Bulletin Daily Paper 8-7-13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$

WEDNESDAY August 7,2013

. ',.;. ree in ere acc,u coseEaton preview SPORTS• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Mars explorationWhat the Curiosity rover has

seen and done in ayear on the red planet, and what it plans to ' do next. A3

Southern

smoke; more fires

Meteor shower —The Perseids will light up the Cen-

tral Oregon night sky.D1

possibe

Washingtonouting —see

By Dylan J. Darling

what the ice age floods left behind at Sun Lakes-Dry Falls State Park.D3

The Bulletin

More thunder and light-

ning, and possibly wildfires, could be coming this week to Central Oregon. The National Weather Service is issuing a fire weather watch from 11 a.m. today through Sun-

Child health —First evidence reported of a national decline in childhood obesity.A2

day, said MeXiCO —Stakes are high as the country pledges to tack-

Rachel Trimarco, a forecaster with the agency in Pendleton. The watch is a steP below

le a difficult job: bringing order to its southern border.A6

Odituary —Robert Bellah, sociologist who probed the

a red flag

American soul.BS

militia leader charged in 2012

Benghazi attack.A2

And a Wed exclusive-

warning.

Tired of cars doing 150 mph and more on the way into Ve-

gas, officers crack down. bendbnlletin.com/extras Roh Kerr /The Bulletin

Suicide'slink to combat

disputed in new study By James Dao New York Times News Service

In the largest study of its kind, military medical researchers have concluded that deployments to war zones and exposure to combat were not major factors behind a significant increase in suicides among military personnel from 2001 to 2008, according to a paper published Tuesday. The study, published online by the Journal of the American Medical Association, corroborates what many military medical experts have been saying foryears:thatthe forces underlying the spike in military suicides are similar to those in the civilian world. They include mental illness, substance abuse, and financial and relationship problems. "The findings from this study are not consistent with the assumption that specific deployment-related characteristics, such as length of deployment, number of deployments, or combat experiences, are directly associated with increased suicide risk," the authors, based at the Naval Health Research Center in San Diego, wrote. "Instead, the risk factors associated with suicide in this military population are consistent with civilian populations, including male sex and mental disorders." See Suicide/A5

health,A4

warning, which the weather service issues when conditions are prime for thunderstorms andfire. Depending on how storms develop today, she said, the watch could be elevated to a red flag

ln world news —Libyan

EDITOR'SCHOICE

inSida • Another wildfire death,B3 • Sm oke

Air Force veteran Landon Clark, right, a fixed-wing flight instructor for Professional Air, instructs aviation student Chris Lyons on a flight simulator at the Bend Municipal Airport. Clark graduated from COCC's aviation program without having to pay out of pocket.

• The new incarnation of the bill offers a stipend and greater flexibility, putting a COCC aviation degree at least $80,000 in tuition within veterans' reach By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

From the window of a Cessna 172 flying west of Tumalo Falls, you can see what looks like a solar panel rising above a sea of ponderosa pines, half of them dead from beetles. Two local flight instructors, Landon Clark and Simeon Gough, are so familiar with the route they're surprised they never before noticed the few square feet of glass poking above the

forest canopy, seemingly in the middle of nowhere. Flying on, they spoke casually to each other through their headsets, noting places they had recently hiked and experienced close calls. Rain clouds brought the unlimited skies so familiar to Central Oregon pilots to a low ceiling. "Moving to the desert for six years really makes you appreciate Central Oregon,"

Post-9/11 Gl Bill full benefits • Full tuition and fees for 36 months (four academic years) at a public school. • Private schools are eligible if enrolled in the "Yellow Ribbon"

program. • Monthly living stipend based on school's ZIP code.

• Annual stipend for books and supplies of up to $1,000. • One-time rural benefit of $500 for those relocating from a

rural area. • Up to $2,000 for licensing test. • Benefits available15 years from end of service. • Benefits begin accruing after 90 days active service.

• Full benefits reached after 36 months of active service. Source: Department of Veterans Affairs

Clark said before the flight. "I'm really into the outdoors and seeing everything I can. With flying, I've seen more of Oregon than I did after 20 years of life." Clark, 30, and Gough, 33, are graduates of the aviation program at Central Oregon Community College, which teaches students fixed-wing

and helicopter aviation. For Clark and Gough, their service in the armed forces allowed them to attend COCC without paying out of pocket, giving them the chance to focus for two years on flying and studying. "I would estimate that 60 to65 percent ofour students are veterans," said

Karl Baldessari, head of the COCC aviation program. "For most people, getting into aviation is cost-prohibitive." According to a new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office, nearly I million veterans used $10.9 billion in benefits to pursue degrees and certificates in 2011. And a 2011 report by Boeing found that airlines will need more than 450,000 new pilots by 2029. There is an equally acute need for helicopter pilots, as the profession consists of mostly Vietnam-era pilots who are nearing retirement en masse. "This level of benefits is fairly unprecedented," Baldessari said. "And, more importantly, these students are entering a profession where we need people with the level of discipline the services teach." See Flight /A4

A large, slow-moving low pressure system is expected to hit Northern California today, pushing unstable air into Southern and Central Oregon, according to the Weather Service. The result will be scattered thunderstorms. See Fire/A5

3 more

resignfrom COVOboard By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

With threemore board members departing this week, a majority of the 15-member board of Central Oregon Veterans Outreach have resigned in just over two weeks in a dispute over the board president living in a house meant for low-income veterans. Since January, board President Linda Heatley has lived in a COVOowned house in Bend leased to Marine veteran Larry Burger, along with Kim Caldwell Burger, who is Larry Burger's wife, Heatley's niece and a paid employee of COVO. See COVO/A4

Washington edges warily into housing finance By BinyaminAppelbaum New York Times News Service

In the seven years since the housing market started to fall apart, politicians of both parties have promised repeatedly to build a better system for fi-

TODAY'S WEATHER Chance of showers High 84, Low 58

Page B6

ANALYSIS nancingthe American dream of owning a home. There is little sign of progress. Instead, the stopgap nationalization of housing finance has

Inside

through Fannie Mae and Freddie Macand the FederalHousing Administration, effectively setting terms and providing money for 9 out of 10 purchases

and refinanced loans. President Barack Obama's speech Tuesday is the latest signal that Washington may finally be returning to where the financial crisis started. See Housing /A4

The Bulletin

+ .4 We usereoycled newsprint

guaranteedabout 87 percent of

• Obama outlines plans for Fannie, new mortgage loans last year, Freddie,C6 hardened into one of the most enduring legacies of the Great Recession. The government

INDEX Busines s/Stocks 05-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope 0 6 Outdoors 01-6 01-4 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1- 6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Ob i tuaries B5 TV / Movies 06

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 110,No.219, 30 pages, 5 sections

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TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

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en, Infants and Children program, which provides food vouchers and other services. It's harder to get national data on preschoolersof more affluent families, so it's not clear if the trend applies to all young children. But experts note that low-income kids tend to be heavier. "If you're going to look at the problem of obesity early in childhood, the group at highest risk are low-income kids. That's what makes this data so valuable for understanding trends in this major public health problem," said Dr. Matthew Davis, a University of Michigan researcher who tracks health policy and children's health issues. The biggest declines were in Florida, Georgia, Missouri, New Jersey and South Dakota. Each saw their obesity numbers fall at least I percentage point. Other states showing improvement: C alifornia, I o wa , I d a ho, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, New H ampshire, New Mexico and Washington.

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Oregon Lottery results

Python strangulations —Af00-pound python blamed in the strangling deaths of two

Canadian boysapparently escaped from its enclosure, slithered through a ventilation system and fell through the ceiling into the room where

the young brothers were sleeping, authorities said Tuesday. Asnakeexpert said it was possible that the python was spooked and simply clung

to whatever it landed on. Police are treating the deaths in Campbellton, New Brunswick, as a criminal investigation.

Bush artery — Former President George w. Bush successfully underwent a heart procedure in Dallas on Tuesday after doctors discovered a blockage in an artery during his annual physical, Bush spokesman Freddy Ford said. "At the

recommendation of his doctors, President Bush agreed to have a stent placed to open the block-

age," Ford said. "The procedure was performed successfully this morning, without complication, at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital."

Bush,67,wasexpectedto bedischargedtoday and resume his normal schedule the following day.

Japan nuclear leak —Tonsof contaminated

what a top regulator has called a crisis. The water

contains strontium — aparticularly dangerous isotope if it gets into the food chain. Theplant's

alike are worried.

Afghan olootionS —Despite efforts to broker

Jg

a peacedealbetween the Afghan government and the Taliban, the insurgent group will not partici-

pate in presidential elections next year, its leader said in a statement Tuesday. The group's stance on the elections is one of the first public indica-

tions that, even asmembers of the Taliban set up an office in the Gulf state of Qatar to ostensibly g l ~l ! .. L I

Hgteko

lrlll

5

13 6 9 9

r

start peace talks, the group doesnot plan to participate in elections next April. PakiStan attaCkS —A bomb blast that appeared to be targeting a provincial government

"

minister killed11 people before dawn today at a soccer field in southern Pakistan, the latest

in a series of attacks that left 28 people dead

orprc. 'A. sr~s

across the country, officials said. The bomb planted next to the field in the city of Karachi

k~

REDMOND BUREAU

One mOnth: $17(Printoniy: Sfe>

figures.

\

was hidden in a motorcycle, said senior police

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of willingness to release Muslim Brotherhood

low in the openocean. But regulators and critics

TALK TO AN EDITOR

TO SUBSCRIBE

ment as "unacceptable interference in internal politics." The new leadership, emboldened by

operator says it does not yet pose a health threat because levels of the contaminants are still very

Traci Oonaca ......................

CORRECTIONS

Republican SenatorsJohn McCain and Lindsey

Grahammetwithasharpresponse,denounced by interim President Adly Mansour in a brief state-

plant have overwhelmed anunderground barrier and are emptying daily into the Pacific, creating

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risk making "a hugemistake." Themessage from

groundwater from the stricken Fukushima nuclear

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

new military-backed leaders: Release Islamist figures as a gesture to the Muslim Brotherhood or

mass demonstrations of support, showed nosign

" It's not like we're out of t h e The Associated Press woods," he said during a conference ATLANTA — For many years, call with reporters Tuesday. doctors have been wringing their Obesity continues to be one of hands as more and more U.S. chil- the nation's leading public health dren grew fat. Now, that may be problems — health officials call it a changing, with the first evidence longstanding epidemic. A third of of a national decline in childhood U.S. children and teens and more obesity. than two-thirds of adults are obese In 18 states, there were at least or overweight. slight drops in obesity for low-inSome hope the report marks a come preschoolers, health officials turning point. "I really do think this is a pivotal said Tuesday. After decades on the rise, child- moment," said Sam Kass, executive hood obesity rates recently have director of a White House initiative essentially been flat. A few places to reduce childhood obesity. — Philadelphia, New York City and Preschoolers who are overweight Mississippi — re ported improve- or obese are five times more likely ments in the last couple of years. But than other children to be heavy as the report from the Centers for Dis- adults, which means greater risks ease and Control Prevention shows of high cholesterol, high blood sugsignsofwider-ranging progress. ar, asthma and even mental health "Now, for the first time, we're see- problems. ing a significant decrease in childTuesday's study used height and hood obesity" nationally, said Dr. weight measurementsfrom nearly Thomas Frieden, CDC director. 12 million low-income children in 40 But rates are still too high, he add- states. The data was collected from ed. Onein 8 preschoolers is obese in 2008 through 2011. the United States, and it's even more Most of the children ages 2 to 4 common in black and Hispanic kids. were enrolled in the federal WomBy Mike Stobbe

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

Egypt viSit —Two U.S.Senators came to Egypt Tuesdaywith a messagefor the country's

official Razaq Dharejo. The bomb went off near the vehicle of provincial minister Javed Nag-

t.

hori, who was leaving after witnessing a latenight match between local teams in the Lyari Ham Mohammed /The Associated Press

Police stop cars Tuesday at a checkpoint near the U.S. em-

bassy in Sanaa,Yemen. Yemen wasthrust back into the forefront of the international fight against terrorism Tuesday when the U.S. and Britain

retaliation for a U.S.-backed military offensive that has dealt serious setbacks to the terror network's most active branch,

including the death earlier this year of its No. 2 leader. The Yemeni army, meanwhile, surrounded foreign installa-

neighborhood, said Dharejo. Naghori escaped unharmed. Iran nuka talkS —Iran's new president, HasanRouhani,onTuesdayused hisfirstnews conference to call for serious negotiations to

evacuated embassy staff due to athreatened attack, a sustions, government offices and the airport with tanks and troops pected U.S. drone killed four alleged members of al-Qaida, and in the nation's capital, Sanaa, aswell as the strategic Bab al-

solve the decade-long dispute over the country's nuclear program, and herepeatedly suggested

militants shot down a Yemeni army helicopter. As Westerners flew out of the country, Yemeni authorities launched a wide investigation into the al-Qaida threat to multiple potential targets in the impoverished Arab nation. Security officials said they believed the terror network was seeking

Mandeb straits at the entrance to the Red Sea in the southern Arabian Peninsula, drawing parallels with security measures

openness to direct talks with the United States, an idea that until recently had been unthinkable

following the 2000 bombing of the USSCole in Adenharbor

for many years. At the sametime, Rouhani said

that killed 17 American sailors.

Americans needed to take the first step in the stalled nuclear negotiations, and he would not

— The Associated Press

specify what his country would be prepared to do, if anything, to make those negotiations ad-

vance.

First charges filed in 2012Benghazi attack By Michael S. Schmidt

forcement officials are f rustrated New York Times News Service w ith the Libyan government and F ederal law enforcement authori- t he State Department because there tieshave filed murder charges have been no arrests. against Ahmed Abu Khattala, The Libyan government a prominent militia leader has little control over the arin Benghazi, Libya, in coneas of the country where the nection with the attacks on a suspects are believed to be, diplomatic mission there last and arresting them will take Sept. 11 that killed the U.S. St e vens significant negotiations and ambassador and three other c oordination between t h e A mericans, according to senior law U.S. and Libyan governments. enforcement officials. Testifying before the House JudiAt least two other foreigners have c iary Committee in May, Attorney b een charged in the attacks, the offi- General Eric Holder said the Justice cials said. Department had made significant Although the charges have been p rogress in its investigation. It is unf iled under seal in the U.S., law en- c lear, however, whether the govern-

ment had filed charges at that point. "We are at a point where we have taken steps that I would say are definitive, concrete, and we are — we will be prepared shortly, I think, to reveal all that we have done," Holder said. He added: "I'm satisfied with the progress that we have made in the investigation. Regardless of what happened previously, we have made very,very,very substantial progress in that investigation." In an interview with The New York Times in October, Abu Khattala said that he had arrived at the U.S. compound in Benghazi as gunfire broke out but that he had played no role in the attack.

LOndOn 'fatderg' —Sewerage workers have removed what they believe to be Britain's biggest

ever "fatberg" — a festering lump of flushed-away fat and other residues — from a London sewer in a special operation that took10 nights. The block-

age was discovered onJuly17 when residents of the affluent southwestern suburb of Kingston upon Thames reported trouble with flushing

their toilets. "The sewerwas almost completely clogged with over 15 tons of fat," said Gordon Hailwood, water contracts supervisor for the local water utility, Thames Water.

ROker OVerSleeping —Al Roker might want to invest in a newalarm clock. The "Today" weatherman overslept Tuesday, missing his early-morning call for The Weather Channel's "Wake Up With

Al." "After 39 years, it happened. I overslept and

missed a show. Missed ¹WUWA. But will be on time for ©today," Roker tweeted at a still-ungodly

hour of the morning. — From wire reports

As listed at www.orcgonlottery.org

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn Tuesday night are:

g~o»y~g~yyy The estimated jackpot is now $20 million.

Prosecutor: Fort Hoodgunmanmeticulously plannedattack By Nomaan Merchant and Paul J. Weber

He let both live. But moments earlier, dozThe Associated Press ens ofuniformed soldiers reFORT HOOD, Texas — Maj. ceived no quarter from Hasan, Nidal Malik Hasan fired the prosecutors said Tuesday as last of 146 bullets in his assault the Army psychiatrist's longon Fort Hood, then walked delayed trial began in a Texas outside where he met two cimilitary courtroom. vilians who asked about the With his life hanging in the commotion an d t h e l a ser- balance, Hasan made little efsighted pistol in his hand. fort to defend himself. Acting Hasan told one person not as his own attorney, he calmly to worry. He assured the other told the jury that he killed 13 it was just a training exercise people and wounded 32 others and the gun shot only paint. in the 2009 attack.

"The evidence will clearly show that I am the shooter," he said in an opening statement that lasted little more than a minute The evidence, he added, would "only show one side." His only utterance of regret was a n ac k n owledgement that he was among "imperfect Muslims trying to establish the perfect religion." "I apologize for any mistakes I made in this endeavor," said Hasan, an American-born

42-year-old who wa s p aralyzed after being shot by officers responding to the attack. He spoke from a wheelchair, wearing green Army fatigues

and a gray, bushy beard. Hasan planned the assault for months, prosecutor Col. Steve Henrickssaid,describing how the defendant stockpiled bullets, practiced at a shooting range and bought an extender kit so his pistol could hold more bullets. If convicted, Hasan could

get the death p enalty. No American soldier has been executed since 1961, and military prosecutorsshowed that they would take no chance of fumbling details that could jeopardize any conviction. They described a calculating Hasan, armed with two handguns and carrying paper towels in his pants pockets to conceal the sounds of rattling ammunition as he walked through a deployment-readinesscenter on the sprawling base.


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

M ART TODAY

A3

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

It'sWe dnesday,Aug.7,the 219th day of 2013. There are 146 days left in the year.

DISCOVERY

STUDY

HAPPENINGS

NOAA report card for 2012: more warming

CleVeland —The house of Ariel Castro, where threewomen were imprisoned andraped for a decade, is scheduled to be torn down. POWerball —Drawing will take place, with the jackpot at $425 million.

HISTORY Highlight:In1782, Gen. George Washington created the Order of the Purple Heart,

By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

a decoration to recognize merit in enlisted men and noncom-

missioned officers. In1882, the famous feud between the Hatfields of West Virginia and the McCoys of Kentucky erupted into full-

scale violence. In1927,the already opened

Peace Bridgeconnecting Buffalo, N.Y., and Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada, was officially dedicated. In1942, U.S. and other allied

forces landed atGuadalcanal, marking the start of the first major allied offensive in the Pacific

during World WarII. (Japanese forces abandoned the island the

following February.) In 1947, the balsa wood raft Kon-Tiki, which had carried

a six-man crew 4,300 miles across the Pacific Ocean, crashed into a reef in aPolynesian archipelago; all six crew members reached landsafely.

!

' '4

r.

In 1959, the United States launched the Explorer 6 satellite. In1963, first lady Jacqueline

Kennedy gavebirth to a boy, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, who died two days later of respira-

tory distress syndrome. In1964,Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin resolution, giving President Lyndon B. John-

son broad powers in dealing

New YorkTimes NewsService

NASA's Curiosity rover captured the dozens of images that constitute this panorama of Mars' Mount Sharp. According to NASA, Curiosity has already traveled more than a mile, taken more than 36,700 images and fired 75,000 laser shots to analyze rocks and soil.

NASA's Curiosity rover is slowly making its way to Mount Sharp, a Martian mountain whose rocks could provide clues on whether the planet was ever habitable.

mer,and whopping tempo-

with reported North Vietnam-

ese attacks on U.S.forces. In1971, the Apollo15 moon

mission endedsuccessfullyas itscommand modulesplashed down in the Pacific Ocean.

In1989, a plane carrying U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Texas,

and 14 others disappeared over Ethiopia. (The wreckage of the planewas found six days later; there were nosurvivors.) In1993, the public got its

first glimpse inside Buckingham Palace aspeople were given the opportunity to tour

theLondon home ofQueen Elizabeth II. (Proceeds were

earmarked to help repair fire damage at Windsor Castle.) In1998, terrorist bombs at

U.S. embassies in Kenyaand Tanzania killed 224 people,

including 12 Americans. In2007,San Francisco's Barry Bonds hit home run No. 756 to break Hank Aaron's storied record with one out in the fifth

inning of a gameagainst the Washington Nationals.

Ten years ago:A bombing outside the Jordanian Embas-

sy in Baghdad killed19 people. An lndonesian court sentenced Amrozi bin Nurhasyim to death

in the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people (he was

executed in 2008). Five yearsago:President George W. Bush,speakingin Bangkok, Thailand, praisedthe spread of freedomin Asia while

sharply criticizing oppression and humanrights abuses in China, Myanmar and North Korea; the president then traveled

to Beijing to attendthe opening of the Olympicgames. One year ago:Jared Lee Loughner agreed to spend the rest of his life in prison, accepting that he went on a

deadly shooting rampageatan Arizona political gathering in 2011 and sparing the victims a lengthy, possibly traumatic

death-penalty trial.

BIRTHDAYS Former MLB pitcher Don Larsen is 84. Humorist Garrison Keillor is 71. Former

diplomat, talk show host and activist Alan Keyes is 63. Actor David Duchovny is 53. Actor

Harold Perrineau is 50. Actress Charlize Theron is 38. — From wire reports

By Kenneth Chang New York Times News Service

On the first anniversary of its landing, halfway through its primary mission to Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover still

71'aCking the CuriOSityrOVer

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-; ~SOL84 (0 t.31,2012) '-'- Curiosity takes a self. portr ait next to a dune called Rocknest and spends a month there, scooping and testing samples of soil. t~' 8

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NASA's Curiosity rover has started its Iong

.

has a long way to go.

drive to Mount Sharp. Dots on the map show g

To be exact, 4.4 miles. That is the distance to the foothills of Mount Sharp, an 18,000foot mountain whose rocks could provide clues to a time on Mars when life could have thrived. Because Curiosity is driving at a careful pace — up to 100 yards a day — the journey will take eight or ni ne months. For now, science is secondary as Curiosity crawls across a barren, largely uninteresting landscape. "Pretty much pure driving, pedal to the metal," said John Grotzinger, the mission's project scientist. An interactive feature at nytimes.com/scienceoffers a chronology of where Curiosity has been and what it has done so far; new images and information will be added as the rover progresses. According to NA SA, Curiosity has already traveled more than a mile, taken more than 36,700 images and fired 75,000 lasershots to analyze rocks and soil. T he first day — o r s o l , the term for a Martian day, which is about 40 m inutes longer than a day on Earth — began in the early morning of Aug. 6, 2012. (At mission control at N A SA's Jet P ropulsion L a b oratory i n Pasadena, Calif., it was late Aug. 5.) The spacecraft carrying Curiosity pierced the top of t h e M a r t ia n a t mosphere at more than 13,000 miles per hour. In precisely choreographed m aneuvers s o r i s k y t h a t NASA called t h em "seven minutes of t e rror," Curiosi ty was dropped to an u n d amaged standstill o n t h e surface. T he r over, r o ughly t h e size ofa car, ended up right where it had been aimed — within Gale Crater, a 96mile-wide scar from an asteroid impact at least 3.5 billion years ago. In that time l ayers o f s e d i ment f i l l e d much of th e c r ater, which

the rover's location at the end of each Martian day, or sol.

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'

TSOLO(Aug 6,2012) Curiosity lands in Gale Crater and sends back its first — a' ~<No~Ne '~ images of Mount Sharp.

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,; , ' SOL 170 (Jan. 27, 2013) o ig Curiosity takes dozens of o~ phot o s of Mount Sharp and a shallow depression , +i, named Yellowknife Bay. More than 30 of them tt tt, 200 FEET were used to make the " panorama at top.

SOL 340 (July 21) The rover makes its longest drive to date: 329 feet.

gg

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nta SOL 349 (July 30) o ~ The rover has now ~

driven one mile since landing.

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Po

.

SOL 3 44(July 25) ~ The rover looks back at its tracks after several consecutive i i~ days of driving. 4

30L 355 (Monday) Curiosity will take months to reach Mount Sharp.

