0 0 0 PA)vrz3b 3 0 1 0 Uggta2h 2 0 0 0 Barmesss 4 0 2 1 RUptoncf 3 0 0 0 AJBrntp 2 0 1 0 Medlenp 3 0 1 0 JHughs p 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Mercerph 1 0 0 0 A.Woodp 0 0 0 0 Zagrskp 0 0 0 0

Young and Erik Kratz also went deep for the Phillies. Brown, the NL player of the month for May, continued his torrid hitting by going 3 for 4. He had12 homers and 25 RBls last month, and

already has connected twice and driven in six runs in June. Miami

Philadelphia ab r hbt ab r hbi Pierrelf 4 1 2 0 Reverecf 5 1 2 1

Lucas3b 2 1 1 0 CHrndz2b 4 0 0 1 Oietrch2b 4 0 1 1 Roginsss 2 0 0 0 Ozunarf 4 0 1 1 Howardtb 3 1 1 0 C oghlncf 4 0 1 0 OBrwnlf 4 1 3 2 K tchmtb 3 0 0 0 OYongrf 4 1 1 1 O lmosp 0 0 0 0 Mayrryrf 0 0 0 0 O Jnngsp 0 0 0 0 Kratzc 4 12 1 Rugginph 1 0 0 0 Gatvts3b 4 1 1 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 Kndrckp 4 1 1 1 Brantlyc 3 0 0 0 Koehterp 2 0 0 0 W ehbp 0 0 0 0 Oobbslb 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 2 6 2 Totals 3 47 t t 7 Miami 0 02 000 000 — 2 Philadelphia 0 0 0 0 3 4 0 0x 7 E—Brantiy (3). OP—Miami 2. LOB—Miami

Venate rf 2 0 0 0 HrstnJr3b 2 0 0 0 Guzmnph-tb t 0 0 0 Moylanp 0 0 0 0 Hundtyc 3 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Stuttsp 2 0 0 0 M.E(tisph 1 0 0 0 Kotsayph 1 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Reidp 0000 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 I ngeph 1 0 0 0 LCruzss 3 0 1 0 5, Philadelphia 8. 28 —Coghan (9), Howard(14). Totals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 3 27 107 38 —Gatvis (2), K.Kendrick(1). HR—0.8rown(17), Fitep 10 0 0 P ittsburgh 001 0 0 0 0 01 — 2 O.Young U ribe3b 1 0 0 0 (5), Kratz (7) 88 Revere2 (13). S LuAtlanta 000 240 10x — 7 T otals 3 0 1 8 1 Totals 2 82 7 2 cas. E — B. U pton (3). OP — Atlan t a 1. L08 — P it t s burgh S an Diego 000 0 0 1 000 — 1 IP H R E R BBSO 7, Atlanta8. 28—Walker (6), G.Sanchez(9), Barmes Miami Los Angeles 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0x — 2 KoehterL,0-4 5 7 5 4 2 4 2 (13). HR —Heyward (3), FFreeman Webb OP San Diego 2, Los Angeles 4 L08 San (5), C.Johnson 2-3 3 2 2 1 1 (8), McCann (7). CS—S.Marte(7). SF—C.Johnson Diego 5, LosAngeles3. 28—Amarista (9) HROlmos 1131 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh IP H R E R BB SO Ad.Gonzatez(8), VanSlyke(5). SB—EY.Cabrera 2 A.J.RurnettL3-8 5 Oa.Jennings 1 0 0 0 0 1 8 8 8 3 5 (23). 8—Uribe. Philadelphia 1 1 0 0 0 0 San Diego IP H R E R BB SO JHughes K.KendrickW6-3 9 8 2 2 1 5 Zagurski 2-3 1 1 1 3 1 Stults L,4-5 7 6 2 2 0 3 Koehterpitchedto 2baters in the8th. 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Reid Stauffer 1 1 0 0 0 0 T—2:41. A—35,087(43,651). Atlanta Los Angeles MedlenW,2 6 7 7 1 0 0 6 5 1-3 5 1 1 2 5 Fite W,1-0 A.Wood 2 2 1 1 1 3 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 MoylanH,t —hyMedlen (Walker). WP—A.Wood. Interleague PRodriguezH,8 1 0 0 0 0 0 HRP JansenH,)3 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—3:05 A—19,528(49,588). LeagueS,)2-15 1 0 0 0 1 0 Athletics10 Brewers 2 Moylanpitchedto1batter in the7th. Reds 3, Rockies 0 T—2:25. A—37,055(56,000).

Cardinals 7, Diamondbacks1

CINCINNATI — Bronson Arroyo limited the NL's most prolific

ST. LOUIS —Lance Lynnpitched

offense to four singles in eight innings, and JayBruce had atwo-

seven solid innings and St. Louis

E—Masterson(1). L08—Cleveland9, NewYork7. got home runs from Yadier Molina 28 — C.santana(14), Stubbs(12), Brignac(1). HRTeixeira(1), Hafner(9). SB—Kipnis (11), Au.Romine and Carlos Beltran in a victory (1). S —A.Cabrera, Au.Romine.SF—Avites. Cleveland IP H R E R BB SO over Arizona. Lynn allowed one

E—Cailaspo (4). L08—Houston1, LosAngeles7. 28 —Oominguez(9), Cagaspo(8), Shuck(6). HR LOS ANGELES — AdrianGonzalez Carter(12).8—Ma.Gonzatez.SF—8.8arnes, Trout and Scott Van Slyke homered, IP H R E R BB SO Houston

VerasS,It-t4 Los Angeles

T—2:54 (Raindelay: 0:09). A—18,498 (42,319). 6 1 0

Brown hit his eighth homer in eight games to backKyle Kendrick's six-hitter, and ATLANTA — Brian MCCann, Jason Philadelphia beat Miami. Delmon

American League Mariners 4, White Sox 2

Omogrosso Seattle

St. Louis LynnW,8-1 7 5 1 1 1 Rosenthal 1 1 0 0 0 Mujica 1 1 0 0 0 WP — Cahil. T—2:39.A—38,042 (43,975).

Braves 7, Pirates 2

Chicago

Monday'sGames

N.Y.Yankees7, Cleveland4 Oakland 10, Milwaukee2 Houston2,L.A.Angels1 Seattle 4ChicagoWhite Sox2 Today's Games Cleveland(Kazmir 3-2) at N.Y.Yankees (O.Pheps33), 4:05p.m.

NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 35 22 Washington 28 29 28 30 Philadelphia NewYork 22 32 Miami 16 42

Miami atPhiladelphia,10:05a.m. Oakandat Milwaukee,11:10am. Torontoat SanFrancisco,12:45 p.m. ChicagoCubsatLA. Angels, 4:05p.m. N.Y.MetsatWashington, 4:05p.m. ColoradoatCincinnati, 4:10pm. ArizonaatSt. Louis, 5:15p.m. SanDiegoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p.m.

run and five hits, struck out six

andwalkedone.Heimprovedto 8-1 for the second consecutive season while becoming the third

run homer among his three hits, leading Cincinnati to a victory over Colorado. The Reds have three shutouts in their past four games.

They've blanked six of their past 21 opponents, tying them for the

league lead with nine shutouts this

National Leaguepitcher to reach

season.

eight wins, trailing Patrick Corbin's

Colorado

league-leading nine for Arizona. Arizona

St. Louis ab r hbt 2 0 MCrpnt20 5 3 3 0 0 0 Beltranrf 5 1 3 3 0 1 Hotlidylf 3 1 1 0 0 0 SRonsnIf 0 0 0 0 1 0 Craig1b 4 0 2 1 2 0 T.Cruzc 0 0 0 0 Gregrsss 4 0 1 0 YMolinc-10 4 2 2 2 Pollock cf 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 0 2 1 C ahillp 2 0 0 0 Jaycf 40 0 0 Oelgad p 0 0 0 0 Kozmass 4 0 0 0 Hinskeph 1 0 1 0 Lynn p 3 0 1 0 WHarrsp 0 0 0 0 MAdmsph 1 0 0 0 Rosnthp 0 0 0 0 Mujicap 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 3 1 7 1 Totals 3 8 7 147 Arizona 0 00 001 000 — 1 St. Louis 102 112 00x — 7 OP Arizona 2. L08 Arizona 6, St. Louis 8

ab r hbi

GParra rf 4 1 Prado3b 4 0 Gtdsch tb 4 0 M Mntrc 3 0 C.Rosslf 4 0 Blmqst 2b 4 0

Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbt F owlercf 4 0 0 0 Chooct 3 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 1 1 0 C Gnztztf 4 0 2 0 Vottotb 4 0 0 0 T lwtzk ss 3 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 2 3 2 Cuddyrrf 4 0 1 0 Frazier3b 4 0 2 1 Hettontb 3 0 1 0 Paullt 3000 WRosrc 3 0 0 0 ORonsnlt 1 0 1 0 LeMahr2b 3 0 0 0 Hanignc 1 0 1 0 Chatwdp 2 0 0 0 Clzturs2h 4 0 0 0 S cahillp 0 0 0 0 Arroyop 2 0 1 0 Eyongph 1 0 0 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Outmnp 0 0 0 0 Corpasp 0 0 0 0 T otals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 03 9 3 Colorado 0 00 000 000 — 0 C incinnati 000 1 0 0 0 2x — 3 E—C.Gonzatez (3), Fowler (3). OP—Colorado 2. LOB —Colorado 5, Cincinnati 8. HR—Bruce(9).

MILWAUKEE — Coco Crisp hit a leadoff homer and finished with four hits, Tommy Milone pitched in at the plate and Oakland beat M ilwaukee. The surging A's have

won four consecutivegamesand 15 of 17 to move a season-high 11 over.500 at 35-24. Oakland

Milwaukee ab r hbt 40 10 Jasoc 8 1 3 2 Segurass 4 0 0 0 C espdslf 5 1 2 1 Braunll 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 1 2 1 ArRmr3b 3 0 1 0 JChavzp 0 0 0 0 Gennettph 1 0 0 0 O nldsn3b 5 0 2 1 Lucroyc 4 0 0 0 Reddckrf 5 1 2 1 CGomzcf 4 1 1 0 Moss1b 5 1 1 1 Weeks2b 3 1 2 2 Sogard2b 4 1 1 0 YBtncr1b 3 0 0 0 M ilonep 4 2 2 1 Estradp 1 0 1 0 Okajlmp 0 0 0 0Radnhpp 0 0 0 0 Rosalesph-ss1 0 0 0 Bianchiph 1 0 0 0 O.Hand p 0 0 0 0 Maldndph 1 0 0 0 A xfordp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 4 10199 Totals 3 3 2 6 2 Oakland 110 060 200 — 10 M ilwaukee 000 0 2 0 000 — 2 E—Weeks (6). OP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—Oakland 10, Milwaukee 4.28—Crisp(14), Lowrie(18), Reddick Crispct 5

ab r hbt

2 4 1 Aokirf

(8), Sogard (7),ArRamirez(10). 38—Weeks(1). HRCrisp(6),Moss(8), Weeks(4). CS—Donaldson(2). Oakland IP H R E R BB SO

Milone W,6-5 7 5 2 Okajima 1 1 0 R E R BB SO J.Chavez 1 0 0 ChatwoodL,3-1 4 4 1 1 1 4 Milwaukee 28 — 0 Parra (18), Hinske (3), M.Carpen 3 1 0 0 1 3 EstradaL,4-4 4 9 5 ter (18), Scahill Outman 2-3 3 2 2 0 2 Radenhop 1 4 3 Craig (18). HR —BeItran (13), YMolina(4). CSC.Ross(1). Corpas 13 1 0 0 1 0 O.Hand 3 5 2 Arizona IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati Axford 1 1 0 Cahill L,3-6 ArroyoW,6-5 8 4 0 0 0 3 Estrada pitchedto 3baters inthe5th. 5 9 5 5 3 0 2 4 2 2 0 3 Oelgado Chapman8,15-17 1 0 0 0 1 3 WP —Estrada,O.Hand. HRP —byScahitt (Hanigan). T—3:08. A—21,023(41,900). W.Harris 1 1 0 0 0 0

SB — Bruce(1). 8—Arroyo. Colorado IP H

2 0 0 0 0 0

4 0 0

5 1 3 2

3 1

1 0 0 0

0 0


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 20'I3

Sand

Heat

Continued from C1 The courts are currently owned and maintainedby OVA and the Old Mill District. While the property is not considered public, anyone can hit the sand and

Continued from C1 "By any means necessary ... we took care of business," James said. Miami led by as many as 28 points, a shocking amount for a series that had an aggregate score of Heat 569, Pacers 564 entering Monday night. The Heat actually trailed by six in the early going, were still down 21-19 after the first quarter and it was starting to look like it was going to be one of those down-to-thewire nights. Not even close. James exited with 5:08 left, shaking retired soccer star D avid Beckham's hand a s he made his way to the Heat bench for a r e latively subdued celebration. Not l o ng afterward, security personnel started what's become a familiar t ask i n M i a m i — surrounding the court and stretching out a yellow rope,

'.*7'

/

play. According to W askom, OVA encourages the public to utilize the courts because it spreads awareness of the sport. Waskom hopes that Central Oregon residents will take ownership and care forthe courts. He also believes that m or e p l ay on the Old Mill courts will boost the demand for the permanent s an d c o u r ts Staley is seeking. And that d emand f or more courts has been increasing rapidly each year, according to Jason Ring, a coach with OVA. It is not unusual, Ring observes, to see the Old Mill courts packed on the weekends with players socializing with friends and getting in their bumps, sets and spikes. "Beach volleyball has al-

l~

v

f;@

+ -k.":IgI, ,l®

ways been very popular," says Ring, 38 and a former star player on the Association of Volleyball Professionals beach tour. "There is almost a cultlike following." Ring, a Southern Calif ornia native wh o g r ew up in Central Oregon and graduated from Redmond High School, was one of the individuals partnered with Staley to construct the Old Mill courts. Ring was in charge of verifying that the courts followed regulation g uidelines pertaining t o size and sand depth. Today, in addition to coaching with OVA, he helps run the sand courts. With the help of Ri ng and other former beach volleyball pros, OVA has been able to oversee the courts without a hitch. But funding is the crucial element in maintaining the courts, according t o Was k o m, who adds that Bend-based Pahlisch Homes has provided the most consistent support since OVA took over. "The courts have been and will continue to be a great place to encourage

not only people being physically active, but for families that enjoy the game to be active together," says Jason Myhre, director of sales and marketing wit h P a hlisch Homes. "This is an important part of our philosophy as a company." According to Ring, beach volleyball builds a sense of community and i s a bout having fun with friends and family. " I t h in k l e a gues a r e great," Ring says, "but we want people to just come and join the community." Currently, the only o fficial league at the Old Mill courts is the Junior Sand Volleyball League, which runs Monday and Tuesday evenings during the months

of May and July. (OVA has opted to not conduct league play inJune, Waskom explains, because school is getting out for th e summer and some playersmay have other commitments.) The courts are also r eserved on Wednesday and Thursday nights for those involved with the courts' management.

Many volleyball players opt to practice in the sand to improve on the skills required for indoor leagues.

"It (beach volleyball) re-

quires a lotmore work," says Claire Haley, a freshman volleyball player at Summit High School. "There's only two people, and you cover more court." Drop-in players do not need to contact OVA to use the courts. And with the exception of th e evening league play during the week or an occasional weekend tournament, the courts are free touse on a first-come, first-play basis. According to W askom, public turnout has been as high as ever this spring, and grabbing a spot on the courts during a sunny Saturday afternoon may not be

easy. "The Old Mill i s a w esome," Ring says. "It attracts everyone because they can barbecue, bring their dogs, the river is right there — combine that with the sand, and that's why we love it here." — Reporter: 541-383-0375, eolleribendbulletin.com.

Wilfredo Lee/The Associated Press

Miami's Dwyane Wade (3) shoots under pressure from Indiana's Roy Hibbert during the first half of Game 7 in the NBA Eastern Conference finals on Monday night in Miami.

R oy H i bbert s c ored 1 8 points for the Pacers, who got 14 from David West, 13 from George Hill and 10 from Lance Stephenson. All-Star Paul George was held to seven points on 2-for-9 shooting a nd fouled out early in t h e fourth quarter. George was the last Indiana player on the floor as Miami

preppedforits postgame cel-

ebration, shaking any hand he could find before being walked toward the v isiting locker room by Pacers coach Frank Vogel, who slung an arm over his star's shoulder. I t's the fourth trip to t h e finals for the Heat, who won the title in 2006 and have now been there all three years of the "Big Three" era, falling to Dallas in 2011 and then topping Oklahoma City in five games last year. "The great thing is we're a young team and we are past the building stage," George said. "This is really our first preparing to hold people at year tasting success. The rate bay for the looming on-court we are going, we see champitrophy presentation. onships soon." "You never want to t a ke They're getting closer. A anything for granted," Wade second-round loss to Miami said afterward. "Being here in six games last year was three straight years in a row, followed by a s e ven-game, going back to the finals, is an c onference-finals exi t t h i s amazing feat. I'm just glad we time around. Still, they'll b e w atching were able to do it. Everything that happened in the first six the title round. games didn't mean anything Miami went 2- 0 a g ainst to us. It was about tonight. San Antonio t h i s s e ason, It was about Game 7. It was t hough n e i ther o f tho s e about finding a way to win games should be considered harbingers of what's ahead. here at home." More than a few people The Spurs rested four regudidn't stick around to see the lars in the first meeting, the East title formally presented. Heat were without three inAfter all, it's an all-or-noth- jured starters in the second ing season for the Heat — and matchup. this trophy isn't the one that James delivered an inspirawill satisfy them. tional address of sorts to his Ray Allen added 10 points team Monday morning,pubfor M i a mi , w h i c h e a r ned licly revealing no details of its 78th victory of th e sea- what he said afterward other son, matching the l l t h-best, than insisting that the Heat s ingle-season total in N B A would be ready. history. He was right.

Oregon

inning and two in the third to go up 7-2. They finished off Continued from C1 the win with three runs in the L emond s a i d h e w as ninth. "caught off guard" when told " The feeling that w e a l l Monday morning he would have is a feeling of emptibe starting. ness," Oregon coach George "But the emotions never re- Horton said. "We didn't pitch ally got to me," he added. "I very well and they hit the ball just had to throw strikes." hard." Rice took a 3-0 lead in the T yler B a umgartner a n d f irst i n n in g w h e n S h a n e C onnor Hofmann had t w o Hoelscher drove in two with hits each for the Ducks, who a triple to deep center off Orhad n in e h i t s a l t ogether. egon starter Jake Reed and Hunter Kopycinski had four then scored on an error by hits and four RBIs, and Rice short stop J.J. Altobelli on the scored seven runs in the first relay throw to third base. three innings in t h e O w ls' The Ducks added two in v ictory against O regon t o the bottom of the first on an win the NCAA tournament's RBI single by Mitchell Toel- Eugene regional. man and a fielder's choice. Rice (44-18) advances to its But the Owls came right first super regional since 2009 back with two in the second with the upset of the Ducks.

Caddies

2i'caz 0

Oregon left fielder Tyler Baumgartner makes a catch at the warning track against Rice during Monday night's regional tournament game in Eugene. Oregon fell to Rice11-4 and ended their season with a 48-16 record. Brian Davies/ The Associated Press

A gVgo.

"It was delightful," Cohen said. "The kid had never been ray of diversions. and putting money in their on a golf course before, but he When Vinny Biondo, the pockets, caddying can lead was respectful and he had a caddie master at th e L a w to scholarships, even job con- lot of legitimate questions. He rence Yacht an d C o u ntry tacts. The golf associations knew when to ask them and Club, first b egan w o r king of New Jersey, Westchester when to keep his mouth shut." there in 1976, the club had County an d L o n g I s l and, Cohen was so impressed with fundraising help from three dozen caddies and a that he arranged to hire the fleet of 40 motorized carts. the MGA, give $1.5 million in caddie again the f ollowing Today there are one-third as scholarships each year, bene- weekend. fiting more than 200 caddies. Richard Kaner, a member many caddies and twice as many carts — a ratio the new Several local caddies have of the club for nine years, is caddie recruitment campaign recently received full college on an informal one-man cruis hoping to reverse. scholarships from the West- sade to promote walking the Biondo, Procops, his assis- ern Golf Association's Evans course with a caddie. "I'm always urging players tant James King and a club Scholars Foundation. "I have a little melting pot member, Rob Raider, spoke to take a caddie," he said. "I with g u i dance c o unselors out here," said Rich Uva, the sense that, slowly, the mindat local schools, distributed c addie master a t Q u a k er set is starting to change. Peofliers and wound up attractRidge Golf Club in Scarsdale, ple are starting to see the bening nearly 60 teenagers to a N .Y., and president of t h e efits of walking. By the end weekend clinic in May. The Metropolitan Caddie Masters of last year, I had my whole recruits were shown a video, Association. " I've got k i d s regular foursome taking cadgiven some instruction, then from the inner city, from the dies. The pace of the game is taken out on the course to Bronx and Westchester, teen- so much more enjoyable. It's watch a golfer and a caddie agers and older guys. It goes infectious " interact. The education proto show that no matter who followed by young men car- few girls) to the game of golf. cess is still in its infancy, but you are, there's something rying clusters of clubs. By the The cartslowly squeezed shut signs are promising. beneficial about caddying." "Money might be the main 18th century, those ambula- this pipeline into the game." Other efforts ar e u ndertory valets had come to be The dwindling number of way to increase caddying and thing," he added, "but there's known as caddies. young players is just one of foster the culture of walking. the experience of m eeting 1000's Of Ads They remained a vital and the problems for the game As it does every spring, the people. I can't tell you how Every Day inviolable part of the game today.The number of regular Metropolitan Golf A s socia- many times I've seen a golfer until 1930, when Curtis Wilplayers of all ages in the U.S. tion, which has 420 member take a liking to a caddie and The Bulleun lock, chairman of the greens peaked at more than 30 mil- courses within a 100-mile ra- then hire him to come work wiiw.bendLulletin.com committee a t A nn a n d ale lion in 2003 and has been de- dius of Manhattan, recently for him. That's priceless." Golf Club in Pasadena, Ca- clining since. put on n ine one-day acadAt the Lawrence Yacht and lif., got a friend to build him Perhaps the m ost a c cu- emies to teach the rudiments Country Club, N eil C ohen a three-wheeled cart p owrate barometer ofthe game's of the craft. Some 700 aspi- recently had such a bonding experience, walking 18 holes ered by a 12-volt battery. The h ealth — t h e n u m ber o f rants turned out. "Golf needs to do a b et- with one of the raw caddying cart reached a top speed of rounds played — has been de11 miles per hour and cost a clining for years. According ter job of promoting the fact recruits. w hopping $4,500. But W i l to the National Golf Founda- that the game is a healthy lock had a hard time walk- tion, Americans played 518 activity," said Jay Mottola, exing 18 holes because he had a million rounds in 2001 and ecutive director of the MGA. 489 million rounds last year. "Walking 18 holes is tremenwooden leg. Most of th e U .S. golfers The recession did not help. dous exercise — you b u rn & HEARING AID CUNIC w ho embraced carts in t h e Nor do the complaints that 10,000 calories. That's apyears after World War II did golf takes too much time and pealing to young people, just ~wwwcen raloregonaudiologycom not have such physical handi- costs too much money, killer like basketball, football and Bend• Redmond• P-viile • Burns caps. Many golf courses were considerations in a country baseball." P 541.647.2884 happy to cater to them because they brought in hefty Continued from C1 revenue, while th e m o ney " Caddying is v er y m u ch paid to caddies walked off the like a mirror of life," he said. course at sundown. " It teaches kids how t o b e The increased use of carts around adults. It gets them in golf b r ought t r ade-offs. out of their shells, and they Carts punish grass, which learn a trade. We're taking led to the laying of unsightly kids and turning them into ribbons of blacktop to accomyoung adults." modate them. In addition to The A m erican s p o rting being a packhorse, a comscene is littered with innova- panion, a course expert and t ions of dubious merit l i k e a psychologist, a good caddie the TV timeout, metal bats is a tireless maintenance main baseball and oxymoronic chine, replacing divots, rak"metal woods" in g olf. But ing sand traps, repairing ball few innovations have done marks on greens — chores more damage toa game than many cart-riding golfers ofthe motorized cart has done ten forgo. "Some ofthe damage done to golf, and particularly to the art of caddying. by carts was more subtle but When men were clubbing perhaps m or e i m p o rtant," little balls o n t h e e a stern Richard J. Moss writes in his coast of Scotland some six new book, "The Kingdom of centuries ago, they chased Golf in America." "The job of their shots through the sea- caddie had introduced thouside sand and gorse on foot, sands of young boys (and a

with a

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span and a mushrooming ar-

In addition to introducing

young people tothe game

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet

OA'uoiou%v


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

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

+

NASDAO ~

15,254.03

"'"' + 1,640.42

9 45

3,465.37

Toda+

S&P 500

Tuesday,June 4,2013

Close: 1,640.42

Big discounts, big profits? More customers have been visiting Dollar General's stores and spending more while they're there. That helped boost the retail discounter's earnings and revenue in the quarter ended Feb. 1. Wall Street will be looking today to see whether the positive sales trends continued in the company's fiscal first quarter. Dollar General's revenue at stores open at least a year will be of particular interest. That's a key gauge of a retailer's health.

$60

DG $48.91

50

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1 5 320

Change: 9.68 (0.6%) 1,600 '

1 0 DA Y S

16,000

1,600

15,200

1,520

14,400

1,440

13,600

1 360

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StocksRecap NYSE NASD

Vol. (In mil.) 3,846 1,994 Pvs. Volume 3,825 1,768 Advanced 1385 1455 Declined 1705 1015 New Highs 75 14 9 New Lows 262 18

M

Growth spurt Mattress Firm spent much of last year opening new stores and integrating others gained through acquisitions. The company added 328 stores, including 242 from rival bed sellers such as Mattress Xpress. The growth powered a 43 percent annual increase in revenue for fiscal 2012. Investors will be listening today when Mattress Firm reports its fiscal first-quarter earnings for an update on how the integration of new stores is coming along.

Growing trade deficit? The Commerce Department reports its latest data on the L.S. trade deficit today. Economists expect that the nation's trade gap widened modestly to $41 billion as of April, up from $39.8 billion the previous month. The trade deficit fell sharply in March due to oil imports sinking to the lowest level in 17 years. Overall, economists anticipate continued gains in L.S. exports this year, which should narrow the trade deficit slightly.