WASHINGTON — Anew massive federal study says the world in 2012 sweltered with continued signs of climate change. Rising sea levels, snow melt, heat buildup in the oceans, and melting Arcticsea ice and Greenland ice sheets, all broke or nearly broke records, but temperaturesonly sneaked into the top 10. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on Tuesday issued a peer-reviewed 260-page report, which agency chief Kathryn Sullivan calls its a nnual "checking on t h e pulse of the planet." The report, written by 384 scientists around the world, compiles data already released, but it puts them in context of what's been happening to Earth over decades. "It's critically important to compile a big picture," N ational C l i matic D a t a Center director Tom Karl says. "The signs that we see are of a warming world." Sullivan says what is noticeable "are remarkable changes in key climate indicators," mentioning dramatic spikes in ocean heat content, a record melt of Arctic sea ice in the sum-

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rary melts of ice in most of Greenland last year. The data also show a recordhigh sea level. The most noticeable and startlingchanges seen were in the Arctic, says report coeditor Deke Arndt, climate monitoring chief at the data center. Breaking r ecords in the Arctic is so common that it is becoming the new normal, says study co-author Jackie Richter-Menge of the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers' Cold Regions Research and E n gineering Laboratory in Hanover, N.H. Karl says when looked at together, all the indicators show a climate that is changing over the decades. Individually, however, the story isn't as simple. Karl sayssurface temperatures haven't risen in the last 10 years, but he notes that is only a blip in time due to natural variability. When looking at more scientifically meaningful time frames of 30 years, 50 years and more than 100 years, temperatures ar e r i s i ng quite a bit, Karl said. Since records have been kept in 1880, all 10 of the warmest years ever have been in the past 15 years, NOAA records show.

' 40 SIILE5-New York Times News Service

Source: NASA

were then somehow carved away, leaving Mount Sharp at the center. O bservations f ro m o r b i t pointed to the p resence of clay minerals at the base of the mountain, named in honor ofRobert Sharp, a promin ent g eologist a n d M a r s expert. Because clays form in water that has a neutral pH, that made Gale Crater a promising place to look for signs that Mars could have once been hospitable for life. Before it h eaded toward Mount Sharp, Grotzinger's team decided to send Curiosity on a detour to investigate terrain that looked to be an intriguing confluence of threedifferent rock types. Along th e w a y , C u r i osity spotted what looked like an a ncient streambed. At t h e site, in the first rock it drilled on Feb. 8 (Sol 182), it struck

the jackpot — clays. This rock in t his part of Mars formed in watery conditions that were surprisingly Earthlike. "Unquestionably, Mars was a habitable planet in its ancient past," Grotzinger said. Curiosity, however, does not have instruments that can directly search for life, past or present. Although the primary mission is scheduled for only two years, Curiosity could be exploring Mars far longer. "It looks great," said Jennifer Trosper, the deputy project manager. "I think overall the rover has worked better than expected." But lest anyone think that everything on the $2.5 billion mission would a lways work perfectly, a computer memory glitch in late February knocked Curiosity out of action for a couple of weeks.

"This is a very sober reminder that the rover ultimately has a finite lifetime," Grotzinger said.

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Flight

Housing

Continued from A1 A n associate degree i n aviation from C OCC t akes two years of hard work and $ 80,000 in t u ition. But t h e Post-9/11 GI Bill, signed into law in 2008, helps veterans afford the cost of aviation training. The benefits received depend on the number of days served, with the m aximum value equalling ful l t u i tion and fees for a public universityfor36 months or four academic years. Veterans also receive money fortextbooks and a monthly living stipend, which i n B e n d i s a r o u nd $1,300. Previous incarnations of the GI Bill did not provide a stipend and o ffered less m oney toward tuition w i t h greater restrictions on how that money was spent.

"Here's a group of folks

w ho otherwise w ould n o t have had this opportunity to study aviation," Baldessari said. "They are often k i ds who out of high school didn't go to college but served their country. At 18 they were in boot camp, and now a f ew years later they are professional pilots." While the military offered these students many skills, B aldessari e s t imates t h a t only a small percentage of his students were directly involved in aviation. "Most of t h ese v eterans weren't able to be pilots in the service;in most branches you have to be a commissioned officer," Baldessari said. "I think a l o t j o i ned because they had indirect associations with a viation. Either t h ey were transported or worked on a carrier, maybe they saw a helicopter in action. Some were even mechanics." Baldessari said most students come to the program with more excitement about flying than knowledge about a pilot's typical career path. A large component of t h e program involves familiarizing students with the aviation industry and the very different paths available to destinations like the major airlines and a i r borne f i r e fighting. For many students, their first job out of school is as a flight instructor. "People always find t h at funny," Baldessari said. "But it makes a lot o f s ense. It doesn't pay a t r e m endous amount, but it allows them to build hours without paying out of pocket. Also, you've just come out o f t r a i ning, having spent two years being taught rules and regulations, so it's all fresh. After two or three years asan instructor, you have enough flight hours to be marketable at the next level."

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Air Force veteran and flight instructor Simeon Gough, left, works with student Kurt van Krieken, back right, during pre-flight Monday at the Bend Municipal Airport. After he has built up enough hours as an instructor, Gough is considering a career in flying for Iaw enforcement or firefighting. always too expensive." Clark at first didn't realize that aviation would be covered by the GI Bill. " When I f o u n d o u t m y benefitswould cover the program, it sure sounded better than p h a r macy work, which I had been focused on," "When I

airplanes'?" A fter h e h a s b u i l t u p enough hours as an instructor, Gough may pursue a path that will take him on more dramatic flights than the one out past Tumalo Falls. "I'm looking more toward law enforcement or he said. "Military fD U rI gpU firefighting," he people are ty pe said. "Law could A, they want ad- ITIy be anywhere from VBI' venture, t o s e e WOU I Cf CO supporting speedd h»e gge prOgr jg ing tickets to looka high-stress job. ing for illegal subDealing wi th s tance grows t o weather and han- b e t t e r t hB A fol low i n g a h i g h -

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A good-natured fall 2012, Clark is f DC rivalry exists benow a fixed-wing tween h e l icopter flight i n structor — Landon Clark an d fixe d -wing for P r ofessional students. The heAir, based at the licopter s t u dents Bend Municipal Airport . He s t r ess how much smaller and plans on working his wa y up tighter knit their community to the airlines, starting on a i s . That's partly due to the cost regional route, such as Port- o f the program, at COCC more land to Redmond, and eventu- t h a n $100,000. A group of five ally moving up. His colleague i n v olved in th e COCC proGough is also a Professional g r a m a t v arious stages said Air instructor, but took a dif- t h e re is no way they would ferent path to the profession h a v e ever flown without the and has different plans for P o st-9/11 GI Bill. what's ahead. " Cost-prohibitive i s w h a t "I was t r avelling ar ound t h e y say," said Glenn Iacovthe country installing in door e t t a, 52, who served 22 years firearm ranges, and one day i n the army. I got back from a job and all Br ya n Vette, 26, built jet enI wanted to do was sleep in," g i n es in the Marines and then Gough said. "But my b uddy l e f t to work as a mechanic for woke me up early to go to a B M W . H e also appeared in recruiter. I told him I've seen a n M T V show called "Burnbases before and everyone on o u t," in which he helped build them looks goofy. But after a d r a gster. He studied at the talking to the recruiter, I was U n i v ersal Technical Institute sold and felt that it was my u n t i l he realized that his bentime to serve." efits would pay for aviation, G ough entered t h e Air s o m ething he knew he would F orce, working in d i f f e rent r a t her be doing. "I did the program in a year capacities for six years , including roles in nuclea r se- b e c ause that's all th e t i m e 'Bug that bites' curity and firearm trai ning. I h a d l eft on my benefits. I Clark saw the military as a When he left, he said, h e en- n e eded a snorkel because I way out of Central Oregon. rolled in school because he w a s buried most of the time," " I didn't see a lot of o p couldn't find a job. He start- h e said. portunity g r o w in g u p i n ed at COCC's welding proBlak e H a r ley, 27, tried to La Pine," Clark said. "I had gram, which happened to be p a y for an aviation program enough of a small town but across from Redmond Air- u n d e r th e old G I B il l a f ter not enough money for col- port. Like Clark, he ju mped being moved by the experilege, and wasn't ready for it at at the chance to study avia- e n ce of flying over Baghdad. the time anyway." tion when h e l e a rned his S p e aking about his first atClark served six years as benefits would cover the t e mpt at c ompleting a pr oa crew chief in New Mexiprogram. gram before 2008, he said, "It's a bug that bites,'' he "I was becoming poor pretty co, tending to Lockheed F117 Nighthawks, a s t ealth said. "Once you get sta rted q u i ckly." He stopped, and six ground-attack jet. His inter- it's addictive, and I didn't even m o n ths later the Post-9/11 GI est in aviation predates his want to do it for a livin g at B i l l went into effect and he reservice, he said, but prior to first. I did it because it's cool. t u r ned to flying. his Air Force service, "It was I mean, how many peopl e fly Sit ti n g i n a con f e rence

room together, the five helicopter pilots talked future careers. Dan Benson, 31, is already an instructor at Leading Edge. The others were mostly looking toward a job at Leading Edge, the flight school at the Bend airport that provides the hands-on portion of the COCC helicopter program. However, they stressed how the generosity of the Post-9/ll GI Bill makes it possible to meet the diverse needs of employers. "You can get any rating you need here, and the government will pay for it," Benson said. These ratings include mountain flying, night vision goggle training and external load, all of which are geared toward local needs. As with fixed-wing pilots, the most common first step is working as an instructor. But the students stressed the number of less-visible career paths now open to them. In Washington state, helicopters are used to dr y f i elds of cherries. There was even talk among the students of going down to New Zealand and working for the company that helped with the "Lord of the Rings" film crew. In the Gulf of Mexico, a need exists for helicopter pilots to fly between the coast and oil rigs.

Actual flying G eordy W i l k i nson, 3 2 , dropped out of high school and moved to Central Oregon for the snowboarding. His path toward aviation is a perfect example of what the GI Bill and COCC's aviation program can do for veterans. "I realized not having an education means not having money," he said. Like many others, his first choice was military service. After 4'/~ years active duty with th e M a r ines and 5 '/~ years in the Army National Guard, Wilkinson was able to enroll in the fixed-wing program with COCC and Professional Air. His goal is now to go back home to Alaska and fly small planes between villages. "The big airlines are about running c omputer systems and monitoring instruments," he said. "Up home, there is actual flying that needs to be done." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleedsC~bendbulletin.com

standards. There is growing concern, Continued from A1 however, that the government's With the housing market risk aversion and the absence on the mend, Obama said of private competition are supit was time to "wind down" p ressing the availability o f Fannie Mae and Freddie loans. The average credit score Mac. for borrowers whose loans "I believe that our hous- were bought by Freddie Mac ing system should operate rose to 756 in 2012 from 720 in where there's a limited gov- 2006, according to its securities ernment role and private filings. "Every few days somebody lending should be the backbone of the housing mar- c omes in who i n m y m i n d ket," Obama said in Phoe- should be able to get a mortnix, a city that is a symbol gage loan, and I have to turn of both housing booms and them away," said Louis Barnes, busts. a mortgage lender with the The president praised a Premier Mortgage Group in bipartisan Senate effort to Boulder, Colo. "It's like trying replace Fannie and Freddie to push ice cream out of the with a system that would wrong end of the ice cream charge lenders for explicit cone." government guarantees of Mortgage companies, some mortgage loans. And backed by some federaloffiwhile there is a risk that the cials, say Fannie and Freddie cost of borrowing would are being too aggressive in increase, Obama also said pursuingrefunds from lenders that he wanted to preserve when borrowers default, leadthe wide availability of the ing lenders to reject applicants 30-year, fixed-rate loans they deem even mildly risky. that arepreferred by most Other critics of Fannie and Americans. Freddie make th e o pposite House Republicans are point, that government support proposing a sharper retreat, for housing, by making mortpreserving only the gov- gage loans more affordable, is ernment's support for lend- distorting the economy. The ing to lower-income fami- government, they say, is sublies. Proponents say it, too, sidizing homeownership, with would preserve the avail- much of the benefit flowing to ability of 30-year fixed-rate affluent Americans, at the exloans, although they are not pense ofbiomedical research widely available in coun- or bridge repairs. tries without governmentMost of all, demands for an backed systems. overhaulof the current system "Washington has s u d- reflect the confounding realdenly come alive on hous- ity that the government, which ing finance reform," said spent vast sums cleaning up the David Stevens, president of last housing crash, is still promthe Mortgage Bankers As- ising to pay for the next one. "Taxpayers are taking on sociation, who headed the Federal Housing Adminis- trillions in risk for no discerntration during Obama's first ible policy goal," said Karen term. "We saw nothing sub- Shaw Petrou, managing partstantive prior to this year, ner of Federal Financial Anabut now we're in a housing lytics, a consulting firm. "The recovery and the odds have g overnment is r u n ning t h e clearly improved given that market, but there is no coherboth the House and Senate ent policy. You have taxpayers have weighed in." subsidizing mansions in much For all the talk, however, of the country." it will be difficult to alter The list of obstacles, howevthe government's role in er, only begins with the generic housing finance, which has facts that the Republican House remained substantially un- and theDemocratic Senate are changed for half a century agreeing on legislation of any — notwithstanding Fannie kind at a historically low rate, and Freddie's move from and that both parties are bracinformal to formal wards ing for fiscal battles this falL of the state. That is because The real challenge is drafting Americans like cheap mort- a replacement. The terms of the gage loans and it is hard to government's involvement in preserve the benefits with- housing finance have remained out the costs of the current substantially unchanged, besystem. cause the benefits are wildly Fannie, Freddie and the popular with powerful interest Federal Housing Adminis- groups, including banks, buildtration backed 87 percent ers, real estate agents — and, of of new m o r tgage loans course, homeowners. over the last five years, the P revious g enerations o f same share they backed politicians created Fannie and in 2012, according to esti- Freddie as a means of providmates by Inside Mortgage ing those benefits while preFinance, a trade publica- tending the costs did not exist. tion. In the years before The companies were declared t he crisis, less than 4 0 to be private during the fat percent of the market was years, and their shareholders government-backed. profited handsomely, even as The government's heavy everyone understood that the hand is holding down inter- government would stand beest rates, helping the hous- hind the companies during the ing market and the broader lean years. economy to recover. The average rate on a 30-year loan was 4.37 percent in July, according to Freddie Mac, a ippure Coadk / o. full percentage point above rates earlier in the year, but still very low by historical

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that day. Within the last week, board members Kevin Abel, Continued from A1 Keegan Hodges and L aura In a statement issued last Chan also resigned, according week, Heatley said she's lived to Perry and the original five. w ith her niece and her niece's The three could not be reached husband since late 2011, after Tuesday for comment. knee surgery that prevented Tuesday, Hemingway said her from living alone. Larry Burger's status as a vetThe three pay $800 to rent eran and the level of Larry and the house on Wells Acres Road Kim Burger's income qualify from COVO. the family to live in the house. On July 22, then-executive Larry and Kim Burger's indirector Alison Perry submit- come since the first of the year ted a letter to Heatley, in which projected to an annual figure of Perry indicatedshe would re- $36,185 when the application sign unless Heatley and Chuck was processed, he said, below Hemingway w er e r e moved the eligibility limit of $59,500. from the board, according to Because K i m Bur g e r's Perry. Hemingway, until De- $35,000-a-year job with COVO cember 2012, preceded Perry was new at the time, as was as executivedirector and ap- Larry Burger's job, the projecproved the agreement for Heat- tion did not account for the ley and the others to move into family's likely income over the the house. next 12 months, Hemingway Board members Liz L ee- sard. berg, Steven Wilkes, K ara He said he briefed Perry Kelly, Dennis Merrill and Ray on who was living in COVO Wheeler sent letters offering properties in D ecember, inHeatley and H emingway a cluding the arrangement with similar ultimatum that same Heatley and the Burgers, who day. They effectively resigned moved into the house Jan. l.

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Perry said she received no such briefing and only learned the Burgers lived in the house later, when Hemingway asked her to sign off on taking $1,600 off their rent to compensate the familyforthe purchase of new appliances. Perry and he r d efenders contend that regardless of Larry Burger's eligibility to live in subsidized housing, doing so with a COVO employee and COVO board member is ethically problematic. They note a passage in the organization bylaws that states, "No director, officer, employee, committee member, or person connected with the corporation shall receive at any time any of the net earnings or pecuniary profit f rom the operations of t h e corporation." In an April vote of 10 board members, four voted that a conflict of interest existed, but no lawsor policieswere broken and no action should be taken; and three members voted that the arrangement was a conflict of interest and the lease should

'R ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ - ~ be immediately terminated. Tuesday, Perry said t h at while she was uncomfortable Cosmic Coffee and,The Bulletin Bring Vou with having COVO staff and b oard members living i n a COVO-owned house, following the April vote, she let the issue rest. "Ethically, I just wanted to disengage from the situation; the board voted, it's their baby," she said. PPSIiir In late June, Perry was neThat's right, ANY gotiating with an i n dividual MENU ITEM ... interested in assisting COVO including specialty in pursuing grant funding. She coffees, smoothies, and said she apprised the individmore! ual of the situation involving CHECKOUTOUR the WellsAcres house, and the I offer ofassistance was withDRESS-UPFRIDAYS! drawn citing the apparent conflict of interest. Perry s ai d t h e e p i sode Look for us on thecorner prompted her to raise the issue ofHeatley and the Burgers' of Reed & 15th St occupancy ofthe Wells Acres OFFERVALIOWITH ORIGIMAL COUPONONLY,OHE COUPON PER house again, on the grounds VISIT, COUPOH EXPIRES 8/10/13 the perceived conflict of interest could be damaging to the organization.

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— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers~bendbulletin.com

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

AS

Suicide

IN FOCUS: CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

Continued from A1 But even as it points to nondeployment factors as paramount, the study underscores the complex interplay of war and the mental health of troops, even those who never left the United States. It suggests that the stresses of 12 years of war may have worn on all service members, creating work and travel demands far outstripping those borne by peacetime troops. "Perhaps it's not being de-

A violent and chaotic land lurchestoward crisis

ployed so much as being in a

reading fliers calling for a

war during a high-stress time period," Dr. Nancy Crum-Cianflone, the principal investigator for the Millennium Cohort Study, which provided much of the raw data for the study, said in an interview. Critics of the study said that, because its analysis ended with data from 2008, it might underestimate the impact of multiple deployments and t r a umatic brain injuries caused by roadside bombs. "Why would the authors repeatedly insist that there is no association between combat and suicide?" asked Dr. Stephen Xenakis, a psychiatrist and retired Army brigadier general. "The careful analysis of bad data generates poor evidence." C ynthia L eardMann, t h e lead author on the study, said the researchteam planned to update the study to i nclude data through 2012. But she expressed confidence that its bottom line conclusions would remain the same. "The current study includes information from when we saw a sharp increase in suicides,between 2005 and 2008," LeardMann said. "So it's demonstrating that, even in that period, we don't see association with deployment." Yet even providersof mental health care and advocates for veterans who praised the quality of the study cautioned that its findings should not be oversimplified to suggest that deployment has nothing to do with suicide. Those providers and advocates say that deployment can prompt or intensify problems that are direct causes of suicidal behavior, including posttraumatic stress disorder, depression and substance abuse. "I'm concerned that some might take this and say: It's not deployments. We don't need to worry about this," said Barbara Van Dahlen, a psychologist who is the founder of Give an Hour, a group that provides mental health counseling to servicemembers and veterans. "This is telling us one important bit of the story, but there are many other factors involved." Before the recent wars, the military suicide rate was well below the civilian rate. But the gap began narrowing shortly after 2001, a time when the civilian rate was also climbing. The sharpest increases were in the Army and the Marine Corps, the services most involved in combat operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. Using data from the National Death Index and Defense Departmentpersonnel records,the researchers found among the group 83 service members who committed suicide, of which 58 percent had never deployed. After correlating those suicides with data from the surveys, the researchers found that suicide rates were highest among men and among people with manic-depressive disorder, depression and alcohol problems. The authors said their findings could point to more effective approaches to reducing suicide, citing in particular programs that focus on depression and alcohol abuse. Craig Bryan, the associate director of the National Center for Veterans Studies at the University of Utah, said the study's large sample gave it added significance. "It lines up with what many of us have been finding and talking about for the last several years," he said, "but they have been able to address the limitations o f p r evious research." Several advocacy groups, including Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America and Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors, or TAPS, also said the findings confirmed what they had been seeing on the ground. "We so often just link military suicide to combat trauma," said Kim Ruocco, the director of postvention for TAPS. "But there are many others: long hours, separationfrom supports systems, sleeplessness. All are stressors. All add to increases in mental health issues."

general strike, their friends

By Adam Nossiter New Yorh Times News Service

BANGUI, Central African Republic — The two men lay still in the back of the pickup truck, staring up. Over them stood the uniformed rebels, rifles pointing out as the truck sped forward. The rebels had just picked up two more citizens, caught

said shortly after. Beaten as they were shoved into the truck, the men were unlikely to be heard from again, the friends feared. A similar seizure had occurred nearby the day before. The rebels, known as Seleka, or "alliance" in the Sango l anguage, make the law i n the Central African Republic, where coups and violent seizures of power have outnum-

Fire Continued from A1 "The thunderstorms could last into Sunday, maybe even into Monday," she said. The s t o rm s c o m e as Central O r egon r e sidents cope with the effects of last week's li gh t n i ng-caused fires. Smoke hung heavy in the air around Bend Tuesday, a thick haze obscuring the signature summertime Cascades skyline. Trimarco said the smoke was blowing i nt o C entral Oregon from the five large fires burning in southwest

has catapulted into place as one of Africa's most troubled countries. It has a rebel leader occupying its presidential palace, an ousted president who fled for his life into exile and a constitution that protected residents' rights minimally before

FIRE UPDATE

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S.W. CampSherman Road in Camp Sherman. is not that far away." Anyone can estimate the summertime air -q u ality level, Svelund said. For example, when visibility gets down to one mile because of smoke, the air is likely very unhealthy. "How far you can see is a

Greg Svelund, spokesman for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. Conditions were just within what the DEQ considers unhealthy for sensitive groups, such as the young, elderly or people w it h b r e athing good gauge of how bad the troubles. air quality is," he said. "We haven't hit unhealthy — Reporter: 541-617-7812, yet in Bend," he said, "but it ddarling@bendbulletin.com

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Everyone should avoid any outdoor exertion; people with respiratory or heart disease, the elderly and children should remain indoors.

Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality

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website. T he Green R i dg e F i r e was 30 p ercent contained as of Tuesday night, Goossens said, and full containment is expected Saturday. About 450 f irefighters are still on the fire. East of Bend, firefighters Tuesday held a

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"I'd say it i s d r i f ting up from those fires near Grants Pass," Trimarco said. While th e G r een R idge Fire northwest o f S i s ters continues to burn, the smoke in Bend today came from the other fires, said Kate Gooss ens, spokeswoman at t h e Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center i n P r i n eville. She said th e G r een Ridge Fire was at 550 acres Tuesday night. "It just really can't put up this much smoke," she said. The fires in southwest Oregon have combined to burn nearly 62,000 acres, or about 97 square miles, offorest, according to the federal Incident Information System

dents face. "Sometimes, not even that." Inside the battered 1970s government ministries, many of them desertedforlong periods because the civil servants had not been paid in months, high officials spoke with debeing suspended. spair about how, after the "One meal a day," Faustin March ousterof the country's O uaya, who worked in t h e despised president,Franqois Ministry of Tourism, said of Bozize, the state had disapthe circumstances many resi- peared altogether.

bered fair elections 4-to-1 since independence. Now, even t h ei r h a n dpicked prime minister calls the country's condition "catastrophic." The rebels have held unchecked sway since they swarmed into this bedraggled capital in March. With its suffering largely cut off from the outside world, this landlocked former French colony, population 5.1 million,

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A6 THE BULLETIN • W EDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 20'I3

UPDATE: IMMIGRATION

IN FOCUS: 'DON'TTREAD ON ME' DISPUTE

a 'sina a ? 0 I n 0 I Ica, Ye erans rou sa s By Peter Appiebome

Bob Cox, managing editor of the local Talk of the Sound blog, R R & +g~e aseaa e T e e NEW R O CHELLE, N . Y. which covered the ceremony, • m~ a a — The way Moises Valencia ~ ~ ~ g ~P; >r~ ~ ~ ~ said there was no political disj+lQ' , h~ ~ ~ ~ describes things, it began with eea s ia % $ E E W J S S cussionor tea party message. a simple idea. Still, he said, "If there was a Seeing that the American message, it was a poke in the W W% - % % • WR R H W H R f flag flying outside the old milieye of the mayor over the ar~ Cf~~ C DONT TREAD OH HE ~ ~ ~ liS Q mory — don't tread on us, which tary armory in the city needed R H S W replacing, he took it upon himyou're doing with the armory." self to contact local veterans Six days later, Parente heard about putting up a new one. from the city manager, Chuck For good measure, he shelled Strome, who wrote in an email s? out about $16 online for a yelthat he had received numerous low Gadsden flag, bearing an complaints that the yellow flag image that dates back to 1775, made a political statement. "I of a coiled rattlesnake and the Karsten Moran/New YorkTimes News Service have been advised by several words "Don't Tread on Me," in Peter Parente, president of the United Veterans Memorial and people that this flag is a tea parcasethe veterans wanted to use Patriotic Association of New Rocheile, N.Y., and Moises Valencia, ty Flag," he wrote to Parente. that one, too. a volunteer with the Save Our Armory Committee, hold a Gadsden That began a back and forth The way city officials see flag in front of the Naval Military Armory in New Rocheiie. The in which Parente described the flag's long history and said it things, a group whose agendas UVMPA is suing the city after it ordered the flag be taken down go beyond purely patriotic ones because of its modern day association with the tea party. was not a tea party flag. Strome decided touse a public space, first agreed, then said that a the flagpole at the city-owned majority of the City Council had armory,to fl y a banner thathas that the Gadsden flag has a Built in 1931, the New Ro- decided otherwise. As a result, come to symbolize the tea party historic meaning, it's also true chelle Armory served as a city officials ordered the flag and antipathy to government. that in the modern day it is training site for naval and Ma- taken down March 27. At an Whatever the case, the re- often associated with the tea rinerecruitsfor decades. Since April 9 council meeting, memsults were an order by the city party movement," said Mayor the end of World War II, veter- bers voted 5-2 along party lines, to take it down, a federal law- Noam Bramson, who is also ans groups have held ceremo- with Republicans in the minorsuit filed by a conservative legal the Democratic candidate for nies there and maintained and ity, against flying the flag. One foundation, a turn in the media Westchester County executive. displayed flags on its flagpole. council member, Jared Rice, hothouse, and an object lesson "If you Google 'Tea Party flag,' In 1997, New York state trans- citing the tea party association, in how easy it is these days to this is the one that comes up. Of ferred ownership of what had said the flag was "divisive" and go from a local spat and rou- course, it's fine for individuals become a shutteredarchitec- represented "a brand of politics tine ceremony to a viral cause to express their views on their tural relic to the city. that is very offensive" to many celebre. own property or persons, but To the extent that the March people locally and nationally. "Never in my wildest dreams I think on public property the 21 ceremony retiring the tatBut legal experts, including would I h ave expected any standard has to be different." tered American flag was un- Don Herzog, a professor at the of this," said V alencia, 26, In a lawsuit filed July 26 in usual, it had to do with a dispute University of M ichigan Law who said he had relatives and federal court in White Plains, that had played out over the School, and Ken Paulson, a First friends in the military and who the United Veterans Memo- past year, in which the city and Amendment expert at Middle has addressed the City Council rial and Patriotic Association of local veterans clashed over the Tennessee State U n iversity, in favor of gun rights and other New Rochelle and its president, best plan for redeveloping the said that more important than issues."I've never been to a tea Peter Parente, sued the city, armory site. The veterans'pro- the flag's meaning was a legal party rally or been a member. I Bramson, the city manager and posalto restore the armory was judgment of whether this was thought I was just showing sup- four City Council members, initially turned down, while the government speech — carried port for the veterans and for the saying that the city had acted city pursued others that the vet- out at a city-owned site — or priin an "arbitrary, capricious and erans felt could imperil the site. vate speech. If it is government armory. City officials, who have been unreasonable manner" and vioBoth Parente, a former Re- speech, officials have broad barraged by angry emails from lated the group's First Amend- publican candidate for C ity power to limit it. conservatives nationally, say ment rights. Council, and Valencia cited the Paulson said it was likely that residents are welcome to put up At issue will be not just the armory's history and impor- this would be considered govbanners or signs representing meaning of the flag, but also tance atthe ceremony, where a ernment speech, but also that their opinions, but not on city- the government's usually broad new American flag was raised the city had left itself exposed to owned property. powers to limit speech under its and the Gadsden flag was the criticism that it was target"Although it's certainly true name. raised beneath it. ing a specific flag or message. SIO E W ~

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Mexico turnseyeto its porousother border By Richard Fausset

American migrant has become one of the darkest stains C IUDAD H IDA L G O , on Mexico's reputation. Mexico — The Mexican govIn recent weeks, however, ernment is pledging to bring the government of P r esiorder to its wild southern bor- dent Enrique Pena Nieto has der. The stakes couldn't be pledged to bring new order higher, and the job couldn't to the border region. Interior be more difficult. Minister Miguel Angel OsoThe proof lies in this dusty rio Chong said the new plans border town of 14,000 people. will "ensure that (migrants) Here, unmonitored goods and don't suffer." travelers float across the wide Security at border crossSuchiate River — the bound- ings will be strengthened, ofary between Guatemala and ficials say, and sophisticated the Mexican state of Chiapas "internal control" stations — on a flotilla of inner-tube will be set up a few miles inrafts. They cross all day long, side the country along comin plain sight of M exican monly-used migration routes, authorities stationed a few to better monitor the moveyards upriver at an official ment of goods and people. border crossing. The government is also exSome of the Central Amer- panding a program to record icans are visiting just for the the fingerprints, photos and day. Others are hoping to other identifying features of find work on Mexican coffee migrants, the newspaper Miplantations or banana farms. lenio reported. High-tech bioBut many will continue north metric kiosks, partially paid toward the United States. for by the U.S. government, There is no guarantee they will record the data of those will ever get there. Lying in applying for temporary visiwait are Mexican criminals, tor and work permits. and even Mexican officials, Meanwhile, the Mexican who aim to k i dnap north- navy, which is charged with bound travelers, extort mon- protecting the border, has ey from them and sometimes deepened its partnership with even rape and k il l t h em. the G uatemalan m i l itary, About 10,000 such migrants staging coordinated operahave disappeared in Mexico tions in an effort to run off the every year since 2008, ac- drug cartels that have taken cording to Mexican govern- advantage of the border's nument estimates. merous unpoliced crossing Luis Martinez, a 33-year- points, Vice Adm. Francisco old migrant from Honduras, Ramon Tiburcio Camacho had crossed the Suchiate said. without incident early one The outlines of the plan morning in June. He knew raise many questions. The he was risking his life by b iometric k iosks, fo r e x moving on. But he said that ample, may help authorities the crippled Honduran econ- keep track of migrants who omy left him little choice. He have been caught by authorineeded to work. He needed to ties, or who willingly apply earn. for legal entry. (Among other "It's going to be hard," he things, the data can help idensaid."We've heard about it all: tify their bodies if they are the cartels, the kidnappings, found in unmarked graves). the robberies, everything." But how will they help keep Along with drug violence tabs on the many migrants and the slaying of journalists, who are evading Mexican the ugly fate of the Central authorities'? Los Angeles Times

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN e WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

www.bendbulletin.com/local

HEALTH CARE

BRIEFING

Data in icate

Biedscheid out of county jail A Bend driverconvicted for fleeing the

By Lauren Dake

scene whenhe struck and killed a manpushing a bicycle across

The Bulletin

PORTLAND — A year ago this month, the state launched what's been called the "Oregon experiment" by setting up coordinated care organizations aimed at lowering health care costs while improving the quality of care. Tuesday, the second quarterly report on how the organizations are faring was

Third Street was

released from the Deschutes County Jail on

Monday. Bret Biedscheid, 40, was booked into jail June12, one day after

he was convicted on a charge of failure to perform the duties of

unveiled to members of the Oregon Health Policy Board. Fifteen coordinated care organizationswere created across the state. Baseline data

formeasuring performance of the care organizations have nearly all been gathered, the first step. It's too early to say whetherthe coordinated care organizations are bending the cost curve down. But Tina Edlund, the deputy

s onri t director of the Oregon Health Authority, noted two categories have enough data to show "the trend is heading in the right direction." And the two metrics get to the heart of what CCOs are all about: preventing costly care. In both emergency department visits and ambulatory care,the numbers forsome CCOs took a small dive. "We'reseeing a reduction

at

of about 10 percent. That's exactly what we hoped to see," she told the board. The federal government gave the state a large advance, $1.9 billion, to prove that it can use the coordinated care organizations to lower costs. Right now, the CCos, as they are called, are focusing on the Medicaid, or Oregon Health Plan, population. See CCOs/B5

a driver. Heserved 55 days of a 90-day sentence. Biedscheid was driving south on Third Street in January 2011

when he struck Anthony "Tony" Martin near Revere Avenue. Martin

died at the scenewhile Biedscheid drove home, then contacted Bend

Police a fewdays later through his attorney. At trial, Biedscheid

agreed to enter a guilty plea onthe charge of failure to perform the

duties of a driver in exchange for prosecutors dropping charges of criminally negligent homicide. — Bulletin staff report

Well shot! reader photos • We want to seeyour photos of water sports foranotherspecial version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work atbendbolletin.com

/gardenandwe'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

From behind the protection of a plastic tarp, members of the Bend Science Station camp watch as a computer numerical control machine cuts out a lightning bolt from a sheet of metal on Friday.

of the greatoutdoors toreaderphotos© bendbulletin.com and

oo m a e rea

tell us a bit about where and when you took them.

We'll choosethe best for publication.

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

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

sk any student at the Bend Science Station last week, and they'll tell you: It was a very busy week for Zeus, the Greek god of lightning and thunder. It was also a very busy week for Hephaestus, the Greek god of fire. And it was an even busier week for the 16 sons and daughters of Poseidon, who spent the week at the science station shooting arrows, fighting Medusa and forging metals in the fires of Hephaestus. "Students are learning about all these scientific elements in camp, and then hopefully they'll make the connection and understand why the ancient Greeks had mythological stories to explain their world," said David Bermudez, owner of Bend's Science Station and the camp instructor. Last week, a group of about 16 students spent the week at Bend Science Station's mythology camp, which is for fourth- through eighth-graders and based on the popular

A

STATE NEWS

Near GrantsPass

• Fire death:Water truck driver dies in crash near Big Windy

complex of fires. Sfory on B3

Underpass detour The Third Street

underpass will be closed from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. nightly throughout

August as city crews work to correct

OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS

V

Educational newsand

L

activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2 "Percy Jackson & the Olympians" book series. Students spent the week acting like Percy, the son of the Greek god Poseidon in the books, while learning about the science behind some wellknown Greek myths. Friday, students were spending a session with Hephaestus, the Greek god of blacksmithing and forging. Hephaestus, also known as Gary Meyer, a local blacksmith and metal welder, showed students the art of blacksmithing at his backyard forge on Bend's west side. First, Meyer showed stu-

a

Metal artist Gary Meyer, left, points out where he wants Brendan Rosenzweig to hammer the edge of a metal lightning bolt during Bend Science Station camp on Friday. dents the computer numerical control machine he uses to cut shapes from sheets of metal. Students huddled behind a transparent yellow shower curtain while Meyer demonstrated the machine. After a few minutes of flying sparks, Meyer picked up the sheet of metal andremoved ajagged,

zigzag shape of a lightning bolt. The second step involved

Meyer placing the piece in the heated forge with a pair of tongs. "Have you ever burned yourself'?" one student asked,

eyeing the glowing forge. Meyer smiled. "Too many times to count," he replied. Once the metal shape was sufficiently heated, Meyer removed the piece. See Mythology/B2

15-year sentence

for ID thief By Branden Andersen The Bulletin

Marjorie Chandler, 85, thought Larry Allan McCright, 58, was a "charming" man. She trusted him in her house and with her

property. "I trusted Larry," Chandler said. "I grew to love him. But he turned around and stole not only money, but violated my trust." From January to May 2012, McCright stole Chandler's money by way of credit and checking cards, as well as her personal jewelry, accumulating 20 counts, of varying degrees, of both theft and identity theft. On Monday, McCright was sentenced to 15 years in state prison by Circuit Court Judge A. Michael Adler, who said McCright's record ofproperty theft was one of the worst he had ever seen. McCright was ordered to pay restitution: $230,040.26 to Chandler, $25,560 to Bend Pawn and Trade and $1,125 to Capital One Bank. "We're pleased," said Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Stephen Gunnels. "He deserved a long sentence." Chandler, the widow of Robert W. Chandler, the owner and editor of The Bulletin from 1953 until his death in 1996, was recovering from a medical operation when McCright committed the crimes. He used money taken from Chandler's checking account to pay debts he owed Chandler. She was frequently on pain medication, allowing McCright to take the money and valuables from her home. "It's not just that you stole money, but a ring that belonged to her," Adler said. "Then you told her that she lost it because she was on medication." "He's a bad guy," Chandler said. "He has done it before and will do it again. I hope, not for my sake but for others', that he gets the longest sentence possible." In April 2012, McCright, whose criminal history goes back to 1987, was sentenced in the same courtroom to 90 days probation for first-degree theft, Adler sard. "We won't be making that mistake again," he added. See Thief /B5

"I trusted Larry. I grew to love him. But he turned around and stole not Only mOney, but violated my trust." — Marjorie Chandler, the victim of identity thief Larry Allan McCright

frequent flooding. A signed detour will lead commuters to Franklin Avenue, Ninth Street and Wilson Avenue.

DESCHUTES COUNTY COMMISSION

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Franklin Av .

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Unde as

Appeal denied for100-foot cell tower inAlfalfa By Shelby King The Bulletin

ALFALFA — The Deschutes County Commission denied construction permits for a 100-foot monopole cell tower following a public hear-

ing Tuesday. ilson Ave.

R d Market Itd. Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Residents of this small town complained the tower would obstruct their views. The audience cheered as the commissioners announced their decision following the hearing at Alfalfa's commu-

nity center. American Tower applied for permits to build the cell tower in the 25000 block of Alfalfa Market Road. The application went before a hearings officer in December and was denied March 1. American Tower appealed within the 12-day appeal period. "Alfalfa is an area that has vistas and views," said Commission Chair Alan Unger. "It's part of the reason why people live here and is very

important in this area of the county." Residents living near the proposed area have been vocal during the appeals process, telling commissioners why they're opposed to the erection of a 100-foot monopole cell tower in their neighborhood. "Other providers have managed to keep up with the latest technological advancements and provide comprehensive cell coverage in outlying areas

like ours without erecting 100foot monopoles in residential neighborhoods and alienating entire communities," said Alfalfaresident David Warren. "I urge the county commissioners to deny American Tower/AT&T's request for a conditional use permit." The board agreed unanimously that American Tower did not meet the requirement to search for alternate sites to locate the tower. "I don't believe their search

ring met the burden of proof," said Commissioner Tammy Baney. "We appreciate the fact that they offered to do work on the site that they didn't have to do, but no amount of work can screen the views of a 100-foot tower." County legal counsel Laurie Craghead said the final step is to mail the commission's final decision to American Tower

by Aug. 27. — Reporter: 541-383-0376; shing@bendbulletin.com


B2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

E VENT TODAY 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. VOLUNTEERCONNECTBOARD FAIR: The annual event to explore volunteer leadership positions with 25 nonprofit organizations seeking new board members; free; 4-6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-385-8977 or www.volunteerconnectnow.org. ALIVE AFTERFIVE: High Street Band performs, with Rob Fincham and LoVoci; at the north end of Powerhouse Drive; free; 5-8 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3890995 or www.aliveafterfivebend. com. CROOKCOUNTYFAIR: The theme is "Boots, Chaps & Cowboy Hats," featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull

AL E N D A R riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 5-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds,1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6575 or www.crookcountyfairgrounds. com. MUSIC ONTHEGREEN: A summer concert series featuring the country band Carrie Cunningham & the Six Shooters, food, crafts, retail and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, S.W.15th St. and S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-923-5191 or http:// visitredmondoregon.com. PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring country western band Earl Wear 8 Haywire; free; 6-8 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6909 or www.crookcountyfoundation. org/events.

Bend High School class of 1973 will hold areunion Friday andSaturday; 5:30 p.m. Friday atCruxFermentation Project, 50 S.W.Division St., Bend;free; and 5:30p.m. Saturdayat BendGolf and Country Club,61045Country Club Drive; $40; registration required;Jennifer Stenkamp,541-548-0711, Facebook page "BendHighSchool Classof1973" or https://reunionmanager.net/reunion registration.php?class id=142545&reun ion=BEND+SENIOR+HIGH+SCHOOL&cl ass of=1973. Bend High School class of1968 will hold a reunionSaturday; 6-10p.m. at Country Catering, 900 S.E.Wilson Ave.; $30 per person; registration required; Arlo Young, bendclassof68©yahoo. com, bendclassof684egmail.com or 503-871-7737. Bend High School class of1983 will hold a reunionAug.17-18; informal gathering atBendBrewfest at Les SchwabAmphitheater during theearly afternoon on Aug.17; 6-11p.m. Aug.17; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt.;12-3p.m.Aug.18;no-host picnic at PioneerPark; $45 per person; RSVPMaryStenkampWeinberg, 503703-8283 orweinbermw oohsu.edu.

COLLEGE NOTES The following local students graduated from Washington State University in Spring 2013: Katelyn A. Krebs, Mary E. Llnker, Rachel E. Swaney and Chase L. Yeakel. Zack W. Almqulst, of Bend, has graduated with a doctorate of

philosophy in sociology at the University of California, Irvine. He is a 2001 graduate of BendHigh School, a 2005 graduate of the University of Oregon Clark Honors College andthe son of Bob andMarilyn Almquist, of

bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6575 or www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com. "BIG, LOUD & LIVE10": Acinema event featuring the world's most elite marching music ensembles; $18; 3:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium168 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. MUNCH & MUSIC: The reggae band Rootz Underground performs; with food, arts and crafts booths, children's area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com.

FRIDAY

THURSDAY CROOK COUNTYFAIR:The themeis"Boots,Chaps & Cowboy Hats," featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music,

SCHOOL NOTES

REUNIONS

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

Hovv tosubmit Teen feats: Kids

recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs,

choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.) Contact: 541-383-0358, youth@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend, OR 97708

Other school notes: College announcements, military graduations or training completions,

reunion announcements. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletinmebendbulletin.com

Story ideas School driefs: Items and announcements of general interest. Contact: 541-633-2161,

news©bendbulletin.com Student profiles: Know

of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

Bend. In the fall of 2013, Almquist will be joining University of Minnesota's sociology and statistics departments as an assistant professor.

RUMMAGE SALEFUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the St. Thomas Altar Society; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; St. Thomas Parish Center Gym,1755 N.W. Maple Ave., Redmond; 541-923-3390.

SUNRIVERARTFAIRE: An art show with more than 65 booths featuring fine arts and fine crafts; entertainment and food; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central Oregon; free admission; 9:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; 877-269-2580 or www. sunriverartfaire.com. CROOK COUNTYFAIR:The themeis"Boots,Chaps 8 Cowboy Hats," featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission;10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-6575 or www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park,W estCascade Avenue and Ash Street; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. SMART ATTHELIBRARY: Learn what it takes to volunteer to read in local elementary schools and create a book-inspired art piece; free; 4-6 p.m.; Crook County Library, 175 N.W. Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; 541-355-5601 or www.

getsmartoregon.org. COUNTRY FAIR& ART SHOW RECEPTION: A preview of the following day's fair; free; 5-8 p.m.; Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, 68825 N. Brooks Camp Road, Sisters; 541-549-7087. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bend author Kim McCarrel presents her new book"Riding Northwest Oregon Horse Trails" with a slideshow; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. TWILIGHT CINEMA: An outdoor screening of "Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey" (1993); bring low-profile chair or blanket, your own picnic, no glass or pets, snacks available; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333 or www. sunriversharc.com. THE DEADLYGENTLEMEN: The Boston bluegrass band performs; free; 7 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541728-0066 or www.facebook. com/crowsfeetcommons.

SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL POPS CONCERT:The Festival Orchestra performs with the Bill GanzWestern Band; "Come DanceWith Us, Let the Music Move You" isthe theme; $26-$42, $10 youth; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-5939310, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or www.sunrivermusic.org.

SATURDAY MOTORCYCLE POKERRUN: Oregon Vets Motorcycle Association andVFW hostspoker,a300-mile motorcycle ride and an after-party with raffles, live music and barbecue dinner; $15 poker hand, $20 for two hands, $7 barbecue dinner; 8 a.m., last bike out at10 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-280-5161 or crazyhorse© coinet.com. TUMALO PEDDLER'S FLEA MARKET: Freeadmission; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-306-8016 or copeddlersmarket@gmail.com.

Mythology Continued from B1 Students oohed and awed, admiring how the forge had transformed th e o n ce-dull gray color of the metal into a bright, fiery orange. Armed with goggles,students then took turns swinging a hammer and softening the edges of the metal. " This i s t h e coolest o f e verything we've done i n camp," Brendan Rosenzweig, 11, said. "I've always loved building things. I may consider doing this in the future." When it was Sierra Freihoefer's turn, she took the hammer in both hands and tapped it lightly against the edge of the metal as it faded

back into gray. "You wouldn't think it, but it takes a delicate touch," Sierra, 13, said. "I was surprised how easy the metal was to work with. It was like butter." Once the l i ghtning b olt piece was complete, students got to make their own medallions. Meyer heated metal washers inthe forge, which students later imprinted with blacksmithing stamps in the shape of a trident. Each student got one to take home, a small memento of their time spent with a Greek god. "It's pretty cool,"Ryan Cooper, 10, said. "When you're up there, it feels like you're actually working for Hephaestus." Meyer,who has been metal-

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Above: Metal artist Gary Meyer shows members of the Bend Science Station's mythology camp a lightning bolt he created with his computer numerical control machine on Friday. Below: Two metal lightning bolts are heated in a forge, allowing their edges to be smoothed more easily by a hammer. working for about 12 years, said he liked teaching students about something most kids don't usually get to see. "When I was their age, the best way of learning was aiways getting out there and doing something you didn't normaiiy do," Meyer said. "When you're a kid, it's fun to seethis kind of thing. Plus, they get a chance to hit something." — Reporter:541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com

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

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 2:36 p.m. July 23, in the 2600 block of Northeast Butler Market Road. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:06 a.m. July 24, in the1500 block of Southeast Skylark Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:13 a.m. July 26, in the 500 block of Northeast Norton Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:05 p.m. July 26, in the100 block of Northeast BendRiver Mall Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:02 p.m. July 26, in the 600 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — Atheft was reported at 3:10 p.m. July 26, in the 500 block of Northwest Trenton Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at8:30 a.m. July 29, in the 20500 block of Prospector Loop. Theft — A theft was reported at 9 a.m. July 29, in the 600 block of Northeast 11th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:01 a.m. July 29, in the 300 block of Northeast Emerson Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:56 p.m. July 29, in the 2100block of Northeast Sixth Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at11:06 p.m. July 29, in the 2200 block of Northeast LyndaLane. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:25 a.m. July 30, in the 63000 block of March Orchid Drive. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 9:31 a.m. July 31, in the 61100 block of Larkspur Loop. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at12:32 p.m. July 31, in the100 block of Northwest

Colorado Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at1:38 p.m. July 31, in the 200 block of Northwest Hill Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 8:47 a.m. Aug. 1, in the 1000 block of Southeast Fourth Street. Theft — Atheft was reported at11:37 a.m. Aug.1, in the1800 blockof Northeast Linnea Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at1:52 p.m. Aug. 1, in the 700 block of Northwest Columbia Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:31 p.m. Aug.1, in the 700 block of Northeast Fourth Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 4:46 p.m. Aug. 1, in the 62700 block of Larkview Road. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 7:36 p.m. Aug. 1, in the area of Southwest13th Street and Southwest DonovanAvenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 9:50 a.m.Aug. 2, in the 400 block of Northeast Burnside Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:03 p.m. Aug. 2, in the 2500 block of Northwest Crossing Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:01 p.m. July 20, in the area of Southwest Troon Avenueand Southwest Mt. Washington Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at1:31 p.m. July 23, in the1400 block of Northeast Seward Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:50 p.m. July 29, in the 300 block of Northeast Hawthorne Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:40 p.m. Aug.1, in the 61400 blockof Barleycorn Lane. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 2:43 p.m.Aug. 1, in the 1200 block of Southwest Silver Lake Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:31 p.m. Aug.1, in the1600 blockof Northwest Portland Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:15a.m. Aug. 2, in the 21000 block of Gardenia Avenue.

Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 9:24a.m. Aug. 2, in the 700 block of Northwest Bond Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:06 p.m. Aug. 2, in the 800 block of Northeast Robin Court. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:17 p.m. Aug. 2, in the 61500 block of Admiral Way. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:50 p.m. Aug. 2, in the area of Robal Laneand North U.S. Highway 97. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at12:21 a.m. Aug. 3, in the1600 block of Northwest Quincy Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at12:36 a.m. Aug. 3, in the1500 block of Northwest Quincy Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at1:52 a.m. Aug. 3, in the1400 block of Northwest Kingston Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 8:14a.m. Aug. 3, in the1000 block of Northwest Baltimore Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:27 a.m. Aug. 3, in the1200 block of Northwest Davenport Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 9:13a.m. Aug. 3, in the 20000 block of Mount Faith Place. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:45 a.m. July 24, in the area of Northwest 13th Street and Northwest Ithaca Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest made at12:24 p.m. Aug. 1, in the 3000 block of North U.S. Highway 97. DUII — Gregory KennethWatson, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at2:20 p.m. Aug.1, inthe area of Northeast Butler Market Roadand Northeast Third Street. DUII — Gabriel Douglas Carlson, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:08 a.m. Aug. 2, in thearea of Northwest Bond Street and Northwest Oregon Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:36 a.m. Aug. 2, in the 100 block of

Northeast GreenwoodAvenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at10:55 a.m. Aug. 2, in the area of Southeast Airpark Drive. Theft — Atheft was reported andan arrest made at3:06 p.m.Aug. 2, in the 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. DUH —Sandra LeePhifer, 65, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:18 p.m. Aug. 2, in thearea of Southeast15th Street andSoutheast BronzewoodAvenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:18 p.m. Aug. 2, in the areaof Southeast15th Street and Southeast BronzewoodAvenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at12:19 a.m.Aug. 3, in the1500 block of Northwest Quincy Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported and arrests made at3:02 p.m. Aug. 3, in the 900 block of Northwest Newport Avenue. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at 8:36 p.m. Aug. 3, in the100 block of Northeast Third Street. Theft — Atheft was reported at I:43 p.m. July 27, in the 2700 block of Northeast MesaCourt. Burglary — A burglary was reported at12:25 p.m. July 27, in the100 block of Northeast Franklin Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported at 12:26 p.m. July 28, in the100 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:01 p.m. July 29, in the 400 block of Northeast Quimby Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported at 11:17 a.m. Aug. 4, in the block of U.S. Highway 20 nearmilepost 28. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:17 a.m. July 31, in the400block of Northwest Franklin Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported at 2:55 p.m. July 30, in the 600 Northeast Bellevue Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:29 p.m. July 27, in the 1700 block of Southeast Tempest Drive. Theft — Atheft was reported at 8:58 p.m. Aug. 3, in the61100 block of Kepler Street. Theft — Atheft was reported at 8:36 a.m. July 26, in the1200 blockof

Northeast Third Street. Theft — Atheft was reported and an arrest made at8:07 p.m. Aug. 2, in the 63400 block of Hunnell Road. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:50 a.m. Aug. 4, in the2100 block of Northwest Lemhi Pass Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 6:50 p.m.Aug. 4, in the 200 block of Southwest Maricopa Drive. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:22 p.m. Aug. 4, in the area of South U.S. Highway 97and RomaineVillage Way. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:48 a.m. Aug. 5, in the 61200 block of Fairfield Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 8:33 a.m. Aug. 5, in the 62900 block of Bilyeu Way. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at10:33 a.m. Aug. 5, in the1388 block of Northeast Williamson Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 10:52 a.m. Aug. 5, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at10:59 a.m. Aug. 5, in the 20800 block of Daniel DukeWay. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:41 a.m.Aug. 5, in the 61500 block of American Lane.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — A theft was reported at 8:24 a.m. Aug. 5, in the area ofNorthwest Madras Highway.

BEND FIRE RUNS Aug. 2 4:53 a.m.— Dumpster or other outside trash receptacle fire, 1700 Southeast Tempest Drive. 5:05 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 288 Southeast CessnaDrive. 9:26 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 260 Southeast Airpark Drive. 9:26 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 480 Southeast Airpark Drive. 9:36 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire,

676 Southeast Airpark Drive. 9:37 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 667 Southeast Airpark Drive. 8 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 3 2:31 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 63225 Town Court. 3:19 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 63488 AbbeyRoad. 25 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 4 4:21 p.m.— Building fire, 63465 Deschutes Market Road. 9:00 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 19930 Windflower Way. 14 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 5 3:08 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 1555 Northeast Tuscan Street. 6:57 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 61412 Blakely Road. 20 — Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE RUNS July 29 11 — Medical aid calls. July30 9:35 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 3485 N.E. 37th St. 7 — Medical aid calls. July 31 4:28 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 21510YoungAve. 3 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 1 9:54a.m.— Forest, woods or woodland fire, in the area ofWest state Highway126. 4 — Medical aid calls. 2:06 p.m.— Smoke odor reported, 67585 Cline Falls Road. Aug. 2 9 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 3 1:45 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 3838 N.W.Spruce Ave. 10:45 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 252 N.W.35th St. 13 — Medical aid calls. Aug. 4 7 — Medical aid calls.


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B 3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

Water truc river ies in cras atwi i r e insout west re on

Supposed human hand actually a seal flipper —The Oregon state medical examiner's office says that supposed human hand found on abeach at Gearhart last weekwas really the remains of a seal flipper. Oregon State Police Lt. Gregg Hastings said the medical examiner's office looked at the decomposing item Tuesday. A

retired police officer walking the beachwith his young granddaughter reported finding what looked like the decomposed remains of a hand last Friday evening. An Astoria police detective took the item to the

By Nigel Duara

Fire officials hope to have The Associated Press "He was always willing to share his faith containment lines around it PORTLAND — The death with others, he never got in any trouble. He next month but some say it of a 19-year-old water truck could grow much larger and was somebody who was going to be very driveroutside a rural Oregon burn until fall rains and snow wildfire came just months af- successful." put it out. "We're going to live with ter he joined a community col— Gigi Trader, mother of Jesse Trader, a 19-year-old water truck these fires until October 15th lege firefighter training prodriver who died in a crash outside the Big Windy complex of fires or later, gram and readied for his first " Dan Thorpe, forester fire season. in charge of the state DepartJesse Trader had a baseball ment of Forestry's southwest scholarship to Western Ore- egon owes Trader a debt. said. "(The truck) was heading district who has seen 41 fire "Even at such a young age, down to get a relief driver." gon University but chose to enseasons, said in an interview roll at Chemeketa Community he was already contributing Trader was the second crew published Tuesday in the MedCollege for its fire protection mightily to his community," member killed this w i ldfire ford Mail Tribune. program instead, his mother Kitzhaber said, "and we owe season in Oregon, and the The fire is in th e Siskiysaid Tuesday. him our gratitude for his com- 29th nationally. ous, a range that's part of the "This is what Jesse wanted mitment to helping protect his On Aug. 1, 58-year-old John Klamath M o untains s t radto do with his life," said Gigi fellow citizens." Hammack was k i l led near dling Southwest Oregon and Trader, of Albany. Trader's mother said his Sisters when the tree he was Northern California. Jesse Trader wa s k i l l ed faith,and hers, helped her cutting fell on him. There are six major wildwhen his water truck over- cope with the reality of his T he s o uthwestern f i r e s fires in Oregon as of Tuesturned on a rural road's em- death just hours after getting a were ignited by lightning late day. One of the southwestern bankment e a r l y Tu e sday call from law enforcement. last month. They are burning fires, named Brimstone, is "He was always willing to m orning o u tside t h e B i g in some of the state's most dif- now considered 100 percent Windy complex of fires about share his faith with others, he ficult mountain terrain, fed by contained. 25 miles northwest of Grants never got in any trouble," Gigi vegetation parched by a wideThe rest of the southwestern Pass in J osephine County. Trader said. "He was some- spread drought. fires are burning on nearly Trader was taken from the body who was going to be very The Big Windy's three fires 60,000 acres, or more than 93 scene by an air ambulance, successful." a re burning n o r thwest o f square miles, and have drawn but emergency r esponders Josephine County Sheriff Grants Pass. More than 1,100 more than 5,600 people to fight were unable to revive him. Gil Gilbertson said it was unpersonnel were assigned to it them. The sixth fire, the Green He was the sole occupant of clear from the crash site why as of Tuesday morning, and Ridge Fire in Central Oregon, the truck. the truck left the road and the fire area is estimated at has about 450 people working Gov. John Kitzhaber said in overturned. "He was c ommore than 14 square miles, or on the fire and is burning on a prepared statement that Or- ing down the hill," Gilbertson more than 9,100 acres. about 500 acres.

medical examiner's office in Clackamas.

Elderly woman saved from burning home — Aneighbor who saw smokeand flames coming from the houseacross the street in Corvallis says he ran to alert the elderly homeowner who lived there. Jim Witzel said he knew that Vera Aas was hard of hearing

so he "knocked realloud"Tuesdayafternoon.Aassaysshedidn't know anything was wrong until her neighbor came to the door "and practically knocked it down." Witzel helped her outside. She was un-

hurt. The newspaper says two exterior walls were badly charred and flames appeared to have done extensive damage to the attic of the single-story home. Fire Marshal Jeff Prechel said it wasn't immediately clear what started the blaze.

Willamette Valley moth outbreak — Thephonesare ringing as landowners in Oregon's Willamette Valley call state and local agencies to inquire about trees that appear to be dying. State Forestry Department entomologist Rob Flowers says a native moth called the

western oak looper is the culprit. He saysthe moths attack Douglas firs and oak trees and can eat nearly all a tree's leaves, making it look

scorched or like autumn hasarrived early. Flowers says the outbreak hits the valley about every15 years. This year's outbreak is centered around the Sheridan area south of Monmouth and east to Silverton and Stayton. While the infestation looks bad, Flowers says oaks usu-

ally suffer minor damage.EvenDouglas firs that appear to be dead could still be healthy and produce anormal crop of needles next year. He recommendsavoiding chemicals to get rid of the moths because of their high tolerance andthe outbreak's short duration.

Screens for Portland 'suicide bridge' — workershave started installing temporary, 9-foot-tall screens to prevent more suicides on Portland's Vista Bridge. The work is expected to take about

three weeks. Construction beganTuesday. Four people, including a15-year-old girl, have jumped to their deaths from the bridge this year. Trained volunteers wearing orange vests began patrolling the bridge in late July to prevent more deaths. The temporary screens

cost $236,000. Thecity is looking for funding for a permanent barrier that's expected to cost between $2.5 million and $3 million. — From wire reports

Former Oregonmandrops Iongstanding sexual abusecaseagainst the Vatican By Steven Dubois

Neither side disputes that the Rev. Andrew Ronan, a PORTLAND — A f o r mer priest of the Friar Servants Oregon man who said he was and Mary order, abused chilsexually abused by a pedo- dren in Ireland and Chicago phile priest nearly 50 years before he was transferredto ago has withdrawn his appeal Portland. John Doe was 15 of a ruling that said the Vati- when he was allegedly molestcan did not employ the priest ed in 1965. and is not liable for damages. Ronan left the priesthood Lawyer J e f f A nd e r son in 1966, shortly after the Portnamed the Vatican as one of land archdiocese began a prothe defendants in the 2002 law- ceeding against him. The Vatisuit he filed on behalf of the can approved the departure, man identified as John Doe. returning him to lay status. Anderson said Tuesday his cli- Ronan died in 1992. ent still believes "all roads lead The plaintiff, who reached to Rome" but has grown weary a settlement with the religious of the long legal odyssey. The order, said the Vatican should decision was made shortly be- also be financially liable. He fore a deadline to reply to the and his lawyer alleged that the Vatican's appellate briefing. Vatican approved the trans"This survivor decided that fers to hide Ronan's behavior. we should pursue this effort, The Vatican, however, said but through other means and it learned of Ronan's actions not his case," said Anderson, after he got to Portland, and it who is based in Minnesota. does not control the movement The Vatican's lawyer, Jef- of individual priests across the frey Lena, said the case that world. ended at the 9th U.S. Circuit U.S. District Court Judge Court of Appeals was "way Michael Mosman examined over the top" and should have thousands of pages of docunever been filed. ments before determining last The Associated Press

Nurseries

get glimpse of 'smart

sprayer'

year that the Vatican did not employ Ronan and was not involved in the priest's transfers. An employee relationship between the Vatican and Ronan couldhave allowed for an exception to a federal law that generally prohibits lawsuits against foreign sovereign entities. Lena said Doe and Anderson had the documents showing that only t h e r e ligious order knew a bout Ronan's abuse. "They just continued to beat on this case way beyond when they knew it should have dled. He said in a statement that the case is the third of its kind to "disintegrate in the face of legal and factual challenge," referring to lawsuits against the Holy See that were filed in Kentucky and Wisconsin and later withdrawn. Anderson said an earlier ruling in which the judge said the Vatican is not i m mune under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act was an important win, and the dropping of Doe's lawsuit will not end

The Oregonian

Plant nursery operators, environmentalists and natural resource managers are gathering in Boring this week for field demonstrations of a new "smart sprayer" that could dr amatically reduce pesticide applications. The sprayer uses laser sensors to d e tect p l ant height, width and volume and adjusts the flow of pesticide from spray nozzles accordingly. A model tested last year reduced pesticide use by 65 percent while still controlling pests. Reducing pesticide use could also save nurseries money. The sprayer was developed by a team of researchers from Oregon State University, Ohio State University, the University of Tennessee and the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Application T e c hnology Research Unit.

The Associated Press A LBANY — A cam p e r known to friends as a mountain man d ie d o f s h otgun blasts after an argument last week with two Colorado men in the Cascade Range, court documents show. The documents were filed on Monday by the Linn County district attorney's office in the killing of W ayne Keith Klavano, 48, who moved from place to place, trapping and living off the land. Klavano was shot on July 29 at his campsite in the Soda Fork area in the Santiam River Valley. His parents found his body the next day after he didn't show up for an appointment. That night, Utah authorities arrested Travis Adam Powers, 23, of Windsor, Colo., and Daniel Lewis Armbrecht, 20,

of Pagosa Springs, Colo. The documents say Powers told officers that during the argument, Klavano crouched as

if to attack. The papers quote Power as saying he shot Klavano in the head and then twice more after Klavano fell to the

ground. A Linn County judge issued an arrest warrant for Powers and Armbrecht, who were initially held in Utah. It could not b e i m m ediately determined if they have lawyers. A member o f t h e U t a h Highway Patrol stopped them because a headlight on their SUV was out. The court documents said a nephew of Klavano saw Powers driving from the campsite the day before the shooting. Klavano was known to keep a rifle and two handguns in his possession. The court documents say the two suspects told investigators they took the firearms and threw spent casings into the bushes to make it look like a robbery scene.

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his effort to hold the Vatican accountable. "Far from the end," he said. "For us, it's the beginning because this case is the one that opened the door."

Court documents: 'Mountain man' killing followed argument

By Eric Mortenson

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DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER FrOmits heritage totheartS, there'S somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals vvho work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.

SISTERS M AGAZ I N E WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS

Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniquenessof this mountaintown. Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlight Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.

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The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

AN LNDEPENDENT NEWSPAPEB

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odds when it comes to managing our forests. The Deschutes Collaborative Forest Project brings environmentalists, timber interests, scientists, recreation representatives and government together to seek common ground. The West Bend Vegetation Management Project involves about 25,000 acres, mostly between Skyliners Road and the Cascade Lakes Highway. The plan calls for logging on 14,522 acres, thinning on 3,129 and prescribed burns on 4,166. Although not the group's first project, it's the one that will get the most attention because it involves popular recreation areas reached through Phil's Trailhead and Virginia Meissner Sno-park. Ruth Williamson, who represents recreation interests on the steering committee, said the work will be done in segments so that recreation won't be closed off. Significant effort is focused on making sure the public is well-informed about access, she said, including signs, news releases, Twitter feeds and more. When the project is fully ready to go, a designated website will be constantly updated, accordingto Kevin Larkin, district ranger for the Bend-Fort Rock District of the Deschutes National Forest. The Deschutes National Forest is one of 12 pilot projects in which

Preventing damaging fire, preserving popular

recreation areas and providing timber and jobs are the immediate prizes from this effort. federal money is allocated based on the demonstration of effective collaborative efforts that bring together groups historically at odds. The notion is that, by engaging competing interests at an early stage, the group can reach agreement on controversial projects, preventing late challenges and expensive delays. Larkin said a legal challenge is certainly still possible, but he's not expecting it. More likely would be adjustments in the plan in response to specific objections. Preventing damaging fire, preserving popularrecreation areas and providing timber and jobs are the immediate prizes from this effort. But the most exciting part of this story is creating a new model of engagement on controversial issues. Overcoming long-established attitudes of distrust opens the door to constructive solutions. It can help build healthy community engagement as well as restore healthy forests.

Goodmove byLegislature to raise Oregonjudges' pay mong the r elatively unnoticed bills to pass out of the Oregon Legislature last month was one that granted raises to the state's judges, both on the local level and in appellate courts, and that's a good thing. Oregon'sjudges are among the most poorly paid in the United States, according to the National Center for State Courts, an independent, nonprofit court improvement organization that has been tracking judicial salaries across the country for 30 years. In fact, pay for Oregon Supreme and Circuit Court judges rank 45th and 46th, respectively, among all states and the District of Columbia. Court of Appeals judges fare slightly better, coming in 36th in the same group. Numbers for the Circuit Court judges have been adjusted for inflation, but without that adjustment, they rank 45th. Judges do better when compared with lawyers in Oregon. Circuit Court judges make a bit more than theaverage lawyer in Deschutes County, for example, but substantially less than the average lawyer in Multnomah County. The

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recently approved raises will give all state judges $5,000 more this year,enough to move them up only slightly in the national rankings, and another $5,000 in 2014, still well below the national average. Obviously, Oregonians don't want judges who seek the job just because the salariesare high. Rather, we want judges who know the law well, who have integrity, the right temperament — neutral, calm, composed and polite, among other things — and who have experience in the legal system. We want judges who want to serve because they believe in the law, not in the size of the paycheck. However, to get men and women like that, we must pay them. Like the rest of Oregonians, judges come equipped with house payments to make, children to send to college and all the rest. If judicial salaries are too low to let them meet those obligations, the men and women we want on the bench will not apply. Oregonians deserve good judges, and by and large we've gotten them. These raises will help to ensure that we continue to get them.

Will Republicans blow it again? Ramesh Ponnuru

interventions and w orried about civil liberties than it was during n the past few weeks, the U.S. George W. Bush's presidency. CotSenateraces of2014 have started ton and Cheney are as youthful and to take shape. energetic as Paul, but on the other Elizabeth Cheney, daughter of the side of these debates — and they former vice president,announced could start pulling the party back that she would take on Wyoming toward its Bush-era views. Sen. Mike Enzi in a R epublican Third, how do conservatives reprimary. Senate Republican leader ally feel about Republican leaders'? Mitch McConnell of Kentucky got A vocal contingent of them cona challenger, too, in businessman sider McConnell, House Speaker Matt Bevin. And Rep. Tom Cotton, John Boehner, R-Ohio, and the rest R-Ark., has decided to run against worthless sellouts who are at odds incumbent Democratic Sen. Mark with grassroots sentiment. This Pryor. group is backing Bevin. The KenWhat's going to get the most at- tucky primary will give us a chance tention, appropriately, is whether to see how many troops each side Republicans can retake the Senate. of this bitter intraparty feud really (More on that in a bit.) But there commands. are other questions at stake in the Fourth, have Republicans learned election, and we'll find out some an- from the races they threw away swers as the races develop. in 2010 and 2012'? They could have First, is President Obama's health won several Senate seats had they care law going to be a hit or a flop'? nominated merely mediocre candiAnd will Republicans finally offer dates rather than disastrous ones. an alternative? Liberals think that, Rep. Paul Broun, who is running for as the law is put in place, people will the Senate in Georgia, has a habit of appreciate their new benefits and mentioning Obama in close proximsupport for it will rise. Conserva- ity to words like "Hitler" and "Sotives think the start of the Afford- viet, n and he says that the Big Bang able Care Act will be something theory, embryology and evolution are "lies straight from the pit of between a disappointment and a disaster. If they're right, the best bet hell." If Republicans pick him, they for Democrats will be to change the will show that they've learned nothsubject to the Republicans' lack of a ing — and that they no longer have plan. any truly safe Senate seats. If red-stateDemocrats such as Fifth, will there be a "wave" in Pryor and Sen. Mary Landrieu of which most of the competitive races Louisiana start running away from break to one party or the other'? Rethe law — declaring their support publicans are placing their hopes in for delaying some of its provisions, the dubious theory that the public for example — we'll know conser- gets a "six-year itch" during a twovatives are winning the argument. term presidency. It may also be that Second, is there going to be a Republicans now have a strong adresurgence of hawks in the Repub- vantage in midterm elections, in lican Party? Kentucky Sen. Rand which a lot fewer Americans vote Paul has pulled the party in his di- than presidential elections. If the rection; it's more skeptical of foreign Democrats can bring their edge in Bloomberg News

t

turning out voters from 2012 to the midterms, on the other hand, we could see a wave for them. Sixth — the big one — will control of the Senate flip to the Republicans? The map favors them: Twenty-one Democratic seats will be up for election in 2014, compared with 14 Republican ones, and Republicans need a net gain of only six to get a majority. But the map favored Republicans in 2006 and 2012, too, and they managed to lose ground both times. Republicans are well-positioned to win seats from Democrats who are retiring in West Virginia, South Dakota and M ontana. But t h ey aren't running heavyweight candidates in Iowa or Michigan, where Democratic retirements have also created opportunities. It's true that Republicans haven't won a Senate seat in Michigan since 1994, but they did very well there in the last midterm elections — picking up the governorship and both houses of the state legislature. Republicans also have no strong candidate yet in Minnesota, where Sen. Al Franken is nearing the end of a first term he barely won in the 2008 Democratic landslide. Alaska Democrat Mark B egich, another bare winner in 2008, doesn't have a challenger worth sweating over yet, either. Based on the way the races look now, then, a Republican takeover of the Senate is unlikely. Too much would have to go just right for it to happen. But that assessment is subject to revision — especially if Obamacare stays unpopular and the Republicans get their act together. — Ramesh Ponnuruis a Bloomberg View columnist, avisiting fellow at the American Enterprise Jnstitute and a senior editor at the National Review.

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Lawrence Summers' critics distort his views on financial regulation Cass R. SunsteIn

theorists, he produced a series of influential academic papers that helped lot of public discussion takes him win the 1993 John Bates Clark place before th e p r esident Medal, known as the "baby Nobel." nominates a new Federal Re- Although his full-time academic caserve Board chairman. This time, reer was short, he remains among the that discussion has gotten unusually most-cited economists in the world. heated. Unlike most academics, Summers Continuing economic difficulties has a wealth of practical experience, are one reason. Another is that Law- having served as U.S. Treasury secrence Summers, a top candidate, is a retary under President Bill Clinton larger-than-life figure — unusually and as head of the National Economwell-known and widely admired, but ic Council under President Barack in some circles controversial. The par- Obama. In the latter position, he adox is that those who know him best, helped to design the central responsand who have worked with him most es to the economic crisis, including closely, are his biggest supporters the stimulus package, the rescue of — and that the objections are coming both General Motors Co. and Chryslargely from those who know him lit- ler Group LLC, and the "cash for tle or not at all. (Disclosure: Summers clunkers" program. is a colleague and a friend, and I coSome of Summers' critics think taught a course with him last spring.) that he is anti-regulatory and reflexNo one doubts Summers has the ively pro-business, and that he would right background and credentials. One undermine the important regulatory of the nation's best macroeconomic mission of the Federal Reserve. NothBloomberg News

A

ing could be further from the truth. I worked with Summers in the Obama administration, and I can report that in internal discussions, he was one of the most uncompromising advocates for financial regulation. Of course,he supports the free-market system and wants to avoid unnecessary regulatory burdens. But time and again, he insisted that the events of 2008required everyone, including him, to re-evaluate their views about regulating the financial industry. He contended that banks can't police themselves any more than polluters can be trusted to protect the environment or pharmaceutical companies can be trusted to ensure that drugs are safe. Building on these analogies, Summers vigorously argued on behalf of a consumer financial protection

agency, and he supported strong safeguards designed toreduce the risk of another economic meltdown.