Trade deficit In billions of dollars F

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ALK 32.16 6800 56 42 -.40 -0 7 T T AVA 22.78 29.26 26 .96 + . 25 +0.9 T BAC 6 . 85 13.99 13 .55 -.11 -0.8 T L BBSI 19.30 62.82 58 .43 + . 1 0 +0.2 BA 66. 8 2 101.47 100.74 +1.72 +1.7 CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 7.18 5.8 2 +. 0 7 +1 .2 T Columbia Bnkg CDLB 16.18 — 0 22.41 2 2 . 12 + . 2 8 F L3 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 46.55 — o 61.95 62 .29 +2.07 +3.4 CostcoWholesale COST 85.37 115.77 110.88 +1.25 t1 . 1 L Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 8.92 7.6 1 +. 0 3 +0 .4 T FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 27.16 24 .01 -.35 -1.4 T T Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 — o 25.47 24 .90 + . 48 +2.0 ty Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 8.74 14.00 12.28 +. 09 +0 .7 L L Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ 27.75 25.24 +.96 +4.0 L L Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — 0 11.00 10 .77 -.01 -0.1 T L Kroger Co K R 2 0 .9 8 ~ 35.44 33.8 4 +.1 7 +0 .5 L T Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 ~ 57 .1 5.25 +.07 + 1 .4 L L LA Pacific L PX 8 .4 6 ~ 22.55 1 7.3 4 -.23 -1.3 T T MDU Resources MDU 19 . 59 ~ 27.14 2 5. 5 3 -.33 -1.3 T T MentorGraphics M EN T 13,21 — o 19,11 19.12 + .13 +0,7 L L Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 — 0 35.28 35 .59 + . 69 +2.0 L L Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ 66.07 63.0 3 +1 .37 +2.2 L T Nordstrom Inc JWN 46.27 ~ 6 1.81 59.3 3 +. 5 1 +0 .9 L L Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.01 ~ 50.80 43.1 2 +. 3 9 + 0 .9 L T OfficeMax Inc DMX 4 . 10 ~ 14.92 13.1 4 +.1 1 +0 .8 L L PaccarInc PCAR 35,21 — o 55,05 53 .72 + . 1 2 +0,2 L L Planar Systme PLNR 1.12 2.36 1 .7 1 -.03 -1.7 T Plum Creek PCL 35.43 54.62 48 .35 + . 65 +1.4 T Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 — 0 218.85 216.58 +2.64 F L2 L Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 28.42 23 .20 + . 19 +0.8 T Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 33.03 25 .25 + . 5 5 t 2 . 2 Sherwin Wms SHW 122.79 194.56 187.30 -1.23 -0.7 T T Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 45.96 45 .09 -.34 -0.7 T L StarbucksCp SBUX 43.04 64.93 63 .46 + . 32 +0.5 L L Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 7.20 7 . 1 7 + . 14 +2 .0 L L UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 14.02 13 .54 +. 0 2 +0.1 L L US Bancorp USB 28.58 35.93 35 .27 + . 2 1 +0.6 L L WashingtonFedl WAFD 14.30 18.25 17 .50 + . 01 +0.1 L L Wells Fargo &Co WFC 29.80 — 0 41.59 40 . 73 + . 1 8 +0 .4 L L Weyerhaeuser W Y 1 8 .70 ~ 33.24 30.0 6 +. 2 4 + 0 .8 L T

445 I 2013

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496 est. 41 0 Source FactSet

EURO

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QQ95

StoryStocks

B MY

Close:$47.59L1.58 or 3.4% The drugmaker reported positive results for a drug that may be used to treat advanced cases of melanoma, a type of skin cancer. $50

A

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Colonial Properties

24

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52-week range $$$.64~

CLP

Close:$23.37%1.26 or 5.7% Real estate investment trust MidAmerica Apartment Communities is buying its peer, Colonial Properties, in an all-stock deal. $26

45

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52-week range $4$ $7

$1$.$$ ~

$24.$$

Vol327.4m (2.5x avg.) PE: 54.7 Vol3 9.3m (12.0x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$78.17 b Yiel d : 2. 9% Mkt. Cap:$2.07 b Yiel d : 3. 6 %

Pandora Media

P Close:$15.22 V-1.80 or -10.6% The NY Times reported that Apple is closer to launching a competing Internet radio service after signing a deal with Warner Music Group. $20

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Koppers Holdings KOP Close:$40.32 V-0.85 or -2.1% A Jefferies analyst downgraded the company's stock, which produces carbon compounds and wood treatment products, to "Hold" from "Buy." $50 45

15

40

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A 52-week range

$7,0$~

M $19,$7

Vold14.0m (2.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $2.66 b

35-

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$2$.$0 ~

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$4$.4$

P E: . . . Vold182.7k (1.8x avg.) PE: 1 3 . 8 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$835.31 m Yi eld: 2.5%

Cracker Barrel

CBRL Close:$95.28 %5.82 or 6.5% The restaurant operator said that its fiscal third-quarter profit rose 30 percent as higher prices on its menus helped lift sales. $100

TripAdvisor

TRIP Close:$62.06 V-2.43 or -3.8% A Stifel Nicolaus analyst downgraded the online travel review company's shares to "Hold" from "Buy" citing a jump in its stock price. $70

60

90 80

50 M

A

M

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52-week range $$7.9$~

A

M

52-week range $$7.24

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$$$.4 1

Vold593.9k(4.5x avg.) PE: 2 0 . 2 Vol3 4.1m (2.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.26 b Yiel d : 2. 1 % Mkt. Cap:$8.1 b

P E: 43 . 1 Yield:...

Clovis Oncology

CLVS Healthways HWAY Close:$74.59 %38.01 or 103.9% Close: $14.86 A1.41 or 10.5% The drugmaker reported promising A Piper Jaffray analyst upgraded the results from an early study of its drug specialty health care company's rucaparib for patients with ovarian stock to "Overweight" saying it may cancer. be a leader in its industry. $80 $16 60 14 40

12

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A 52-week range

$11.1$~ Dividend Footnotes:a - Extra dividends were paid, ttut are not included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, wttictt was mcreased bymost recent diradend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pad after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of dividends caid tttis year. Most recent diradend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pad this year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - imtiai dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in precedmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approamate cash value on ex-distrittution date. FeFootnotes:q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

Vol33.2m (16.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $1.96 b

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A 52-week range

$6.63

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$14.97 PE: 7 4 .3 Yield :...

Vold480.4k(2.6xavg.) Mkt. Cap:$508.18 m

AP

SOURCE: Sungard

Cracker Barrel hits 52-week high

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

The earnings picture is looking stronger for Cracker Barrel Old Country Store. Management raised its

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

InterestRates

guidance for the year to $4.75 to $4.85 per share from its previous forecast of $4.60 to $4.80 per share. Shares rose to set a 52-week high of $97.24, before ultimately closing

pri c es on its menus helped lift sales. For the period ended May 3, the company said it

Cpmpu n y

earn ed $24.6 million, or $1.02 per share, beating the 94 cents per share Wall Street expected. In the year-ago ~R period , it earned $19 million, or 81 cents per share. Revenue rose 5 percent to $640.4 million, also topping the $629.9 million Wall Street expected according to FactSet. Old COuntry Stpre

Spotlight

ef

the day at $95.28

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.12 percent Monday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 0 4 .03 . 08 .06 .13 .13

+0 . 01 +0 .0 2 L L

L

2 -year T-note . 30 .30 ... L 5-year T-note 1 .03 1 .05 -0.02 L 10-year T-ttote 2.12 2 . 13 -0.01 L 30-year T-bond 3.27 3.28 -0.01 L

L L L L

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BONDS

52-wEEK RANGE

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds BalA m 22.63 +.10 +11.4 +24.3 +14.2 + 68 A A A BondA m 1 2.73 -0.8 +1.7 +5.0 + 39 D D E Silver rose to its CaplncBuA m 56.16+ .33 t 7 . 4 +19.4 t12.1 + 33 8 A C highest settleCpWldGrlA m 40.98+.28 +10.6 +32.2 t13.1 + 21 8 C C ment price in BkofAm 1894874 13.55 —.11 EurPacGrA m 43.57+.19 +5 . 7 +28.6 +9.6 + 05 D C A nearly three S&P500ETF 1531543 1 64.35 t . 9 1 FnlnvA m 4 6.74 +.21 +14.9 +33.6 +15.7 + 41 8 8 D weeks, climbing iShEMkts 996330 41.81 + . 62 T Rowe Price DivGrow PRDGX GrthAmA m 39. 0 6 +.05 +13.7 +32.1 +14.5 + 40 A C D with crude oil, SPDR Fncl 984085 19.86 + . 02 IttcAmerA m 19 . 6 1+.10 +9.5 +22.4 +13.8 +61 8 A A iShJaptt 874703 10.71 —.13 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH gold and other IttvCoAmA m 34.45 +.17 +14.7 +30.0 +14.4 + 48 D D C iShR2K 794095 9 8.73 t . 9 3 commodities. NewPerspA m 34.64 +.14 +10.8 +31.2 +14.0 + 43 8 8 8 Intel 749535 25.24 + . 96 cC o WAMutlnvA m 38.11 +.27 +16.3 +30.7 +17.5 + 59 D A B Platinum SiriusXM 717252 3.46 —.03 $$ reached its Zynga 626316 2.99 —.41 $o Dodge & Cox Inc o me 13.81 . . . +0. 4 +4 . 4 + 5 .7 +6.8 tc BariPVix rs 625297 19.11 -.03 ItttlStk 37.81 +.07 + 9 .2 + 39.5 +11.0 +0.6 A 8 A highest settleStock 143.51 +.91 + 18.2 +42.6 +16.5 +4.6 A 8 C ment price since cC o Gainers $3 Fidelity Contra 87.16 +.02 + 13.4 +24.9 +15.3 +5.6 C 8 B May 14. GrowCo 107.3 8 - .04 + 15.2 +28.2 +17.3 +7.3 8 A A NAME L AST CH G %CHG to LowPriStk d 45 . 77 +.15+ 15.9 +35.8 +16.9 +8.1 8 A A ClovisDnc 74.59 + 3 8.01 +103.9 Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 58 . 31 +.35+16.0 +31.2 +16.6 +5.9 C A 8 DrchardSH 3 .73 +1 . 3 6 +57.4 «C Tesaro tt 46.22 + 1 2.01 +35.1 $$ FrankTemp-Franklinlncome 0 x 2.36 - . 01 +7 .2 + 20.4 +11.7 +5.5 A A 8 Pixelwrks 3.69 +.68 +22.6 «C IncomeA x 2.34 . .. +7. 5 + 2 1.2 +12.3 +6.1 A A 8 ChelseaTh 2.36 +.43 +22.3 FrankTemp-Templet on GIBondAdv13.31 +.04 +1 . 4 +16.9 +7.6+9.6 A A $o Epizyme n 2 7.99 +5 . 0 0 +21.7 Mornittgsiar Ownership Zone™ A ASaftylns 2 8.91 +4 . 9 5 +20.7 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19.6 9 +.11 +13.5 +28.0 +14.9 +4.5 D C C HeidrkStr 1 7.25 +2 . 8 4 +19.7 O o Fund target represents weighted RisDivB m 17.8 1 +.10 + 13.0 +26.8 +13.8 +3.6 E D D FlamelT 5.70 +.88 +18.3 average of stock holdings RisDivC m 17.7 3 + .10 + 13.1 +27.1 +14.0 +3.7 E D D EntreMed 2.12 t .32 +17.8 • Represents 75% of futtd's stock holdings Foreign SmMidValA m 38.43 +.03 +18.6 +36.3 +12.5 +1.9 C E E Exchange Losers SmMidValB m 32.34 +.03 + 18.2 +35.3 +11.6 +1.0 C E E CATEGORY Large Blend NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR PIMCO TotRetA m 11.0 7 . .. -0.6 + 3 .7 + 5 .8 +7.1 8 8 A The dollar fell against RATING™ * ** * y r T Rowe Price Eqt y l nc 30.41 . . . +1 5 .5 + 30.4 +15.5 +5.4 -10.54 -39.1 IttfinityPh 16.41 SyntaPhm 4.87 -2.51 -34.0 ASSETS $3,121 million GrowStk 42.48 - . 11 + 12.4 +24.5 +15.8 +6.1 D 8 8 the Japanese NatlReshB 27.00 -7.12 -20.9 HealthSci 50.17 - . 21 + 21.7 +42.3 +26.6+15.8 8 A A yen and other EXP RATIO 0.67% currencies SupcndT rs 3.25 -.68 -17.3 Newlncome 9.6 8 ... -0.6 +2.5 +4.9 +6.1 MANAGER Thomas Huber following -3.44 -16.6 PwSBMetS 17.26 Vanguard 500Adml 151.74 +.91 +16.1 +31.2 +16.6 +5.9 C A 8 SINCE 2000-03-31 surprisingly 500lnv 151.71 +.91 +16.0 +31.1 +16.5 +5.8 C A 8 RETURNS3-MD +7.3 weak reports on Foreign Markets CapDp 41.18 -.21 t22.5 +45.6 +15.6 +6.5 A 8 8 manufacturing YTD +14.9 Eqlnc 27.99 +.22 +16.6 +31.8 +19.0 +7.7 D A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG activity and 1-YR +29.8 StratgcEq 25.45 -.04 +18.6 +39.1 +18.5 +6.2 8 A 8 construction Paris -27.92 -.71 3,920.67 3-YR ANNL +16.2 Tgtet2025 14.73 +.06 +8.4 +21.3 +11.7 +4.6 C 8 A London 6,525.12 -57.97 —.88 spending in the 5-YR-ANNL +6.2 TotBdAdml 10.87 -0.8 +0.5 +4.6 +5.4 E D D United States. Frankfurt -63.04 -.76 8,285.80 +9.0 -1.6 Totlntl 15.53 +.08 t3.9 +28.4 DDC Hong Kong 22,282.19 -109.97 -.49 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico TotStlAdm 41.21 +.20 +16.1 +31.9 +16.7 +6.3 8 A A 41,094.82 -493.50 -1.19 Pfizer Ittc 2.5 Milan 17,058.05 -156.03 —.91 TotStldx 41.19 +.20 +16.1 +31.7 +16.5 +6.2 C A A Visa, Inc. 1.74 Tokyo 13,261.82 -512.72 -3.72 USGro 23.97 +.04 t12.7 +27.2 +15.4 +5.6 8 8 B 1.69 Stockholm 1,209.71 -7.11 -.58 Crown Castle International Corp Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Sydney -40.30 -.82 Danaher Corporation 1.69 iee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing iee and either asales or 4,873.70 Zurich 7,801.13 -145.88 -1.84 PepsiCo Ittc 1.66 redemption iee. Source: Morningstac FAMILY

FUND

h5N4 QG

-

T T T

L

.06 .11 .17

.25 .62 1.45 2.52

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.99 3.02 -0.03 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.27 4.27 . . . $58 ~ ~ ~ ~ 97 Barclays USAggregate 2.08 2.05 +0.03 Price-earnings ratio (Based on past12 months' results):19 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.71 5.63 +0.08 *: 27% 5 -Y R*: 31% 10 - YR *: 12% Divi d end:$2.00 Div . yield: 2.1% Total return this year:50% 3- YR RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.09 4.06 +0.03 AP *Annualized Source: FactSet YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.27 1.28 -0.01 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 2 .91 2.88 +0.03 1 YR AGO3.25 .13 FundFocus SelectedMutualFunds

The fund focuses on financially healthy companies. It may not Marketsummary lead during market rallies, but Most Active it's kept up enough to produce NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG an enviable long-term record. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

+

Stock indexes rose Monday amid hopes that the Federal Reserve will keep up its stimulus for the economy. The Standard & Poor's 500 index bouncedbetween modest gains and losses formuch ofthe day following surprisingly weak reports on the economy. Manufacturing activity contracted last month, only the second time that has happened sinceAugust 2009. Economists expected to see modest growth for the month. A separate report showed that growth in construction spending was weaker in April than economists expected. The S&P 500 turned higher in the last hour of trading. Energy stocks and makers of consumer staples had the biggest gains.

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

Cracker Barrel Old Country Store (CBRL) Monday's close:$95 28

I I

CRUDEOIL $93.45

49

Bristol-Myers Squibb

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. DDW 15254.11 15123.55 15254.03 +138.46 -1.91 DDW Trans. 6314.91 6213.94 6288.27 DDW Util. 486.02 477.02 482.71 +0.55 NYSE Comp. 9357.19 9276.63 9357.08 +54.82 NASDAQ 3465.84 3419.39 3465.37 +9.46 S&P 500 1640.42 1622.77 1640.42 +9.68 -3.55 S&P 400 1185.77 1169.81 1180.77 Wilshire 5000 17292.86 17107.45 17292.83 +80.43 Russell 2000 991.82 976.05 990.53 +6.39

The restaurant chain also reported that its fiscal third-quarter profit rose 30 percent as higher

482

Change: 138.46 (0.9%)

1 0 DAY S

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Price-to-earnings ratio: 19 Bank of America based on past 12 months' results Barrett Business Source. Factset Boeing Co

D ', J

Close: 1 5,254.03

NorthwestStocks

60 63 1Q '12 1 Q '13

N

+

$22.72

Dow Jones industrials i

12,800 . "D

A

SILVER

GOLD

$1 411 70 I +19.10

j

,

15,080

1,680

$53.55

Operating EPS

10 YR T NOTE 2.12%

+9 QS

L L L L L L L

L

L L L L L L T L L L L L L

2.25 4.35 1.97 7.88 3.63 .86 3 30 .

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 93.45 91.97 + 1.61 + 1 . 8 Ethanol (gal) 2.71 2.74 t23.7 Heating Dil (gal) 2.83 2.79 +1.86 -7.0 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.99 3.98 +0.18 +19.1 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.79 2.78 +1.09 -1.0 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1411.70 1392.60 22.72 22.23 1497.40 1461.80 3.33 3.29 756.80 751.05

%CH. %YTD F1L37 -15.7 +2.19 -24.7 +2.44 -2.7 -8.6 +1.16 + 0.77

+ 7.7

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.1 Cattle (Ib) 1.21 1.21 -0.48 Coffee (Ib) 1.29 1.27 +1.53 -10.3 6.62 -0.94 -6.1 Corn (bu) 6.56 Cotton (Ib) 0.82 0.79 + 3.78 + 9 . 6 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 306.80 306.30 +0.16 -18.0 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.51 1.51 -0.46 +29.8 Soybeans (bu) 15.33 15.10 + 1.49 + 8 . 0 Wheat(bu) 7.09 -8.9 7.06 +0.46 AGRICULTURE

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5324 +.0143 +.93% 1 .5375 C anadian Dollar 1.0 2 76 —.0092 —.90% 1.0395 USD per Euro 1.3076 +.0095 +.73% 1 . 2416 Japanese Yen 99.45 -1.24 -1.25% 7 8 . 11 Mexican Peso 12. 7 399 —.1006 —.79% 14.3084 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6692 —.0193 —.53% 3.9076 Norwegian Krone 5.8048 —.0717 -1.24% 6.1342 South African Rand 9.8321 —.2665 -2.71% 8.5880 6. 5400 —. 0908 -1 . 39% 7.2662 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9469 —.0127 -1.34% .9673 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0250 -.0194 -1.89% 1.0319 Chinese Yuan 6.1360 -.0037 -.06% 6.3706 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7625 -.0002 -.00% 7.7609 Indian Rupee 56.675 t.130 t . 2 3% 55.585 Singapore Dollar 1.2521 -.0148 -1.18% 1.2928 South Korean Won 1121.22 -10.88 -.97% 1179.45 -.13 -.44% Taiwan Dollar 29.87 29.92


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

BRIEFING

New brewery planned in Bend A Bend resident has been working on anew brewpub and brewery on Northeast Division

What: NorgeBoards What it does:M akesand

sells land-based stand-up paddleboards Pictured:Steve Bangsund, owner of NorgeBoards

Street, according to information from the

Where:740 S.E. 9th St., Suite 15, Bend

Oregon Liquor Control

Employees:1

Commission.

Phone:503-481-5263

Gary Sobala, who's listed as the manager

U.. car sa es

EXECUTIVE FILE

0 LI

er LAN

' ll!I '. r

in Ma

on the OLCC information, said the brewery

is expected to open this summer. "Hopefully we can add a good niche to the

.i

market," Sobala said.

"We're trying to cash in on our little square of it

Rob Kerr /The Bulletin

SAGEAwards winners named Debbie and Rudy

Dory, owners of Newport Avenue Market,

were jointly named 2013 Citizen of the Year on Friday night at the

Bend Chamber of Commerce's annual SAGE

in

e oar in es ree s

Awards Dinner.

The Dorys have been strong advocates for the Hunger Prevention Coalition of Central

Oregon and havegiven more than $445,000 toward feeding families

and fighting hunger

. Howdid

By Elon Gluckllch• The Bulletin

Steve Bangsund's land paddleboards are a one-man labor of love. Working out of an 1,100-square-foot industrial shop

in the region since 1998, according to a

in southeast Bend, Bangsund spends his days turning

news release from the chamber.

long strips of bamboo into NorgeBoards, the land-based

Other winners included: Let it Ride Electric Bikes for Entrepreneur of the Year;

equivalent of a stand-up paddleboard.

BendBroadband for Large Business of the Year; and Steele As-

sociates Architects for Small Business of the

Year. — From staff reports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Pacwest 2 LLC to Gary

S. and Steffanie A. Lakey, Angus Acres, Phase 3,Lot 86, $254,464 • Margo D. Irish to Shea M. Babich and Mary B.Seiler, Township 15, Range11, Section 32, $209,100 • Christine L. Kessel, aka Christine K. Alford, and Jack W. Alford to Barton B. and Kristin A. Wills, Aero Acres, First Addition, Lot1, Block 5, $215,000 • Eric L. and Linda A. Westeren to Carole C. Atherton, Maplewood, Phase 2, Lot 62, $190,000 • Michael J. Condon to Nicolas andJessica Hall, RiverRim PU.O., Phase1, Lot 68, $267,000 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Ethan D.Sandelin, Parkway Village, Phases 1-3, Lot 41, $184,700 • Diane Prescott, trustee for Diane Prescott Revocable Living Trust, to Christopher J. andWendy W. Philcox, Trapper Point, Lot 2, Block 2, $429,000 • William T. Slocum Jr. and Mechelle Slocum to John P. Kane,Tasman Rise, Phases1 and 2, Lot 5, $315,000 • Steven D. andKari S. Strang to Brady Clark, Parks at BrokenTop, Phase 4, Lot151, $450,000 • William E. Lackey Sr. andFleeta M.Lackeyto Christopher B. andTracy V. Walluck, Township 14, Range13, Section 21, $499,500 • John G. andAnn S. Lund, trustees for John G.Lund and Ann S. LundTrust, to Richard A. andClaudia K. Nix, Providence, Phase8, Lot 14, Block 7, $31I,000 • Kenneth D. Wolford to Beth Ashley, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 3, Lot 31, $354,000 • Ralph J. Grogan Jr. and Myrtle K. Grogan, trustees for Grogan Family Trust, to Erin M. DanielsonSchmidt, Tanager Village, Lot 11, $185,000 • Schumacher Construction lnc. to Gregory S. Boon,Southern Pines, Lot 4, $189,900 • Matthew R. and Patricia Leahy, trustees for Leahy 401K Plan, to Brian D.and Kerry Bergler, Deschutes River Crossing, Phases3 and 4, Lot 88, $175,000

N orgeBoards are a relativel y new take o n t h e p a ddleboard trend, a popular mode of transportation on the Deschutes River, lakes and even the ocean. Bangsund's boards combine paddleboarding with longboard skateboarding, putting a paddleboard on the street, complete with a paddle to propel riders. From start to finish, the boards and paddles are Bangsund's making. Hehad years of experience in the woodworking and construction trades in the Wilsonville area before moving his family to Bend three years ago. He launched the business in his garage in late 2011, then moved into his shop several months later. Bangsund orders bamboo from markets around the world, planing and shaping the wood into a varietyof board faces.He orders

• you get the idea for NorgeBoards?

• I was A . thinking aboutgetting into some kind

of board-making business. In 2010, I was at the U.S.

Open Surfing Championships in Huntington Beach,

decks and attaches wheels, which are soy-based. He said he can make a board in several hours. Bangsund is working to sell the boards in out-of-state coastal markets. He used traditional advertising and social media to get them into several California and Florida board shops. Besides occasional help from his wife, Tina, daughter, Jocelyn, and son, Kalven, he makes, markets and sells the boards himself. He brandsthem as a solid crosstraining workout for athletes. Instead of a blade, the bottom of the paddle has a small, rubber ball for propulsion and turning. The boards range in l ength from 3 feetto 5 feet and cost between $179 and $289. Paddles sell for $79.

(Calif.,) and realized no onewas making a street version of the

paddleboards you see in the water. • Where do

Q. you want the business to go from here?

. We're A • wanting to continue to grow. We might

look into opening

a retail store.lt takes more time

and manpower, but that would get more foot traffic

and walk-in customers.