Intensely focused on the problem of "too big to fail," he was one of the earliest and most forceful advocates of promoting financial stability by requiring banks t o h ave enough capital to withstand an economic downturn. Summers never wears hisheart on his sleeve. Would he take steps to protect those who are struggling, including the unemployed'? If the past is any guide, the answer is unambiguous. In the long discussions that led to Obama's decision to save GM and Chrysler, Summers was acutely concerned, at every stage, with the human consequences. He asked: If those companies failed, what would happen to the people who worked for them'? What would be the effects on workers in manufacturing? It is true that when he was president of Harvard University, Summers made some ill-considered remarks about women in science. Those re-

marks have followed him ever since — an irony given that he has been an unwavering opponent of sex discrimination in all its forms, and a strong supporter and loyal mentor of numerous women. To take just one example, he chose a relatively young law professoras the firstfemale dean of Harvard Law School. (Her name was Elena Kagan.) The mission of the Federal Reserve Board is to help to increase employment, to promote economic growth and stable prices, and to p rotect consumers. For its next chairman, Obama has s ome e x t raordinary candidates, but no one knows more about how to carry out that mission than Larry Summers. — Cass R.Sunstein, the Robert Walmsley University professor at Harvard Law School, isa Bloomberg View columnist. Heis the formeradministrator of the White HouseOfficeofInformation and Regulatory Affairs.


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Allen Roger Tathwell, of Madras Nov. 26, 1937 - July 31, 2013 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home. 541-475-2241 Services: Memorial services will be held on Saturday, August 10, 2013, at 11:00 a.m., at the United Methodist Church, in Madras. Contributions may be made to:

United Methodist Church Food Bank c/c United Methodist Church

Barbara Jean Addington, of Redmond Oct. 30, 1936 - Aug. 3, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life: Sat., Aug. 10, 2013, 11:00 a.m., Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond Contributions may be made to:

Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond, OR 97756; or Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701

Wayne Eugene Bryant, of Redmond Feb. 28, 1921 - Aug. 5, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date.

Lawsuit alleges Portland police used excessive force in 2011Qccupymarch

Charlene Margaret Veek, of Sunriver

By Nigel Duara

April 13, 1965 - Aug. 1, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A public visitation/viewing will take place on Friday, August 9, 2013, from 11:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m., at Baird Funeral Home, 2425 NE Tweet Place, Bend. A Celebration of Life will be held on Sunday, August 11, at 2:00 p.m., at The Door at Three Rivers, 56870 Venture Lane, Sunriver.

PORTLAND — A p hotograph of an Occupy Portland d emonstrator blasted w i t h

Contributions may be made to:

The Door 'l9300 Kiowa Road Bend, Oregon 97702 thedoor3r.org

Karen Della Graham, of Christmas Valley Mar. 31, 1944 - Aug. 2, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service will be held Thursday August 8, 2013, at 2:00 p.m., at Real Life Christian Church, located at 2880 NE 27th St., Bend, OR 97701.

Teresa A. Guy, of La Pine Sept. 26, 1962 - July 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services are pending.

The Associated Press

pepper spray as she opened her mouth to shout at a police officer became a defining image of the monthlong encampment. N ow, the woman in t h e photograph is in court to seek $155,000 in damages from the city of Portland, the officer who sprayed her and another she said put a baton to her throat. Jury selection in a lawsuit filed by Elizabeth Evon Nichols began Tuesday. The trial will address whether Sgt. Jeffrey McDaniel's use ofpepper spray was within bureau policy, and whether the officers' actions were reasonable. The officers' defense team responded to the suit by saying Nichols was menacing the officers, and they reacted

appropriately. Nichols "actively, physically resisted lawful police instructions to move off of the sidewalk," the attorneys wrote in a motion. They said Nichols "aggressively moved as if to attack" the officers, whose actions were reasonable under the circumstances. Nichols was among thous ands o f p r o testers w h o gathered in Portland on Nov. 17, 2011, in a demonstration againstforeclosures by major banks. Protesters lined sidewalks as police vehicles w arned them t o s t a y o f f the pavement. Nichols was

Randy L. Rasmussen/The Oregonian file photo

A police officer uses pepper spray on Occupy Portland protestor Elizabeth Evon Nichols as she opens her mouth to shout at a police officer at Pioneer Courthouse Square in 2011. Nicholsis in court seeking $155,000 in damages from the city of Portland, the officer who sprayed her and another she said put a baton to her throat. Jury selection began on Tuesday. among several people who shouted at police from the sidewalk. She said in the lawsuit that police officer Doris Paisley held a baton to her throat. When she protested, the lawsuit states, McDaniel sprayed her open mouth with pepper

spray. Nichols "was so overcome by pain that she flinched and

spun away from (McDaniel)," according to the lawsuit. "She hunched over with her hands on her face. After a moment, she felt her legs collapsing and

sat down on the sidewalk." Nichols sa i d Pai s l ey dragged her by her hair to a differentspot, where she was charged. Last year, Nichols was convicted in Multnomah County Circuit Court of i nterfering with police officers. She was ordered to pay $130. Now 22, Nichols says in the suit that officers McDaniel and Paisley violated her right to freespeech and impeded her right to freedom from unreasonable seizure with excessive force.

Oregonian p h otographer Randy Rasmussen took a p hotograph o f N i c hols a t the moment when she was

pepper-sprayed. The photo played on newspaper front pages and won a N ational Headliner award. The incident occurred a week after the Occupy Portland camp downtown was broken up b y p o l ice. The Portland camp lasted a little more than a month, before it was ordered closed because of d e t eriorating s a n itary conditions.

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.

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Mail:Obituaries P.D. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

FEATURED OBITUARY

Resurrecting HoodRiver'sspring chinook run By Scott Learn

for the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. "They're starting to build PARKDALE — As salmon streams go,Hood River faces a self-sustaining p r ogram some unique challenges: glathere," Fritsch says, "and it cial gullywashers from Mount should improve over time." Hood, heavy irrigation withT angible results o n t h e drawals for Oregon's top fruit be gaining a more secure Hood River would bolster exorchards and a once hardy foothold. pensiveefforts across the Copopulation of spring chinook The numbers are small, but lumbia River basin to restore t hat scientists figure w a s estimated returns of wild chi- salmon and steelhead runs, wiped out four decades ago. nook topped 400 in 2012, tribal after decades of dam building But the Powerdale Dam officials say, up from a low of and development k nocked came down in 2010,improv- 20 in 1999. Estimated returns them down. The Deschutes ing prospects for young salm- ofhatcheryfishthisyear, about c uts t h rough t h e Wa r m on migrating downstream. 1,100 to date, are relatively S prings r e servation, b u t Investment in the basin has strong, even compared with Hood River's spring chinook spiked, part of a 2008 accord the much bigger Deschutes are also vital to the tribes. between four Columbia River River, says Mark Fritsch, proj- The river is in the tribes' treatribes and t h e B o nneville ect implementation manager ty ceded lands, where they The Oregonian

Power Administration. And early signs are that Hood River spring chinook, w hich biologists from T h e Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs and Oregon officials are trying to r estore, may

still retain fishing rights. And Punchbowl Falls is a spectacular tribal fishing spot for the first salmon to return from the ocean each spring. After years of fishing shutdowns, improving r e turns have allowed spring chinook fishing the last seven years for both tribal and non-tribal anglers, says Chris Brun, coordinator of the tribes' Hood River productionprogram. Hatchery fish, marked by a clipped fin, are kept, wild fish released. For the tribes, being part of the solution is "really important," said Brun. "And this is a placewhere tribal members can fish in seclusion."

Bellah, sociologist, sought map to the Americansoul By Margalit Fox

Candler School of Theology at New York Times News Service Emory University, wrote in an Robert Bellah, a d i s t in- email Monday. guished sociologist of religion Bellah's best-known books who sought nothing less than include "The Broken Covenant: to map the American soul, in A merican Civil R eligion i n both the sacred and secular Time of Trial" (1975), "Habits senses ofthe word, died July of the Heart: Individualism and 30 in Oakland, Calif. He was Commitment in American Life" 86. (1985) and "Religion in Human His death, from complica- Evolution: From the Paleolithic tions of recent heart surgery, to the Axial Age" (2011). "He was a major moral phiwas announced by the University of California, Berkeley, losopher of modernity," said where he was the Elliott pro- Ann Swidler, a professor of sofessoremeritus of sociology. ciology at Berkeley and, with Throughout his work, Bel- Tipton, one of the authors of lah was concerned with the "Habits of the Heart." "He was ways in which faith shapes, interested in the way in which and is shaped by, American our humanity was grounded civic life. He was widely cred- in very primitive aspects of ited with helping usher the ourselves — our need to think study of religion — a histori- interms of myth, narrative, the cally marginalized subject in stories we tell about who we the social sciences — into the are as a people — and in our sociological fold. capacity for rational thought." " Modern America has a Bellah, who was awarded soul, not only a b o dy, and the National Humanities MedBellah probed that soul more al by President Bill Clinton in deeply and subtly than anyone 2000, came to wide attention in his field or his time," Ste- in 1967 with a seminal article, ven Tipton, a professor in the "Civil Religion in America."

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Dmytro Groisman, 41: A pioneering Ukrainian rights advocate who was one of the leading rights defenders in post-Soviet Ukraine, earning widespread respect as a relentless campaigner for justice and crusader against official abuse. Died Monday. LeightonGage, 71:A former advertising man f rom N ew

Jersey who found a second career writing crime novels about a Brazilian police detective, Gage was 66 when his first book, "Blood of the Wicked," was published in 2008. Hi s l e a d c h a racter, Chief Inspector Mario Silva, is anofficer ofthe Federal Police willing to resort to illegal methods when crooked officials impede justice. Died July 26 in Ocala, Fla. — From wire reports

Thief

WEST NEWS

Continued from B1 McCright was given the opportunity to explain his actions to the court. "I violated Mrs. Chandler's trust," he said. "She took me in, trusted me, and because of her age and vulnerability, it makes it more repulsive.1have no excuses for my actions." M cCright claimed t h e money was used to pay administration fees for his company, Diamond Point Ventures Development. "I'm sorry for your pain and suffering," McCright said to Chandler. "I hope there is a day, after prison, that my actions can speak for my words." After A dler s entenced McCright, Gunnels asked the court t o t a k e a w ay chances for the defendant to get out early. "He had a s u bstantial criminal record and stole a great deal of money from a great, innocent person," Gunnels said. "It's a substantial sentence for a property crime case and will keep him locked away for a

Fishermenaccuseagency of illegally deserting 'otter-free zone' program

long, long time." — Reporter: 541-383-0348, bandersen@bendbulleti n.com

CCOs Continued from B1 With all the reforms being made at the state and federal levels — including health insurance exchanges, online marketplacesfor consumers

By Louis Sahagun Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Commercial fishermen have filed a lawsuit in f ederal court challenging the U .S. Fish a nd W i ldlife S ervice f o r a bandoning a p r ogram t o create an "otter-free zone" in Southern California coastal waters that sustain shellfish industries. The lawsuit filed last week by the Pacific Legal Foundation on behalf of harvesters of sea urchin, abalone and lobster south of Point Conception, accuses the agency of illegally terminating the program without congressional approval or authorization. O tters are voracious eaters of shellfish. Federal officials ended the program in J anuary after determining that capturing and trans-locating sea otters that wander into the "otterfree zone" was hurting efforts to protect and recover the species — even as it succeeded in protecting shellfish fisheries.

to compare insurance plans — Bruce Goldberg, director of the Oregon Health Authority, noted it's a historic time. By 2016, he told the board, the state plans to have 93 percent of the population covered by insurance. Right now, it's

The sea otter population has not risen much in recent years,as the creatures suffer from disease, parasites, inadequate food supplies, shark bites and the occasional bullet wound. A n e s t imated 2,792 now exist off the California coast. Last week, a coalition of environmental groups led by Friends of the Sea Otter announced that it would intervene in the case on behalf of federal wildlife authorities. "The problem is that the shellfish industry flourished after sea otters were all but wiped out by the fur trade," said Jim Curland, advocacy program director of the nonprofit Friends of the Sea Otter. "Now, if the fishermen's lawsuit were to prevail, our concern is that harm, injury and even death to sea otters would follow." Pacific Legal Foundation attorney Jonathan Wood argued that the no-otter zone was needed to prevent the furry, button-nose marine m ammals f r o m "ravag-

ing fragile nearby f i sheries and d e stroying l o cal economies." "We're not attacking sea otters," Wood said. "It's just that without a sea otter management zone, the fisheries our clients rely on will be decimated in 10 to 20 years." Plaintiffs include the California Abalone Association, the California Lobster and Trap Fishermen's Association, Commercial Fishermen of Santa Barbara, and the California Sea Urchin Commission, a state panel dedicated to promoting education about the nutritional value of sea urchin. "This case is about balance in environmental p olicies, and adherence to the rule of law," Wood said. Congress established the "otter-free zone" in the late 1980s as part of an effort by federal wildlife authorities to move 140 otters from Monterey Bay to San Nicolas Island, which is located about 60 miles off the coast of Ventura County.

at about 83 percent. "This is the biggest change we're seeing in our nation's health care system since the 1960s," he said. Goldberg also updated the board on action the Legislature took the past session,

including expanding the Oregon Health Plan in 2014. Soon, the board will tackle ideas on how to lower the costs of commercial insurance providers, at the governor's request. — Reporter,541-554-1162, Idake@bendbulletin.com


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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 6:00 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday.... 8 21 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:01 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 8:19 p.m Moonrise today.... 6:59 a.m Moonsettoday .... 8:26 p.m Aug.14 Aug. 20 Aug. 28 Sept. 5 •

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....4:38 a.m...... 7:35 p.m. Venus......9:01 a.m...... 9:44 p.m. Mars.......3:31 a.m...... 6:52 p.m. Jupiter......2 58 a.m...... 6:1 7p.m. Satum.....1253pm.....11:29pm. Uranus....10:21 p.m..... 1 1:02a.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 91/55 24hours endmg 4p.m. *. . 0.00" Recordhigh........95m1990 Monthtodate.......... 0.11" Recordlow......... 32 in1980 Average monthtodate... 0.09"

Average high.............. 83 Year to date............ 3.30" Average low .............. 48 Average year to date..... 6.37" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.97 Record 24 hours ...0.53 in1999 *Melted liquid equivalent

FIRE INDEX

OREGON CITIES

WATER REPORT

Yesterday Wednesday Thursday Bend, westoiHwy 97veryhigh Sisters..............................high Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/WBend,easto/Hwy.97......high LaPine......................veryhigh

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as Redmond/Madras........high Prineville.................veryhigh a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Mod. = Moderate; Exi. = Extreme

Reservoir Acre feet C a p acity Crane Prairie...... . . . . . . 28,332...... 55,000 Wickiup...... . . . . . . . . . . 79,235..... 200,000 Crescent Lake..... . . . . . . 67,020...... 91,700 Ochoco Reservoir..... , , , 15,670...,, . 47,000 The higher the UV Index number, the greater Prineville...... . . . . . . . . 107,956..... 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 ...... . 218 for solar at noon. Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup .... . . . . . . 1,530 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake ...... . 145 LOW MEDIUM HIGH Little DeschutesNear La Pine ...... . . . . . . . 79.7 0 2 4 6 10 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend .... . . . . . . . . . 133 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls ..... . . . . 2,001 Crooked RiverAbove Prinevige Res..... . . . . . NA Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res..... . . . . 222 Updated daily. Source: pollen.com Ochoco CreekBelow OchocoRes. .... . . . . . 21.8 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne ..... . . . . . . 79.7 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 MEDIUM or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

To report a wildfire, call 911

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

IPOLLEN COUNT LOW0

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

o www m

• 114'

HIGH LOW

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

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

Yesterday's extremes

possible

HIGH LOW

Salem ....... 95/57/0 00 ..88/57/s ...86/57/pc Sisters.........95/52/0.00....86/52/pc.....83/48/pc The Dages......98/60/0.00.....92/65/s.....90/62/pc

• 39'

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t t t 't't't t t t t t t

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HIGH LOW

Roseburg.......96/62/0.00....86/58/pc.....86/58/pc

Yesterday's state extremes

Slight chance of thunderstorms

HIGH LOW

Medford

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Astoria ........68/53/0.00....65/56/pc.....66/55/pc Baker City...... 89/44/0.00..... 89/52/t.....88/52/pc Brookings......55/50/0.00....59/53/pc.....59/53/pc Burns..........92/48/0.00....88/52/pc.....87/50/pc Eugene........95/52/0.00....86/54/pc.....86/54/pc Klamath Falls .. 90/48/000 ....80/52/t .. . 78/51/t Lakeview....... 91 /39/0.00 .... 84/54/t..... 82/52/t La Pine........91/41/0.00....84/50/pc......81/43/t Medford.......98/62/0.00....87/59/pc.....88/62/pc Newport.......59/48/0.00....61/50/pc.....62/50/pc North Bend...... na/na/na....62/54/pc......64/55/c Ontario........97/65/0.00.....96/67/s.....96/66/pc Pendleton......96/59/0.00.....95/62/s.....93/57/pc Portland .......90/58/0.00.....86/59/s.....83/59/pc Prineville.......90/55/0.00....88/56/pc.....85/54/pc Redmond....... 94/50/0.00..... 88/58/t.....87/54/pc

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W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms

seyes

maymxy m Rain F l urries Snow

Ice

Yesterdayyyednesdayyhursday Yesterdayyyednesdayyhursday Yesterdayyyednesdayyhursday Yesterdayyyednesdayyhursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/yy Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/yy Hi/Lo/yy City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX.....102/77/0.00 103/79/pc100/77/pc GrandRapids... 78/65/trace...80/56/t .. 78/62/s RapidCity.......82/57/004..82/59/pc. 83/55/pc Savannah.......89/77/000..89/73/pc. 90/75/pc Akron..........81/60/000... 84/66/t...80/66/t Green Bay.......82/63/000 ..76/54/pc.. 76/57/s Reno...........96/59/000 ..89/60/pc. 87/57/pc Seattle..........87/57/000...82/58/s. 80/59/pc Albany..........79/51/000...79/66/c...81/65/t Greensboro......77/64/073...85/69/t...86/70/t Richmond.......75/65/1.39... 86/71/t. 88/72/pc SiouxFalls.......85/60/0.00...75/55/s. 79/56/pc Albuquerque.....88/69/000 ..87/64/pc. 88/67/pc Harusburg.......72/62/0.17... 80/68/t...84/67/t Rochester, NY....80/54/0.00... 81/66/t...80/62/t Spokane........89/62/0.00... 92/58/s. 90/60/pc Anchorage......66/55/000 ..65/53/sh. 63/53/sh Hartford,CT.....79/54/000..81/66/pc...83/69lt Sacramento......83/53/000 ..83/55/pc. 85/56/pc Springfield, MO ..82/71/027... 90/71/t...85/70/t Atlanta.........88/74/0.00... 86/72/t...89/72/t Helena..........87/54/0.00... 88/56/s...86/56/t St. Louis........ 90/72/trace... 88/70/t...82/69/t Tampa..........91/79/0.33... 92/77/t...91/77/t Atlantic City.....79/54/0.01... 79/70/t...81/72/t Honolulu........88/76/0.00... 89/74/s.. 88/75/s Salt Lake City....98/72/000 ..94/70/pc...95/70/t Tucson..........84/70/003 ..96/76/pc .. 98/77/s Austin.........104/74/000 ..103/77/s.102/76/s Houston ........99/78/0.00..100/7is. 100/78/s SaoAntonio....105/78/000 ..102/76/s. 100/76/s Tulsa...........99/75/000 ..99/75/pc. 95/74/pc Baltimore .......72/65/0.13... 81/70/t...84/71/t Huntsville.......83/71/0.40...87/72/1...90/72/t SaoDiego.......72/64/000..72/64/pc.71/62/pc Washington, DC..74/69/007... 82/72/t...86/74/t Billiogs.........87/57/000 ..88/58/pc. 77/57/pc Indianapolis.....80/69/0.00... 85/71/t...81/67/t SaoFrancisco....70/55/000..68/55/pc. 6555/pc Wichita.........91/71/000... 85/68/t...81/67/t Birmingham .. 90/74/038... 8I73/t...89/73/t Jackson, MS.... 97/76/009. 97/77/t. 96/76/pc SaoJose........73/58/000..74/56/pc 75/56/pc Yakima.........98/61/000...94/63/s. 93/63/pc Bismarck........81/54/000 ..75/55/pc. 75/51/pc Jacksonvile......90/78/000..90/72/pc...90/73/t SantaFe........88/62/000 ..81/56/pc. 83/59/pc Yuma..........l04/83/000 ..102/76/s. 102/75/s Boise...........95/62/000..92/59/pc.94/58/pc Juneau..........70/51/000...70/50/s. 65/52/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........74/59/000 ..82/66/pc...81/70/t Kansas City......87/69/005...85/68/t...80/66/t Bodgeport,CT....79/59/000 ..79/69/pc...81/71/t Lansing.........80/63/001...82/54/t .. 76/62/s Amsterdam......70/61/014 66/55/sh 69/55/pc Mecca..........97/86/000 .103/84/s106/83/pc Buffalo.........80/57/000... 80/67/t...79/62/t Las Vegas......104/81/000..100/79/s. 102/79/s Athens..........86/77/000...93/71/s .. 88/73/s Mexico City .....77/55/000... 74/53/t .73/52/t Burlington, VT....78/51/000...80/67/c...80/63/t Lexington.......84/69/0 00... 81/71/t...83/72/t Auckland........63/48/000 ..60/51/sh.62/42/sh Montreal........77/57/000 ..79/70/pc. 77/68/sh Caribou,ME.....76/47/000...77/55/s...70/58/t Lincoln..........88/67/000 ..81/62/pc. 80/59/pc Baghdad.......105/78/000..113/89/s. 111/88/s Moscow........79/63/003..82/61/sh. 81/66/pc Charleston, SC...88/73/0.00..88/74/pc. 89/75/pc Little Rock.......95/76/0.00 ..98/76/pc. 96/76/pc Bangkok........95/82/0.00... 91/75/t...88/76/t Nairobi.........64/57/0.0072/55/pc. .. 71/55/pc Charlotte........76/67/050..87/69/pc...89/72/t LosAngeles......71/61/000..74/61/pc. 74/61/pc Beiyng..........91/77/000... 87/80/t .. 98/79/s Nassau.........88/77/000 ..87/79/pc...84/80/t Chattaoooga.....86/74/000...87/72/t...89/72/t Louisville........84/72/0 00... 85/73/t...85/76/t Beirut..........88/77/0 00... 86/72/s.. 85/72/s New Delhi.......82/77/0 00... 95/82/t...86/80/t Cheyenne.......85/57/000... 69/53/t...79/53/t Madison yyh....84/66/000..79/56/pc. 76/58/pc Berliu...........90/64/000...91/67/s.76/56/sh Osaka..........95/77/058...93/73/s. 95/73/pc Chicago...... 83/67/004... 83/64/t. 78/63/pc Memphis....... 88/76/000 92/77/t .. 94/75/t Bogota.........68/45/000..63/48/sh.61/49/sh Oslo............66/55/015..73/58/pc. 65/50/sh Cincinnati.......82/64/0.00... 82/69/t...84/69/t Miami..........90/76/0.19... 89/79/t...90/81/t Budapest........97/64/0.00 ..102/72/s. 104/75/s Ottawa.........77/55/0.00 .. 79/61/pc. 77/55/sh Cleveland.......81/61/000...84/67/t...79/66/t Milwaukee......84/64/000..78/60/pc.72/60/pc BuenosAires.....66/43/000...59/48/c ..57/41Ic Paris............77/61/000... 79/61/t.72/54/pc ColoradoSpnngs ..87/59/NA...65/50/t. 75/50/pc Minneapolis.....86/59/0.00...75/57/s. 77/58/pc CaboSaoLucas ..91/75/0.00... 97/77/c. 97/81/pc Rio deJaneiro....84/63/0.00... 76/64/s. 80/65/pc Columbia,MO...87/70/046... 86/67/t...79/68/t Nashville........83/71/005... 87/72/t...90/73/t Cairo...........97/75/0.00..102/73/s. 101/71/s Rome...........91/70/0.00... 87/75/s .. 94/77/s Columbia,SC....82/72/040 ..89/72/pc...92/73/t New Orleans.....96/78/000... 95/78/t. 93/77/pc Calgaiy.........68/50/0.33... 68/48/t. 59/48/sh Santiago........57/41/0.00... 50/30/r. 52/28/pc Columbus, GA....91/75/0.00... 90/74/t. 92/74/pc New York.......82/64/0.00...82/70/c...83/71/t Cancun.........90/75/0.00... 89/78/t...88/79/t Sao Paulo.......77/57/0.00 ..76/56/pc.. 79/58/c Columbus, OH....82/65/0.00... 82/68/t. 81/68/pc Newark,Nl......81/61/0.00... 83/70/t...83/70/t Dublin..........66/50/000 ..68/54/pc. 68/56/pc Sapporo ........84/77/000 ..81/66/sh.. 84/69/c Concord,NH.....77/52/000 ..80/61/pc...79/62/t Norfolk, VA......72/66/053... 86/71It. 87/73/pc Edinburgh.......64/46/000 ..68/50/sh.68/53/sh Seoul...........82/73/000... 86/77/t...87/76/t Corpus Christi....99/81/000... 91/80/s .. 90/79/s OklahomaCity...99/78/0 00 100/75/pc. 96/74/pc Geneva.........88/64/000... 72/61/t...69/58/t Shanghai.......l06/86/000... 99/84/s. 101/85/s DallasFtWorth..104/80/000..105/83/s.104/82/s Omaha.........90/66/037 ..82/62/pc. 80/60/pc Harare..........68/43/000... 70/47/s. 72/48/pc Singapore.......88/77/169... 90/79/t...90/79/t Dayton .........81/63/0.00... 82/68/t. 81/68/pc Orlando.........93/74/0.00... 93/75/t...92/75/t Hong Kong......93/82/000... 86/79/t...85/78/t Stockholm.......79/59/000... 79/59/r.73/59/sh Denver....... 89/62/000... 70/58/t. 80/58/pc PalmSprings....106/74/0.00..102/73/s. 101/71/s Istanbul.........86/75/0.00... 85/70/s ..84/74/s Sydney..........75/54/0.00 .. 71/51/pc. 51/45/pc DesMoines......92/70/000..81/60/pc. 81/61/pc Peoria..........87/67/0.00..84/63/pc. 79/64/pc lerusalem.......90/68/0.00... 87/68/s ..86/67/s Taipei...........93/82/0.00... 90/81/s .. 92/80/s Detroit..........79/65/0.03... 83/65/t. 78/63/pc Philadelphia.....78/63/0.00... 81/70/t...85/73/t Johannesburg....61I41/000...62/48/s ..65/42/s TelAviv.........91/77/000...93/70/s .. 91/70/s Duluth......... 76/56/trace...69/50/s. 69/50/pc Phoeuix.........92/76/0.01 102/82/pc. 105/84/s Lima...........63/59/0.00... 70/59/s .. 70/58/s Tokyo...........88/81/0.00... 91/77/t. 90/77/pc El Paso..........95/74/0.00... 94/73/t. 97/74/pc Pittsburgh.......80/58/0.00... 81/67/t...80/67/t Lisbon..........79/64/000 79/58/pc 82/60/s Toronto.........75/63/000... 79/63/t .. 81/59/s Fairbanks........81/52/000...82/52/s. 79/50/pc Portland,ME.....75/49/0.00..76/61/pc...75/61/t London.........72/54/006...73/52/c. 77/54/pc Vancouver.......73/57/000...75/60/s.. 73/61/s Fargo...........79/58/0.18...73/54/s.72/50/pc Providence ......80/54/0.00..81I66/pc...82/70/t Madrid .........91/64/0 00.. 90/60/pc.. 89/60/s Vienna..........97/70/0 00104/75/pc101/71/pc Flagstaff ........62/57/001...75/49/t.. 78/48/s Raleigh.........84/66/014..88/70/pc. 88/71/pc Manila..........84/75/0.63... 85/79/t...92/78/t Warsaw.........91/64/0.00... 96/73/s. 100/72/s