— Reporter: 541-617-7820 egluckfich@bendbulfetin.com

Btoomberg News

SOUTHFIELD, Mtch. — Ford and Chrysler reported U.S.salesgainsthatexceeded analysts' estimates as surging demand for F-Series and Ram pickups pace the industry's best year since 2007. Deliveries of cars and light trucks climbed 14 percent for Ford and 11 percent for Chrysler, according to company statements. Nissan sales rose 25percent, also beating analysts' estimates. General Motors deliveries increased 3.1 percent, Toyota's gained 2.5 percent and Honda rose 4.5 percent, all less than analysts had estimated. The full-size pickup market expanded 21 percent this year through May, almost triple the increase for all U.S. light vehicles, according to researcher Autodata Corp. Ford, Chrysler and GM, which have a stranglehold on the domestic truck market,are marketing more efficient pickups as rebounding

housing and energy sectors boost demand. "New home construction remains really the driving force behind growth in the pickup truck market, not to mention the fact that the energy markets have been booming out there," said Alec Gutierrez, an industry analyst for Kelley Blue Book. U.S. light-vehicle sales climbed 8.2 percent to 1.44 million, accordingto Woodcliff Lake, N.J.-based Autodata. Deliveries topped the 1.43 million average estimate of 10 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The annualized industry sales rate, adjusted for seasonal trends, rose to 15.3 million, Autodata said in an emailed statement. The pace exceeded the 15.2 million average estimate, up from 14 million a year earlier, keeping on pace forthe best year since 2007.

swigging youngsters are ex-

By Tiffany Hsu Tea expert David DeCandia has spent his entire 17-year career in the shadow of coffee. At his employer, Los Angeles beverage chain Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, coffee comes first in the company name. It also takes up most of the company's processing facility in Camarillo, Calif., and brings in 90 percent of the revenue. But more A mericans are complaining that t h eir c o ffee buzzfeelslike a hangover, citing concerns about overcaffeination and high prices. DeCandia is reading the tea leaves — and seeing a cultural shift toward his brew of choice. " The tea industry i s g o ing straight up, and at some point, it will reach the level of coffee," he said, standing in a

lab ringed by porcelain cups, maps of tea estates and bags of

pected to buy more tea. Asians, long a key r evenue source, form the fastest-growing racial group in the country. Rising interest in ethnic cuisines is drawing foodies to Japanese matcha, Indian Darjeeling and African Rooibos teas. Corporate America is taking notice. Soda giants PepsiCo and Coca-Cola are plugging Anne Cusack/ Los Angeles Times teas through brands such as Different types of tea are on display at Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf's Brisk, Honest Tea and Fuze. Camarillo, Calif., processing facility. Domestic tea sales reached Tea-infused waters, soft drinks $15.7 billion last year, up nearly 32 percent from 2007. and energy drinks are increasingly prevalent. So too are teaflavored booze options like dried Oolong. up nearly32 percentfrom 2007, Twisted Tea. A mericans developing a according to consumer goods Even Howard Schultz, chief hankering for tea are turning researchfirm Packaged Facts. executive of coffee giant Starone of history's oldest drinks In the next two years, the mar- bucks Corp., is bettingbig on tea. into what may be the beverage ket is expected to expand to $18 Last year, the company exindustry's sexiest new offering. billion. panded its $1 billion Tazo Tea Domestic tea sales at restauThe t ea-drinking d e m o- business, which was founded rants, grocery stores and shops graphic is widening. Aging in Portland, by opening its first reached $15.7 billion last year, baby boomers and Redbull- Tazo tea shop.

• Lucian F. andTheone Mihalcheon, Gemstone F. Ellis, trustees for Estate, Lot 3, Block 2, Lucian andTheone Ellis $290,000 Revocable Trust, to Patrick • Marvin K. Hanson to Eric C. and Kimberly A. Boot, J. and Melinda S.Parkes, trustees for Patrick and Kimberly Boot Trust, Eagle Stonebrook, Phase 2,Lot 28, Block1, $289,000 Crest 2, Phase1, Lot 26, • David J. and Tina M. $568,000 Chapman to Lawrence D. • Ben E. andGisela S. and Kimberly S. Kressley, Deberry, trustees for Ben Greens at Redmond, E. Deberry Family Trust, Phases 1 and 2,Lot 133, to Richard D. andSally M. $166,000 Baer, TamarackParkEast, Phase 5, Lot 29, Block 7, • Kathryn Lilienthal to $151,294 David M. andCynthia D. •StephenV.and Rebecca Strutin, Tetherow, Phase2, A. O'Malley to MarcusT. Lot 29, $191,000

• Federal National Mortgage Association to Alan and Kathleen Valenti, Forum Meadow, Lot 38, $197,000 • I. G. Beall Jr. and Wanda A. Beall to Jonathan O. Davison, Whispering Pines Estates, SecondAddition, Lot 8, Block 26, $180,000 • Squirrelhouse lnc. to Erika D. Mohr, Tamarack Park, Phase 7,Lot 4, Block 3, $179,900 • Amanda Scalabrin to Susan S. Foerster, Golf Course Estates at Aspen Lakes, Phase 3,Lot 93,

The U.S.government said on Monday that there were100 phone

$515,000 • Donald L. and Kathleen M. Peterson, trustees for Donald L. andKathleen M. Peterson Revocable Living Trust, to Richard and Dolores M. Lalley, trusteesfor Richard D. Lalleyand Dolores M. Lalley Revocable Living Trust, Valleyview, Lot 37, $171,000 • Alex A. and Sandra L. Dreyer, trustees for Dreyer Living Trust, to Carl T. Cline II, Ponderosa Pines, Second Addition, Lot14, Block 3, $209,000

• Tim and Jennifer Ross to William B. Ballard, Blue Ridge, Lot 23, $301,000 • Phyllis M. Wilbur, personal representative for Estate of Rasmus Peter Rasmussen III, to Casey O'Neil, Township 14, Range13, Section 21, $165,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Richard R. Rueb, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot96, $215,000 • Donald R. and DawnL. Jones to Jason G.and Cortney Runco, Broken Top, Phase4H, Lot 460,

tives of the publishing industry in the weeks

leading up toApple's introduction of the iPad in 2010, when they had

to decide whether to sign on to a deal with Apple that would raise the

prices of e-books.

By Craig Trudell

Rea t e leaves: It's tea time in America Los Angeles Times

Apple price-fixing case begins

calls amongtopexecu-

OR

Website:www.norgeboards.com

and do something that is different."

BRIEFING

$1,080,000 • Justin A. and Kasey J. Mason to Raymond Meskill and Margo lrish, Valleyview, Lot 51, $183,500 • Roger E. andMary L. Carlson, trusteesfor Roger E. Carlson andMary L. Carlson Living Trust, to John G. andAnn S. Lund, trustees for John G.Lund and Ann S. LundTrust, Starwood, Lot 4, Block 6, $227,500 • Jeffrey A. Hatleberg, who acquired title as Jeffery A. Hatleberg, andTerri L.

At least three publishers confided with one

another about their plans, Lawrence Buterman,a Justice Department law-

yer, said onthe opening day of the government's

antitrust caseagainst Apple. All the piecesadd up to proof that Apple

led an elaboratescheme to fix prices of e-books, they said. "The publishers needed a facilitator

to gobetweenthem and Amazon — acompany large enough togive publishers confidencethat their conspiracy would

succeed," Butermansaid. — From wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • MTA Database Administration Fundamentals: Introductory knowledge and skills including relational databasesand concepts, core database concepts, security requirements and more; prep for the Microsoft 98-364 certification exam; registration required; class continues Tuesdays and Thursdays through June 27; $149 includes textbook and test fee; 4-6 p.m. COCC — Crook County OpenCampus, 510 S.E Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7270. • Young Professionals Network: Free; 5:30 p.m.; The Pig andPoundPublic House, 427S.W .EighthSt., Redmond; 541-626-1697. • Eight Marketing Strategies To SetYou Apart: Online presentation, please visit http://goo.gl/ g JePN; free; 6-6:30 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. Greenwood Ave., No.100; 541-480-8835. WEDNESDAY • Howto Start a Business: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus,1170E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Women's Roundtable Series, Building a Vision of Success: For life, career, relationships or business; registration required; noon-1:30 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-382-3221. • Opportunity Knocks Spring Social: Registration required; $15; 5-6:30 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-3184650, info@opp-knocks. org or www.eventbrite. com/event/5514582264. FRIDAY • Liberating the Speaker Within, Empowering Women to Speak, Act & Live with Confidence: Seminar; registration required; continues June 8; $297after May25; 7-9 p.m.; The OldStone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-617-0340, diane© eloquentexpression.com or www.eloquentexpression. com.

For the complete calendar, pick upSunday's Bulletin or visit bendbuiietin.com/trizcal Hatleberg to Joseph P. and Teresa C.Schneider, trustees for Joseph P. Schneider RevocableTrust and Teresa C.Schneider Revocable Trust, Crosswater, Phase 3,Lot 54, $325,000 • Ralph L. and Vicki L. King to David C. andDeborah L. Behrens, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Inc., Lot4, Block8, $365,000 • Gary L. and Theresa M. Clowto Q&E LLC,Bend Park, Lots 3 and 4,Block 78, $579,000


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/athome

GARDEN

What to Plant

»*

FOOD

I10W By Liz Douville For The Bulletin

It was really difficult during those wildly hot days in May to restrain myself from planting every seed in sight. Fortunately I had indoor priorities that only allowed for very limited time touching the soil. Besides, I knew better than to think the time had come to declare open season on gardening. A good control measure is to look back at entries in your garden journal, or better still to start one if you haven't. The reality was that last year on June 8, the low was 29 degrees. In June 2012, the average high temperature was 72.7 degrees, and the average low was 40.9 degrees. The point in bringing this to your attention is that early June is not too late to plan or

• Herbs from the garden can enhancea variety of dishes By Alison Highberger

I I I

For The Bulletin

resh herbs are summer's natural flavor boosters for food. Of course, you can buy fresh herbs yearround at the grocery store. But if you grow

plant some veggies. So

your own parsley,

you can shed the guilt of feeling behind schedule; you will do just fine if you take some time now to plant. It's too late to start tomatoes, peppers or eggplant from seed, but you will find many varieties in nurseries and garden centers. Be sure to choose varieties that mature within our growing range of 65-75 days, plus add on another 14 days to compensate for the dips in temperature from hot days to cool nights. Tomatoes are always the mostcoveted crop. Varieties developed at Oregon State University are very successful in our climate. Those varieties include Gold

sage, rosemary and thyme this summer,

you'll probably dis-

Nugget (cherry), Legend (slicer), Oregon Spring (slicer), Santiam (slicer), Saucy (paste), Siletz

cover, like cookbook author Lynn Alley, that your garden will inspire your cooking in new ways. Alley's new vegetarian cookbook, "Cooking with Herbs: 50 SimpleRecipes for Fresh Flavor," is full of tips for growing herbs as well as using them. Her passion for herbs was ignited when she worked at an herb nursery in southern California years ago, leading tours and teaching herb cooking classes It profoundly changed how she cooks. "Rather than choosing main ingredients around which to build a dish, I chose my herb or herbs from what

(slicer) and Willamette

looked good on any

(slicer). The newest

given day, then built my dish around them," Alley writes. When we talked on the phone with Alley at her home in San Diego, she confirmed her love of herbs by mentioning her favorite salad. See Herbs/D2

release, Indigo Rose, a purple tomato released in 2012, is valued as the first high anthocyania (anti-oxidant) tomato. Tomatoes like full sun, a low nitrogen (5-10-10) fertilizer and moderate amounts of water. SeePlant/D4

Courtesy Dnanraj Emanuel

Herbs add flavor to dishes from tomato sorbet to Greek-style rice salad. See recipes, Page D2.

ns 4W

Farmers markets starting up

Thinkstock

Central Oregon farmers markets are starting up. Two markets, the Back-

yard Farmers Market at Celebrate the Season in Bend and the Madras Sat-

urday Market, are already underway. The Bend Farmers Market in downtown

begins Wednesday.The Redmond Farmers Market starts June 11.

The Bendfarmers market at St. Charles will not

open this year. Other markets will not open until later this year, with the Prineville Farmers

Market opening June15, Sisters Farmers Market starting June14and the

NorthWest Crossing Saturday Farmers Market opening June 29. For details, see

the daily Calendar listing in The Bulletin or visit www. bendbulletin.com, click on

the Events tab andsearch forfarmers markets. For information about

produce available at the local markets, check out the At Home section starting

June11. — Bulletin staff report

TODAY'S RECIPES

HOME

+

Inside somesparkling kitchens

Curry-Cilantro CreamCheese Spread:Serve it with bread or crackers,D2

By Penny Nakamura

More herdrecipes:Savory Tomato Sorbet with Oregano,

For The Bulletin

The Assistance League of Bend is showcasing six beautiful kitchens in the Tetherow development as part of its Kitchen Kaleidoscope showcase. This event only happens every other year,and proceeds from ticket sales will go toward the many philanthropic programs the Assistance League supports. "This is our big fundraiser to help improve the quality of life for adults, as well as children in need in our area," said Maggie Chmiel, Assistance League public relations spokeswoman. "Whether we're shopping with a child for clothes, visiting a resident in a nursing home or delivering hand-sewn or knitted hats to cancer patients, we are commitment in action." There will be six new kitchens openforthisJune 22 tour.

Greek-Style Rice Salad with Dill Dressing,D2 Coconut-Marinated Pork Tenderloin with Scallion-Peanut Relish:Contrasting textures with a bit of heat, D3

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Ryan Brennecke/The Bullean

Cathy and Alan Mills first chose the granite slab for their kitchen then matched everything else — such as the backsplash — to it. Each kitchen will host guest chefs, including Bette Fraser of Well Traveled Fork and Steve Helt of Zydeco Kitchen & Cocktails, who will cook up tasty treats to share with visitors.

The Bulletin was allowed a sneak peek of two of the kitchens on the tour, and while each was gorgeous, they couldn't be more different in style. SeeKitchens/D4

More grilling recipes:Mustard-Aioli-Grilled Potatoes with

Fines Herbes, Shrimp and SausageSkewers with Paprika Glaze, Grilled Fennel with Anchovy Vinaigrette, The Yellow Jacket (a

cooling drink),D3 The Flexitarian:Mark Bittman's recipes with meat in a supporting

role: Grilled SteakandVegetables with Flour Tortillas, Pork and Portobello Burgers, Chinese-Style Vegetable and Veal Stew,DS

Recipe Finder:Light and crispy salmon cakes,D3


D2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

FOOD

Next week: Food gifts for dad

Savory Tomato Sorbet with Oregano Makes about 2 cups. Serve this savory sorbet icy cold as a between-course palate cleanser, or let it melt somewhat and serve it with

a straw or spoon on a hot day, as a sort of gazpacho slush. You could just as easily use basil or rosemary, or you can try mixing herbs and spices for different effects. Leave the skins on the organic tomatoes for additional color, flavor, and nutrients. — Lynn Alley 4 fairly firm tomatoes, each cut into 8 pieces (about 4 C), frozen /2tsp cumin seeds, crushed

/2 tsp coriander seeds, crushed 2 tsp freshly squeezed lemon juice Sait

Freshly ground black pepper '/4 C fresh oregano leaves, chopped coarsely

Place the frozen tomato pieces, crushed seeds and lemon juice in the work bowl of a food processor. Pulse to break up the tomato pieces, then continue pulsing until they are reduced to a powder.

Add salt and freshly ground pepper to taste. Let the machine run, stopping from time to time to scrape down the sides of the work bowl, until the mixture turns into a smooth sorbet. Add the oregano leaves and pulse a few times until they are thoroughly mixed in.

Scoop the sorbet into cups, andenjoy. Youcan also scoop it into a container and pack it away inthefreezer for a day or two. Let it thaw a bit before serving. — "Cooking with Herbs: 50 Simple Recipes for FreshFlavor," by LynnAlley, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC,2013, www. andrewsmcmeel.com

Herbs Continued from D1 "There's nothing I like better than parsley, freshly picked from my garden, with lemon juice, olive oil and salt — and I only grow the curly k i nd of parsley. I don't like Italian parsley. I know it's supposed to be the choice of gourmet cooks, but I love that wonderful mouthfeel of good old conventional American parsley," she sard. In "Cooking with H erbs," Alley's chapters on soups and salads, main dishes, breads and spreads and smallindulgences ( herb-infused s o rbets a n d cheesecakes), all begin with a basic template recipe that can be changed by adding any herbs that appeal to you. Basic polenta, for example, goes Italian with the addition of fresh basil, marinara sauce, ricottaand Parmesan cheeses, or it can have a Southwestern flair if you incorporate cilantro along with tomatoes, onion, avocado, black olives, queso fresco and a squeeze oflime juice. An herb, by definition, is the "fragrant leaves of any of various annual or perennial plants that grow in temperate zones and do not have woody stems," according to "The New Food Lover's Companion," by Sharon Tyler Herbst and Ron Herbst. Spices, on the other hand, are "seasonings obtained from the bark, buds, fruit, roots, seeds or stems of various plants and trees," the Herbsts write. "I think we're way underusing fresh ingredients from

gardens, and especially herb gardens," Alley told us. To remedy that, she suggests planting some containers of herbs this summer or designating a spot in your garden for a patch of herbs. "Ask yourself, what are you most likely to use and enjoy? Myfavorites are parsley, chives, basil, oregano and cilantro," she said. Alley is an organic gardener who recommends well-drained soil, amended with plenty of organic matterbefore herb seeds or starts are planted. Herbs are either annual or perennial (see "Annuals vs. perennials"), so it's good to know which herbs will only live for a year (annuals), and which will come back next year

(perennials).

Annuals vs. perennlals ANNUALS Basil Cilantro Chervil Dill

PERENNIALS Chives

Lavender Mint

Oregano Rosemary Sage Tarragon Thyme Parsley is a biennial. It

produces seeds in its second year andthen dies. Marjoram comes in both annual and perennial varieties.

Cooking tips • Wash herbs off in the garden, let them dry, then cut them.

• Use a very clean, sharp knife for cutting herbs. Cut

them cleanly; don't mash or bruise them or they'll oxidize quickly.

• To remove small-leafed herbs such asthyme, or woody leaves suchas rosemary, run your index finger and thumb down the stems.

• To "chiffonade" (cut into thin strips) herbs such as basil or mint, stack the

leaves and roll them into a cigar shape, then, using a very sharp knife or a pair of sharp kitchen scissors, cut thin slices crosswise. A fresh herb chiffonade

("Schiff-on-ODD") is a

great finish for a dish. — Source: "Cooking with Herbs: 50 Simple Recipes for Fresh Flavor," by Lynn Alley, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC, 2013

"It may be useful to place the annuals and the perennials together in different areas of the garden," Alley writes. She notes in her book that most culinary herbs originated in the Mediterranean regions, so they grow well in full sun. For optimal growth, make sure they get at least six hours of direct sunlight every day. If you're planting herbs in

containers, don't forget to feed them. "You must fertilize herbs in pots because they can't keep reaching out roots to new soil and nutrients. Fertilize lightly every month or so during the growing season, using an organic fertilizer," she writes in "Cooking with Herbs." If youhaven't cooked much with freshherbs and are more familiar with dried herbs, just remember the three-to-one rule of thumb: three times as much fresh as dried because dried herbs are more concentrated. If a recipe calls for one teaspoon of dried oregano, triple it and use one tablespoon of fresh oregano, since three teaspoons equal one tablespoon. To avoid overdoing it with fresh herbs, just season with a light touch. " Start out w i t h a small amount. You can't easily remove an herb from a dish. Start with a tablespoon and your chances of success are much greater than if you put in a quarter cup and can't easily take it out," Alley said. Alley gives oregano and dill starring roles in her "GreekS tyle Rice Salad with D i l l

Courtesy Dhanraj Emanuel

Curry-Cilantro Cream Cheese Spread can be served on crackers or bread.

Curry-Cilantro Cream Cheese Spread Makes about1 cup. I have madevarious versions of this delicious spread for many years, sometimes presenting it in a crock and sometimes rolling it into a ball covered with nuts. You can make it using commercial cream cheese or home-

made yogurt cheese. — Lynn Alley

12 oz cream cheese, at room temperature 1 C shredded sharp cheddar cheese '/4 C dry sherry (optional)

2 tsp curry powder, or more as desired '/4 C chopped walnuts, plus for more rolling (optional)

Combine the cream cheese, cheddar, sherry (if using) and curry powder in the work bowl of a food processor and blend well. Add the walnuts, raisins and cilantro, and pulse just until mixed. Be sure to leave plenty of texture. Season with salt to taste.

Spoon the mixture into a crock, or roll it into a ball and cover it with walnuts, then refrigerate for at least 3 hours before serving on crackers or bread. — "Cooking with Herbs: 50 Simple Recipes for Fresh Flavor," by LynnAlley

Dressing" (see recipe).

"It's really, really good. I like it as a main dish salad, and serve it over some romaine lettuce leaves," Alley told us. She said that her "Curry-Cilantro Cream Cheese Spread"

Greek-Style Rice Salad with Dill Dressing Makes 4 to 6 servings. If you let this salad sit for a few hours after preparing it, whether at room temperature or in the refrigerator, the

flavors begin to blendand deepen. In short, the whole is greater than thesum of its parts. My friend Kathy thinks this is the best thing that ever came out of my kitchen. — Lynn Alley

(see recipe) is great on crackers, or would make a delicious grilled sandwich spread. "If you don't like cilantro, leave it out or use chives instead," Alley said. Alley's "Savory Tomato Sorbet with Oregano" is unusual and would be memorable at a

1 recipe Basic Brown Rice (see

recipe below) 1 med cucumber, peeled and diced finely 2 med tomatoes, diced finely 1 C Mediterranean black olives, sliced in half and pitted

1 green bell pepper, seeded and diced finely 1 (7-oz) pkg feta cheese, crumbled VINAIGRETTE: 3 cloves garlic, pressed

dinner party (see recipe). She serves it as a between-course palatecleanser or as a "sort of gazpacho slush" on a hot day. "It's so unique and so delicious, if I do say so myself. If you don't like cumin, try basiL Try dill or tarragon with it. Tomatoes areso versatile.Try chives, or you could even use parsley," Alley said. Just try more fresh herbs in your cooking this summer. Snip them fresh from your garden, add them to dishes at the last minute, before serving, to enjoytheir full aroma and taste, and even bring them inside for afragrant decoration. Just get hooked on herbs like Lynn

For the Greek rice salad: In a large bowl, combine the rice, cucumber, tomatoes, olives, green pepper and feta.

Make the vinaigrette: Combine the garlic, lemon juice and vinegar in the work bowl of a mini food processor and blend well. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, then with the processor running, slowly drizzle in the oil. Add the dill seeds, dill leaves, salt and pepper to taste, then pulse until the dressing reaches your desired

consistency. Toss the vinaigrette with the salad. Refrigerate for at least one hour or two before serving. Serve chilled, or let the salad come to room temperature first.

Basic Brown Rice Makes2to4 servings,dependingon how hungryyouare. Most of us probably use arice cooker to cook rice. It's convenient and easy, but may not always produce alight, fluffy finished product. If you're in a hurry, go ahead and use the rice cooker. But if you've got a little more time, and you'd like a nice, light, fluffy batch of rice as a basis for a salad, try cooking it the old-fashioned way: boiled in a

pot with lots of water, just as youwould cook pasta. Youcan prepare your favorite toppings while the rice cooks. — Lynn Alley 4 qts water

1TBS salt

Alley. "At the height of the summer season, I love making bouquets of freshherbs to place around the house as flower arrangements," she said. We guess that if they're made of parsley, they can double as a snack.

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Bring the water andsalt to a boil in a large pot over medium-high heat. When the rice is al dente, drain it in a colander, rinse lightly under cool water, then drain thoroughly. Put the rice in a wide bowl and fluff it up with your fingers. It's ready to serve with your favorite toppings, or

to use in a salad. — "Cooking with Herbs: 50 Simple Recipes for Fresh Flavor," by LynnAlley

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2 C uncooked long-grain brown rice, rinsed

Add the rice and boil briskly until the grains are al dente, about 40 minutes. The cooking time may vary accordingly with the variety of rice.

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3 TBS freshlysqueezed lemon juice 3 TBS vinegar '/3 C olive oil or mixed oils 2 tsp dill seeds ~/4 C chopped fresh dill leaves 1 tsp salt

Freshly ground black pepper

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/2 C golden raisins or dried currants ~/4 C fresh cilantro leaves Sait Crackers or bread, for serving

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Cottage cheese:Howlong does it keep inthe fridge'? By Kathleen Purvis

would last in a home refrigerator because there are so many How long will cottage variables, such as how cold . cheese keep in the re- you keep your refrigerator and frigerator? Shall I discard af- how often you open and close ter the expiration date? Can I the door, which affects temfreeze it? perature. If the cottage cheese • The date on your con- has no sign of mold and it • tainer of cottage cheese smells OK, it's probably fine. is probably a sell-by date. It's While harder cheeses, like so the store will know how Parmesan and cheddar, can long something has been on be frozen,softer ones like cotthe shelf (and for you to use tage cheese and cream cheese when you rummage around to don't freeze well. They get try to get one from the back of gummy or watery after thawthe shelf). ingthem. It's hard to give an exact — Email questions to amount of time cottage cheese hpurvis@charlotteobserver com The Charlot te Observer

Q.

A


FOO D

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

RECIPE FINDER Looking for a hard-to-find recipe

or can answera request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, The Baltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, MD 21278, or email

By Bonnie S. Benwick The Washington Post

baltsunrecipefinder© gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for

So there we were, testing our way through this season's grilling and barbecue cookbooks, when a question flared up like embers sizzling with marinade drippings: If we can land a man on the moon, why can't Those Who Grill agree on standard temperatures

them to be published.

for low, medium, medium-high and high'? For this roundup of new recipes, Bobby Flay's medium ranges from 350 to 375 degrees with a four-second hand test; Barton Seaver skips specifics and offers a 2-to-3-second hand test for medium; Michael Chiarello goes with just the numbers (his medium, 400 to 450

salmon patties

degrees); and Bon Appetit editor Adam Rapoport equates a simple label of "medium fire" with "medium-high" for the gas grill. No matter. We think these recipes are all worth your time. Mustard-Aioli-Grilled

Grilled Fennel with

Potatoes with Fines Herbes

Anchovy Vinaigrette Makes 4 servings. Wood chips can overpower the flo-

Makes 4 to 6 servings.

ral taste of the fennel, so if you are

Make ahead: Theaiolineedstobe refrigerated for at least 30 minutes and up to aday in advance.

using wood, use it sparingly and choose chips or sawdust of delicately flavored woods such as orange, apricot or alder.