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 M otor sports, C3 NBA, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

WCL BASEBALL

Elks lose ground, fall to Knights CORVALLIS — Bend

dropped its second game in a row toCorvallis on Tuesdaynight, falling 6-3 to the host Knights in the West

Coast Leaguecontest. The Elks (30-20WCL), who gave up10 hits and

committed three errors against Corvallis, are

now three gamesback of the Knights (33-17) in the WCL South Division standings with four contests left in the regular

season. Bend starter Taylor

Elman took the loss after allowing four runs on seven hits over 4/s

innings. The Elksand the Knights were tied 33 after four innings, but

Corvallis scored twice in

CYCLING

Biking enthusiasts wanted for web video By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

Riding Oregon's scenic bikeways and exploring the state on two wheels makes for a pretty amazing vacationforanyone with "cyclelust." The only thing better is when someone else picks up the tab. Travel Oregon, the state's tourism arm, is looking to film several groups of riders this summer and fall for a web video series promoting Oregon's scenic bikeways. In exchange for serving as "talent" for the videos, the state will pay food

r

r

jl.'i

and lodging costs for the lucky groups selected. "The idea is to try to find people excited about (the state's designated scenic bikeways)," says Laura Crawford, who along with he r b u siness partner and companion, Russ Roca ofthe bicycle tourism group The Path L ess Pedaled, film a n d p roduce the v i deos f o r Travel O r egon. "People P that want to volunteer their time, we treat them really well with food and lodging during Rob Kerr/The Bulletin file A pair of cyclists ride along Innes Market Road near Tumalo last year. The rural road the whole shoot." SeeBiking/C4 is part of the Twin Bridges Scenic Bikeway.

the fifth and once in the sixth to grab a lead it did

not surrender. Turner Gill paced

PGA CHAMPIONSHIP

TRACK & FIELD

Bend at the plate, going 1-for-3 with an RBI and

one run scored.

m ire

The top two teams in the WCL South Division conclude their three-

game series todayat Corvallis' Goss Stadium. — Bulletin staff report

GOLF

Bend prowins Championship

OS S

gC

NEWBERG — Bend's Brandon Kearney tied

e IC

u'.

the course record at Chehalem Glenn Golf Club on Monday with a 7-under-par 65 to win the 2013 Pacific Northwest's Assistant

Oaeguzo»

eVen S

Oaegt/zo»

Championship. Kearney posted an8-

By Doug Ferguson

under-par 71-65 — 136 to win by a single stroke

The Associated Press

over Lake Oswegopro Scott Erdmann, who shot a first-round 65 to

set the course record. It was the second time

Kearney haswonthe tournament, first winning it in 2010. The 34-year-old assistant pro at Bend Golf and Country Club earned $1,200 for the

Martin Meissner/The Associated Press file

Ashton Eaton, left, and Trey Hardee compete in the 110-meter hurdles during the decathlon at the World Athletics Championships in Daegu, South Korea in August of 2011. Eaton and Hardee are the favorites to win gold in Moscow.

win and advanced from the tournament to the 2013 National Car Rental PGA Assistant National Championship, scheduled for Oct. 31-Nov. 3 at the Wa-

namaker Course at the PGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Fla. — Bulletin staff report

• Ashton Eatonlooksto solidify hisstatus as'world's greatest athlete' with a win attheWorld Championshipsin Moscow By Steve Ritchie

EatPn at theWPllti

Championships COLLEGE FOOTBALL

Dealer reportedly paid Manziel Another day, another report from ESPN cit-

ing evidence from an unnamed source that Texas A& M quarterback

JohnnyManzielsigned

2009 — In Berlin, in his

first time competing at the World Championships, Eaton placed 18th with

8,061 points. 2011 — In Daegu, South Korea, Eaton won the silver medal with 8,505 points to fellow American Trey

Hardee's 8,607.

By any measure, Ashton Eaton had a pretty sweet year in 2012. First, he set a new world record in the decathlon at the Olympic Trials in Eugene, despite weather conditions that were abysmal at times. Then he went on to win the gold medal in the decathlon at the London Olympic Games. Eaton, just 24 years old at the time of his gold-medal performance, was acclaimed as the "world's greatest athlete," a title commonly associated with the Olympic decathlon champion. See Eaton/C4

PITTSFORD, N.Y.— The PGA Championship can't be accused of being only in a New York state of mind. At least not over the long haul. True, the inaugural PGA Championship was held at Siwanoy Country Club in Bronxville, N.Y. And yes, eight of the first 22 championships were held in the Empire State. But the PGA of America moves its major around the country. It has been held in 26 states, compared with 17 states for the U.S. Open. And while the U.S. Open has gone to New York 18 times, Oak Hill marks the 12th time the PGA Championship is in the Empire State. Jim Barnes won at Siwanoy, 1 up over Jock Hutchison in 1916. Barnes often gets left out of conversation on the back-to-back winners of this major. He also won in 1919, after a two-year absence brought on by World War I. Even more impressive? The PGA Championship has been held at 10 golf courses in New York, compared with eight New York courses for the U.S.

Open. SeePGA/C4

memorabilia in ex-

change for money. In Tuesday's report, an East Coast auto-

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

graph dealer said he paid Manziel $7,500 for signing approximately 300 mini- and full-sized

A&M helmets on Jan.

11-12 in New Haven, Conn. The ESPN report

J+rp

said the broker played

Thomas isreadyto gofor Ducks • The Oregonjunior returns to once again be athreat to score each time hetouchesthe ball

two cellphone videos for an ESPN reporter. But the video does not show Manziel, the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner,

accepting money. The report said the videos, taken without

By Anne M. Peterson

cluded a clip of Manziel

EUGENE — De'Anthony Thomas is a man of many surprises.

The Associated Press

Manziel's knowledge, in-

saying "you never did a signing with me" and

The speedy running back grew up in the

telling the broker that, if he were to tell anyone,

Manziel would refuse to deal with him in the future. — Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Oon Ryan /The Associated Press file

Oregon runningback De'Anthony Thomas scored every 9.2 tim es he touched the ball during the 2012 season.

limelight as one of the best prep football players inLos Angeles, then graced the cover of a national magazine in his sophomore year with the Oregon Ducks. But he prefers the quiet of fishing on the McKenzie River. Or hanging out with his new pet iguana, Gucci.

He has little time for that now, however, as Thomas and the Ducks opened preseason camp this week. Last season Thomas was a dual threat, running for 701 yards and 11 touchdowns and catching 45 passes for 445 yards and five more scores. He also scored on a kickoff return and a punt return. He was the first Oregon player in 47 years to score touchdowns four different ways. For every 9.2 times he touched the ball, he scored. In last season's 35-17 Fiesta Bowl victory over Kansas State, Thomas scored on a 94-yard return of the opening kickoff, the longest ever in an Oregon bowl appearance. In two career bowl games, he has amassed 509 all-purpose

yards. SeeThomas /C4


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

SPORTS ON THE AIR TODAY BASEBALL Little League, World Series, Midwest Regional, semifinal Little League, World Series,

Time 9 a.m.

ESPN2

Midwest Regional, semifinal

11 a.m.

ESPN2

TV/Radio

Little League, World Series,

COREBOARD BASEBALL

1 p.m.

ESPN2

Southeast Regional, semifinal MLB, Oakland at Cincinnati

3 p.m. 9:30 a.m. 5 p.m.

ESPN2 MLB ESPN

MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis Little League, World Series,

Southwest Regional, final

5 p.m.

ESPN2

GOLF

USGA, U.S.Women'sAmateur

noon

Golf

SOCCER MLS, U.S. Open Cup, semifinal, Portland at Real Salt Lake

6:30 p.m.

Root

THURSDAY TENNIS

Time

ATP Tour, Rogers Cup, men's and women's round of 16

9 a.m.

TV/Radio ESPN2

GOLF

In the Bleachers Ct 2013 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Leaguestandings North Division WallaWallaSweets WenatcheeAppleSox Bellingham Bells VictoriaHarbourCats Ke owna Falcons South Division

s(a. W

L

27

22

27 25 20 17

22 25 29 32

W

L 17 20 24 24 25 32

CorvagisKnights 32 BendElks 30 MedfordRogues 28 KlamathFalls Gems 25 CowlitzBlackBears 24 KitsapBlueJackets 17 Tuesday'sGames

Wenatchee 6,Victoria 2 Today'sGames Kitsap atMedford, 6:35 p.m. KlamathFalls atCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Bend atCorvallis, 6:40p.m. KelownaatWalla Walla, 7:05 p.m. Victoria atWenatchee, 7:05p.m.

10 a.m.

TNT

11 a.m.

ESPN

Northwest Regional, semifinal Little League,World Series,

2 p.m.

ESPN2

Great Lakes Regional, semifinal MLB, Detroit at Cleveland or

4 p.m.

ESPN2

BASEBALL Little League, World Series,

Great LakesRegional, semifinal Little League, World Series,

Knights 6, Elks 3 Bend 000 300 000 — 3 7 3 Corvallis 101 121 000 — 6 10 1 Elman,Jordan (5), Melbostad(7), Aboites(8) and Servais.Bishop,Nesbitt(6)and Lund.W—Bishop.L — Elman.2B—Corvallis: Heck.

FOOTBALL NFL

Los Angeles Dodgers at St. Louis (5 p.m.j

4 p.m.

MLB

6 p.m.

ESPN2

NFL preseason, Denver atSan Francisco

5 p.m. 6 p.m.

NFL preseason, Seattle at San Diego

6:30 p.m.

ESPN NBC Fox

Little League, World Series,

Northwest Regional, semifinal FOOTBALL NFL preseason, Cincinnati at Atlanta

Listings are themostaccurate avai/ab/e. The Bu((etinis not responsible forlatechangesmade by TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All Times POT

Thursday'sGames Ba timoreatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Washin gtonatTennessee,5p.m. CincinnatiatAtlanta,5 p.m. St.Louis atCleveand,5 p.m DenveratSanFrancisco,6 p.m. Seattle atSanDiego, 7p.m. Friday's Games

N.Y.JetsatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Miami atJacksonvile, 4:30p.m. NewEnglandatPhiladelphia, 4:30p.m. HoustonatMinnesota, 5p.m.

KansasCityatNewOrleans, 5p.m. Arizonaat GreenBay, 5pm. Chicago at Carolina, 5p.m. Dallas atOakland, 7p.m. Saturday'sGame N.Y.Giantsat Pittsburgh,4:30p.m. Sunday's Game Buffalo atIndianapolis, 1030a.m.

BASKETBALL

CYCLING Van Avermaet takes Utah OPBllBF —As he stayed with

thepelotoninTuesday'sopening stage of the Tour of Utah,

Greg VanAvermaet of Belgium was waiting for a place to kick his bike into another gear. Once the final three-lap sprint came around, it was all the BMC team racer needed. With crowds cheering along the final stretch,

Van Avermaet beatAustralian Michael Matthews to the finish line over the final half mile

on Main Streetand earned the Stage1 victory in 4 hours, 11 minutes. American Tyler

Magner, who drives for a team owned by GeorgeHincapie, finished third.

Seahawks and the Super Bowl

champion Baltimore Ravens. The Seahawks are fourth and the Ravens are sixth.

Safety leaves Bills camp — The Buffalo Bills have placed

Mana Silva on theexempt-left squad list after the backup safety left training camp without

being excused. TheNFLgranted the Bills permission to make

the move Tuesday, aday after Silva left camp before the team's scrimmage in suburban Rochester. Silva's agent, Josh Arnold, told The Associated Press that his client is re-examjnjng his pri-

orities after experiencing some recent personal issues. Arnold hopes Silva will return to playing football soon.

Cooper dack with Eagles BASEBALL

— Riley Cooper returned to the

Philadelphia Eagles after he was caught on video using a racial York Yankeescloser Mariano slur and given four days off. The Rivera insists he's still retiring at team saysCooperisexpected

RiVera Still retiring —New

the end of the season. Baseball's

career saves leadersaid Tuesday he will not reconsider even though he shows no signs of

to be at practice Tuesday. The wide receiver was fined by the

Eagles after his slur became known last Wednesday. He left the team Friday to seek

slowing down. Rivera sayshe's been asked that in every city and counseling. The video of Cooper hopes this is the last time. He was taken at aKenny Chesney says there's no going back. At concert in June. Cooperapolo43,Riverahasbeenasautomat- gizedprofuselyW ednesdayand ic as ever this season. Hehas35 Thursday. saves in 37 opportunities and a1.56 ERAentering Tuesday's Stanford to retire game against the Chicago White

Sox.

Elway's jersey — Stan-

ford football is finally retiring

Seattle demotes pitcher — Former closer Tom Wilhelm-

sen was demoted to the minors by the Seattle Mariners in the

hopes he canrediscover command of his pitches. Seattle

optioned Wilhelmsen to Triple-A

TacomaonTuesday.Heinstantly tookthemound inTacoma, pitching two innings in a day

game.

FOOTBALL 49erS tOPPOWerrankingS — The SanFrancisco 49ers are

No.1 in the AP Pro32 NFL power rankings heading into the preseason, with the Denver Bron-

John Elway's No. 7 jersey. The former Cardinal quarterback and No.1 overall pickofthe 1983 NFL draft will have his jersey retired during halftime of the executive vice president of the Denver Broncos, will

join Ernie Nevers' No. 1 and Jim Plunkett's No. 16 as the

only jerseys the school has enshrined. Wide receiver Ty Montgomery and defensiveend Azjz Shittu both wear No. 7 currently. They will be the last two to wear the jersey at Stanford.

BASKETBALL SBRS'BeaSley arreSted-

Jaguars at the bottom of the list. Led by quarterback Colin

Scottsdale police have arrested Phoenix Suns forward Michael

Kaepernick, the 49ers nearly

Beasley after finding suspected

won the Super Bowl last season and could be ready to win it all

marijuana in his car. Officer David Pubjns says Beasley was

as coach Jim Harbaugh begins

arrested early Tuesdaymorning

his third season. San Francisco received five first-place votes

following a traffic stop. Pubjns

Press panel of 11 media mem-

says an officer found three cigarettes suspected to contain marijuana in Beasley's Mercedes after smelling marijuana during thestop.PubinssaysBeasley

Denver, which added standout wide receiver Wes Welker to

was released after being cited

bers who regularly cover the league, and totaled 344 points. catchPeytonManning'spasses, had four first-place votes and 335 points. Receiving one first-

place vote eacharethe Seattle

Columbus (IL).

LOS ANGELESANGELS Optioned RHP Daniel

All TimesPacific 2013-14 PortlandTrail Blazers Schedule Oct. 30atPhoenix, 7p.m Nov. I atDenver,6p.m. Nov. 2SanAntonio, 7p.m. Nov. 5Houston, 7p.m. Nov. 8Sacramento, 7p.m. Nov. 9atSacramento, 7p.m. Nov.11Detroit, 7 pm. Nov. 13Phoenix, 7p.m. Nov.15 atBoston,4:30 p.m. Nov. 17atToronto, 10a.m. Nov. 18atBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. Nov. 20atMilwaukee,5 p.m. Nov. 22Chicago,7p.m. Nov. 23atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Nov. 25NewYork, 7p.m. Nov 27 atPhoenix, 6p.m. Dec. 1at L.A.Lakers,6:30p.m. Dec. 2Indiana,7p.m. Dec. 4DklahomaCity, 7p.m. Dec. 6Utah,7p.m. Dec. 7Dallas, 7p.m. Dec. 9at Utah,6 p.m. Dec. 12Houston,7:30 p.m. Dec.14 atPhiladelphia,5 p.m. Dec. 15atDetroit, 3 p.m. Dec. 17atCleveland, 4p.m. Dec.18at Minnesota,5p.m. Dec. 21NewOrleans, 7 p.m. Dec. 26L.A.Clippers,7:30 p.m. Dec. 28Miami, 7p.m. Dec. 30atNewOrleans, 5p.m. Dec. 31atOkahomaCity, 5p.m. Jan. 2Charlotte, 7p.m. Jan. 4Philadelphia,7p.m. Jan. 7atSacramento,7p.m. Jan. 8Orlando,7p.m. Jan. 11Boston, 7 p.m. Jan.15Cleveland,7p.m. Jan.17 atSanAntonio, 5:30 p.m. Jan. 18at Dallas,5.30p.m. Jan. 20at Houston, 5p.m. Jan. 21atOklahomaCity, 5p.m. Jan. 23Denver, 7:30p.m. Jan. 25Minnesota,7p m. Jan. 26atGolden State, 6 p.m. Jan. 28Memphis, 7p.m. Feb.1Toronto,7 pm. Feb. 3 atWashington,4p.m. Feb. 5atNewYork, 4.30 p.m. Feb. 7atIndiana,4p.m. Feb. 8 atMinnesota,5p.m. Feb.11Oklahoma City, 7 pm. Feb.12 atLA.Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 19SanAntonio,7 p.m. Feb.21Utah,7p.m. Feb.23 Minnesota,6p.m. Feb.25 atDenver,6 p.m. Feb.26Brooklyn,7p.m. March 1Denver, 7p.m. March 3L.A.Lakers,7p.m March 5 Atlanta, 7:30p.m. March 7 at Dalas, 5:30p.m.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NEW YORKKNICKS— SignedFJeremyTyler. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONACARDINALS— Signed C Deverlc Galington, CKyle QuinnandDTJonathan Mathis. Re"My client is fine with the 'selling leased WRTyler Shaw.Waived/injured WRLaRonByrd and DEEverrette Thompson. his soul' thing. But he has a problem BUFFALO BILI.S—Placed S ManaSilva onthe with Paragraph Four, Section B, where it exempt-leftsquadlist. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS—Agreed to termswith LS mentions 'Eternal fires of hell' ..." ChristianYountonative-year contract. GREENBAY PACKERS— Signed QBVince Young and WR Justin Wilson. PlacedWRSederrik Cunningham on injured reserve. INDIANAP OLIS COLTS—Signed FB Robert Hughes. March 9atHouston,4 p.m. Agnie szka Radwanska (3),Poland,def.Yanina JACKSONVILLEJAGLIARS— Signed G Pat McMarch11atMemphis,5p.m. Wickmayer, Belgium,6-2, 6-3. Quistan. March12 atSanAntonio, 6:30p.m. Samantha Stosur(12), Austraia, def. JuliaGlushKANSASCITY CHIEFS— SignedCBSemajMoody. March14 atNewOrleans, 5 p.m. ko,lsrael,5-7,6-2,6-3. WaivedCBConroy Black. March16GoldenState, 6p.m. SecondRound MIAMIDOLP HINS—SignedS ReshadJonesto a March 1B Milwaukee,7p.m. DominikaCibulkova,Slovakia, def.AngeliqueKer- four-yearcontractextension. March 20 Washington,7p.m. ber (8),Germany,6-7 (0), 6-2,7-5. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Signed LBStanford KegMarch 22atCharlotte, 4p.m. lar. Waived LBNathanWiliams. March 24atMiami, 4:30p.m. CoupeRogers NEWYDRKGIANTS—Activated GChris Sneeand March 25atOrlando,4 p.m. A U.S. OpenSeries event CB TerreiThomas l off thePUPlist. March 27atAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Tuesday PHILADEL PHIA EAGLES—Reinstated WR Riley March 28 atChicago,5p.m. At Uniprix Stadium Cooper. Montreal March30Memphis, 6p.m. SEATTI. E SEAHAWKS— Released TE Michael April1 at L.A.Lakers,7:30pm. Purse: $3.496million (Masters1000) Palmer.SignedDTMartin Parker. April 4 Phoenix,7p.m. Surface: Hard-Outdoor TENNES SEETITANS—Signed LBKadarron AnderApril 6 New Orleans, 6p.m. Singles son. Waived-injuredCBMatthewPierce. April 9 Sacram ento, 7p.m. First Round HOCKEY April11 atUtah,6 p.m. Filip Peliwo,Canada,def. Jarkko Nieminen,FinNationalHockeyLeague April13 Golden State, 6p.m. land, 3-6,7-5,3-1retired. BUFFALO SABRES—Re-signedF CoreyTroppto April16 LA.Clippers,730 pm. JerzyJanowicz(15),Poland,def JulienBenneteau, aone-yearcontract. France, 3-6, 6-3,7-5. DETROIT RED WINGS Si gned FJoakim AndersFrankDancevic, Canada,def.Lu Yen-Hsun,Taiwan, son to atwo-yearcontract. 5-7, 7-6(6), 6-1. WNBA VANCO UVER CANUCKS—Signed C Bo Horvat RadekStepanek, Czech Republic, def. NicolasAI- and 0 HunterShinkarukto NHLentry-level contracts. WOMEN'SNATIONAL magro (12), Spai n , 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-3. SignedLWDarrenArchibald BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, def JurgenMezer, AusSOCCER All Times PDT tria, 6-4,7-6(3). Major LeagueSoccer Alex BogomolovJr., Russia,def. Michael Llodra, PORTLAND TIMBERS—Purchased the contract EasternConference France, 6-2,4-6,6-3. of MFDiegoValeri fromArgentinesideClubAtletico W L Pct GB Fabio Fognini (13), Italy,def.MarcosBaghdatis, Lanusandsignedhimto amultiyearcontract. Chicago 13 7 .650 Cyprus,1-6,6-1,6-1. COLLEGE 11 6 Atlanta .647 t/z Marcel Granol l e rs, Spai n , def Grigor Di m i t rov, BERRY —Named Brittany Grahamwomen's basIndiana 10 10 .500 3 Bulgaria, 6-4, 6-4. ketballcoach. NewYork 9 12 .429 4t/t VasekPospisil, Canada,def. JohnIsner, United BRADLE Y—Named Benet Higgs assistant softbaI Washington 9 13 .409 5 States,5-7,7-6 (5), 7-6(4) coach. Connecticut 6 13 .316 Bt/z AlexandrDolgopolov,Ukraine,def. KevinAnderBRIDGE PORT—NamedScottVanKuilenburg men's Western Conference son, South Afnca,7-6(0), 6-4. andwomen'sassistant swimmingcoachandrecruiting W L Pct GB NikolayDavydenko, Russia,def. GilesSimon(14), coordinator. Minnesota 17 3 .850 France, 2-6, 6-1,6-1. CLEMSD N—Named Katie Bruggeling assistant 14 7 Los Angeles .667 3t/t TommyHaas(10), Germany, def. DavidGoffin, rowingcoach. Phoenix 10 11 .476 Plt Belgium, 7-6 (4), 6-3. C OLLEGE OF CHARLESTON— Named LindaKala9 1 1 450 8 Seattle Milos Raonic(11), Canada, def. JeremyChardy, fatis softbalcoach. l SanAntonio 7 1 4 .333 10t/t France, 6-3,4-6,7-5 COLOR ADOSTATE—Agreed to terms with men's Tulsa 7 15 .318 11 SecondRound basketbalcoach l Larry Eustachyona contract extenKei Ni s hi k ori (9), Japan, def Am dreas Se ppi , Ital y , sion throughthe2017-18season. Tuesday'sGames 4-6, 7-5,6-1. CONNE CTICUT—NamedAngieCretors senior asNewYork93, Washington 88 NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia,def. Florian Mayer, sociatedirectorof athletics for NCAArules education LosAngeles74,Connecticut72 Germany, 6-2,6-1. and compl iance services. Indiana64,Chicago58 RichardGasquet (7), France,def. Martin Klizan, ELON —NamedShane Carewassistant men'ssocMinnesota93,SanAntonio 80 Slovakia,6-3, 6-2. cercoach. Seattle80, Phoenix65 FURMAN —Named Jenna Romaneli and DanToday'sGames iel Rochester assistant strength and conditioning No games scheduled SOCCER coaches. Thursday'sGames HIGH POINT —Named Nate Thiesfeld assistant Los AngelesatIndiana, 4p.m. MLS trackandfield coach. WashingtonatMinnesota, 5p.m. HOFSTR A—Promoted men's assistant lacrosse MAJORLEAGUESOCCER coachKevinUnterstein to men'sassociate lacrosse AO TimesPDT