/2 C regular or low-fat mayonnaise 2 cloves garlic, smashed to a paste 1 heaping TBS Dijon-style mustard 1 heaping TBS whole-grain mustard Kosher salt Freshly ground black pepper 2/sIbs baby Yukon Gold potatoes, scrubbed 2 TBS finely chopped flat-leaf parsley 1 TBS finely chopped chives 1 TBS finely chopped tarragon

Make ahead: The vinaigrette can

be refrigerated for up to 5 days,

«,

but be aware that its anchovy flavor will strengthen over time. FOR THE VINAIGRETTE: Juice of1 orange 1 TBS sherry vinegar 1 (2-oz) can oil-packed anchovy fillets 3 TBS extra-virgin olive oil FOR THE FENNEL: 2 Ig bulbs fennel 1 TBS extra-virgin olive oil Kosher salt

Whisk together the mayonnaise,

Photos by Deb Lindsey i For The Washington Post

Freshly ground black pepper

garlic and mustards in a medium Scallion-Peanut Relish adds a crunch to the silky texture of the marinated pork. container; season lightly with salt

Prepare the grill for direct heat. If using a gas grill, preheat to

and pepper.Coverandrefrigerate for at least30 minutesand upto1 day. Put the potatoes in a pot, cover with cold water by 2 inches and add

Coconut-Marinated Pork Tenderloin with Scallion-Peanut Relish Makes 4 to 6 servings.

medium (350 degrees). If using a charcoal grill, light the charcoal or wood briquettes; when the bri-

2 tablespoons salt. Bring to a boil The chili pepper used here is a hot one; wear food-safe gloves or wash your hands thoroughly after prepping. quettes are ready, distribute them over; cook for 15 to 20 minutes, un- Serve with yellow or brown rice. til a skewer inserted into the center Make ahead:Thepork needs to marinate for at least 2 hours and up to 8 hours.

under the cooking area for direct heat. For a medium-hot fire, you

of a potato meets someresistance.

should be able to hold your hand

Drain well and let cool slightly. Prepare the grill for direct heat. If

14 oz unsweetened low-fat coconut milk using a gasgrill, preheat to medium Grated zest and juice of 2 limes (350 degrees). If using a charcoal 1 heaping TBS mild curry grill, light the charcoal or wood bripowder quettes; when the briquettes are 2 tsp mild smoked paprika ready, distribute them under the (pimenton) cooking area for direct heat. For a 6 cloves garlic, finely chopped medium-hot fire, youshould beable 3 TBS peeled, grated ginger to hold your hand about 6 inches above the coals for about 4 or 5

seconds. Have ready a spraywater bottle for taming any flames. Lightly coat the grill rack with oil and place it on the grill. Combine the warm potatoes and aioli in a mixing bowl and season lightly with salt; toss to coat evenly.

1 Scotch bonnet chili pepper,

seeded and chopped (may substitute 2 TBS Scotch bonnet hot sauce) '/4 tsp coarsely ground black

pepper 2 Ibs pork tenderloin (preferably in one piece), trimmed of silver skin and visible fat 2 TBS canola oil

Kosher salt 4 scallions, light-green and darkgreen parts, halved lengthwise then finely chopped 2 TBS finely chopped fresh cilantro leaves '/s tsp ground allspice /2 C coarsely chopped roasted, unsalted peanuts Hotsauce, for serving

about 6 inches above the coals for

about 4 or 5 seconds. Haveready a spray water bottle for taming any flames. Lightly coat a grill basket with oil and place it on the grill.

Meanwhile, make the vinaigrette: Combine the orange juice, sherry vinegar, anchovy fillets with

their oil and the extra-virgin olive oil in a blender. Puree until smooth. Transfer to an airtight container

Combine the coconut milk, lime zest, lime juice, curry powder, paprika, garlic, ginger, Scotch bonnet chili pepper and black pepper in a large zip-top bag. Add the pork and seal, pressing as much air out as possible. Massage to coat evenly. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours and up to 8hours. Remove the pork from the refrigerator 30 minutes before cooking and pat dry with paper towels. Discard the marinade.

and refrigerate until ready to use.

ing a charcoal grill, light the charcoal or wood briquettes; when the briquettes are ready, distribute them onone

and place in a mixing bowl, along

For the fennel: Trim the stalks, reserving them for another use, if desired. Cut the fennel bulbs in half, discarding the cores, then Prepare the grill for direct and indirect heat. If using a gas grill, preheat to medium-high (450 degrees). If us- cut the half bulbs into thin slices

Grill (uncovered) until golden brown side of the cooking area. For a hot fire, you should be able to hold your hand about 6 inches above the coals for 3 with the oil. Season with salt and on all sides (a little char looks ap- or 4 seconds. Have ready a spray water bottle for taming any flames. Lightly coat the grill rack with oil and place pepper to taste; toss to coat evenly pealing), about 8minutes. it on the grill. and let sit for a few minutes so the Transfer the potatoes to a platter and sprinkle with the fresh herbs.

Brush the pork with the oil and season lightly all over with salt. Put the pork directly over the heat and cook fennel softens a bit. until charred on all sides, about 8 minutes. Transfer to the indirect-heat side of the grill; cook for about 12 minPlace the fennel in the grill bas-

Season with salt and pepper.Serve

utes or until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center of the meat registers145 degrees.

warm or at room temperature. Transfer to a cutting board, tent loosely with aluminum foil and let rest for10 minutes. — Adapted from "Bobby Flay's Meanwhile, combine the scallions, cilantro, allspice and peanuts in a mixing bowl. Taste, and season with salt Barbecue Addiction,"by Bobby Flay as needed. with Stephanie Banyasand Sally Cut the pork crosswise into slices and arrange on a platter. Spoon the relish on top; serve with hot sauce. — Adapted from "Bobby Flay's BarbecueAddiction," Jackson (Clarkson Potter, 20f3).

Shrimp and Sausage Skewers with Paprika Glaze

The Yellow Jacket

Makes 6 servings. Because theskewers are onthe grill just long enough to cook the shrimp (and not long enough to cook sausages through), be sure to use a cooked smoked sausage. Make ahead: Theglazecan bemadeandtheskewerscanbeassembledupto 6hoursinadvance. /4 C extra-virgin olive oil 4 Ig garlic cloves, minced 2 TBS chopped thyme 5 tsp smoked paprika

(pimenton) 4 tsp sherry vinegar /4 tsp kosher salt

/2 tsp freshly ground black

pepper /2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes 12 extra-Ig shrimp (13 to 15 per Ib), peeled and deveined

Puffed-up By Julie Rothman The Baltimore Sun

Pat Arata from Mishawaka, Ind., was looking for

a recipe for making crispy fried salmon patties that she thought was once printed on a can of Crisco. E velyn B l edsoe f r o m L etart, Wv a., sent i n a photocopy of the well-used recipe taken from a Crisco can many years ago that she thinks is the one Arata was searching for. T hese cakes cook u p crispy and light. I would recommend using canned red salmon instead of the p ink if y o u a r e a ble to spend a little more. It has a less fishy flavor and usually fewer of the tiny bones. I also think the cakes could be fried in a little canola oil, instead of the Crisco.

Requests Mary Geis from Baltimore is looking for a dessert recipe that her mother made some 45 years ago. The bottom layer was about one inch of some sortof flour/butter mixture. Over the top,she placed fresh plum halves, skin side up and baked. She recalls that it was not sweet but rather tart tasting. Bettie Vogt from Bend would like to have a recipe for making Ezikiel bread, using beans and seeds instead of flour.

Quick 'n Easy Salmon Patties Makes 6 to 7 patties 1 can (15- to 16-oz) pink salmon 1 egg /3 C minced onion s/s C flour 1'/s tsp baking powder 1/2 C Crisco

ket and set it on the grill over direct heat. Cook for 5 to 7 minutes without moving the basket, so that the

fennel on the bottom lightly chars.

Drain salmon; set aside 2

tablespoons of its juice. In amedium mixing bowl, mix salmon,

Remove from the grill and toss to combine. The heat of the fennel on the bottom will help to soften the

egg and onion until sticky. Stir in flour. Add baking powder to

fennel on top, giving you arangeof

mixture. Form into small patties and fry until golden brown

textures. Toss the fennel with the vinaigrette and serve immediately. Variations:For the vinaigrette,

salmon juice; stir into salmon (about 5 minutes) in hotCrisco. Serve with tartar sauce or

Caesar salad dressing.

add a clove of garlic if desired, or substitute the juice of 2 lemons for the orange juice and omit the

sherry vinegar.

1 Ib cooked smoked sausage, such as andouille or linguica, cut crosswise into 1-inch pieces 12 cherry tomatoes 12 red onion wedges (thick or thin, your preference)

HIGH DESERT BANK

— Adapted from 'Where There's Smoke: Simple, Sustainable, Delicious Grilling," by Barton Seaver (Sterling Epicure, 2013).

• •

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s •

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.

Makes 8 servings. Prepare the grill for direct heat. If

This sno-cone "cocktail" is simple

using a gas grill, preheat to mediumhigh (450 degrees). If using a char-

enough for kids to make themselves. Blend equal parts lemonade and pineapple and orange juices, add a splash of cranberry

coal grill, light the charcoal or wood

briquettes; when the briquettes are ready, distribute them evenly over the cooking area. For a hot fire, you

juice cocktail, then pour the mix-

should be able to hold your hand

ture over shaved ice. Make ahead: The juice mixture

about 6 inches above the coals for 3 or

needs to be well chilled.

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2 DIay~s of' EmbreiderTY Fun!, .....

4 seconds. Have ready a spray water bottle for taming any flames. Lightly coat the grill rack with oil and place it on the grill.

Bring a friend and receive a $50 Gift Certificate*

«

Whisk together the oil, garlic, thyme, smoked paprika, vinegar, salt,

black pepper and crushed red pepper flakes in a medium bowl. Reserve half of the glaze by transferring it to a separate bowl. Refrigerate until ready

to use. Thread the shrimp, sausage pieces, tomatoes and onion sections alternately onto the metal skewers,

1 C pineapple juice 1 C fresh orange juice 1 C lemonade Generous splash cranberry juice cocktail 8C ice

Combine the pineapple juice, orange juice, lemonade and cranberry juice cocktail in a pitcher. Refrigerate until well chilled. Working in batches, process the

ice in a blender or food processor

dividing the elements evenly. Ar-

fitted with a grating disk; this will

range the skewers on a large rimmed baking sheet. Use half of the glaze

approximateshaved ice.Use an ice cream scoop to divide andpack

to coat them thoroughly and evenly. Cook uncovered for 6 to 8 minutes,

the ice among individual cups or

turning the skewers as needed and brushing occasionally with t hat glaze, until the shrimp are just opaque in the center.

Divide the skewers among individual plates. Serve warm or at room temperature. Pass the reserved glazeat the table. — Adapted from "The Grilling Book: The Definitive GuideFromBonAppetit,"editedby Adam Rapoport (AndrewsllrtcMeet, 2013).

paper sno-cone cups. Drizzle each serving with the juice mixture. Serve right away. — Adapted from "TheGrilling Book: The Definitive Guide FromBonAppetit," edited by AdamRapoport (Andreyys McMeet, 20t3).

'Eileen Roche

, Narie Ziano

'.,Expert 8 Editor

Author

lNORR.OWS Stitching Sisters Embroidery Bash! June 7 - June 8, 2013 This isa 2-Day Hands-on Interactive Workshop from the creator of the popular Designsin Machine Embroidery magazine. • 50 fabulous Embroidery Techniques • Relax in popular team stt«ktng environment • All projects kits, supplies, & top line machines provided • Each guest receivesan ex«lusive CD with all embroidery designs, project instructions used during the event. • Book signing and photo opportunities • Catered lunch for both days, snacks and goodies • Exclusive offers, drawings, tt«prizes

Call to Register 541-382-3882 Brought to you by Morrow's Sewing 8t Vacuum Center 304 NE 3rd St., Bend *Friends cannot have ever attenda Morrow's Sewing Event


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

H OME 4

A R DEN

Next week: How to change out cabinet pulls

Kitchens Continued from D1

Old world style Cathy and Alan Mills knew they wanted an open kitchen design. They also knew they wanted a kitchen big enough to have many cooks stirring the pots at the same time. The amenities and layout of this kitchen are ideally suited for casual family dinners. After selling t h eir P o r tland software company, the Millses moved to the H i gh Desert knowing they wanted to build their dream home. For Cathy Mills that meant a dream kitchen that melded sophistication with Old World charm. "First we picked the granite slab, and we matched it with everything else in the kitchen," said Mills. "I knew I didn't want an enclosed kitchen or dining room. We ha d t h at type of formal house in Portland, and we wanted this to be a place where everyone could gather together." The eye-catching slab Mills selected has beautiful golden tones. The kitchen, with dark cabinets,incorporates warm autumn tones throughout. As a person who loves to cook, Mills selected a stainless steel six-burner stove and oven. The professional-styl e cooktop and industrial hood allow Mills the ability to cook for her l arge and g r owing family. A rounded, two-level island allows room for bar seating and an e f ficient t r iangular work area. Above the bar seating area are hanging drop light fi xtures made of hollowed-out onyx. The lights diffuse a yellow light, giving the area a warm tone. "Bend is more a destination area, so we wanted something for everyone with this openair design," said Mills. She wanted to accommodate her grandchildren an d f r i e nds who visit for golfing and skiing trips. When they aren't hosting grandchildren an d g u e sts, Mills says one of her favorite appliances in her new kitchen is the double dishwasher. This allows her to use one part of it when she's only cooking for her husband and herself. When she's entertaining, she can use both sides. She says this new appliance is great for empty nesters who don't need a huge dishwasher for day-to-

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The Bulletin file photo

At a soil temperature of 59 degrees, carrots germinate in about 10 days, so you're not too late to plant a row or two.

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Photos hy Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Cathy and Alan Mills' kitchen has a stainless steel six-burner stove and a two-level island that features bar seating on one side and a triangular work area on the other.

The Millses' outdoor kitchen area is kept sheltered by an overhang from the house. In cold weather, built-in overhead heaters keep the outdoor bar seating area warm.

For Alan Mills, the climateThe Millses included a gascontrolled built-in wine cuppowered outdoor fire pit — a board is a favorite feature. It perfect place for grandchilkeeps all the wine at exactly dren to roast marshmallows the right temperature. in the summer. F rom t h e ki t c hen, t h e Whether i n t h e o u t door Millses can look out toward kitchen or indoor kitchen, the the golf course and onto their Millses are always a warm outdoor patio kitchen. and inviting couple, who alT he overhang f ro m t h e ways promise good food, good house keeps the outdoor patio wine and good company. area dry in wet weather, and, Modern and contemporary should it get chilly, built-in overhead heaters over the outThe use of stainless steel, door bar seating area keep the a simple palette of colors and area warm. clean lines brings a cohesive, An outdoor dining set and uber-functional kitchen into sitting areas make this outclear focus. day living. door space exquisite. This contemporary kitchen may seem sparse to some, but it is so well-thought out, i ts functionality cannot b e denied. "I think you could say this What:Assistance League of Bendpresents Kitchen Kaleidoscope is very E uropean-inspired," 2013; six kitchens will be on the tour, and Central Oregon chefs says Arrowood Development will be preparing appetizers in the kitchens designer Femke van Velzen. When:10 a.m .to 3 p.m.June22 "It's about utilizing l i mited Where:Tetherow, 61240 Skyline Ranch Road space, with good design lines. In some ways, Europeans are Gost: $25 inadvance,$30dayof;Ticketsmaybepurchasedat so far ahead in this area." Ginger's Kitchenware, Kitchen Complements, Merchant Trader Though this k i tchen has in Sunriver, Newport Avenue Market, Umpqua Bank and at www. no windows, the open design assist anceleagUebend.com allows the large bank of winContact: www.assistanceleaguebend.com dows in the adjacent dining FEATUREDCHEFS room to let in ample natural Tim Garling, Jackalope Grill; Steve Helt, Zydeco Kitchen & lighting. Cocktails; Baltazar Chavez, Batazar's; Bette Fraser, Well A mix of natural materials Traveled Fork; Cliff Eslinger, 900 Wall; Zac Hoffman, Tetherow and hues links the interior G rill with the outdoor views of the

Ifyou go

golf course.

Another of the kitchens to be featured in the upcoming Kitchen Kaleidoscope showcase uses stainless steel, clean lines and a simple palette of color. A climatecontrolled built-in wine cupboard is another of the features in the Millses' kitchen.

"With this kind of design, we want it to be a carefree, an easy way of living," said van Velzen. "We are all about low maintenance in this house. It should look beautiful, but not require a lot of work to keep it looking this way." As an example, van Velzen pointed to the wire brushed oak floors in the kitchen and dining room, which are an engineered flooring material. It looks natural, but it is lowsheen and low-maintenance and gives a distinctive texture underfoot. She also explained that everything in the kitchen, and in the home, was designed to be energy efficient. A breakfast island bar runs part of the way across the front of the kitchen. Van Velzen called this the "floating" bridge bar, which comfortably seats four. This floating island

bar easily handles food p rep, casual meals and buffets. It's also an ideal

spot for lingering over a glass of wine or enjoying the outdoor views from the windows across the open dining room. "It's a smaller kitchen, but it's still big enough to be able to handle entertaining or having a party," said van Velzen. The brown streamlined c abinets h av e n o v is ible pulls. In fact a wall of cabinets spans the entire length of the kitchen and blends so well that visitors may not notice the wall is actually cupboards until they are opened. A large stainless steel Viking refrigerator melds w ell i n t o t h i s m o d e r n kitchen, and a large flatscreen television makes

cooking or cleaning up •

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more enjoyable. The modern design of this kitchen is both efficient and inviting. — Reporter: 541-382-181 I, pnakamura@bendbulletin.com

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Continued from 01 A common problem is overwatering, leading to the development of various diseases. Always plan ahead for frost protection so you will be ready when those unexpected frosty nights are predicted. Most corn varieties have a maturity date of 80 days; add to that the 14 days, and it's no wonder we aren't boiling the water. Look for seeds with a 65-75 maturity date. Corn can be pre-sprouted indoors about five days prior to planting t o t h e g a rden. Place adampened paper towel on a plate, place seeds on the towel and cover with p lastic wrap. Corn seeds need warmth to germinate and do best between 70-80 degrees. Monitor the moisture content of the paper towel; it should be moist but not wet. Both ends of the kernels will show signs of growth, and it won't make any difference which end is up or down when you go to plant. The seed will right itself and find its proper orientation in the soil. Corn can also be started with seeding mix in containers.For best results,the seedlings shouldn't be held longer than two weeks. A study from Iowa State University showed the growth of 4-weekold transplants was poor in comparison to the 2-week-old transplants. You're not too late for beans. They are considered a warm weather crop and will do better when day and night temperatures are more stable.Beans can also be pre-sprouted on a paper toweL If you don't want to go through the pre-sprouting exercise, you can soak them overnight to speed them along. Bush beans are easier to protect from an unexpected frost than pole beans. Potatoes and beans are considered to be companions and can share space, thereby confusing some ofeach other'sworst pest enemies. Carrots continue to do well as the temperatures start to dip in the fall. In fact, most gardeners feel the flavor is enhanced with the cooler weather. Although carrots germinate at a soil temperature of 50 degrees, it takes approximately 17 days. At a warmer soil temperatureof 59 degrees, germination takes place in about 10 days, so you're not too late to plant a row or two. There just isn't any comparison in flavor between what you grow and what you buy in the supermarket. Growing onions, chives or related crops near carrots tends toconfuse or repel the carrot rust fly. A lbany-based Nich o l s Garden Nursery owner Rose Marie has decided to experiment with carrots in a hanging basket. The baskets will have an attractive fern-like appearance. Sounds like a fun project. Seems like you would have to m atch th e m ature length of carrot to the depth of your basket. Don't forget the flowers that draw in the pollinators. It's more important than ever to interplant flowers with vegetables. Nasturtiums, calendulas, snapdragons, salvias, cosmos, yarrow and dill are just a few of the friends in your vegetable garden.

Have fun growing for your I •

a •

• •

table and consider growing a row to be donated to your local food kitchen. — Reporter: douville@ bendbroadband.com.


TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

THE FLEXITARIAN

DS

ASK MARTHA

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MARK BITTMAN

Chinese-Style Vegetable and Veal Stew

Ii I

Makes 4 servings.

This monthly feature explores healthy and delicious food ideas from the New York Times' food columnist.

2 TBS peanut oil 1 Ib veal stew meat, cut into1/2 inch chunks Salt and ground black pepper 2 med onions, chopped 4 med carrots, cut into 1-inch chunks 12 radishes (about 8 oz) 3 TBS minced garlic 3 TBS minced ginger /4 C soy sauce 2 C white wine, stock or water 1 Ib bok choy or baby bok choy (leaves and stems) 12 oz snow peas, trimmed Dark sesame oil, for drizzling Chopped fresh cilantro for garnish

By Mark Bittman New York Times News Service

I probablyeat a third as much meat as I used to and, on the not-rare (three times a week?) occasions that I do indulge, I eat less of it. I'm reminded of a r e ally good plate of slow-roasted lamb shoulder I had in Seattle two weeks ago; there were about 6 ounces on the plate, and I ate half. It was delicious, and it was enough. This is no longer a conscious thing but a new habit. The new habits, I suppose, come from new attitudes. The vast majority of Americans still eat meat at least some of the time. Statistically, most of us eat it in unwise, unsustainable and unhealthful quantities. I'm betting that you eat meat

Put oil into large pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. When oil is hot, add veal and sprin-

kle with salt and pepper. Cook, turning as necessary, Until well browned on all sides. Transfer veal

to plate and setaside. Add onions, carrots and radish-

es. Cook, stirring occasionally, un-

more consciously (and less of it)

til lightly browned, 5 to10 minutes.

than you once did. The health, environmental and ethical concerns affect the attitudes of almost everyone I encounter, and although our priorities differ, few people I know indiscriminately fill their supermarket carts w i t h s h r i nk-wrapped meat and leave. Not long ago, almost all of us did that. "Humanely" means different things to different people. Veal consumption plummeted in the '80s when confinement turned people off, and as a result, crates are set to be phased out by 2017, producers say. But veal can be as natural a part of legitimate agriculture as any other animal. If you consume dairy, you support veal production. When it comes to beef, pork and lamb, some people insist that meat come from animals raised on small farms, individually tended; others are interested only that the animals are not raised in confinement or routinely fed antibiotics. Feed is also an issue, because cows evolved to eat grass, not grain. Many of us consider all of those factors when shopping. Sadly, claims like these are not ironclad and difficult to vet. But they're still better than buying commodity or branded meat from the country's biggest producers. I feel best when buying from a farmer orfarmer's representative I know, or think I know. Even assuming this is possible, though, it has what at first appears to be a decided drawback: cost. It's difficult to nail down averages, but if commodity meat — I'm talking about red meat here, but most of what follows could be argued about almost any product — costs something under $10 a pound in most cases, and national brands from humanely treated animals like that from Niman Ranch or C oleman Natural cost maybe twice as much, meat from localfarmers costs considerably more. It's not uncommon to spend $25 or more a pound on beef from a trustworthy source. The immediate response that we as consumers have to this is "ouch." Counterintuitive

Add garlic and ginger and cook for another minute. Season with salt FrancescoTonelh i New York Times News Serwce

Home-cooked fajitas are accompanied by grilled condiments.

and pepper. Add soy sauce and wine, stock or water. Bring to a boil, return

veal to pot and reduce heat to low.

Grilled Steak and Vegetables with Flour Tortillas Makes 4 servings. 2 ears corn, shucked 1 avocado, halved and pitted 8 radishes, trimmed 1 fairly firm mango, peeled and halved 4 limes, halved 1 Ig zucchini, sliced lengthwise 2 Ig red or yellow bell peppers or poblanos, cored and halved

. MARTHA i STEWART

1 bunch scallions, trimmed 1 head romaine lettuce, outer leaves removed, but left whole Olive oil Salt and ground black pepper 1 to 1'/4 Ibs rib-eye or strip steak (about an inch thick) 8 to 12 sm flour tortillas

Cover and simmer, stirring once or twice, Until veal is tender, 45 minutes to1 hour. Stir in bok choy, cover and cook until the leaves are wilted

but stems still have some crunch, about 5 minutes.

Stir in snow peas and simmer until they turn bright green, about 3 minutes. Garnish with cilantro, drizzle with sesame oil and serve.

of this kind of cooking. Here are three, which are among my on one side and medium on the other, withthe rackabout4 inches from the current favorites. flame. Have 2 platters handy; one so you can removethe vegetables and The first is a vague interprefruit as theybegin tochar, andanother smaller onefor the steak. Getatowel tation of fajitas that focuses on or foil ready for wrapping the tortillas. grilled vegetables and makes Once you have the vegetables and fruit prepped, toss or rub them all with beef a supporting player. A olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. (Youwill grill even the limes for pound or so of tender, fatty ribsqueezing on top of everything else.) Blot the steak dry with paper towels eye or sirloin goes a long way and set aside. here. It also makes a lovely imOn the hottest part of the grill, put the corn, avocado, radishes, mango pression if you present it whole and limes and char lightly, turning as necessary, for no more than 5 min- before slicing or chopping. You utes. Start the zucchini, peppers, scallions and lettuce on the cooler side; can cook everything in a castthey should be cooked until just tender and browned, 5 to 10 minutes. iron skillet (you will most likely Transfer the vegetables to the platter as they finish cooking. need more than one, or you will Season the steak with salt and pepper. Score the outer fat, if necessary. If have to cook in batches) instead

Prepare agas or charcoal grill for direct cooking; the heat should be high

using charcoal, consolidate the coals so that the heat is high again. Put the of on a grill. steak on the hot grill; cook, leaving it alone Until the bottom is nicely charred The second is a n ew-age and the steak releases easily, 2 to 4 minutes. Turn and cook for another 3 version of a veggie burger (as minutes, more or less, for medium-rare. in half and half, not a burger Remove steak from the grill and let it rest for at least 5 minutes. Mean- made from v egetables and while, cookthe tortillas on the grill, turning once or twice until lightlycharred grain), which you might also and stack in a towel or foil, wrapping loosely. Prepare the vegetables and think of as a stuffed mushroom. fruit for serving: Strip the corn kernels off the cob and scoop out and slice It's terrific, hearty, unusual and the avocado; the rest of the vegetables and fruit you can chop or slice how- really cool: a portobello filled ever you like, keeping in mindthat you'll be putting them into tortillas. with sausage meat and grilled. Slice the steak crosswise, sprinkle with more salt and pepper if you like and In this instance, a broiler will return to the platter. Serve the steak, vegetables and fruit with the tortillas. work, as will a skillet. Finally, there is an Asianstyle veal stew. Despite the as it may seem, this is good for each week or month, but buy name, it's a fairly quick dish everyone. less and buy better. You might to prepare, combining simple There are o t her r easons compare this to an annual pur- technique with decidedly unyou can live with these higher chase of20 $5 T-shirtsmade by expected flavors and d oing prices. It's widely accepted that child labor versus one of five so with plenty of vegetables. large quantities of red meat $20 T-shirts made by better- Finding good veal is perhaps may be problematic, health- paid and better-treated workers the most difficult challenge, alwise, and we know that many from organic cotton. Expensive though tender beef, like tenderpeople have made it a goal to eat meat fromrealfarms is a m ore loin or pork from the shoulder, less meat becauselarge-scale extreme example of this less-is- also works well. industrial production is damag- better policy. These are good recipes. With ing to the environment. This is Then cook meat differently. I really good meat (and less of to a great extent what flexitari- could offehundreds r of recipes it), they're even better. That's a anism is about, after all. for dishes that take advantage change in attitude. I am saying this: Spend the

same $30, or $50 or $100 or $300

Q

. My peonies b l oom .beautifully, but during the summer the leaves turn brown, and I'm afraid I'll lose the entire plant. What should I do differently? . Peonies are r obust; . there are few diseases that seriously injure or kill them. Take some comfort in knowing that they probably aren't in danger. The most common causes of discoloration are nonlethal diseases, such as powdery mildew. The solution is likely pretty simple: Cut unhealthy leaves back and clear debris. Repeat in the fall, before the first frost, so you can start anew next season. Then be vigilant next year and on the lookout for familiar symptoms, keep your garden clean, and be sure to refresh your mulch three or four times over the season. If the problem persists, however, it's worth turning to a plant-diagnostics center, says Kathleen Gagan of Peony's Envy, in Bernardsville, N.J. Reach out to your county's cooperative extension office (visit www. csrees.usda.gov/extension) or the agricultural center at a nearby land-grant college. You'll be asked to fill out a form and mail in a plant sample. A week or so and a small fee later, you'll receive

«,r

1'

.