TENNIS

Eastern Conference

Professional Rogers Cup AU.S. OpenSeries event Tuesday At Rexall Centre Toronto Purse: $2.369million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Ana Ivanovic(16), Serbia,def. Su-WeiHsieh,Taiwan, 6-1,6-2. Maria Kirilenko (11), Russia,del. PetraMartic,

W L T Pts GF GA NewYork 1 1 7 5 3 8 36 29 S porting KansasCity 10 7 6 3 6 33 24 Montreal 1 0 6 5 3 5 33 32 Philadelphia 9 7 7 3 4 34 32 Houston 9 6 6 3 3 26 21 NewEngland 8 8 6 3 0 27 20 Chicago 8 9 4 2 8 27 31 Columbus 6 11 5 23 25 30 TorontoFC 4 10 8 20 20 29 D.C. 3 15 4 13 13 36

Western Conference

W L T Pts GF GA 11 7 5 38 38 26 8 3 11 35 32 21 9 7 8 3 5 30 26 9 7 6 3 3 34 30 Los Angeles 1 0 9 3 3 3 32 27 FC Dallas 8 6 8 3 2 27 30 Seattle 9 7 4 3 1 27 22 SanJose 8 9 6 3 0 25 33 ChivasUSA 4 13 5 17 19 39 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

RealSaltLake Portland Lauren Davis, United States, def. Svetlana Colorado Kuznetsova,Russia, 3-6, 7-5,7-5. Vancouver Croatia,6-2,6-1.

Alize Comet,France,def. ElenaVesnina, Russia,

6-3, 6-3. JelenaJankovic (15), Serbia,def. AnnaTatishvili, Georgia,7-6(6), 4-6,6-3. MagdalenaRybarikova,Slovakia, def. Alexandra Duigheru,Rom ania, 6-4, 6-3

EkaterinaMakarova,Russia, def. AnastasiaRodionova,Australia, 6-1, 7-5. FrancescaSchiavone,Italy, def. ChanelleScheepers, SouthAfrica,2-6, 6-3,6-3. Kirsten Flipkens(13), Belgium,def. VenusWilliams, U nited States, 0-6,6 4, 6-2. CarlaSuarezNavarro, Spain, def.JamieHampton, UnitedStates,6-4, 6-4. Sharon Fichman,Canada,def.Stephanie Dubois, Canada,5-7,6-2, 6-2. Eugeni eBouchard,Canada,def.AlisaKl eybanova, Russia,6-3,6-1.

Saturday's Games Seattle FCatTorontoFC,4p.m. NewYor katColumbus,4:30p.m. San Jose atVancouver,430 p.m. D.C. UnitedatPhiladelphia, 5 p.m. NewEnglandatSporting KansasCity,5:30 p.m. MontrealatChicago,5:30p.m. HoustonatRealSalt Lake,6:30p.m.

Sunday'sGames

Los Angelesat FCDallas, 5 p.m. Colorado at ChivasUSA,8 p.m.

coach. KANSAS STATE Agreedto termswith baseball coachBradHil on a five-year contractthroughJune 14, 2018. OKLAHOM ACHRISTIAN—Named Josh Wayland

men'sassistant crosscountry coach.Named Rachel Sniderwomen'sassistant crosscountry coach. DLD DOMINION —Signed football coach Bobby Wilder to afive-year contractthroughthe 2017sea-

son.

SOUTH CAROLINA—Named Tyson l.usk director of baseballoperationsandAdrian Moralesstudent assistantbaseball coach. THIEL —Named Kristen Morelandassistant to the director ofathletics andcoordinator ofstudent-athlete academi cachievement. VIRGINIATECH—Suspended redshirt freshman RB JoelCalebonegamefor aviolation ofateamrule.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement ofadult chinook,jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected Columbia RiverdamslastupdatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsghd Bonnevi le 1,062 2 0 1 6 ,244 3,060 The Dalles 44 7 89 1,9 4 5 1 ,093 John Day 26 8 46 880 499 McNary 27 0 57 874 465 Upstream year-to-date movement otadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsghd Bonnevi le 179,625 60,658 86,790 47,527 The Dalles 155,688 53,252 43,465 25,262 John Day 132,211 48,667 26,211 13,927 McNary 126,955 36,831 20,079 10,114

Stanford's home gameagainst Oregon on Nov. 7. Elway, now

cossecondandtheJacksonville

Tuesdayfrom TheAssociated

NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

BASEBALL American League BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Reinstated2BBrian Roberts fromthepaternity leavelist. OptionedINFDanny Valenciato Norfolk(II.) CLEVELANDINDIANS— PlacedRHPCorey Kluber on the15-dayDL.Recalled RHPMat Langwell from

Stangeto Salt Lake(PCL). Recalled INFGrant Green from SaitLake. SEATTLE MARINERS—Recalled RHPCarter Capps from Tacoma (PCL). OptionedRH PTomWilhelmsen optionedto Tacoma. National League CHICAGOCUBS— Added OF ThomasNealto the roster.OptionedRHPEduardo Sanchezto lowa(PCL). NEW YORKMETS— Placed RHPBobby Parnellon the15-dayDL.Recaled INFWilmer FloresfromLas Vegas(PCL). PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—ActivatedOFDomonic Brownfromthe15-day DL.DesignatedOFLaynceNix for assignmen t. SANDIEG OPADRES—Selectedthecontract ofINF Ronny Cedenofrom LakeElsinore(Cal). WASHING TDN NATIDNALS—Selected RHPTanner RoarkfromSyracuse(IL). OptionedLHPXavier Cedeno to Syracuse.Transferred LHPRoss Detwiler to the60-dayDL.

Cowlitz 2,KlamathFalls1 Medford 6, Kitsap5 Corvagis6, Bend3 WallaWalla6, Kelowna0

Tuesday's Summary

PGA Tour, PGAChampionship

Transactions

WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE

Southeast Regional, semifinal Little League,World Series,

DEALS

IN THE BLEACHERS

for investigation of one felony count each of marijuana possession and possession of drug paraphernalia. — From wire reports

Heat-Bullshi hli htopenin ni ht By Brian Mahoney

NBA

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The Miami Heat will open their title defense against the Chicago Bulls on Oct. 29 in the expected return of Derrick Rose, with an all-Los Angeles matchup later that night in the Lakers' first game without Dwight Howard and the Clippers' first with Doc Rivers. The NBA's 2013-14 schedule, released Tuesday, also features a potential LeBron James-Kobe Bryant duel on Christmas in Los Angeles, right after scoring stars Carmelo Anthony and Kevin Durant match up across the country in New York. Portland starts its season on Wednesday, Oct. 30 at Phoenix. The Blazers open their home season against the Western Conference champion San Antiono Spurs on Saturday, Nov. 2 (See Scoreboard, above, for the Blazers complete 2013-14 season schedule). Howard's first visit to the Lakers since leaving for Houston as a free agent doesn't come until Feb. 19, giving Bryant plenty of time to get back to full strength from his

torn Achilles' tendon near the end of last season. The Indiana Pacers host the Orlando Magic in the opening game of the season, about the time the Heat are holding another championship ring ceremony. Then Miami will try to give Rose a rough welcome back in what's likely to be his first NBA game since tearing his knee in the opening game of the 2012 playoffs. Most teams open on Oct. 30. Two nights later, the Heat will serve as the opponent for the new-look Brooklyn Nets' first home game since acquiring Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce from Boston. That duo, which helped lead the Celtics to the 2008 NBA championship, will make its emotional return to Boston on Jan. 26. Rivers will coach his first game back there on Dec. 11 — one night after the Celtics see Garnett and Pierce for the first time in Brooklyn. Rivers will then renew acquaintances with his two star players on Dec. 12 at Barclays Center.

Other highlights of the schedule, which was released during an NBA TV special

program: • The Heat will host the Spurs on Jan. 26 in their first meeting since they edged San Antonio in Game 7 of the NBA Finals. The teams also meet in Texas on March 6. • The marquee Christmas Day schedule features five games: Chicago at Brooklyn, Oklahoma City at New York, Miami at the Lakers, Houston at San Antonio, and the Clippers at Golden State. • No. 1 pick Anthony Bennett could make hisNBA debut athome when Cleveland hosts Brooklyn on Oct. 30. • The Nets have a three-game road trip in three different countries from Jan. 1120. They open atToronto, travel to London to face the Atlanta Hawks on Jat L 16 in the02 Arena, and then return to New York to visit the rival Knicks in a Dr. Martin Luther King Day matinee. • San Antonio and Minnesota play Dec. 4 in Mexico City. The regular season ends April 16. The All-Star game is Feb. 16 in New Orleans.


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MOTOR SPORTS

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL ab r hbi

Standings All Times PDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Boston 69 46 TampaBay 66 46 Baltimore 62 51 NewYork 57 55 Toronto 53 60 Central Division W L Detroit 66 45 Cleveland 62 51 Kansas City 57 53 Minnesota 49 61 Chicago 42 69

West Division W 64 64 52 51 37

Oakland Texas Seattle Los Angeles Houston

L 48 50 61 61 75

Pct GB .600 589 I'/z .549 6 .509 10'/r .469 15

Pct GB .595 .549 5 .518 8'/z .445 16'/r .378 24 Pct GB 571

.561 1 .460 12'/z .455 13 .330 27

Tuesday'sGames

Detroit 5,Cleveland1 Cincinnati3,0aklandI Boston15,Houston 10 Minnesota 7, KansasCity 0 Chicago WhiteSox3, N.Y. Yankees2 Arizona6,TampaBay1 Texas 8, L.A.Angels3 Baltimore 4, SanDiego1 Toronto 7, Seatle 2 Today's Games Oakland(Colon14-3) at Cincinnati(H.Bailey6-10), 9:35 a.m. Baltimore(Mig.Gonzalez8-5) atSanDiego(Stults 810), 12:40p.m. Toronto(Happ2-2) at Seattle(Harang5-10), 12:40 p.m. Detroit (Frster10-5)at Cleveland(Salazar 1-0), 4.05

p.m. Boston(Dempster 6-8) at Houston (Cosart1-0), 5:10 p.m. Minnesota(Deduno7-4) at KansasCrty (Dufty 0-0), 5:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 9-10) at ChicagoWhite Sox (H.Santiago 3-7), 5:10p.m. TampaBay(Archer6-4) at Arizona(Delgado4-3), 6:40 p.m. Texas (Ogando4-3) at L.A.Angels (Hanson4-2), 7:05 p.m. Thursday'sGames Detroit atCleveland,4:05 p.m. Bostonat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 69 45 Washington 54 59 Philadelphia 51 61 NewYork 50 60 Miami 43 68

Central Division

W L 68 44 66 46 62 51 49 63 48 65 West Division W L Los Angeles 62 50 Arizona 57 55 SanDiego 52 61 Colorado 52 62 SanFrancisco 50 62 Pittsburgh

St. Louis Cincinnati Chicago Milwaukee

Pct GB .605 .478 14'/z .455 17 455 17 .387 24'/r

Pct GB .607 .589 2 .549 6 i/r

.438 19 .425 20'/z

Pct GB .554 .509 5 .460 10'/r .456 11 .446 12

Tuesday'sGames Atlanta 2,Washington1 Philadelphia9, ChicagoCubs 8 Pittsburgh4, Miami3 N.Y.Mets3, Colorado2 Cincinnati3,0akland1

St. Louis5,L.A. Dodgers1 Arizona6,TampaBay1 Baltimore 4, SanDiego1 Milwaukee 3,SanFrancisco1 Today's Games Oakland(Colon14-3) at Cincinnati(H.Bailey6-10), 9:35a.m. Baltimore(MigGonzalez8-5) atSanDiego(Stults 810), 12:40p.m. Atlanta (Medlen8-10) at Washington (Zimmermann 13-6), 4:05p.m. ChicagoCubs(TWood 78) at Philadelphia(Hamels 4-13), 4:05p.m. Miami (Koehle3-6) r at Pittsburgh(Morton 3-3), 4.05

p.m.

Colorado(Chacin10-5) at N.Y.Mets(Harvey8-3), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Nolasco7-9)at St. Louis(S.Miger117),5.15p.m. TampaBay(Archer6-4) at Arizona(Delgado4-3), 6:40 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada 4-4) atSanFrancisco(Bumgarner 11-6), 7:15p.m. Thursday'sGames Colorado at N.Y.Mets, 9:10a.m. Miami atPittsburgh,9:35a.m. Chicago Cubsat Philadelphia,10:05 a.m. Milwaukee atSanFrancisco,12:45 p.m. L.A. Dodgers atSt. Louis,5:15 p.m.

American League

Blue Jays 7, Mariners 2 SEATTLE — Jose Reyes homered on the first pitch of the game,

added an RBIsingle to cap Toronto's big fourth inning, and the Blue Jays handed Seattle ace Felix Hernandez his first loss since late May with a win over the

Mariners. The BlueJays battered Hernandez (11-5) and knocked him out after just five innings, matching his shortest start of the

season. Toronto

Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Reyesss 5 1 2 2 BMigerss 4 0 2 2 Mlzturs2b 4 0 0 0 Frnkn2b 3 0 0 0 Bautistrf 3 2 2 0 Seager3b 4 0 I 0 Encrnc dh 5 0 1 0 KMorls dh 4 0 2 0

L ind1b 4 1 1 0 Ibanezlf 4 0 1 0 C IRsmscf 3 1 2 1 Morserf 4 0 1 0 L awrie3b 4 I 2 I Smoaklb 4 I I 0 Tholec 4 0 0 0 MSndrscf 3 0 0 0 Bonitaclt 4 1 1 2 HBlancc 3 1 0 0 T otals 3 6 7 11 6 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Toronto 1 00 320 100 — 7 Seattle 0 00 000 200 — 2

ab r hbi

LMartncf-rf 5 2 2 1 Calhon1b 5 1 2 1 A ndrusss 5 3 3 1 Troutcf 4 1 2 1 K insler dh 4 I I I Hamltn rf 4 0 0 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 2 2 Trumodh 4 0 0 0 P rzynsc 5 0 1 1 Aybarss 3 1 1 0 D vMrplf 5 0 0 0 Shucklf 2 0 1 1 Morlnd1b 3 1 1 0 Nelson3b 4 0 0 0 Profar2b 4 0 1 0 GGreen2b 4 0 2 0 E Beltrerf 2 0 I 0 lannettc 3 0 0 0 Gentryph-cf 0 1 0 0 Congerph 1 0 1 0 T otals 3 7 8 126 Totals 3 43 9 3 Texas 2 00 010 014 — 8

Shields and leading Minnesota to a LOB—Colorado 7, NewYork 6. 28—Helton (10), .Davis 2(10). 3B—Lagares(4). HR —Blackmon(2). victory over Kansas City. The first ISB — Fowler (16). SF—Arenado

big leaguer from Saskatchewan in Colorado more than 20 years, Albers at one point retired15 straight.

Texas

Los Angeles

Bettis Ottavino W.LopezL,1-4 2 New York

HOUSTON — JacobyEllsbury added a three-run shot and Boston rallied from a five-run deficit for a win over Houston. Catcher Ryan

Cardinals 5, Dodgers1

Lavarnway tied amajor league record with four passed balls in

Matt Adams homered in the eighth

the first inning as he struggled to handle pitches from knuckleballer Steven Wright, and the Astros took a 3-0 lead. Boston

ST. LOUIS —Carlos Beltran and inning, andSt.LouissnappedLos Angeles'15-game road winning streak. Joe Kelly pitched into the sixth inning, outperforming

Clayton Kershawand helping St. Louis to its fourth victory in the

Houston

ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsurycf 4 4 2 3 Grssmnlf 3 2 2 3 V ictornrf 5 4 3 0 BBarnscf 3 I I 0 Pedroia2b 5 1 2 2 Altuve2b 5 0 0 I D.Ortizdh 4 2 4 2 Jcastroc 3 1 1 0 BSnydrph-dh1 0 0 0 Corprnc 1 0 0 0 Napoli1b 4 1 0 0 Kraussdh 4 0 0 0 C arplf 3 0 0 1 Wagac1b 4 1 I 2 JGomsph-If 3 I 2 4 MDmn 3b 4 0 0 0 D rewss 2 1 1 0 Hoesrf 4 2 2 0 L vrnwyc 5 0 1 2 Vigarss 2 1 2 1 Holt3b 5 1 0 0 Elmoress 2 2 2 1 Totals 4 1 151514 Totals 3 5 10118 Boston 003 055 200 — 15 Houston 321 102 010 — 10 E—Hoes(1), Vilar (4). DP—Boston1, Houston1. LOB—Boston 9, Houston 4. 2B—Victorino (17), Pedroia (27),Lavarnway(6). 38 Hoes (1). HR Egs-

past six games.TonyCruz added an RBI single.

Los Angeles St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi Crwfrd lt 3 I 2 0 Mcrpnt 2b 4 0 0 0 M.ERis2b 4 0 0 0 Beltranrf 4 1 2 1 Howegp 0 0 0 0 Craig1b 4 0 1 0 League p 0 0 0 0 Hollidy If 3 01 0 Marm p 0 0 0 0 Chamrspr-f 0 1 0 0 AdGnzl lb 4 0 I I Freese3b 2 0 0 0 Puigrf 3 0 1 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Ethiercf 4 0 1 0 MAdmsph 1 1 1 2 A.ERisc 4 0 1 0 Muiicap 0 0 0 0 uribe3b 4 0 1 0 Jaycf 3 110 Puntoss 3 0 2 0 T.cruzc 3 1 1 1 Kershw p 2 0 0 0 Kozma ss 3 0 1 0 bury 2 (7),J.Gome s(9), Grossman (2), Wallace (9), Schmkrph-2b2 0 0 0 J.Kegyp 2 0 0 1 Choate p 0 0 0 0 Elmore(2). SB—Grossman(6), Vilar (10).CS—VilManess p 0 0 0 0 lar (3).— SGrossman. Boston IP H R E R BB SO Siegrist p 0 0 0 0 S.Wright Descal3b s 1 000 1 1 3 3 2 1 WorkmanW,2-1 4 2-3 9 6 D.BrittonH,l 2 1-3 1 1 R.DeLaRosa I 0 0 Houston 42-3 9 8 8 Lyles L,4-6 2-3 3 4 Keuchel Cisnero 1 2 3 I 2-3 I 0 Zeid Lo I 0 0

6 2 1 0 0 0

2 3 2

3

6

4 1 3 3 0 I 0 1

0 0 3 1

HBP —by S.Wright (B.Barnes), by Lyles(Pedroia). WP — S.Wright, Lyles.PB—Lavamway4.Balk—Cisnero. T—3:54. A—21,620(42,060).

White Sox 3, Yankees2 CHICAGO — Chris Sale allowed one run while outpitching Hiroki Kuroda in to the eighth inning,

and Chicago beatNewYork. Alex Rodriguez singled, walked, was hit by a pitch and lined out to

(20), Ma.Ad ams(9). Los Angeles KershawL,10-7 6 Howell

League Marmol St. Louis

2 0 0 I 0 0

1 0 0 0 2 0

Brewers 3, Giants1

fly. Peralta (8-11) struck out six

of nine batters during anearly sequence andfinished with six Ks in 6/s innings for his first career victory against the Giants.

Cleveland in the AL Central.

pitching into the ninth inning in

his major leaguedebut, easily outduel ingRoyalsaceJames

2 1 0 0

4 0 3 3

Washington G .Gonz alezL,7-5 7 6 2 2 I 5 Krol 1 1 0 0 0 0 Stammen 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP —by Teheran (Harper), by G.Gonzalez (F.Freem an). T—2:53. A—30,875(41,418).

Pirates 4, Marlins 3

in the eighth. Miami

Pittsburgh

ab r hbi ab r hbi Y elichlf 4 0 1 0 SMartelt 3 1 0 0 Lucas3b 5 1 2 0 Walker2b 4 1 3 0 Stanton rf 5 1 1 0 Mcctch cf 3 1 2 2 M orrsnlb 4 0 2 I PAlvrz3b 4 0 I I DSolan2b 5 1 3 1 RMartnc 4 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 0 GJones1b 3 0 0 0 Mrsnck cf 4 0 1 0 JHrrsn ph 1 1 1 1 Mathisc 3 0 0 0 Presleyrf 3 0 0 0 HAlvrz p I 0 0 I Mercer ss 3 0 I 0 R ugginph 1 0 0 0 Lockep 2 0 0 0 Quallsp 0 0 0 0Mazzarp 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Tabataph 1 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 3 113 Totals 3 1 4 8 4 Miami 0 12 000 000 — 3 P ittsburgh 003 0 0 0 0 0 1 — 4 No ouiswhenwinning runscored. E—PAlvarez (21). DP—Miami I, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Miami 11, Pittsburgh5. 2B—Lucas (5), Mc-

1

1 1 1 0

6 0 0 2

7 4 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 S.Rosario 1 1 1 0 0 Kintzlerpitchedto1batter in the8th. HBP —byW.Peralta (Posey). T—2:51.A—41,426(41,915).