Ruby Washington New YorkTimes News Service

A few simple tricks will encourage peonies to bloom year after

year. and forth between the broken shells, releasing the white into a cup. Then transfer the white to a bowl. Dropping the white of each egg into a cup before adding it to the bowl with the other whites will help prevent you from losing the whole batch if you make a mistake. To help the whites fluff up, add an acidic ingredient, such as cream of tartaror lemon juice, when the whites become foamy while you are beating them. Use a ratio of '/s teaspoon acid to two egg whites. When beating, always begin at a low speed, and gradually increase the speed until the mixture is

glossy and stiff peaks form.

Maintaining woodenutensils Mywoodensaladspoons Q ..Iook oily and stained. What's the best way to clean

a diagnosis, a prognosis and them? a treatment plan. This way, you can addressthe problem properly, rather than trying unnecessary treatments such as toxic fungicides. And the next time you see those brown leaves, you'll know what to do. Be sure to dispose of any cuttings, and mulch properly; don't compost them, or the problem could reappear and spread throughout your garden.

Perfecting fluffy meringues

Q

• What's the best way • t o w h ip u p fl u f fy meringues? • To get the consisten• cy right, you need to consider the temperature of theeggs as well as your

A

mixing speed. Egg whites always whip up best when the eggsare room temperature. Set eggs on a counter at least 30 minutes prior to preparation. If you are pressed for time, place the

eggs in a bowl of warm (but not hot) water for five to 10 minutes. W hen s eparating t h e whites from the yolks, be meticulous, as any fat from the yolks will cause airy beaten egg whites to deflate. To separate the eggs, use the hand method: Crack an

egg, and pass the yolk back

Shrubs • Flowers

A

• Generally, the best way to • clean any wooden utensil is to scrub it with a dish brush and hot soapy water. You can also try cleaning it with baking

soda and a slightly damp nylon scouring pad. Keep in mind, however, that if the stains on your wooden salad spoons are oil-based, they're likely set in at this point and may be difficult to remove. If stains are set in, use a fine steel-wool pad to apply a food-safe mineral oil, such as Tree Spirit mineral oil ($7 for 8 ounces, williams-sonoma. com), to the spoons to see if you can blend the coloring of the stained and unstained parts.

This camouflaging also conditions the wood, keeping it from drying out and cracking. In fact, it's helpful to condition all wooden utensils every few months,because this creates a barrier against new stains and odors. — Questions of general interest can be emaiied to mslletters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

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GARDENING. Get good at it. Pork and Portobello Burgers Makes 4 servings. 1 Ib ground pork 1 TBS minced garlic 1 tsp minced fresh rosemary, fennel seed or parsley Salt and ground black pepper

4 Ig portobello mushroom caps, stems removed Olive oil 4 burger buns Any burger fixings you like

Prepare a grill; the heat should be medium-high and the rack about 4 inches from the heat.

Combine the ground pork, garlic, rosemary and a sprinkle of salt and pepper. Use a spoon to lightly scrape away the gills of the mushrooms and hollow them slightly. Drizzle the mushrooms (inside and out) with ol-

ive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Press '/4 of the mixture into each of the hollow sides of the mushrooms; you want the meat to spread all the way across the width of the mushrooms. They should look like burgers.

Join OSU Master Gardeners™ for free gardening classes. Fabulous Flowers, Gorgeous Grasses and E i e Herbs,Sat., June 8, 10:30 a.m. — 12:00 p.m., Hollinshead Community Garden, Bend. Lunch andLearn:Landscaping with Shrubs and Woody plants, Tues., June 18, 12:15 — 12:45 p.m., OSU Extension Office, Redmond. Bring your lunch. Tending Your Growing Garden,Thurs., June 20, 5:30 p.m., Hollinshead CommunityGarden, Bend. Plan ahead: 2013 High Desert Garden Tour,Sat., July 20. Tour sevengardens. www.gocomga.com/coming events page.html

Grill the burgers, meat side down, until the pork is well browned, 4 to 6 minutes. Flip and cook Until the top side of the mushrooms are browned and the mushrooms are tender, another 6 to 8 minutes. If you like, use an

MON-FRI 8-5 • SAT 8-3 C~

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which should be a minimum of145 degrees.

Serve the burgers onbuns (toasted, if you like) with any fixings you like.

TURF 4 N U R SERY

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instant-read thermometer to check the interior temperature of the pork, <eps~ys«

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 201I3

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

s rea si s an e orsummer TV SPOTLIGHT

"Primeval: New World" (Syfy, thing, in this mini-series based Saturday) —This Canadian spi- on a Stephen King noveL

By Mike Hale

noff of the British series "Primeval" moves the angry-timetraveling-dinosaur action from England to Vancouver, British Columbia, and has an almost entirely new cast, led by Niall Matter, who played the bad boy Zane on Syfy's "Eureka."

New York Times News Service

When it c omes to television, we're in a bull market for doomsayers. It's the end of the broadcast networks, astheir signals are pirated and their quality is eclipsed by cable and online shows. It's the end of commercial TV, as the advertising dollars move to the Internet. It's the end of entertainment, as attention spans shrink to the lengthofa YouTube video. And yet the shows keep coming. The 2013 summer season, which just recently got underway, presents worthwhile options well beyond the new and returning series, mini-series and online originals listed in this preview. The season may be relatively low in the kind of flashy, aspiring water-cooler fare that draws attention these days — of the new shows on the list, only Showtime's "Ray Donovan" and "The Bridge" on FX truly fit into that categorybut it's relatively high in shows that promise stylish and smart entertainment. USA's "Graceland," BBC America's "Broadchurch" and NBC's "Crossing Lines" may fit that description, and returnees like Showtime's "Dexter," BBC America's "Being Human" and HBO's "Newsroom" have already shown that they do. Striking a seasonal note, two of the summer's most highly

"King & Maxwell" (TNT, Mon-

day) —Jon Tenney, so dapper as an FBI agent in TNT's "Closer" and "Major Crimes," goes scruffy to play a former Secret Service agent turned Washington-based private eye on the channel's latest lightweight summer crime series (not to be confused with "Rizzoli 8 Isles"). Rebecca Romijn plays his partner-antagonist.

brothers and menacing gang-

ster father. Liev S chreiber leads an impressive cast that includes Jon Voight, Elliott Gould, Katherine M oennig and Eddie Marsan. The pilot anticipated new shows allow us show from cancellation, and so telegraphs the ambitions of to spend a significant amount of Season 3begins a yearafterthe the show's creator, Ann Bitime at the beach: "Graceland," conclusion of the Rosie Larsen derman ("Southland"), with set on the Southern California case, with the former deteca scene that pays homage coast but filmed in Florida, and tive Sarah Linden (Mireille to a Gould film that is one of "Ray Donovan," set in the Los Enos) working on a ferry dock. "Futurama" (Comedy Central, the classics of Southern CaliAngeles basin with frequent Among the central cast, only June 19) — This venerable (it fornia noir, Robert Altman's foraysto the expensive sands of Enos and Joel Kinnaman, as made its debut in 1999) and re- "The Long Goodbye." Malibu and Santa Monica. Linden's once and future part- liably funny animated sitcom "Moone Boy" (Hulu, July 10) The dominant theme of the ner, Holder, return. begins its final season. — Chris O'Dowd of "Bridessummer,though, may be good"Graceland" (USA, Thursday) "Crossing Lines" (NBC, June maids" and "Family Tree" crebyes, as high-profile series like AMC's "Breaking Bad," Show- — This heavily hyped new se- 23) — The title of this crime ated this series for the British time's "Dexter," USA's "Burn ries is a crime show that com- drama is doubly apt: The show network Sky; it will have its Notice" and Comedy Central's bines "The Real World" (seven is about ateam of globe-trotting U.S. premiere online at Hulu. "Futurama" begin their final strangers in a d e s ign-cata- investigators at the I nterna- O'Dowd plays a young Irish seasons. But that's probably just log beach house) with "Point tional Criminal Court, and it's boy's imaginary friend. a reflection of what are actually Break" (uptight rookie and Zen- an American-German-French "The Bridge" (FX, July 10)boom times for TV: With more master veteran sharing surfing production. Donald Sutherland shows being made than ever lessons and bonfires). Created and William Fichtner star. The latest dark Nordic thriller before,there are more leave- by Jeff Eastin, creator of USA's adaptation, thi s s erial-killer "White Collar," it's based on a "Under the Dome"(CBS,June tale shifts the action from the takings that deserve notice. sand grain of a true story about 24) — A town in Maine finds itDenmark-Sweden frontier to "The Killing" (AMC, started undercover agents from differ- self cut off from the rest of the the U.S.-Mexico border. Diane Sunday) — A co-production ent federal agencies sharing a world by an i nvisible dome, Kruger and Demian Bichir play deal with Netflix saved the Southern California house. w hich is apparently a b a d the lead cops. Frank Ockenfels/ Courtesy AMC/ MCT

Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman are the only two central cast members to return for Season 3 of "The Killing" on AMC.

Teac in i s to appreciatesoitu e Dear Abby: I would like to respond to "Solitary Woman in Ottawa, Canada" (March 5), the expectant mom who askedhow she could raise her child to enjoy "periods of quiet, reflective fun by himself." I have two c hildren, ages 7 and l. Like "Solitary," I also DEAR enjoy time to myself, ABBY whether rea d i ng, writing or going for a hike. When my son was born, I felt it was important to give him confidence and the ability to be self-sufficient. Therefore, we have him help us withchores like grocery shopping and encourage him to make healthy, responsible choices. When he was 2 and stopped taking naps, we told him he had to have "quiet time" and that reading to himself was one of the options. As a result, our son is self-motivated, an avid reader and writer, and has an intellectual curiosity most adults don't have. He is teaching himself cursive writing and is interested in learning a foreign

language. We live in the Colorado Rockies, and getting rid of our TV set was one of the best things our family

has ever done. Instead of tuning each other out, we enjoy conversation, creating and sharing our days together. I have never been happier as a father or husband. I am concerned for people who are afraidof silence. I suspect it's a sign of sensory bombardm ent. Th e h u m an mind needs moments of clarity brought on by reflection. — Dad Who GetsIt Dear Dad: Thank you for your letter. I received many thoughtful comments from people who identify strongly with "Solitary's" point of view: Dear Abby:Your advice to "Solitary Woman" was good, but did not start soon enough. She should provide stimulating crib and playpen toys to teach her son at an early age that he can control some aspects of his environment. Having this ability is the key to enjoying solitude. When my daughter was 7 weeks old, I attached a mobile fashioned from a w h ite w ire coat hanger and rainbow-hued origami cranes to her bassinet. I wiggled it and watched her smile at the moving colored birds. When the move-

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORTUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013:This yearyouoften wil feel as if you cannot be direct enough. Realize that you could get somestrong reactions as a result. Other times, you'll want to cocoon. Youwill succeed in akey project. If you Stars showthekind are single, you of day you'll have wi ll attract more ** * * * D ynamic than one suitor ** * * P ositive w h o appeals to ** * A verage dif f erent parts of ** So-so your character. If * Difficult you are attached, your multifaceted personality does not surprise your sweetie, though he or shemight have apreference as to which way you should go. Though you may want to vanish at times, you still enjoy each other. ARIES can be pushy.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * Your concern is not only about your finances, but also whether you havethe power and strength that is necessary to make a difference. Youmight be concerned about the outcome of acertain situation. Initiate a conversation in the morning. Tonight: Happily head home.

TAURUS (April20-May20)

r Ray Donovan" (Showtime, June 30) — Showtime's new Emmy-bait drama feels a lot like "The Sopranos" on Sunset Boulevard: A Hollywood fixer who lives in suburban Calabasas makes deals and dispenses violence while coping with hi s h i ghly strung wife, young children, troubled

YOURHOROSCOPE

ment stopped, she became frustrated and began to whimper and kick and flail her arms. The paper birds moved again. She lay still and watched them. When they stopped the second time, she didn't whimper but just moved herself in the bassinet.She had learned she could control her environment. As a toddlershe could leave her playmates and p u rsue solitary activities in the quiet of her own room. I am convinced that her bassinet experience was the basis for learning to be happy by herself and with herself. — Smart Mama in El Cajon,

Calif. Dear Abby: According to a journalist and mother who published a book on the topic, when an infant cries, wait a few minutes and listen before reaching out. This gives the baby time to learn how he feels with himself, and to deal w ith i t e m otionally. After f i v e minutes or so, if the baby has a real need, then you can reach for him. Doing it too quickly prevents this crucial process of learning to be with oneself. — Another Solitary Canadian — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

SCORPIO(oct. 23-Nov.21)

same. The longer it takes, the surer you can be thatyou are wearing rose-colored shades. Tonight: Do for you.

** * * L isten to what is being shared, and know thatyou might not like everything you hear. Your version of what is possible could change. Honoryour needs more openly than you have in the recent past. A friend wants to help you lighten up. Tonight: Share, if it would make it easier.

CANCER (June 21-July22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * You might want to rethink a decision more carefully. Adiscussion could shed some light on the potential problem. Do not necessarily count on your idea or resolution being the best one. Bereceptive to someone who hasexpertise in these matters. Tonight: Where the fun is.

** * * Your creativity soars. You laugh and see life from a newperspective. How youhandlesomeone couldradically change becauseofwhatyou now know.Fatigue plays into your mood late afternoon. Tonight: Justforyou.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * * You might feel pressured by a personal issue. Your ability to break down barriers now will directly affectyour ability to relax later. Your lighter side could emerge. A misunderstanding or a difficult meeting could leaveyou feeling off. Tonight: Your creativity flourishes.

** * Make time for a discussion with an expert on an issueyou aredealing with. In the afternoon, you'll need to listen to someonewho demands yourtimeand attention. You also might decide to distance yourself from an unpleasantsituation. Tonight: A force to bedealt with.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * You might need to evolve to new a level of understanding when dealing with a partner and a financial matter. You have the control you desire. Beaware of your limits with someoneyou care a lot about. The afternoon provides solutions where there previously were none.Tonight: Dut and about.

** * * * Y ou could be dragging in the morning, but by afternoon you'll start to feel your Wheaties. You'll feel empowered, and you won't hesitate to discuss an idea. If someone is negative, be resilientand refuse LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct.22) to take on his or her energy. Tonight: Be ** * * Others will want to call the shots, where you want to be. butyou could have alot to share. You'll GEMINI (May21-June20) command their attention. No decisions ** * * I t is likely that you need to head in can be madewithout your "OK." Claim a new direction. Many of you will see this your power, and people will be more than fact clearly during the day,andsomewill willing to listen to your side of the scenario. see itat night. The endresults will be the Tonight: A loved onemakesyou smile.

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb. 18) ** * * G et busy, make phone calls and schedule meetings. Keepconversations moving, and understand that there could be a difference of opinion among those around you. By afternoon, you might want to play the role of recluse, asyou have somuch to do.Tonight:Happyathome.

PISCES (Feh.19-March20) ** * * You could be extremely tired and withdrawn, especially with a demanding associate or family member. Avoid taking any financial risks, and you will be happier as a result. Later today, conversations will run more smoothly than in the recent past. Tonight: Chat the night away. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

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

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 42(PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:20 • AFTER EARTH (PG-13) Noon, 1, 2:45, 3:45, 6:15, 7:15, 9:15, 10:15 • EPIC(PG)11:55 a.m., 2:30, 6, 9:10 • EPIC 3-0(PG) 12:50, 3:20, 6:20, 9:35 • FAST &FURIOUS6 (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 1:15, 3, 4:30, 6:05, 7:45, 9:40 • THE GREAT GATSBY (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:55, 6 IO, 9:25 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 12:10, 1:10, 3:10, 4:10, 6:35, 7:35, 9:30, 10:05 • IRON MAN 3(PG-13) 'l2:35, 3:40, 7:10, 10:10 • NOW YOUSEE ME iPG-13)12:30,3:30,6:45,9:45 • OBLIVION (PG-13)12:05, 3:55, 6:55, 9:55 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:40, 3:05, 4:20, 6:50, 7:30, 9:50 • STARTREKINTODARKNESS IMAX3-0 (PG-I3) 1215, 4,7,10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. s

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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • AT ANYPRICE(R) 4: l5 • DISCONNECT iR) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • THE GREAT GATSBY(PG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 1, 4, 7 • THE ICEMAN (Rl 1:15, 7 • MUD(PG-I3) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15 • THE SAPPHIRES (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 I

TV TODAY 8 p.m. on H K3, "The Voice" — As "America's Got Talent" starts another season, this singing competition is winding down. The field is narrowed to four in this "Live Eliminations" episode as viewer votes determine which two contestants will be sent home andwho willadvance. 8 p.m. on E3, "NCIS" —When a case involving an unidentified perpetrator captures the media's attention, Gibbs (Mark Harmon) is approached by his barber, whose son is at the top of the list of suspects. He wants the NCIS team to investigate and clear his son's name in "Prime Suspect." Michael Weatherly, Cote de Pablo, Sean Murray and Pauley Perrette also star. 9 p.m. on HIST, "CountingCars" — Flipping cars sounds dangerous, but Danny"The Count" Koker doesn't flip them over; he flips them like houses. In this series, which starts a newseason tonight, Koker, a frequent visitor to "Pawn Stars," buys interesting cars and takes them back to his Las Vegas shop, where heand his team restore and customize them to sell at a profit. 9:01 p.m. on H f3, "America's GotTalent" — Supermodel and "Project Runway" host Heidi Klum and former Spice Girl Mel B join Howard Stern and Howie Mandel on the judging panel for Season 8 of the competition. Nick Cannon hosts the summer variety hit, which features acts ranging from singers and dancers to jugglers and ventriloquists. So far, however, singers seem to have the best shot at reaching the winner's circle. 10 p.m. on LIFE, "Pretty Wicked Moms" —You thought the mothers on "Dance Moms" and "Toddlers & Tiaras" were extreme? Meet Emily, Meredith, Marci, Miranda and the two Nicoles — six Atlanta moms who treat parenthood as a competitive sport. If you're a "Real Housewives" fan, you'll love — or love to hate — these ladies. 10 p.m. on SYFY,"Exit" — The channel used to becalled Sci-Fi, as in "science fiction," but rebranding as Syfy has allowed it to get into nonfiction, and it's scored some hits with competitions such as "Face Off" and "Total Blackout." This latest entry in the genre, based on aJapanese show, challenges two-person teams to escape a series of four rooms by solving brain gamesand puzzles. A $10,000 prize awaits the winners. Curt Doussett ("America's Lost Treasures") hosts. ©Zap2tt

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • Nofilms are scheduledtoscreen today.

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I-548-8777 • FAST & FURIOUS 8 (PG-13) 3:30, 6:15, 9 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 • NOW YOUSEE ME (PG-13)4:30,7,9:30 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court,541-549-8800 • AFTER EARTH (PG-I3) 6:30 • EPIC (PG)5:30 • THE HANGOVER PARTIII (R) 7:30 • NOW YOU SEEME(PG-13) 6: I5 • STAR TREK INTODARKNESS(PG-13) 6

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Love atml Facebook at: Papa Murphy's Central Oregon Online at: www, pmpizza.com •

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2 ROOMS & HALLWAYFORjUST

382-6767 389-7272 REDMOND SW10th & Highland

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

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

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

264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood

Pets 8 Supplies

00 I Want to Buy or Rent

C r t a n ct t e r

Chihuahua pupfemale born 4/4 $200 obo. 541-497-3666

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212

246

263

267

269

Pets & Supplies

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Tools

Fuel & Wood

Sears Elite Series Generator, 7000 watts, new in box, $895 new; sell $725. 541-306-0166.

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,

DON'TMISSTHIS

Pomeranian/long haired Chihuahua puppies, $160 cash.541-678-7599 People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough

The Sulletin Classigeds p omeranian pup p y male wolf sable great personality 10 weeks old. $350. 541-480-3160 Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537

Beautiful handcarved coffee table n

(44 x 19 5/4nx 17 2/an)

and 2 matching end tables (shown) 240/4" n x 15 x 24t/4". Built in

Taiwan between 1940-1950, all glass covered, in excellent condition. $1900. 541-382-6731

www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all Scottish Terrier p upfrom The Bulletin pies, AKC, born 4/2. ads onto The shots & wormed, par- newspaper Internet webents on site, Ready Bulletin site. now! 541-317-5624.

Shih Poo puppies! Toy hypo-allergenic family dogs, 2 males, 1 female, $400. Kelly, 541-604-0716 Wolf-Husky-Malamute pups, only 3 left! $300! 541-977-7019

541-546-7909

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

• Building Materials REDMOND Habitat RESTORE

Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12 OI'

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20!

Ad must include price of it

541-548-1406

Open to the public. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

l 0500

or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500.

Furniture & Appliances A1 Washers&Dryers

Free Bachelor Buttons, bring container, U-dig. 541-548-2879

The Bulletin

• Heating & Stoves

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

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

The Bulletin

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Sewing Central Oregon ttnte 1903

Lawnmower self-prop. Mastercraft, bag, 5HP, $200. 541-408-4528.

Petunia hanging baskets, ready to go, $15 each. 541-433-2112

SUPER TOP SOIL www.herahe aoiiandbark.com NOTICE TO All Year Dependable Screened, soil 8 comADVERTISER Firewood: Seasoned post mi x ed , no Call Classifieds at Since September 29, Lodgepole, Split, Del. rocks/clods. High hu541-385-5809 1991, advertising for Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 mus level, exc. for www.bendbulietin.com used woodstoves has for $335. Cash, Check flower beds, lawns, been limited to modor Credit Card OK. straight gardens, M arlin Model 4 0 . 2 2 els which have been 541-420-3484. s creened to p s o i l . semi-auto, sc o p e, c ertified by th e O r Bark. Clean fill. Deh ard c a se , $ 1 5 0. egon Department of liver/you haul. i 541-728-1900 Environmental Qual- Gardening Supplies 541-548-3949. ity (DEQ) and the fedWanted: Collector & Equipment • Western Wear eral E n v ironmental seeks high quality -Gently UsedProtection A g e ncy fishing items. * Double D Ranch WANTED: Lost & Found (EPA) as having met Call 541-678-5753, or * Patricia Wolf LAWN SWEEPER smoke emission stan503-351-2746 * Boots manual or powered. Found a furniture item dards. A cer t ified * Turquoise 541-318-1233 255 on Brookswood Ave. w oodstove may b e 541-549-6950 in Bend on Sat. 5/25. Computers identified by its certifiBarkTurfSoil.com To cl a im , ema i l 242 cation label, which is coveredinmud23Ogm T HE B U LLETIN r e permanently attached Exercise Equipment ail.com quires computer ad- to the stove. The Bul- PROMPT D E LIVERY vertisers with multiple letin will no t k n ow541-389-9663 Found: Woman'sfl eece Elliptical 18 a stride 16 schedules or those ingly accept advertisjacket, dropped from progs $150 loc deliv ad selling multiple sysing for the sale of Craftsman chainsaw baby bike trailer in $20 call 541-639-9026 n tems/ software, to dis- uncertified Drake Park. 18 runs good $70. close the name of the woodstoves. 245 541-408-4528 541-383-3483. business or the term Golf Equipment "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are d efined as those who sell one Largest 3 Day

The Bulletin

210

E nglish Mastiff A K C puppies, dam & sire fully OFA tested, litter is champion sired with pedigrees! CORGI PUPS - Pem- Sincredible mall litter, only 5 broke AKC $800. 1 tri avail. $ 2000. male 8 wks. Vet checked, pups 1st vac/worming, micro- Chris, 503-577-7185.

A v e .

208

Yorkie AKC pups, big eyes, short-nosed, health guar. Taking deposits, ready 6/28. 541-777-7743 Yorkie-Maltese c ross tiny puppies, male $250, females $300. CASH.

208 0

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$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also Wanted: $Cash paid for wanted, used W/D's vintage costume jew541-280-7355 elry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the computer. Estate, Honest Artist chip. Champ. Iines; par- English Springer SpanGUN & KNIFE Call a Pro Elizabeth,541-633-7006 ents on site 541-604-4858 iels, AKC, Tri-colored, 260 SHOW Will travel to Sisters Whether you need a June 7th, 8th, 9th Misc. Items 206 Donate deposit bottles/ 6/7 will deliver M$450 fence fixed, hedges Portland Expo Pets & Supplies cans to local all volF$500. 509-244-6080 Buying Diamonds Center trimmed or a house unteer, non-profit res1-5 exit ¹306B /Gold for Cash cue, to h elp w /cat built, you'll find The Bulletin recomAdmission $10 Saxon's Fine Jewelers spay/neuter vet bills. professional help in mends extra caution Fri. 12-6 Sat. 9-5 541-389-6655 Cans for Cats trailer is Sun.10-4 when purc h a s- at Bend PETCO (near The Bulletin's "Call a BUYING ing products or serApplebee's). Donate Service Professional" I 1 - 800-659-3440 I Lionel/American Flyer vices from out of the l CollectorsWest.co Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, Fila/Bull Mastiff puptrains, accessories. im Directory area. Sending cash, 541-408-2191. 1515 NE 2nd; or at checks, or credit in541-385-5809 CRAFT i n T u m alo Where can you find a BUYING & SEL L ING f ormation may b e anytime. 3 8 9 -8420. affectionate also good helping hand? All gold jewelry, silver subjected to fraud. For more i nfo/map, farm dogs. $500. and gold coins, bars, For more i nformaFrom contractors to visit www.craftcats.org 1-541-861-2170 rounds, wedding sets, tion about an adveryard care, it's all here class rings, sterling siltiser, you may call Frenchie Faux puppies, Devlgn ver, coin collect, vinin The Bulletin's the O r egon State very coby, 8 wks, 1st DO YOU HAVE Visit our HUGE tage watches, dental Attorney General's shots/dewormed, $600. "Call A Service home decor SOMETHING TO gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-447-0210 Office Co n s umer SELL consignment store. Professional" Directory 541-382-9419. Protection hotline at New items FOR $500 OR German Shepherds AKC 1-877-877-9392. Cast iron skillet, 10", LESS? arrive daily! 246 www.sherman-ranch.us with lid, 10", $25. Non-commercial 541-281-6829 930 SE Textron, Guns, Hunting 541-388-6846 The Bulletin advertisers may Bend 541-318-1501 Sewing Cent al Oregon t nte t903 8 Fishing Koi, 7 large Koi, vari- www.redeuxbend.com place an ad with Picnic table canopy with ous colors, make off er. oui' netted siding, $25. Adopt a nice cat from 541-706-9277. 1450 Rounds of 9mm "QUICK CASH 541-388-6846 GENERATE SOME ex- factory a m munition. Petco, PetSmart or SPECIAL" Lab mix female 1 y r. citement i n your $500. 5 4 1-447-1595 Wanted- paying cash Tumalo s a n ctuary! 1 week 3 lines 12 FREE to good home neighborhood! Plan a or 541-788-1438. Fixed, shots, ID chip, for Hi-fi audio 8 stu~ 2 k 20 ! only. 541-420-5602, Joe. garage sale and don't tested, more! Sancdio equip. Mclntosh, Ad must include 2000 rnds of .556 ammo, forget to advertise in tuary open Sat/Sun Manx/Desert Lynx mix J BL, M a rantz, D y price of single item $1500. 1600 rnds of .223, classified! 1-5, other days by kittens. 1 f emale, 2 naco, Heathkit, Sanof $500 or less, or $1200. 1650 rnds 22LR, 541-385-5809. a ppt. 6 5 48 0 7 8 t h , males. One long tail sui, Carver, NAD, etc. multiple items $190. 541-647-8931 Bend. Photos, map at $75; short tails $100. Sofa blue sectional 3 Call 541-261-1808 whose total does www.craftcats.org. Kelly 541-604-0716 rnds . 380 a uto, WHEN YOU SEE THIS not exceed $500. pce, heavy foam pil- 200 541-389-8420, or like $100. 500 rnds 40 S8W, Mini Australian Shep- lows, clean no rips, $250. 350 rnds of 9mm, us on Facebook. Call Classifieds at herd pups, registered, $175. 541-389-1922 $150. 541-647-8931 ~Oo 541-385-5809 Adult b arn/shop/workfamily raised, bred for M ore P ixa tBendbuletin,com temperament and The Bulletin 7 50 Rounds of 9 m m ing cats, fixed, shots, www.bendbulletin.com On a classified ad agility. 541-389-7499 some friendly, some factory a mmunition. recommends extra ' go to not. No fee 8 free de$285. 54 1 -447-1595 l caution when purwww.bendbulletin.com livery. 541-389-8420 English Bulldog, beauti- The Bulletin is your chasing products or • or 541-788-1438. to view additional ful white, female, 4 yrs services from out of I Bend local pays CASH!! A pet sitter in NE Bend, old. spayed. Needs photos of the item. E mploy m e n t I the area. Sending I warm and loving home bulldog-knowledgable for all firearms & l cash, checks, or ' with no cages, $25 day. family, air conditioned ammo. 541-526-0617 Marketplace l credit i n f ormation Linda at 541-647-7308 Medical Equipment home, no small chilCASH!! may be subjected to dren. V er y a c t ive. Call For Guns, Ammo & Father's Day is coming! l FRAUD. For more ae $500. 541-350-1965. Reloading Supplies. Power lift chair Ultra information about an I y 541-408-6900. 5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 advertiser, you may I AUSSIES - mini pups, Comfort UC540, fully toy-sized Merles, $300 I call t h e Ore g onI C ollection: REM M 3 7 recline to standing poNeed to get an ' State Attor ney ' cash. 541-678-7599 to advertise. sition. 541-550-7913 Rangemaster; Cimarad in ASAP? l General's O f f i ce ron "Evil Roy" 45LC; BOXER AKC puppies, You can place it 263 www.bendbulletin.com Consumer P rotec- • COLT Officers .22; reat litter, 1st shots, t ion ho t l in e at I Rugers: B l a ckhawk online at: Tools 700. 541-325-3376 l 1-877-877-9392. F lattop 44 ; Su p e r www.bendbulletin.com Blackhawk 44; 1's in Sears Craftsman Bull Terrier, 1 yr neutered male, free to good, cat6 mm, 2 7 0 , 7m m . table saw, $90. Serving Central Oregon since l903 541-385-5809 free home. 541-420-5602 541-389-1392 541-388-6846

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Easy, flexible, and affordable cld packages are also available on our Web site. To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: Choose a category, choose a classification, and then select your ctd package. Write your Cid and uPIOad your digital Photo. Create your account with any major credit card. All ads appear in both print and online Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print and online. To place your photo ad, visit us online at www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions 541-385-5809

Classifieds tttkw.ttcntttkuuctin.cum


E2 TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

CAUTION READERS:

Medical / Endoscopy Nurse

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

fg,/F~>JIP) JI,J j JIJ IJjjJ~ Jg Can be found on these pages:

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Ads published in "Em- BE'NnSURGERY 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts ployment OpportuniC • F. • N • T • I t • R 421 - Schools andTraini ng 514 -Insurance t ies" i n c lude e m hlorCat 'Ikmekkoomkrl ment 52 8 - Loans and Mortgages ployee and Full-Time, 4 - 1 0 hr. 454- Looking for Employ e Posit ions 543-Stocksand Bonds i ndependent pos i - shifts, Mon.-Fri. Appli- 470 - Domestic & In-Hom 5 5 8 - Business Investments Ads for posi- cant must have Endo- 476 - EmploymentOpportunities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5 Noon Tuess tions. tions that require a fee scopy 573 - BusinessOpportunities exp e rience 486 - IndependentPositi ons or upfront investment preferably in an ASC must be stated. With 476 476 setting. Propofol seany independent job dation a plus, but not Employment Employment opportunity, p l ease required. Job offers Opportunities Opportunities investigate thor- e xcellent bene f i t oughly. package. I n terested Truck Drivers with persons should email Service Tech experience needed. Use extra caution when resume to: Immediate Job opSeeking dump truck, applying for jobs on- jobs© bendsurgery.com portunity for q ualibelly dump, flatbed, line and never profied and trained perlowboy & c o ntainer vide personal inforson. See the display d rivers. Local a n d mation to any source Office Clerk / Recep- ad in our classified 528 over the road posiyou may not have re- tionist - Graveyard s ection today f o r Loans & Mortgages tions. Must have 2 shift, 30-40 hrs/week. searched and deemed more information. seasonal, must be 18 Hollingsworths' years experience and to be reputable. Use inc. Place a photoin your private party ad WARNING valid Class A C D L. PRIVATE PARTY RATES extreme caution when or older. Apply in perBurns, OR The Bulletin recomWages based on exfor only$15.00 per week. Starting at 3 lines r esponding to A N Y son between sam541-573-7254 mends you use cauperience. Benefits inonline e m p loyment 3pm, Mon-Fri., Albina "UNDER '500in total merchandise tion when you proOVER '500in total merchandise clude health i nsurAsphalt, 400 NW Paul ad from out-of-state. vide personal ance, 401(k) p lan, Jasa Way, Madras. 7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 The Bulletin paid vacation, inspec- information to compaWe suggest you call 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 nies offering loans or I Recommends extra tion bonus program. the State of Oregon Remember.... *Must state prices in ed 14 days .................................................$33.50 caution when purcredit especially Call Kenny, Consumer Hotline at A dd your we b a d those asking for adchasing products or I Western Heavy Haul, 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special 1-503-378-4320 dress to your ad and services from out of vance loan fees or 541-447-5643 (call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days.................................. companies from out of readers on The I the area. Sending For Equal Opportunity state. If you have Bulletin' s web site c ash, c hecks, o r L aws: Oregon B uconcerns or queswill be able to click I credit i n f o rmation reau of Labor & Infor your next A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: tions, we suggest you be subjected to Looking dustry, C i vil Rights through automatically I may employee? FRAUD. consult your attorney to your site. Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Division, Place a Bulletin help For more informaor call CONSUMER 971-673-0764 wanted ad today and BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) HOTLINE, tion about an adverRN reach over 60,000 1-877-877-9392. I tiser, you may call REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well If you have any quesPre/Post-Op readers each week. the Oregon State BANK TURNED YOU tions, concerns or as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Your classified ad I Attorney General's DOWN? Private party comments, contact: will also appear on Office C o n sumer s reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulleiimcom Classified Department BENDSURGERY Protection hotline at I will loan on real esbendbulletin.com C • F. • N • T • I C • R tate equity. Credit, no The Bulletin any time. is located at: which currently hhr C~ ' Nme lat C~ I 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809 problem, good equity receives over 1.5 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. On-call, 10 hr. shifts, is all you need. Call million page views LThe Bulletin Mon.-Fri. Critical Care Oregon Land MortBend, Oregon 97702 every month at The Bulletin or ASC e x perience gage 541-388-4200. no extra cost. preferred; endoscopy Bulletin Classifieds LOCAL MONEYIWe buy Just too many PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call ua immediately if a correction is Food Service - Bruno's experience a p l u s. Get Results! secured trustdeeds & collectibles? needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisherreserves the right to accept or Grocery/U-bake is taking Wage premium paid note,some hard money Call 385-5809 reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher apps for Cashier & Pizza for on call status, and loans. Call Pat Kelley or place shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days Maker. Apply: 1709 NE eligible for Bonus proSell them in 541-382-3099 ext.13. your ad on-line at 6th, Bend. No phone calls gram. Interested perwill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. bendbulletin.com sons should e mail The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin is your resume to: GENERAL

Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5500 pm Fri •

Tuesday•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mona Wednesday •

a

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • •

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Lost Fri., male wedding band with inscription, n ear F re d M e y er

(Bend) or i n B e nd a rea. P l ease c a l l

308

Farm Equipment & Machinery

TACK & SADDLE AUCTION Sat. June 15, 7 p.m. Preview 5:30 p.m. Liquidating 70 Saddles+ an entire store's worth of inventory at public auction, regardless of loss or cost. Top brand and custom made Saddles, Bridles, Blankets, too much to list. Everything used on & around a horse! Cash, Cards, NO CHECKS 10% Buyers Premium Elks Lodge ¹. 1371 63120 Boyd Acres Rd., Bend, OR (541) 362-1150

AC WD45 tractor w/wide front, power lift 8 steerLost kitty Sydney, black & ing; needs head gasket. white long-hair, white spot $1200. 541-410-3425 on chin, microchipped, at 1000 Trails o n 5 / 10. Reward! 541-923-6948 Lost men's w e dding band, large, hand-made, area of P r o C a liber and/or Deschutes County Fresh strawberries! Sheriff Dept., 5/30. RePicked daily 7 days ward! 541-408-5594 week. Open Mon. Sat., 9-7, Sun. 10-6 Lost prescription sun- Wholesale avail. Adglasses on chain with vance orders. pearls. 541-678-0148 We pick or U-Pick K Family Farm Lost wedding ring Memorial weekend pos33427 Seven Mile Auctioneer sibly at Sugarloaf Mtn. Lane SE, Albany, OR. Mike Murphy 541-286-2164. Motel, High D esert Middle School, Pilot 345 325 Butte o r Bo r den's Livestock & Equipment Corner. Cash reward. Hay, Grain 8 Feed 253-653-5296 1st quality grass hay, Irg Replacement-quality REMEMBER: If you purebred y e arling 3'x3'xs' bales, approx have lost an animal, 750lbs ea. $240/ton, barn Angus heifers, Final don't forget to check stored. Patterson Ranch, Answer and Danny The Humane Society Sisters, 541-549-3831 Boy bloodlines. Good in Bend 541-382-3537 disposition. Raised in Redmond, Wanted: Irrigated farm long-established herd. 541-923-0882 ground, under pivot ir- $1000 ea. Del. avail. Prineville, rigation, i n C e n tral541-480-8096 Madras 541-388-8942.

-

541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.

OR. 541-419-2713

Want to

Sales Southwest Bend Multi Family 40-yr collection! Rototiller, 12' boat, canoe, 40' Alfa Gold, '72 pickup, furniture, collectibles, see craigslist for more info. Thurs-Fri, June 6-7, 8-4, 55386 Big River Dr., Bend 97707 286

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!

KIT INCLUDES:

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

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

333

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Poultry, Rabbits, & Supplies

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

Baby Serama Chicks! Great for 4H or FFA projects. $5 each.

The Bulletin

541-433-2112.

I

I

Q0~0 ~

The Bulletin

Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is looking for a professional and driven Sales and Marketing person to help our customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of m edia sales experience is preferable, but we will train the right candidate.

Email your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Jay 8randt, Advertising Director jbrandt@bendbulletin.com OI'

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

JoHN DEERE

Immediate job OPPOrtunity fOr Qualified and Trained Person Service Technician: Must have pervious experience in Ag Equipment. Resume with references required. Call Ron Weatherby, for appointment.

HOLLINGSW O R T H S' INC. gT

eHOme

Find out more at homeinsteadbend.com, Become a CAREGiver link

Jngt+QQ mmmmm m i'

Call 54 I.330.6400

f w rvs, a'.i puraae/ '

EaCh HpmelnStead Senipr Care®pffiCe iS inde kndentl OWned and O erated ©2013 Hpme lnStead hC.

Position details: This is a full time exempt position; Monday through Friday. Competitive salary, benefit package, retirement and bonus plan PositionclosesJune 15, 2013.

Email resume to jobs©bendsurgery.com

Employment

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin

Classifieds

541-385-5809

Marketplace Call

5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 to advertise. www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

sewing central oregon srnce 19te

Web Developer Are you a technical star who can also communicate effectively with non-technical executives and employees? Would you like to work hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to talk to you.

Our busy media company that publishes numerous web and mobile sites seeks an experienced developer who is also a forward thinker, creative problem solver, excellent communicator, and self-motivated professional. We are redesigning all of our websites within the next couple of years and want you in on the ground floor. Fluencywith PHP, HTML5, CSS3, jQuery and JavaScript is a must. Experience integrating third-party solutions and social media applications required. Desired experience includes: XML/JSON, MySQL, Joomla, Java, responsive web design, Rails, WordPress. Top-notch skills with user interface and graphic design an added plus. Background in the media industry desired but not required. This is a full-time position with benefits. If you've got what it takes, e-mail a cover letter, resume, and portfolio/work sample links a n d/or re p ository ( GitHub) t o

resume@wescompapers.com. This posting is also on the web at www.bendbulletin.com

EOE/Drug Free Workplace

call 54I-3855809 to promoteyour service • Advertise for 28 doysstarting at 'I40 (rlis speo'4package ishx availableoaour website)

I

• No medical degree necessary • Training and support provided Flexible shifts

Delivery

The p o sition in c ludes a com p etitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an a ggressive, customer focused Building/Contracting salesperson with unlimited earning potential.

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

It takes a special person co become a Home Instead CAREGiver™ not a special degree. Working with seniors in their homes can be challengingbuc,at the same time, tremendously rewarding. Enjoy training, support,flexible shifts thatfityour life,and a job that nurcures the soul.

541-385-5809

Experienced, r esponsible professional will coordinate all lodge $upplement Your Income departments, including: personnel, bookkeeping, front desk 8 470 Now taking bids for an Independent Contract guest services, marHauler to deliver bundles of newspapers from Domestic 8 keting 8 media, operations & m a i nte- Bend to LaGrande, Oregon (with some delivIn-Home Positions nance, housekeeping, ery drops en route) on a weekly basis. Must s p e cial have own vehicle with license and insurance Live-in, full time care for restaurant, the capability to haul up to 6000 lbs. elderly woman in LaPine events 8 w e ddings, and Candidates must be able to lift up to 50 lbs. area. Help with mobility, HOA and cabin sales. Selected candidate will be i ndependently grooming, meal prepara- Our leader will be an tion, tran s portation, i nspirational, e n e r - contracted. To apply or for more info contact medications, some light getic and highly motiJames Baisinger at housekeeping, house- vated "people person" jbaisinger@bendbulletin.com hold errands and com- who will host families panionship. Wages ne- and guests that have otiable and will include been returning to the ree rent. R e ferences resort for generations. Nurse Manager: required. For interview Full time position, for Pre-Op/Posf-Op/Call Room call 916-216-0162. immediate hire. Please email resume B~ S U RGERY Check out the and salary requireC • F. • N • T • R • R h kr C~ ' ikene ke Cacrkn classifieds online ments to: www.bendbuffetin.com s dne LCLO mail.com Job Summary: We are looking for a strong leader to fill the Nurse Manager role for the Updated daily Housekeeping Pre-op / Post-Op / Call Room. This position Seasonal Housekeep- requires an individual capable of providing diers Needed. M ust rect oversight of Pre-Op, Post-Op and the call DO YOU NEED work weekends and room whilemanaging 20-25 FTE's. The posiA GREAT holidays. M i n imum tion reports directly to the Clinical Director. EMPLOYEE wage while t raining Duties will include, but not be limited to, perRIGHT NOW? then to piece rate. formance evaluations and performance manCall The Bulletin Must have r e liable agement as well as new staff orientation. This before 11 a.m. and transportation, ODL, position is a member of multiple committees. get an ad in to pubcurrent Ins, over 18 lish the next day! years of age. Please Qualifications: Must be able to demonstrate 541-385-5809. call Car o l @ strong leadership and communication skills. VIEW the 541-749-1296; Must be a licensed RN in the state of Oregon, Classifieds at: Village Properties or able to obtain licensure upon hire. 3-5 years www.bendbulletin.com Sunriver of Peri-Operative experience, preferably in an ASC setting. The ideal candidate will have management experience in an ASC setting.

b u y A l falfa,• F armers Column • grass and grain hay, standing, in C entral 10X20 STORAGE Ore. 541-419-2713 BUILDINGS for protecting hay, Looking for your firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. next employee? 541-617-1133. Place a Bulletin CCB ¹173684. help wanted ad kfjbuildersOykwc.net today and reach over For Sale, Lowline 60,000 readers Angus and Dexter's each week. Heifers. (pregnant or Your classified ad with calf) NO steers will also available except for appear on cow/calf pairs. bendbulletin.com Grass fed/raised. which currently Reasonable prices. receives over Must sell as 1.5 million page I am retiring. views every Leo 541-306-0357 month at no extra cost. Wanted: Irrigated farm Bulletin ground, under pivot irClassifieds riqation, i n C e n tral Get Results! OR. 541-419-2713 Call 541-385-5809 Want to b u y A l falfa, or place your ad grass and grain hay, on-line at standing, in C entral bendbulletin.com Ore. 541-419-2713

284

jobsObendsurgery.com

Lake Creek Lodge A Camp Sherman Resort

LOST dog on Commercial St., Madras. Small red, deaf, old. Re-

I

MANAGER

• Horses & Equipment •

Lost & Found

BurnS, Oregon (541-573-7254)

Handyman

Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care

NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY Nelson law req u ires any- SERVICES. Home & Landscaping & one who co n t racts Commercial Repairs, Maintenance for construction work Carpentry-Painting, Serving Central to be licensed with the Pressure-washing, Oregon Since 2003 C onstruction Co n - Honey Do's. On-time Residental/Commercial tractors Board (CCB). promise. Senior A n active lice n se Discount. Work guarSprinkler means the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 Activation/Repair i s bonded and i n or 541-771-4463 Back Flow Testing s ured. Ver if y t h e Bonded 8 Insured contractor's CCB CCB¹181595 Maintenance c ense through t h e eThatch & Aerate CCB Cons u mer LandscapingNard Care • Spring Clean up Website •Weekly Mowing www.hireaacensedcontractor. & Edging com •Bi-Monthly & Monthly or call 503-378-4621. Maintenance The Bulletin recom•Bark, Rock, Etc. mends checking with ZcdN'4 gua//iP the CCB prior to conZacug gu.e I,. ~Landsca in tracting with anyone. More Than Service •Landscape Some other t rades Construction Peace Of Mind also req u ire addi•Water Feature tional licenses a nd Installation/Maint. Spring Clean Up certifications. •Pavers •Leaves •Renovations •Cones Concrete Construction •Irrigations Installation •Needles •Debris Hauling Senior Discounts JJ & B Construction, Bonded & Insured quality concrete work. Weed Free Bark 541-815-4458 Over 30 Years Exp. & Flower Beds LCB¹8759 Sidewalks; RV pads; Driveways; Color 8 Lawn Renovation BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Stamp wor k a v a il. Aeration - Dethatching Also Hardwood floorSearch the area's most Overseed ing a t af fo r dable comprehensive listing of Compost prices. 541-279-3183 classified advertising... Top Dressing real estate to automotive, CCB¹190612 merchandise to sporting Landscape Debris Removal goods. Bulletin Classifieds Maintenance appear every day in the Full or Partial Service JUNK BE GONE print or on line. •Mowing ~Edging I Haul Away FREE Call 541-385-5809 •Pruning ~Weeding For Salvage. Also Sprinkler Adjustments www.bendbulletin.com Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 The Bulletin Sewing Centrai Oregonsnce f903 Fertilizer included with monthly program Handyman SPRING CLEAN-UP! Aeration/Dethatching Weekly, monthly I DO THAT! Weekly/one-time service or one time service. Home/Rental repairs avail. Bonded, insured. Small jobs to remodels Free Estimates! Honest, guaranteed EXPERIENCED COLLINS Lawn Maint. Commercial work. CCB¹f 51573 Ca/l 541-480-9714 Dennis 541-317-9768 & Residential ALLEN REINSCH Just bought a new boat? Yard maintenance 8 Sell your old one in the Senior Discounts classifieds! Ask about our clean-up, thatching, 541-390-1466 Super Seller rates! plugging 8 much more! Same Day Response Call 541-536-1294 541-385-5809

Maverick Landscaping Mowing, weedeating,yd detail., chain saw work, bobcat excv., etc! LCB ¹8671 541-923-4324 N OTICE: O R E G O N Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) r equires a l l bus i nesses that advertise to p e rform L a n dscape C o n struction which inclu d es: p lanting, dec k s , fences, arbors, w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included 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 co n t racting with th e b u s iness. Persons doing landscape m a intenance do not require a LCB license.

Painting/Wall Coveringj WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman,

a semi-retired painting contractor of 45 years. S m al l J obs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. c c b ¹51 84. 541-388-6910

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Dccr-to-dcor seliing with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809



E4 TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

DAILY B R I D t93E CLU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Sh ortz

4,2o13 T oesday,June

ACROSS

Taking your medicine

1Signature pieces? s Gets outta there fast 11 "The Purloined Letter" writer 14 Song heard at 15-/(cross ts Manhattan cultural landmark 1s Finale 17 *Triumphs, but barely 19 Moonshine holder 2o Natural, seasoning 21 *First capital of California 23 Boom's opposite on Wall Street 2s Regatta implement 26 Family chain with a brand Slam breakfast 3o List shortcut: Abbr. 33 Belfry occupants 36 African antelope

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

"How do you cope with all those kids of yours?" I asked Unlucky Louie, who has a houseful. "Don't you ever get headaches?" "I follow the instructions on the aspirin bottle," Louie said. "'Take two. Keep away from children.'" Many players use a medicinal approachto dummy play: They take t wo f i nesses and w o rr y i n t h e morning. At t oday's slam, South ruffed the first diamond and led a trump to the ace and back to his jack. West won and led another diamond, and South ruffed again, drew the last trump and ran the clubs. At Trick l2 he finessed with dummy's queen of spades, but East had the king.

BEST PLAY South misplayed and had to take his medicine. Though a finesse was his best play to pick up the trump suit, it was wrong in the context of this deal. South must take the A-K. When both defenders play low, South runs the clubs. He can discard f our spades f ro m d u mm y a n d eventually ruff his second low spade w ith d ummy's l ast t r u mp . T h e defense gets only West's high trump.

DAILY QUESTION

diamonds, you rebid two spades and he tries three clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: To bid 3NT would be unwise when you have three cards in diamonds and only one stopper in hearts. Supporting your partner is a basic bidding concept. Bid three diamonds. You still may l and at notrump, but if partner has 8 7, 2, A Q J 7 4 2, A Q 5 4, you will want to be at six diamonds. South dealer Neither side vulnerable

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

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PUZZLE BY LYNN LEMPEL

duty 13 Periphery 1s Nickname of, Haiti's Duvalier ousted in 198(7 22 Quick punch 24 Margarita need 2s Dame Judi of fil m 27 Get right to the honeymoon, say 2e Activity led by a park ranger, perhaps 29 Oooosite of SSE 31 Something whistled 32 Rogue 34 Polynesian carvings

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nyfimes.com/learning/xwords.

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LOS ANGELES TIMESCROSSWORD Edit ed by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 1 King Dr queen, but not a prince 5 Coffeehouse connection 9 Carnival features 14 Once again 15 Breezed through 16 99 44/100%

2 Arctic pullover 3 Call it a night 4 Nerdy type 5 Shake, as a tail 6 Mixologist's buckefful 7 Command to Fido 8 Southern neighbor of British pure" soap Columbia 17 Staff symbol 9 Iranian currency 18 Need after a bank 10 Harvard and Yale are in it Iob 20 Partner of true 11 Leader Df the Dwarfs 22 Veg (out) 23 Business that 12 Stat for Jered cuts locks Weaver 26 Change People, 13 Country W of Iraq say 19 Clean with a rag 30 Just manage, with 21 Knocked down a "out" peg 31 The Brewers, on 24 Rolling in dough scoreboards 25 More shrewd 32 Gal pal Df Jerry 27 A-line designer and George 28 Legal memo's 34 Church get"concerning" together 29 Parisian 37 Sikorsky and possessive Stravinsky 33 Religious ritual 38 "Know what I 34 Household mean?" gadget used on a 41 Blender setting board 42 Paste back 35 Big brute together 36 Traffic controller 43 B-Down, to 1 2 3 4 Mexicans 45 Ben14 46 Spot for a shot 49 Tabloid twosome 17 50 Jamaican resort 20 21 54 Ancient Aegean region 23 56 Kind of question with only tvvo 30 31 possible answers 34 57 Classic Hitchcock film, and a hint to 38 39 the end of 18-, 23-, 38- and 50- 41 Across 62 "No l u ck!" 63 Paddled boat 64 Movie "Citizen"

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66 Put up with 67 64-Across's

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48 " G ood heavens!" 51 Cries in sties 52 Spanish tennis star Rafael 53 S u nset direccion

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55 N e eded to pay

41 Canada's 57 Pepsi alternatives smallest prov. 58 P u t away some 44 Luxury hotel dishes? chain 59 California's 46 Preposterous Santa 47 Causing serious 6 0 Small bill nose-wrinkling 61 U n ited

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: W I P O WE L I T F L E SL R I

ED S W T O K A E S I R S H A N D O C D NT H E S ES T E E M O S T P E D R A W E R Y CEN T R A L A X L S O N A K N O W I T Z E R O I N O A V I D L I R P A T E D E A xwordedltor@aol.com 5

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suggested by the above cartoon.

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"Sweetheart, don't forget your lunch."

here: (A08Wer8 tamarrOW)

Jumbles: PINCH B U D D Y BR U NC H EF F O RT Answer: The food at the restaurant was 60 bad that customers were getting — FED UP

DOWN 1 "That's impossible!"

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By David Poole (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

68

06/04/13


THE BULLETIN• TU ESDAY, JUNE 4 2013 E5

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

~

e

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860

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870

881

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

932

Travel Trailers

21' Bluewater Mirage •

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

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

Worth $8315Will sacrifice for $4 900 for quick sell To see video, go to: www.u2pro.com/95

Victory TC 2002, 541-815-9981 runs great, many accessories, new 21' Crownline 215 hp tires, under 40K in/outboard e n g i ne 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin miles, well kept. sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, $6500 OBO. For toilet, exc. m ore i nfo. c a l l portable cond. Asking $8,000. 541-647-4232 OBO. 541-388-8339 876

Watercraft

ATVs

450>0< pgjgrj :Q<II

971-678-3196 or nortonjackOcomcast.net

Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, race-ready, lots of extras, $4999/obo 541-647-8931

14' 1982 Valco River Sled, 70 h.p., FishFinder. Older boat but

price includes trailer, 3 wheels and tires. All for $1 5 00 ! Cal l

705

Real Estate Services Room for rent, Redmond, Boise, ID Real Estate very nice location, $500 For relocation info, per mo + small utility. call Mike Conklin, 541-279-9538. 208-941-8458 Studios & Kitchenettes Silvercreek Realty Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro 8 fridge. 745 Utils & linens. New Homes for Sale owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885

I

Call 541-410-5415

541-416-8811

(2) 2000 A rctic C at Z L580's EFI with n e w covers, electric start w/ reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons. $6000 all. 541-536-8130

15' older Seaswirl, 35HP motor, cover,

d epth finder, a s sorted live v e sts, $1400. OBO. 541-548-7645 541-408-3811.

or

Antique & Classic Autos

Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild re painted original blue, original blue interior, ~e ngS~S original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $9000 F reightliner FL 6 0 or make offer. 1995, midsize 541-385-9350 hauler, must see to appreciate. $19,000

King size walkaround bed, electric awning, (4) 6-volt batteries, plus many more extras, never smoked in, first owners, $19,900.

Ads published in "WaSuzuki Ei er 2004 tercraft" include: KayQuadrunner ATV, autoaks, rafts and motormatic, new tires, 2215 ized personal miles, covered dog For carrier platform, nylon watercrafts. " boats" please see dust cover, set of 4 Class 870. snow chains. $2899. Contact Larry at 541-385-5809

870

Rooms for Rent

Keystone Sprinter 31', 2008

Boats 8 Accessories

630

0 0

MUST SELL.

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

OBO. 503-298-9817

G K E A T 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located I Bend.) Also: Sunriver hanqar available for sale at $155K, or lease, O $400/mo. 541-948-2963

R U T X Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call 541-749-0724

• r 6 Orbit 21' 2007, used only 8 times, A/C, j ~a~ ~ oven, tub s hower, micro, load leveler FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, Peterbilt 359 p o table door panels w/flowers hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, 1 /3 interest i n w e l l - water t ruck, 1 9 90, 8 hummingbirds, gal. tank, 5hp 880 EXCELLENT CON- equipped IFR Beech Bo- 3200 white soft top & hard DITION. All acces- nanza A36, new 10-550/ pump, 4-3" h oses, top. Just reduced to Motorhomes $ 2 5,000. $3,750. 541-317-9319 sories are included. prop, located KBDN. camlocks, 541-820-3724 Fleetwood 31' T i o ga $16,000 OBO. $65,000. 541-419-9510 or 541-647-8483 Class C 1997, 25.000 541-382-9441 FIND IT! mi. V-10, Onan 4000 Utility Trailers BIIY IT' g enerator 275 h r s . P ioneer 23 ' 19 0 F Q No leaks. Excellent 2006, EZ Lift, $9750. SELL ITr 2011 Interstate Load t ires. $25.00 0 541-548-1096 Runner custom utility The Bulletin Classifieds 541-447-3425 trailer, 6x12, enclosed, rear ramp, c ustom Need help fixing stuff? 1/5th interest in 1973 wheels, silver 8 black, Call A Service Professional been stored, towed Cessna 150 LLC find the help you need. 150hp conversion, low only 150 miles. Excelwww.bendbulletin.com time on air frame and lent! $3195 obo. 541-408-7908 engine, hangared in Ford Galaxie 500 1963, Prowler 2009 Extreme Bend. Excellent per2 dr. hardtop,fastback, E dition. Model 2 7 0 formance & afford390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 Antique & RL, 2 slides, opposable flying! $6,500. radio (orig),541-419-4989 ing in living area, ent. 541-382-6752 Classic Autos Ford Mustang Coupe center, sep. bedroom, 1966, original owner, L 2 ne w e x tra t i res, V8, automatic, great Fleetwood D i s covery hitch, bars, sway bar shape, $9000 OBO. 40' 2003, diesel moincluded. P r o-Pack, 530-515-81 99 torhome w/all anti-theft. Good cond, 1921 Model T options-3 slide outs, c lean. 'til Req . Delivery Truck Ford Ranchero satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, 4/20/1 5. $19 , 9 00. Restored 8 Runs etc. 3 2 ,000 m i les. 541-390-1122 1979 1974 BeHanca $9000. Wintered in h e ated skslra@msn.com with 351 Cleveland 1730A 541-389-8963 shop. $89,900 O.B.O. modified engine. 541-447-8664 Body is in RV 2180 TT, 440 SMO 1952 Ford Customline excellent condition, CONSIGNMENTS 180 mph, excellent Coupe, project car, flat$2500 obo. WANTED condition, always head V-8, 3 spd extra 541-420-4677 We Do The Work ... hangared, 1 owner parts, 8 materials, $2000 You Keep The Cash! for 35 years. $60K. obo. 541-410-7473 On-site credit •

The Bulletin

6 Bdrm, 6 bath, 4-car, 15' older Seaswirl, 4270 sq ft, .83 ac. corner, Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, 35HP motor, cover, short track, variable view. By owner, ideal for Apt./Multiplex NE Bend d epth finder, a s exhaust valves, elecextended family. tric s t art, r e v erse, sorted live v e sts, **No Application Fee ** $590,000. 541-390-0886 OBO. approval team, manuals, re c o rds, $1400. 2 bdrm, 1 bath, or Jayco Seneca 34', 2007. ln Madras, web site presence. new spare belt, cover, 541-548-7645 $530 8 $540 w/lease. NOTICE 541-408-3811. call 541-475-6302 28K miles, 2 slides, DuWe Take Trade-Ins! Carports included! All real estate adver- heated hand g r ips, ramax diesel, 1 owner, Free Advertising. tised here in is sub- nice, fast, $999. Call excellent cond, $84,995; BIG COUNTRY RV FOX HOLLOW APTS. ject to t h e F e deral Tom, 541-385-7932, Executive Hangar 5 Trade? 541-546-6920 Bend: 541-330-2495 at Bend Airport (KBDN) Buick Riviera 1991, clas(541) 383-3152 F air H o using A c t , • Yamaha 750 1999 Redmond: 60' wide x 50' deep, sic low-mile car, driven Cascade Rental which makes it illegal Mountain Max, $1400. 541-548-5254 w/55' wide x 17' high bi- about 5K/year. Always Management. Co. to advertise any pref- • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 16' O ld T o w n fold dr. Natural gas heat, garaged & pampered, erence, limitation or Call for Specials! EXT, $1000. Camper C a n oe, Terry Lite 2000, great offc, bathroom. Adjacent non-smoker, exclnt cond, discrimination based • Zieman 4-place Limited numbers avail. exc. cond, $ 900. cond, see on craiqslist, to Frontage Rd; great $4300 obo 541-389-0049 on race, color, reli- trailer, SOLD! 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. 541-312-8740 $6500. 541-382-0964 visibility for aviation busiW/D hookups, patios gion, sex, handicap, All in good condition. ness. Financing avail- Chev Cheyenne 20 1972 Monaco Windsor, 2001, familial status or naor decks. Located in La Pine. able. 541-948-2126 or Custom Camper, new Tarloaded! (was $234,000 tional origin, or intenetMaster eng., 1 owner, MOUNTAIN GLEN, Call 541-408-6149. 17.5' Glastron 2002, email 1jetjock@q.com new) Solid-surface lii a ~gi g II I tion to make any such 1350 obo. 541-350-6235 541-383-9313 Chevy eng., Volvo counters, convection/ Professionally preferences, l i mita860 outdrive, open bow, micro, 4-dr, fridge, tions or discrimination. managed by Norris & Chevrolet Cameo washer/dryer, ceramic We will not knowingly Motorcycles & Accessories stereo, sink/live well, Stevens, Inc. Warrior Toy Pickup, 1957, w/glastron tr a i ler, tile & carpet, TV, DVD, Weekend accept any advertisHauler 28' 2007, Gen, disassembled, frame 636 incl. b oa t c o v e r, satellite dish, leveling, ing for r eal e state fuel station, exc cond. powder coated, new 8-airbags, power cord Like new, $ 8 500. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend which is in violation of sleeps 8, black/gray front sheet metal, cab 541-447-4876 reel, 2 full pass-thru this law. All persons i nterior, u se d 3X , One Half Interest in restored. $9995 firm. trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 $19 Small c l ea n S t u dio are hereby informed 999 firm Call for more info, RV-9A for SALE 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 downtown area, $495 that all dwellings ad541-389-9188 541-306-9958 (ceII) 2005 Vans RV-9A, Diesel gen set. $85,000 moq $475 d e p. All vertised are available 2002 Harley Davidson 0-320, Dynon, GPS, obo. 541-233-7963 ,=-'uuy--gt utilities paid. No pets, on an equal opportu- Heritage Softail - Fl, emICOM's, KT-76C, no smoking. 541-330- nity basis. The Bulle- erald green & black, lots Oxygen. Flies great, 'er tin Classified 9769, 541-480-7870 no damage history. of chrome & extras, 9K mi, perfect cond. $9995. 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 300 plus Hours tach, 648 746 Call 503-999-7356 (cell) kept in Redmond C Volvo Penta, 270HP, Houses for Hanqar. Reduced to Northwest Bend Homes WEEKEND WARRIOR low hrs., must see, Chevy C-20 Pickup Rent General $35K, OBOr $15,000, 541-330-3939 NATIONAL DOLPHIN Toy hauler/travel trailer. Dick Hansen, 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Beautiful NW cottage, 24' with 21' interior. 37' 541-923-2318 1997, loaded! 1 auto 4-spd, 396, model PUBLISHER'S c lose to C OCC & 6. Self-conslide, Corian surfaces, Sleeps dkhansen@bendCST /all options, orig. NOTICE shops Master bdrm w/ tained. Systems/ broadband.com or wood floors (kitchen), appearancein good owner, $19,950, All real estate adver- large walk-in closet. 2-dr fridge, convection 541-923-6049 Tod, 541-350-6462 tising in this newspa- Upstairs perfect for BMW K1200 GT, 2007, condition. Smoke-free. microwave, Vizio TV & Tow with y2-ton. Strong per is subject to the family room, 2nd bdrm crystal gray metallic, The Bulletin roof satellite, walk-in F air H o using A c t or office. Large attic less than 20K mi, persuspension; can haul Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, To Subscribe call which makes it illegal for storage or easy fect cond, large 43 liter 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, 4.3L shower, new queen bed. ATVs snowmobiles, based in Madras, alto a d v ertise "any conversion to l i ving tour box, new Michelin Mercruiser, low hrs, 190 White leather hide-a- even a small car! Great ways hangared since 541-385-5800 or go to 8 chair, all records, preference, limitation space. Oversized ga- P3 tires, factory battery hp Bowrider w/depth bed price - $8900. new. New annual, auto www.bendbulletin.com or disc r imination rage w/ space for your charger/maintainer. finder, radio/ CD player, no pets or smoking. Call 541-593-6266 pilot, IFR, one piece 1955 PROJECT based on race, color, car, skis & k a y ak. $14,500. 541-550-6809 rod holders, full canvas, $28,450. windshield. Fastest Ar- Chevy Call 541-771-4800 car. 2 door wgn, 350 EZ Loader trailer, exclnt religion, sex, handi- Comes with all appli. 882 cher around. 1750 tosmall block w/Weiand cond, $11,500. cap, familial status, i ncluding W/D. A p tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. dual quad tunnel ram Fifth Wheels 707-484-3518 (Bend) marital status or naRV pointments on week541-475-6947, ask for with 450 Holleys. T-10 tional origin, or an in- ends only. $218,000 CONSIGNMENTS Rob Berg. 18.7' Sea Ray Monaco, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, tention to make any WANTED John 503-804-4681. 1984, 185hp, V6 MerWeld Prostar wheels, such pre f e rence, We Do The Work ... Cruiser, full canvas, life extra rolling chassis + limitation or discrimiKeep The Cash! 750 vests, bumpers, water YouOn-site Trucks 8 extras. $6500 for all. credit nation." Familial staHarley Davidson 1991 skis, swim float, extra 541-389-7669. Redmond Homes Heavy Equipment tus includes children approval team, Custom Softail, 39k prop 8 more. EZ Loader under the age of 18 web site presence. I ~ 4'%~ ' g miles, garaged, bags, trailer, never in saltwater, MONTANA 3585 2008, living with parents or Looking for your next We Take Trade-Ins! cover, Vance exhaust, always garaged, very exc. cond., 3 slides, legal cus t o dians, Free Advertising. emp/oyee? LOTS of Chrome, SS clean, all maint. records. king bed, Irg LR, pregnant women, and Place a Bulletin help BIG COUNTRY RV bars, windshield and $5500. 541-389-7329 Arctic insulation, all people securing cus- wanted ad today and Bend: 541-330-2495 extras! $6,500. options $35,000. tody of children under Redmond: reach over 60,000 541-788-3144 541-420-3250 541-548-5254 Chevy Wagon 1957, 18. This newspaper readers each week. Reo Du mp 4-dr., complete, will not knowingly acHarley Davidson SoftNuyya 29 7LK Hi t ch-Diamond Your classified ad Truck 19 7 4, 1 2-14 e $7,000 OBO / trades cept any advertising Hiker 20 07, All sea- yard box, runs good, TaiI D e luxe 2 0 0 7 , will also appear on Please call for real estate which is sons, 3 s l ides, 32' white/cobalt, w / pasbendbulletin.com Ifl 541-389-6998 in violation of the law. senger kit, Vance 8 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, erfect for snow birds, $6900, 541-548-6812 which currently re„+ jpgt~ O ur r e aders ar e e ft k i t chen, re a r Hines muffler system inboard motor, g r eat ceives over I' lounge, extras, must hereby informed that & kit, 1045 mi., exc. cond, well maintained, j 1.5 million page all dwellings adversee. $27,499 Prineville cond, $16,9 9 9, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 views every month 541-447-5502 days & tised in this newspa541-389-9188. Southwind 35.5' Triton, at no extra cost. 541-447-1641 eves. per are available on 2008,V10, 2 slides, DuBulletin Classifieds Harley Heritage an equal opportunity pont UV coat, 7500 mi. Get Results! Softail, 2003 basis. To complain of Bought new at Call 385-5809 or $5,000+ in extras, $132,913; discrimination cal l place your ad on-line 1 8' Seaswirl 1984, $2000 paint job, asking $91,000. HUD t o l l -free at at open bow, V6, en30K mi. 1 owner, Call 503-982-4745 1-800-877-0246. The bendbulletin.com gine 8 outdrive reFor more information toll f re e t e lephone built, extras, $2495. please call number for the hear541-546-6920 • Ig • 8 • ~ $ Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th 541-385-8090 ing im p a ired is 773 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, or 209-605-5537 1-800-927-9275. TV,full awning, excelAcreages lent shape, $23,900. Look at: 654 Winnebago Suncruiser34' 541-350-8629 Bendhomes.com Houses for Rent CHECK YOUR AD 2004, only 34K, loaded, for Complete Listings of SE Bend Please check your ad Area Real Estate for Sale too much to list, ext'd RV warr. thru 2014, $54,900 the first day it runs CONSIGNMENTS Newer, beautiful 3 bed- on 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, Dennis, 541-589-3243 to make sure it is corWANTED room 2y2 bath, new car- rect. Sometimes innew upholstery, new elecWe Do The Work ... pet, gas furnace / water s tructions over t h e 881 tronics, winch, much more. You Keep The Cash! heater / f i replace. No $9500. 541-306-0280 Travel Trailers On-site credit smoking, no pets. 1-year phone are misunderstood and an e rror approval team, lease; 1st / last / security. 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish web site presence. $1250/mo. 541-420-0579 can occurin your ad. Ski, 50 hrs on new If this happens to your Harley Limited 103 2011, & We Take Trade-Ins! engine, fish finder, chart Call The Bulletin At ad, please contact us many extras, stage 1 & air plotter & VHF radio with Free Advertising. the first day your ad cushion seat. 18,123 mi, antenna. Good shape, 541-385-5809 BIG COUNTRY RV $20,990. 541-306-0289 appears and we will Bend: 541-330-2495 Place Your Ad Dr E-Mail full cover, heavy duty happy to fix it as I Redmond: trailer, kicker and electric Fleetwood At: www.bendbulletin.com be 31' Wilders oon as w e c a n . HOFatBo 19 96 motors. 541-548-5254 Deadlines are: Weekn ess Gl 1 9 99, 1 2 ' 660 $7500 or best offer. slide, 2 4 ' aw n i ng, days 11:00 noon for 541-292-1834 Houses for Rent 885 queen bed, FSC, outnext day, Sat. 11:00 La Pine t t t | t l t side shower, E-Z lift Canopies & Campers a.m. for Sunday and stabilizer hitch, l i ke Monday. La Pine - 2/1.5, in Cresnew, been stored. 541-385-5809 cent Creek subdivision. 20.5' 2004 Bayliner $10,950. 707-688-4253 Thank you! Fitness center, park. The Bulletin Classified Completely 205 Run About, 220 Natural gas appl., & Rebuilt/Customized HP, V8, open bow, fireplace. $750/mo. 2012/2013 Award exc. cond with very $850/dep. Rick Winner low hours, lots of 775 541-815-5494. Showroom Condition Canopy for long bed extras incl. tower, Manufactured/ Many Extras great cond., w h ite Bimini 8 custom Low Miles. w/tinted windows 8 Mobile Homes trailer, $17,950. Tick, Tock slider window. $500. 541-389-1413 $77,000 634

FAST 66 Ranchero! $7500 invested, sell for $4500I Call 541.382.9835

I

S g .

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in 8 out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

Ford T h underbird 1955 new white soft top, tonneau cover and upholstery. New chrome. B e a utiful Car. $25, 0 0 0. 541-548-1422

4

I

WOIN

GMC V~ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171 MOVING - NOROOM!

GMC 1977 Sierra Classic 4x4 Original owner, a show truck. Never restored or o ff-road. AT, 400 V 8 , many extras, plus free custom 8' matching utililty trailer, and Alpine canopy. Collectors welcome! Sorry, no trades. Firm, cash. $6995. 503-880-5020

Mercedes 450SL, 1977 113K, 2nd owner, ga raged, b o t h tops $10,900. 541-389-7596

ihIr ~-;.-~

hacajgy

'

' Ij

Get great deals on all kinds of SPOIXS

equipment and more in The Bulletin Classifieds.

-q-w-Q--P%"

Tick, Tock...

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

541-548-4807

HD Screaming Eagle Electra Glide 2005, 103" motor, two tone candy teal, new tires, 23K miles, CD player hydraulic clutch, excellent condition. Highest offer takes it. 541-480-8080.

eeo

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

541-580-7334

Sleeps 6, 14-ft slide, awning, Eaz-Lift stabilizer bars, heat

8 air, queen walk-around bed, very good condition, $10,000 obo. 541-595-2003

BSSl 1C S

www.bendbulletin.com

Lance Camper 1994, fits long bed crew cab, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 OBO. 541-580-7334

541-385-5809


E6 TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 • THE BULLETIN •

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

v

4

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- RVsfor Rent

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

Legal Notices •

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

L e g al Notices

the sale shall be en- at $3,660.47 each $ titled only to a return 3,660.47 1 payments is made is the grant- of the monies paid to at $3,660.80 each $ ors: The installments the Trustee. This shall 3,660.80 1 payments of principal and inter- be the P u rchaser's at $3,660.82 each $ est which became due sole an d e x clusive 3,660.82 1 payments on 10/1/2012, and all r emedy. Th e p u r - at $3,660.83 each $ subsequent i n s tall- chaser shall have no 3,660.83 1 payments ments of principal and further recourse at $3,660.85 each $ against the T rustor, 3,660.85 1 payments interest through the date of this Notice, the Trustee, the Ben- at $3,660.87 each $ Sport Utility Vehicles Auto m obiles the 3,660.87 1 payments plus amounts that are eficiary, due for late charges, Beneficiary's Agent, at $3,660.88 each $ pay delinquent p r operty or the B eneficiary's 3 ,660.88 1 1 taxes, insurance pre- Attorney. If you have ments at $ 3 , 658.29 LEGAL NOTICE each $ 40, 2 4 1.19 miums, adv a nces previously been disNOTICE OF Chevy Malibu 2009 made on senior liens, c harged thro u gh (03-05-11 thr o ugh BUDGET COMMITTEE 43k miles, loaded, Late taxes andlor i nsur- bankruptcy, you may 05-08-13) HEARING studs on rims/ ance, trustee's fees, have been released of Charges: $ 40 0 . 00 GMC Yukon D e nafi Asking $12,900. personal liability for B ENEFICIARY ADand any attorney fees HIA public meeting of and court costs aris- this loan i n w h i ch VANCES Suspense Plymouth B a r racuda 2004, 4x4, l o a ded, 541-61 0-6834. the Sisters Park & 1966, original car! 300 third row, tow. Credit: $0.00 TOTAL: ing from or associ- case this letter is inVin¹163244 Recreation Di s t rict ated with the benefi- tended to exercise the $81,173.72 ALSO, if hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 $11,988 Board of Directors will ciaries e f f orts to note holders right's you have failed to pay be held at 530 p.m. and preserve against the real prop- taxes on the property, S UBA R U . PROJECT CARS:Chevv on Tuesday, June 11, protect provide insurance on i ts security, al l o f erty only. THIS OF2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & 2013 at the Coffield which must be paid as FICE IS A TTEMPT- the property or pay 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Chevy Coupe 1950 Community Center at 877-266-3821 ING TO COLLECT A other senior liens or a condition of r einrolling chassis's $1750 Chrysler Sebring 2004 1 7 5 0 W. statement, i ncluding Dlr ¹0354 DEBT AND ANY INencumbrances as reea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, 84k, beautiful dark gray/ SPRD, McKinney Butte Road, all sums that shall ac- FORMATION OB- quired in the note and complete car, $ 1949; brown, tan leather int., Sisters, Oregon. The crue through r ein- TAINED W IL L B E d eed o f t r u st, t h e Cadillac Series 61 1950, $5995 541-350-5373 Purpose of the meet- statement or pay-off. U SED FO R T H A T beneficiary may insist 2 dr. hard top, complete ing is to discuss the Nothing in this notice P URPOSE. As r e - that you do so in orw/spare f r ont cl i p ., D istrict Budget f o r shall be construed as quired by law, you are der to reinstate your $3950, 541-382-7391 2013-2014 fiscal year a waiver of any fees hereby notified that a account i n good beginning J ul y 1, owing to the Benefi- negative credit report standing. The benefiPorsche Cay e nne 2013 as approved by ciary under the Deed r eflecting o n yo u r ciary may require as a Turbo 2005, t wi n the Budget Commit- of Trust pursuant to credit record may be c ondition t o rei n t urbo, l oaded, l o w "My Little Red Corvette" tee on May 28, 2013. the terms of the loan submitted to a credit s tatement that y o u miles. A full copy of the bud- documents. Monthly report agency if you provide reliable writCoupe, 1996, 350, Vin¹A92123 auto, 26-34 mpg, 132K, get may be obtained Payment $ 1 ,290.00 fail to fulfill the terms ten evidence that you T-BIRD 1988 S p ort $24,888 on-line at w w w.sis$12,500/offer. Monthly Late Charge of your credit obliga- have paid all senior coupe, 34,400 orig. tersrecreation.com or $64.50 By this reason tions. 541-923-1781 Dated: l iens or encu m mi., A/C, PW, PL, new 4 @ s U B A R U . in person at Sisters brances, pr o p erty of said d efault t he 5/21/2013 Q UALITY tires/brakes/hoses/ Park 8 Re c reation 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. L OAN SERV I C E b eneficiary has d e taxes, and hazard inbelts & exhausts. Tan District between the 877-266-3821 surance p r emiums. clared all obligations C ORPORATION O F w/tan interior. hours of 9 00 a m. Dlr ¹0354 secured by said deed W ASHINGTON, a s These r equirements Immaculate! $4,995. and 5:00 p.m. week- of trust immediately trustee Signature By: for reinstatement Days 541-322-4843, Subaru Outback Limdays. due and payable, said Michael Dowell, As- should be confirmed Eves 541-383- 5043 ited 2006 51k miles. Secr e tary by contacting the unsums being the fol- sistant ¹ 354693 $1 8 , 9 88 CORVETTE COUPE LEGAL NOTICE Quality Loan Service dersigned Trustee. By PUBLIC H E A RING l owing, to-wit: T h e Get your Glasstop 2010 Corp. of Washington reason of said default, NOTICE BEND sum of $168,348.97 Grand Sport - 4 LT business together with interest c/o Quality Loan Ser- the beneficiary has P LANNING COM loaded, clear bra Oregon d eclared al l su m s thereon at the rate of vice Corp. 2141 5th MISSION AND CITY hood 8 fenders. AutoSource 6.0000 per a n num Avenue San Diego, owing on the obligaCOUNCIL. New Michelin Super a ROW I N G 921 0 1 For tion secured by said 541-598-3750 from 9/1/2012 until CA PROJECT NUMBER: Sports, G.S. floor Non-Sale Information: trust deed i m mediaaaoregonautosource.com PZ 1 3 -375 A P P LI- paid; plus all accrued mats, 17,000 miles, LOA N ately due and paywith an ad in CANT: City of Bend late charges thereon; QUALITY Suburban LT 2005 Crystal red. N ATURE O F TH E and all trustee's fees, SERVICE C O RPO- able, said sums being The Bulletin's Loaded, leather, 4x4! $45,000. R ATION OF W A S H - t he f o llowing: U N foreclosure costs and A PPLICATION: D e ¹ 178655 $14, 7 7 5 503-358-1164. "Call A Service c/o Quality PAID PRIN C IPAL velopment Code Text any sums advanced INGTON OF b e neficiary Loan Service Corp. BALANCE Professional" Amendment to p r e- by th e pursuant to the terms 2141 5th Avenue San $ 227,955.28, P L U S c lude h e ight v a r iDirectory Oregon D iego, C A 921 0 1 i nterest thereon a t said deed of trust. ances on property lo- of AutoSource notice 6 19-645-7711 Fa x : 2.48% pe r a n n um cated west of Brooks Whereof, f rom 0 2 / 06/1 1 t o 541-598-3750 Street/Alley in down- hereby is given that 61 9-645-771 6 LOA N P1041570 5/28, 6/4, 12/04/1 1, 0% per anaaaoregonautosource.com town Bend. A PPLI- QUALITY 6/11, 06/18/2013 num from 1 2/04/11 SERVICE C O RPOLi Ford Taurus Wagon 2004, CABLE CR I T ERIA: RATION OF WASHuntil paid, t ogether Bend D e velopment LEGAL NOTICE 120K miles, loaded, in e s c ro w adthe under- TRUSTEE'S NOTICE with nice s hape, $ 4 200. Code Section 4.6.200, INGTON, f o reclosure VW BUG 1972 rebuilt available in City Hall signed trustee will on OF SALE Pursuant to vances, 541-815-9939 or at the Community 9/23/2013 at the hour O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. costs, trustee fees, eng, new paint, tires, fees, sums chrome whls, 30 mpg Development De- of 1:00:00 PM, Stan- and O.R.S. 79.5010, attorney dard of Time, as es- et seq. Trustee's Sale required for the pro$3800. 541-233-7272 Toyota F J partment portion of Cr u i ser the C ity's w e bsite. tablished by section No. 0 9 -XFH-124642 tection of the property 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, PROPERTY L O C A- 187.110, Oregon ReN OTICE T O B O R - and additional sums TRD, roof, grill guard, vised Statues, At the TION: West side of ROWER: YOU secured by the Deed low miles Brooks S t r eet/Alley front entrance to the SHOULD BE AWARE of T r ust. W H EREVin ¹074880 C o u nty THAT THE UNDERFORE, notice hereby Kia Forte Koup S X between Newport Ave Deschutes $25,988 2010, 2 dr, 6 speed, and F r anklin B l vd. Courthouse, 1164 NW S IGNED IS AT- is given that the unVW Super Bug, 1974 Bond St., Bend, OR tinted windows, preDATE, TIME, PLACE TEMPTING TO COL- dersigned trustee, will major tune-up, new paint, 4@ I S UBAR U . 97701 County of DEmium wheels. AND LOCATION OF LECT A DEBT AND o n S eptember 1 0 , 8UBARUOPBEIID COM interior, tires, r unning Vin¹139257 THE H H E ARINGS: SCHUTES, State of THAT ANY I N FOR- 2013, at the hour of boards, roof rack. $4500. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 11:00 AM, in accord $14,988 Planning Commission, Oregon, sell at public MATION OBTAINED with 877-266-3821 541-389-5760 the standard of auction to the highest WILL BE USED FOR June 24, 2013, 5 30 Dlr ¹0354 ©s U BA R U . p.m. City Council, July bidder for cash the THAT PUR P OSE. time established by 3 , 2013, 7 :00 p . m. interest in th e s a id Reference is made to ORS 1 8 7 .110, at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Pickups MAIN ENTRANCE TO described real prop- that certain Deed of LOCATION: 710 NW 877-266-3821 DE S CHUTES Wall Street, B e nd, erty which the grantor Trust made by, CON- THE Dlr ¹0354 or had power to N IE G. H I CKS, a s COUNTY J U S TICE O R, i n Ci t y Ha l l had 1100 NW Council C h a mbers. convey at the time of grantor, to FIDELITY CENTER, B OND ST RE E T , the execution by him ADDITIONAL INNATIONAL TITLE INof the said trust deed, BEND, County of DEToyota F J Cr u iser FORMATION: Th e S URANCE CO., a s SCHUTES, State of 2007, 6 speed, 4x4, application, all docu- together with any in- Trustee, in favor of OREGON, s e l l at roof rack, tow, alloys. Chevy 2500 HD 2003 ments and evidence terest w h i c h the GREATOR N ORTHauction to the Vin¹056099 s ubmitted by o r o n grantor or his succes- W EST M O R T G AG E, public 4 WD w o r k tru c k , h ighest b i dder f o r Nissan Sentra 2012 $17,988 behalf of th e a ppli- sors in i nterest acINC., as beneficiary, cash, 140,000 miles, $7000 Full warranty, 35mpg, the in t e rest cant and the applica- quired after the exdated 3/30/2005, reobo. 541-408-4994. i s U B A R U . 520 per tank, all power. 4@ n the said described tion criteria are avail- ecution of said trust corded 4/6/2005, un$13,500. 541-788-0427 p roperty which the able for inspection at deed, to satisfy the der Instrument No. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. foregoing obligations 2005-20674, records grantor had, or had City Hall at no cost 877-266-3821 a nd copies will b e thereby secured and of DESC H UTES the power to convey, Dlr ¹0354 t the t ime o f t h e provided at a reason- t he costs and e x - County, O R E GON. aexecution by him of of sale, in940 The beneficial interable cost. CONTACT penses PERSON: Colin cluding a reasonable est under said Trust the said trust deed, Vans Dodge Dakota Quad charge by the trustee. Deed and the obliga- t ogether w it h an y Stephens at Cab SLT 2006, 4x 4 , Notice is further given tions secured thereby i nterest w h ic h t h e (541)693-2119 Ford 1-ton extended van, Nissan Versa S Sedan or his bed liner, tow pkg., 1995, 460 engine, set-up 2011, well equipped, cstephens©ci.bend.o t hat a n y per s o n are presently held by grantor named i n Se c t ion F IRST successors in interest premium wheels. r.us. S e n d w r itten HO RI ZO N f or c o n tractor w i t h great gas mileage. Vin¹653072 t estimony t o C o l i n 86.753 of Oregon Re- HOME LOANS, A DI- a cquired a fter t h e shelves & bins, fold-down Vin¹397958 vised Statutes has the VI SION OF F I R ST execution of said trust $15,988 ladder rack, tow hitch, Stephens, CDD, 710 $10,888 deed, to satisfy the miles, new tranny & NW Wall St. 97701, or right to have the fore- T ENNESSEE B A NK fs@ S U BA R U . 180K obligations brakes; needs catalytic © s U BA R U . attend the meetings closure p r oceeding N ATIONAL A S S O - foregoing 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. converter & new windand state your views. d ismissed and t h e CIATION S U CCES- thereby secured and 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. trust deed reinstated SOR THRU MERGER t he cos t s and 877-266-3821 shield. $2200. The hearings will be 877-266-3821 expenses of sale, iny payment to t h e WITH FIRST HORI541-220-7808 Dlr ¹0354 conducted in accor- b Dlr ¹0354 beneficiary of the encluding a reasonable dance with BDC SecZ ON HOME L O AN Ford Aerostar 1994 charge by the trustee. tire amount then due CORPORATION. tion 4.1500. Eddie Bauer Edition Good classified ads tell Notice is further given (other than such por- Said Trust Deed enthe essential facts in an Fully Loaded, LEGAL NOTICE tion of said principal cumbers the following t hat a n y per s o n interesting Manner. Write Mint Condition! TRUSTEE'S NOTICE as would not then be described real propnamed in ORS 86.753 from the readers view - not has the right, at any Runs Excellent! OF SALE T S. No.: due had no default erty situated in said the seller's. Convert the OR-13-546026-SH occurred), t o gether county an d s t a t e, time prior to five days $3000. Dodge R a m 2500 facts into benefits. Show Reference is made to w ith the cost s , to-wit: LOT 1, BLOCK before the date last 541-350-1201 Quad Cab SLT 2005, and 1, the reader how the item will t hat c e r tain d e e d trustee's H A R RI S ES- set for the sale, to 4x4, auto trans, tow, have this foreclosure m ade b y ALI C E attorney's fees a nd help them in someway. TATES, P HASE bed liner. PETERSON A ND curing any other deproceeding dismissed This DESCHUTES Vin¹716973 and the t rust deed CLIFFORD REITEN- fault complained of in COUNTY, OREGON advertising tip $15,988 B AUGH, A S TE N - the Notice of Default The street address or reinstated by payment brought to you by 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ANTS BY THE ENby tendering the per- other common desig- to the beneficiary of 877-266-3821 TIRETY as Grantor to formance r e q uired nation, if any, of the the e n tire a m o unt The Bulletin L umina Va n 19 9 5 , Dlr ¹0354 PATRICK R. BERG, under the obligation or r eal p r operty d e - then due (other than X LNT c o nd. , w e l l as trustee, in favor of trust deed, at any time scribed above is pur- such portion of t he i4@sU B A R U. cared for. $2000 obo. principal as would not MORTGAGE E LEC- prior to five days be- ported to be: 150 NE Porsche Carrera 911 541-382-9835. TRONIC REGISTRA- fore the date last set Xenolith Street Terre- then be due had no 2003 convertible with TION SYS T EMS, for sale. For Sale In- bonne, OR 97760 The default occurred) and hardtop. 50K miles, 975 G MC Sierra S L T formation Call: undersigned Trustee by curing any other new factory Porsche INC., AS NOMINEE 2006 - 1500 Crew Automobiles motor 6 mos ago with FOR FIRST MORT- 714-573-1965 or Lodisclaims any liability default complained of Cab 4x4, Z71, exc. 18 mo factory warG AGE CO R P O R A - gin to: www.priority- for any incorrectness herein that is capable cond., 82 k m i les, ranty remaining. TION, A C A LIFOR- posting.com In conA udi A 6 se d a n of the above street o f being cured b y $19,900. $37,500. NIA CORPORATION, struing this notice, the a ddress o r the 541-408-0763 Quattro 2003 4wd, oth e r tendering 541-322-6928 D/B/A FIRST MORT- masculine gender in- common designation. performance required a/c, auto, tilt steer, G AGE CO R P O R A - cludes the f eminine sun & moon roofs, Both the beneficiary under the obligation or TION OF CALIFOR- and the neuter, the leather int, disc 8 and the trustee have t rust deed, an d i n ITS singular includes plu- elected to sell the said addition to paying said NIA, tape, good to exc SUCCESSORS AND ral, the word "grantor" real property to sat- sums or tendering the cond, + 4 mounted I nternational Fla t ASSIGNS, as Benefi- includes any succes- isfy th e o b ligations performance studs KBB $8200, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ciary, dated sor in interest to the ask $7500. secured by said trust necessary to cure the ton dually, 4 s pd. 12/18/2009, recorded grantor as well as any deed and a notice of default, by paying all Call 541-385-5634 trans., great MPG, Subaru Impreza M/RX 12/29/2009, in official other persons owing default has been re- costs and expenses or 541-420-2699. could be exc. wood DES - a n o b ligation, t h e corded pursuant to a ctually incurred in STI 2005, 6 s p e ed, r ecords o f hauler, runs great, the power windows, CHUTES County, Or- performance of which Oregon Revised Stat- enforcing new brakes, $1950. Advertise your car! is secured by s a id utes 86.735(3); the obligation and t r ust power locks, Alloys. egon in book / reel / 541-41 9-5480. Add A Picture! volume number fee / trust deed, the words default for which the deed, together with Vin ¹506223 Reach thousands oi readers! file / instrument / mi- "trustee" and foreclosure is made is trustee's and $21,488 Nissan Frontier 2006 Call 541-385-5809 crofile / rec e ption 'beneficiary" i n clude grantor's failure to pay a ttorney's fees n o t K ing Cab X E 2 W D The Bulletin Classifieds © s UBA R U number 2009-54730„ their respective suc- when due, the follow- exceeding the ¹ 45579. $12, 9 8 8 Buick LeSabre Cuscovering the following cessors in interest, if ing sums: Amount due amounts provided by 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. described real prop- any. Pursuant to Or- as of May 8, 2013 De- said ORS 86.753. In tom 2004, rare 75k, 877-266-3821 erty situated in said egon Law, this sale $6000, worth way linquent P a y ments construing this notice, Dlr ¹0354 Oregoe County an d S t a te, will not be deemed fi- from March 05, 2011 the masculine gender more. leather, Aurosnurre to-wit: APN: 149081 nal until the Trustee's 1 payments at $52.15 includes the feminine heated seats, nice 541-598-3750 LOT 12, BLOCK 12, deed has been isToyota Camrysr each $52.15 1 pay- and the neuter, the wheels. Good tires, aaaoregonautosource.com NEWBERRY ES- sued b y Q U A LITY ments at $ 1 ,826.91 singular includes the 7984, SOLD; 30 mpg, white. TATES P HASE L OAN SERV I C E t h e word 1985 SOLD; each $ 1 , 8 26.91 1 plural, Convinced? Call Bob "grantor" includes any DESCHUTES CORPORATION OF payments at $ 7986 parts car 541-318-9999 COUNTY, OREGON. WASHINGTON. 1,835.04 e a c h $ successor in interest only one left! $500 Commonly known as: there are any irregu- 1,835.04 1 payments to the grantor as well Buick Century Limited Call for details, 52674 A MMON larities dis c overed at $1 ,843.56 each $ as any other person 2000, r u n s gr e at, 541-548-6592 ROAD, LA PINE, OR within 10 days of the beautiful car. $3400. 1,843.56 1 payments owing an obligation, 97739 Both the ben- date of this sale, that at $1,852.19 each $ the performance of Subaru Baj a 2 0 0 5, 541-312-3085 eficiary a n d the t he trustee will r e - 1,852.19 1 payments which is secured by A WD, leather, b e d Buick Lucerne CXS WHEN YOU SEE THIS trustee have elected scind the sale, return at $1,860.92 each $ said trust deed, and liner, tow. 2006 sedan, V8, to sell the said real the buyer's money 1,860.92 1 payments the words "trustee" Oo Vin ¹1 03619 ~ "beneficiary" Northstar 4.6L enproperty to satisfy the and take further ac- at $1,869.76 each $ and $16,988. their gine, silver, black obligations secured by tion as necessary. If 1,869.76 1 payments include leather, new $36,000; On a classified ad said trust deed and the sale is set aside at $1,878.71 each $ respective successors S UB A R U . 8UBARUOPSENDCOM 92K miles, 18" wheels go to notice has been re- for any reason, in1,878.71 1 payments i n interest, i f a n y . 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. & much more, best www.bendbulletin.com corded pursuant to cluding if the Trustee at $1,887.77 each $ Anyone having any 877-266-3821 to the sale offer over $7900. to view additional Section 86.735(3) of is unable to convey 1,887.77 1 payments objection on a n y gro u nds Dlr ¹0354 Oregon Revised Stattitle, the Purchaser at Bob, 541-318-9999 photos of the item.

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LEGAL NOTICE Foreclosure Notice Brosterhous Storage 61380 Brosterhous Road, Bend 97702 Notice of foreclosure sale on Saturday June 15th at 9:00 AM to satisfy lien against the following unit: Kara Borden (unit ¹123); Eli Johnson (unit ¹1 6)

utes: the default for which the foreclosure

Legal Notices •

Legal Notices

name and address of the bu s iness or individual w h o is handling the f oreclosure sale i s shown on this notice under th e h e ading Y ou TO RES I D ENTIAL "TRUSTEE". TENANTS: The must mail or deliver property in which you your proof not later are l i v ing is in than 8 / 9/2013 (30 foreclosure. A foreclo- days before the date sure sale is scheduled first s e t for the f or S eptember 1 0 , f oreclosure sal e ) . 2 013. U n less th e Your proof must be in lender who is writing and should be f oreclosing on t h i s a copy of your rental property is paid, the agreement or lease. If f oreclosure will g o you do not have a through and someone written rental n ew will o w n t h i s agreement or lease, property. The you can provide other following information proof, su c h as applies to you only if receipts for rent you you occupy and rent paid. ABOUT YOUR t his property a s a SECURITY DEPOSIT residential d w e lling Under state law, you under a le g i timate m ay a p pl y yo u r rental agreement. The security deposit and information does not any rent you paid in apply to you if you advance against the own this property or if current rent you owe you a r e not a your landlord. To do residential tenant. If this, you must notify the foreclosure goes your l a n dlord in through, the business writing that you want or individual who buys to subtract the amount this property at t he of yo u r sec u rity foreclosure sale has deposit o r pr e paid the right to r e quire rent from you r ent you to move out. The payment. You may do buyer must first give this only for the rent you an eviction notice you owe you current in wri t in g that l andlord. If y o u d o specifies the date by this, you must do so which you must move before the foreclosure out. The buyer may sale. The business or n ot give y o u t h i s individual who buys this property at the notice until after the foreclosure sale foreclosure sale is not happens. If you do not responsible to you for l eave b e fore th e any deposit or prepaid m ove-out date, t h e rent you paid to your buyer can have the l andlord. ABOU T s heriff remove y o u YOUR TEN A N CY from the property after AFTER THE a court hearing. You FORECLOSURE will receive notice of SALE The business or the c o urt h e a ring. individual who buys FEDERAL LAW t his property at t h e REQUIRES YOU TO foreclosure sale may BE NOTIFIED IF YOU be willing to allow you ARE OC C U PYING to stay as a t enant AND RENTING THIS instead of r equiring PROPERTY A S A you to move out. You RESIDENTIAL s hould contact t h e DWELLING UNDER buyer to discuss that A L EGIT I MATE possibility if you would RENTAL like to s tay. Under AGREEMENT, state law, if the buyer FEDERAL LAW accepts rent from you, REQUIRES THE signs a new B UYER T O GIV E r esidential rent a l YOU N O T IC E IN agreement with you or WRITING A CERTAIN does not notify you in NUMBER OF DAYS writing within 30 days BEFORE THE after the date of the BUYER CAN foreclosure sale that REQUIRE YOU TO you must move out, M OVE O UT . T H E the buyer becomes FEDERAL LAW THAT your new landlord and REQUIRES THE m ust m a intain t h e B UYER T O GIV E property. Otherwise, YOU THIS NOTICE the buyer is not your IS EFFECTIVE UNTIL l andlord and i s n o t DECEMBER 31, responsible for 2012. Under federal maintaining the law, the buyer must p roperty o n you r give you at least 90 behalf and you must days notice in writing move out by the date before requiring you the buyer specifies in to move out. If you are a notice to you. YOU renting this property SHOULD CONTINUE under a fi x ed-term T O PAY RENT TO lease (for example, a YOUR L A N DLORD six-month or one-year UNTIL THE lease), you may stay PROPERTY IS SOLD until the end of your TO ANOTHER l ease term. I f t h e BUSINESS OR buyer wants to move INDIVIDUAL OR i n and u se thi s UNTIL A COURT OR property as the A L ENDER T ELLS b uyer's prim a r y YOU OTHERWISE. IF residence, the buyer YOU DO NOT PAY can give you written RENT, YOU CAN BE notice and require you EVICTED. AS to move out after 90 EXPLAINED ABOVE, days, even if you have YOU MAY BE ABLE a f ixed-term lease TO A PP L Y A w ith more t han 9 0 DEPOSIT YOU days left. STATE LAW MADE OR PREPAID w hatsoever will b e afforded an opportunity t o be heard as t o t h o se objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. N OTICE

NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS: IF THE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY, STATE LAW S T I LL REQUIRES THE B UYER T O GIV E YOU N O T IC E IN W RITING B E F O R E REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE OC C U PYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY A S A T ENANT IN GO O D FAITH. EVEN IF THE FEDERAL LAW R EQUIREMENT IS NO LONGER EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 3 1, THE 2012, REQUIREMENT UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR S ITUATION.

R ENT Y O U PA I D AGAINST YOUR C URRENT REN T O BLIGATION. BE S URE TO KEEP PROOF O F A NY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE AND OF ANY NOTICE YOU GIVE RECEIVE OR CONCERNING THE A PPLICATION OF YOUR DEPOSIT OR Y OUR PREP A I D RENT. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR A NY P ERSON T O TRY TO FORCE YOU T O L EAVE Y O U R HOME WIT H O UT F IRST GOING T O COURT TO E V I CT Y OU. FOR M O R E INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU MAY Under state law, if you WISH TO CONSULT have a fix e d-term A LAWYER. If y o u

lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days notice in writing before requiring you

believe you need legal assistance, c o ntact the Oregon State Bar at 800-452-7636 and

ask for lawyer referral s ervice. Cont a ct t o move out. If t h e i nformation fo r t h e buyer wants to move Oregon State Bar is i n and u se thi s i ncluded w i t h t h i s property a s the notice. If you do not b uyer's prim a r y have enough money residence, the buyer to pay a lawyer and can give you written are otherwise eligible, notice and require you you may be able to to move out after 30 receive legal days, even if you have assistance for f r ee. a f ixed-term lease I nformation abo u t w ith more than 3 0 whom to contact for days left. If you are free legal assistance renting u n der a may b e obt a ined month-to-month or t hrough Safenet a t week-to-week rental 800-SAFENET. agreement, the buyer DATED: 5/ 8 / 2 013 must give you at least REGIONAL 3 0 days n otice i n TRUSTEE writing before SERVICES requiring you to move CORPORATION out. IMPORTANT: For Trustee By: MELANIE the b u yer t o be BEAMAN, required to give you AUTHORIZED notice under s t ate AGENT 6 16 1st law, you must prove Avenue, Suite 5 0 0, to the b usiness or Seattle, W A 9 8 1 04 individual w h o is Phone: (206) handling the 340-2550 Sale foreclosure sale that Information: you are o ccupying http://www.rtrustee.co A-4385812 a nd r e n ting thi s m property as a 5/21/2013, 5/28/2013, residential d w e lling 6/04/2013, 6/11/2013. under a le g i timate rental agreement. The


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EA I

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STUBBRS

16 Oz Selected Varieties EA

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18Oz Selected Varieties

18 EA

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FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, JUN 04, 2013 PAGE I 3


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13 to 14 Oz, Selected Varieties

EA

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PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, JUN 04,2013 I FOOD

CARPI SUN

r I 4 LESS - BEND

88 EA

KETTLECHIPS 8.5 Oz Selected Varieties

18 EA

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WESTERN FAMILYPOP 12 Pack, 12 Oz Cans, Selected Varieties

LINIIT 4

46 Oz Selected Varieties

WESTERN FAMILY APPLE JUICE BLENDS 64 Oz, Selected Varieties

EA + DEP

EA

EA

WESTERNFAMILY CORN 5 GREENBEANS

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98

34.5 Oz Classic 8 French

FOR

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15 Oz

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Selected Varieties

LIMIT 12

FOR

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24 Oz

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WESTERNFAMILY EGG NOODLES

WESTERNFAMILY INSTANT OATMEAL

10.75 Oz

12 Oz Selected Varieties

EA I

LIMIT6

FOR

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38 EA

WESTERNFAMILY PAPER PLATES 100 Count

58 EA

1 I

FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, JUN 04,2013 IPAGE 5


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Washington Grown

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. ~' $ 4 8 LB

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BONELESS PORKLOIN Whole In Bag 4

CHICKEN LEGQUARTERS Southern Grown Frozen

LB i

I

PAGE 6 I TUESDAY, JUN 04,2013 I FOOD 4 LESS - BEND

CANTALO UPE California Grown Ripe & Juicy

S S8 LB

I

LB

LB

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Full of Juice

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LIMIT2 I

$ $8 LIMIT 6

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COCOFRESH WATER 17.5 Oz

EA

60z Selected Varieties

$ $8

I

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EA

ANNIE'S MAC N CHEESE

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$ $8

WHE AT

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EA

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RESER'S BAJA CAFE BURRITOS

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21 to 25 Count 2 Lb Bag

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$48 EA

I

FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, JUN 04,2013 IPAGE 7


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3 LB, Potato, Macaroni, Mustard Potato

LIMIT 3

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16 Oz

LINIT 4

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LIMIT2

LIMIT 5

EA

I

EA

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NEWMAN'S OWN LEMONADE

60z Regular & Light Selected Varieties

16 Oz Selected Varieties

a

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64 Oz

FOR

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Virgin lemonade aaa 'aa'

FOR

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PAGE 8 I TUESDAY, JUN 04,2013 I FOOD

i

EBERHARDPS

Selected Varieties

16 Oz

LIMIT 3

LB I

RED BARON CLASSICCRUST PIZZA

I

4 LESS - BEND

TILLAMOOK SHREDDED CHEESE

COTTAGE CHEESE EA

Regular & Lite

FOR

80z Selected Varieties

88 EA


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