6 0 1

San Francisco M.cain L,7-7 Machi

T otals 3 2 2 6 2Totals 30 3 6 3 Colorado 0 00 011 000 — 2 New York 200 000 01x — 3

E—I.Davis (8) Flores (I). DP —New York 1.

and 15-2. Oakland

Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi C rispct 4 0 I 0 Chooct 3 2 2 0 Sogard2b 4 0 1 0 DRonsnlf 3 0 0 0 L owriess 3 0 1 0 Votto1b 4 0 2 0 Cespdslf 3 0 0 0 Phigips2b 4 0 1 1 Mosslb 4 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 I I I Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 0 Mesorcc 3 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 Vogtc 3 0 1 0 Hannhn3b 3 0 1 0 D Norrsph I 1 I I Latosp 3 0 I 0 Strailyp 1 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 S.Smit hph 1 0 0 0 Chpmnp 0 0 0 0 Blevins p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 CYoung ph I 0 0 0 Otero p 0 0 0 0 Cagasp ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 1 5 1 Totals 3 03 8 2 Oakland 0 00 000 001 — 1 Cincinnati 011 0 1 0 Ogx — 3 E Blevins (2), Phillips (7). DP Oakland 2. LOB — Oakland 8, Cincinnati 5. 28 —Sog-

ard (19), Lowrie(28), Choo(26). 3B—Crisp (2). HR — D.Norris (8), Bruce(23). CS—D.Robinson(5). S—D.Robinson. Oakland IP H R E R BB SO Straily L,6-6 Blevins

4 6 2 2 I 1131 1 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0

3 2 0 1

LatosW,11-3 71- 3 4 0 0 3 2-3 0 0 0 0 HooverH,7 Chapman S,26-30 1 1 1 1 0 T—2:52.A—34,640(42,319).

3 0 3

Neshek Otero Cincinnati

Orioles 4, Padres1 SAN DIEGO — Adam Jones tied his career-high with four hits, including a home run, drove in two

his second straight start since

joining the Orioles, holding San Diego to one runand five hits in six innings. San Diego

Baltimore

ab r hbi ab r hbi M cLothlf 5 1 1 0 Venalerf 2 0 1 0 M achd3b 5 0 1 1 Denorfilf 4 1 1 0 Markks rf 5 0 0 0 Headly 3b 4 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 2 4 2 Aonso1b 4 0 2 1 C.Davislb 4 0 2 1 Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 Wieters c 3 0 0 0 Amarst cf 4 0 1 0 Hardy ss 3 0 1 0 Forsyth ss 4 0 1 0 BRorts2b 3 1 0 0 Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 BNorrsp 2 0 1 0 Volquezp 1 0 0 0 urrutiaph 1 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 TmHntp 0 0 0 0Guzmnph 1 0 0 0 Matuszp 0 0 0 0 Grgrsnp 0 0 0 0 O'Dayp 0 0 0 0 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0

Acasig ph 1 0 0 0 JiJhnsn p 0 0 0 0

T otals 3 6 4 104 Totals 3 1 1 7 1 B altimore 100 10 0 0 1 1 — 4 S an Diego 000 0 0 1 000 — 1 E—Machado(8). DP—Baltimore 3. LOB —Balti-

more 8, SanDiego7 28—McLouth(23), C.Davis (31). 3B — Venable (5). HR—A.Jones (23). SB—McLouth (26) A.Jones (10), Venable(12). S—Volquez. Baltimore IP H R E R BB SO B.NorrisW,89 6 Tom.Hunter H,13 1 MatuszH,14 1-3 O'DayH,17 2-3 Ji.Johnson S,39-45 1

San Diego

VolquezL,8-9 Vincent

6 1

5 0 1 0 0 1

1 1 2 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

5 1 I 0 0

6 2 2 2 0 0 0 0

6 2 1 0

Gregerson 1 2 1 1 0 Stauffer 1 2 1 1 1 WP — B.Norris. T—3.01.A—28,055 (42,524).

Diamondbacks 6, Rays1 PHOENIX — Cody Ross homered and Wade Miley allowed five hits

in seven innings to help Arizona

5 2-3 9 3 3 I 1-3 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 Morris W,5-4 1 0 0 0 Quagspitchedto 3baters in the8th. MDunnpitchedto1 batter inthe9th. PB — Mathis 2. T—2.50. A—27,907(38,362).

Mazzaro Watson

3 0 0 0

1

4 0 1 1

Phillies 9, Cubs 8 PHILADELPHIA — Darin Ruf and

Chase Utley sparked a three-run fifth inning to lift Philadelphia to a win over Chicago. Utley, who had three hits, drove in the tying run on a triple to deep center field. He

soon scored on aDomonic Brown

2B — Aoki (15), Segura(16), B.crawford (19), Belt ground out to give the Phillies the (23). HR —C.Gomez(18). S—M.cain. SF—Lucroy. lead.Rufaddedonemoreonasolo Milwaukee I P H R E R BB SO home run, his fourth of the season. W.PeraltaWB-11 61-3 5 1 1 2 KintzlerH,14 2-3 1 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 WootenH,1 HendersonS,16-19 11-3 0 0 0 I

called an embarrassing weekend against St. Louis — losses of 13-3

Cutchen(31). 38—PAlvarez(1). HR J.Harrison(2) beat TampaBay.Miley (9-8) SB — Yelich (1). S—H.Alvarez SF—H.Alvarez. Miami IP H R E R BB SO allowed one run, struck out five H.Alvarez 7 6 3 3 0 6 and walked two for his fifth win in Quags 0 1 0 0 2 0 his past six starts. MDunnL,2-3 Pittsburgh Locke

Milwaukee San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Weeks2b 4 0 0 0 Scutaro2b 4 0 0 0 A okirf 4 2 2 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Segurass 4 0 1 0 SRosari p 0 0 0 0 Lucroylb 3 0 0 I Bcrwfrss 4 0 2 0 6. 28 — J.Nix (9), DeAza(23), Beckham(13) SBB ianchi 3b 0 0 0 0 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 A.Soriano (1). CS—DeAza(5) C Gomzcf 4 1 1 1 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 New York IP H R E R BB SO Gindllt 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 KurodaL,10-7 7 9 3 3 1 4 K intzlrp 0 0 0 0 Belt1b 3110 D.Robertson 1 1 0 0 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0Kschnclf 4 0 2 0 Chicago Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 GBlanccf 2 0 0 0 71-3 5 1 1 4 6 YBtncr3b-1b 3 0 0 0 M.cainp 1 0 0 0 SaleW,7-11 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 Ariasph-2b 2 0 0 1 N.JonesH,6 A.Reed S,27-32 1 2 1 1 0 2 W Perltp 2 0 1 0 HBP—bySale(A.Rodriguez). WP —Kuroda,Sale. L Schfrlf 1 0 0 0 T—2:56. A—23,826(40,615). T otals 3 1 3 5 2 Totals 3 11 6 I M ilwaukee 010 1 0 0 0 0 1 — 3 S an Francisco 000 000 100 — 1 Tigers 5, Indians1 E Arias(5), Posey(5). DP Milwaukee1,San Francisco 1.LOB Milwaukee2, SanFrancisco 8

opened a five-game leadover

I 0 0 0

out of a bases loaded, no-out jam

1 0 0 0 0 0

ARdrgzdh 2 0 1 0 Riosrf 40 I 0 Cano2b 3 0 1 0 A.Dunndh 4 1 1 0 VWegsrf 3 0 0 0 Konerk1b 3 0 1 1 Grndrsph-rf 1 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 4 0 1 1 J.Nix3b 3 0 1 0 Bckhm2b 3 1 2 0 Overayph-1b1 0 0 0 JrDnksct 3 0 0 0 N unezss 4 0 0 0 Pheglyc 3 0 1 0 DAdms1b-3b3 0 0 0 ISuzukiph 1 1 1 0 AuRmnc 4 0 1 0 Totals 3 3 2 7 I Totals 32 3 I 0 3 New York 1 00 000 001 — 2 Chicago 000 101 10x — 3 DP — New York 1. LOB —New York 9, Chicago

hits as the Tigers beat the lndians for the10th time in11 games and

1 0 0 0

a fastball from Miami's Mike Dunn

second as the Brewers jumpedon Cain (7-7) early. Jonathan Lucroy added a ninth-inning sacrifice

(12-8) allowed onerun andfour

4 1 0 0

H R ER BB SO (2-3) into the first row of seats in 6 2 2 2 5 left-center field for his first career 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 2 3 3 I 1 walk-off homer. Dunnhadworked 1-3 0 0 0 0 0

New York

CLEVELAND — Justin Verlander dominated for eight innings and Don Kelly hita three-run homer off Justin Masterson, leading Detroit to its10th straight win. Verlander

TeheranW,9-5 6 AvilanH,20 1 WaldenH,13 1 KimbrelS,35-38 1

IP

J.KegyW,3-3 51 - 3 6 1 Choate 0 1 0 Maness H,9 1 1 0 1-3 0 0 Siegrist H,3 RosenthalH,25 1 1 - 3 0 0 Muiica 1 1 0 Choatepitchedto1batter in the6th. T 3:14. AML770 (43,975).

lineup, leading Cincinnati to a

Rendon(15). HR —Harper (17). SB—B.upton 2(10). runs and scored twice against his S—Teheran. hometown Padres asBaltimore Atlanta IP H R E R BB SO beat San Diego. Bud Norris won

Totals 3 3 I 9 1 Totals 30 5 8 5 PITTSBURGH — Josh Harrison Los Angeles 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 00 6 1 homered leading off the bottom of St. Louis 000 020 03x E Freese(6). DP LosAngeles2, St. Louis 4 the ninth inning, lifting Pittsburgh LOB —Los Angeles 8, St. Louis 4. 28—C.Crawford to a win over Miami. Harrison sent —Beltran (17), uribe(12), Jay(17), Kozm a(18). HR

SAN FRANCISCO — Carlos center field after going1 for 4in Gomez homered, Wily Peralta his season debut Monday. The outdueled Matt Cain to end a Yankees lost for the13th time in winless stretch and 19 gamesafter scoring a run in the three-start Milwaukee beat San Francisco. ninth against closer Addison Reed. Gomez hit his18th homer in the Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi G ardnrcf 3 0 1 1 DeAzalf 4 0 2 1 A Sorinlt 5 I I 0 AIRmrzss 4 I I 0

Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi H eywrdrf I 0 0 0 Harperlf 4 1 2 I Gattislf 3 0 1 2 Zmrmn3b 4 0 0 0 A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Werthrf 2 0 0 0 Waldenp 0 0 0 0 AdLRc1b 3 0 1 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 1 0 J.uptonlf-rf 4 0 2 0 WRamsc 4 0 0 0 F Frmn1b 3 0 0 0 Spancf 4 0 0 0 Mccnnc 4 0 1 0 Rendon2b 4 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 GGnzlzp 2 0 0 0 Janish3b 0 0 0 0 Hairstnph 1 0 0 0 u ggla2b 4 0 1 0 Kro p 00 0 0 Buptoncf 4 1 2 0 Stmmnp 0 0 0 0 Smmnsss 3 1 0 0 Tracyph 1 0 0 0 T ehernp I 0 I 0 Cnghmph-If 1 0 0 0 T otals 3 2 2 8 2 Totals 3 31 5 1 Atlanta 0 00 020 000 — 2 W ashington 0 0 1 0 0 0 000 — 1 E—C.Johnson (I3). DP—Washington 2. LOB—Atlanta 6,Washington 9. 2B—T eheran (3), Atlanta

National League

homeredtwiceandJonnyGomes

inning against Oakland's slumping

IP H R E R BB SO victory over the Athletics. The 5 4 2 2 I 2 Reds had droppedseven of nine 1 0 0 0 1 1 2 I I 1 2 and were coming off what players

Meiia 5 1-3 4 2 1 2 7 Minnesota Kansas City C.Torres I 2-3 0 0 0 0 I ab r hbi ab r hbi AtchisonW,2-0 1 0 0 0 1 2 D ozier2b 4 1 2 3 L.caincf 4 0 0 0 H awkins S,1-3 1 2 0 0 0 0 Carrog3b 4 1 1 0 Hosmer1b 3 0 2 0 T—3.19. A—27,198(41,922). Mauer1b 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 3 0 0 0 L os Angeles 2 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 3 Mornea dh 4 1 1 2 AGordn If 4 0 0 0 E—Calhoun (3). DP—Texas 1. LOB —Texas 7, Arcialt 4 0 0 0 Maxwgrf 3 0 0 0 Braves 2, Nationals1 Los Angeles7. 2B—Aybar (18). HR —Calhoun (3), Colaegrf 4 2 2 1 Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Trout (19). SB —L.Martin 3 (23), Andrus 2 (27), CHrmnc 3 2 1 0 MTeiad2b 3 0 0 0 Gentry(11). CS —E.Beltre (2), Aybar(6). S—E.Beltre. WASHINGTON — Hit by a pitch Thomscf 3 0 1 0 Kottarsc 3 0 0 0 SF Kinsler. Bemierss 3 0 0 0 AEscorss 3 0 2 0 two innings after homering, Texas IP H R E R BB SO T otals 3 3 7 8 6 Totals 2 90 4 0 DarvishW,11-5 7 8 3 3 3 6 M innesota Bryce Harper jawedand pointed 310 1 0 2 0 0 0 — 7 ScheppersS,1-1 2 1 0 0 0 0 K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 at Atlanta's Julio Teheran, and the Los Angeles E—Shields (1). DP—Minnesota 2. LOB —Mindugouts and bullpens emptied, Richards 6 6 3 3 1 5 nesota4,KansasCity 4.28 Carroll (6) HR Dozier J.Gutierrez 1 0 0 0 1 1 (10), Morneau (11), Colabello (3) S—Bemier. SFbut the only haymakers thrown JepsenL,1-3 I 2 1 1 0 I Dozier. 2-3 0 2 0 1 0 Minnesota Maronde IP H R E R BB SO during the NL East-leading Braves' 1-3 4 2 2 0 0 A.AIbersW,1-0 8 Frieri 1-3 4 0 0 1 2 victory over the Nationals came WP Richards2,J.Gutierrez. 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Fien from the teams' Twitter feeds. T 3:12. A 34,233(45,483). KansasCity Shields L,6-8 6 8 7 7 2 3 All in all, it was the sort of stuff W.Smith 3 0 0 0 0 5 rivalries and high-drama playoff HBP —byShields(Thomas). Balk—Shields. Red Sox15, Astros10 chases are madeof. T—2:33.A—18,924(37,903).

Detroit Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi E—Ibanez(4), Seager 2 (9), B.Miger (6). Mets 3, Rockies 2 DP—Toronto2, Seattle 1. LOB —Toronto 7, Seatte A Jcksncf 5 0 1 0 Bourncf 4 0 2 0 TrHntrrf 5 1 0 1 Swisherlb 4000 7. 28—Encarnacion(22), Bonifacio (16), K.Morales NEW YORK — Eric Young made (27). 3B —B.Miger (4). HR —Reyes(8). SB—Lawrie Micarr3b 4 I 2 1 Kipnis2b 4 0 0 0 HPerez 2b 0 0 0 0 Acarer ss 4 0 1 0 (3). CS —Reyes(4). a diving catch to take a go-ahead Toronto IP H R E R BB SO F ielder1b 3 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 0 hit away from Todd Helton in the Jo.JohnsonW,2-8 5 5 0 0 2 5 VMrtnz dh 2 1 0 0 CSantn dh 3 0 0 0 JPerez 2 2 2 2 1 1 D.Kellylf 4 1 3 3 Raburnrf 3 0 0 1 sixth inning, then raced home with 4 0 I 0 Chsnh03b 3 0 0 0 Cecil 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Avilac the tiebreaking run in the eighth, Igle siasss 4 0 0 0 YGomsc 2 0 0 0 S.Santos 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 RSantg2b-3b3 1 0 0 Seattle and New York beat Colorado. The 3 01 4 1 FHernandezL,11-5 5 9 6 3 3 3 Totals 3 4 5 7 5 Totals Capps 2 2 1 0 1 2 Detroit 0 00 060 000 — 5 Rockies have lost12 of18 since 010 0 0 0 0 00 — 1 the All-Star break andhavescored Luetge 2 0 0 0 0 0 C leveland DP — Detroit 1. LOB—Detroit 6, Cleveland 3. HBP —byLuetge (Bautista). 2B — Mi.cabrera (21), A.cabrera(24). HR—DKelly five runs in their past three games. T—2:56.A—28,198(47,476). (5). SB —Bourn(17). New York Detroit IP H R E R BB SO Colorado Rangers 8, Angels 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi VerlanderW,12-8 8 4 1 1 0 7 Fowler ct 2 0 0 0 EYonglf 4 1 1 0 Veras I 0 0 0 0 I CDckrs f 4 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 4 0 I 0 Cleveland ANAHEIM, Calif.— Adrian Beltre 4I 00 MastersonL,13-8 7 7 5 5 2 6 Tlwtzk ss 4 0 0 0 Byrdrf drove in the tiebreaking run in the Rzepczynski 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cuddyrrf 3 0 0 0 I.Davis1b 2 1 2 0 eighth, Yu Darvish pitched seven MAlbers 1 0 0 0 0 0 WRosrc 4 1 1 0 Lagarsct 4 0 2 3 HBP —by Verlander (Y.Gom es), by Masterson Helton1b 4 0 1 0 Flores3b 4 0 0 0 solid innings, and Texas beat Los Arenad 3b 3 0 1 1 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 (R.Santiago,V.Martinez). JHerrr pr 0 0 0 0 Buckc 2000 Angeles for its eighth win in nine T—2:31. A—24,676(42,241). LeMahi 2b 4 0 1 0 Quntngss 3 0 0 0 games. Elvis Andrus had three B ettis p 1 0 0 0 Meiiap 2 0 0 0 Blckmn ph 1 1 1 1 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 hits and scored the go-ahead run Twins 7, Royals 0 Ottavin p 0 0 0 0 ABrwn ph 1 0 0 0 as the Rangers won their third Culersn ph 1 0 0 0 Atchisnp 0 0 0 0 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Andrew straight and moved within one WLopez p 0 0 0 0 JuTrnr3b 0 0 0 0 Albers allowed four hits while Torreal ph 1 0 0 0 game of AL West-leading Oakland,

which lost at Cincinnati.

Stewart

Chicago

Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi DeJesscf 5 1 1 0 MYong1b 3 2 2 1 L akelf 5 0 1 0 utley2b 4 2 3 2 R izzolb 5 I I I Roginsss 4 I I 0 S chrhltrf 5 2 3 2 DBrwnlt 4 0 1 2 Stcastrss 5 0 1 0 Rufrf 4 12 2 C astigoc 4 1 3 1 Mrtnzcf 0 0 0 0 Bamey2b 2 1 0 0 Mayrrycf-rf 4 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Asche3b 3 2 2 0 D Navrrph 1 0 0 0 Ruizc 3111 Bowdenp 0 0 0 0 Kndrckp 2 0 1 1 Nealph 1 0 0 0 DYongph 1 0 0 0 DMrph3b 4 1 1 3 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 E Jcksnp 2 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Watkns2b 2 1 1 0 Frndsnph 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 8 127 Totals 3 39 139 Chicago 0 41 000 003 — 0 P hiladelphia 1 1 2 0 3 1 0 1x — 9 E—Ruiz (1), D.Brown (3). DP—Chicago 2. LOB—Chicago8, Philadelphia 3 28—DeJesus(19), Schierholtz(24),M.Young2 (20), Ruf(7), Asche(1).

TampaBay Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi Y Escorss 4 0 1 0 Eatoncf 3 1 1 0 Zobristlf-rf 4 0 1 0 Pradolf-3b 4 0 1 1 Longori3b 4 1 1 1 Gldsch1b 1 2 0 0 WMyrsrf-ct 3 0 I 0 Erchvz3b 4 I 2 2 S Rdrgz1b 3 0 1 0 Begp 0000 K Jhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 R Rorts2b 3 0 0 0 A.Hill2b 3 1 1 0 J oyce ph I 0 0 0 C.Rossrf 4 I I 3 Loaton c 4 0 1 0 Nieves c 4 0 2 0

Fuld cf 1 0 0 0 Gregrs ss 3 0 0 0 B ourgsph-If 2 0 0 0 Mileyp 2 0 0 0 Hgcksn p 2 0 1 0 Pogockph-If 1 0 0 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0

Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 Scottph 1 0 0 0 CRamsp 0 0 0 0

T otals 3 3 I 7 1 Totals 2 96 8 6 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 1 Arizona 000 410 10x — 6 DP — Tampa Bay2,Arizona1. LOB —TampaBay7,

Arizona4. 2B—Lobaton (11), Prado(23), ErChavez 2 (13). HR —Longoria (22), C.Ross (8). SB—Goldschmidt(11).CS—Gregorius (2). TampaBay IP H R ER BB SO HegicksonL,10-5 42-3 5 5 5 3 JWright 13 1 0 0 0 Farnsworth 1 0 0 0 0 CRamos 2 2 1 1 1

I 0 1 1

Miley W,9-8 7 5 1 1 2 Bell 1 1 0 0 0 Ziegler 1 1 0 0 0 HBP —byHegickson(Eaton). WP —J.Wright. T—2:43.A—19,458(48,633).

5 1 2

Arizona

Leaders ThroughTuesday's Games

AMERICANLEAGUE PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit,16-1; Colon,Oakland, 14-3;Tilman, Baltimore, 14-3;MMoore,Tampa Bay, 14-3;Masterson,Cleveland, 13-8; Guthrie,Kansas City,12-7;Verlander,Detroit,12-8. ERA—FHernandez,Seatle,2.39; FHernandez,Seattle, 2.39;Kuroda,NewYork, 2.45; Colon, Oakland, 2.50; AniSanchez,Detroit, 2.58;Darvish,Texas, 2.72; Iwakuma,Seattle, 2.75. STRIKEOUTS —Darvish, Texas,192; Scherzer, 170; FHernandez,Seattle, 169; Masterson, 38 —utley (5). HR —Rizzo (18), Do.Murphy(1), Ruf Detrort, Cleveland,166;Sale,Chicago,161; Verlander,Detroit, (4), Ruiz(2). SB —Rollins(15). S—Rurz. Chicago IP H R E R BB SO 145; DHolland,Texas, 145. SAVES —JiJohnson, Baltimore,39; MRivera,New E.Jacksonl.,7-12 5 10 7 7 2 2 York, 35; Nathan,Texas, 33; Balfour,Oakland,29; HRondon 2 2 1 1 0 I GHolland,KansasCity, 29;Perkins, Minnesota,27; Bowden 1 1 1 1 0 1 AReed,Chicago,27,Rodney,TampaBay,27. Philadelphia K.KendrickW,10-8 6 6 5 4 0 4 NATIONALLEAGUE DiekmanH,5 11- 3 1 0 0 0 2 PITCHING —Lynn, St. Louis, 13-5;Zimmermann, De FratusH,6 2 3- 2 0 0 0 2 Washington, 13-6; Wainwright, St. Louis, 13-7; Papelbon 1 3 3 2 1 2 Corbin, Arizona,12-3; Liriano, Pittsburgh,12-4; LaWP — E.Jackson,Papebon. tos, Cincinnati,11-3;Minor,Atlanta,11-5; Bumgarner, T—3.21. A—36,841(43,651). San Francisco,11-6;SMiger,St.Louis, 11-7. ERA—Kershaw, LosAngeles,1.91, Kershaw,Los Angeles,1.91; Harvey,NewYork, 2.21; Corbin, AriInterleague zona,2.33;Locke,Pittsburgh,2.47; Fernandez,Miami, 2.54; Wainwright,St. Louis,2.66. STRIKEOUTS —Harvey, NewYork, 172; KerReds 3, Athletics1 shaw,LosAngeles, 166; Wainwright, St. Louis, 156; Samardziia,Chicago,155;Bumgarner, SanFrancisco, CINCINNATI — Jay Bruce 146; HBarley,Cincinnati,145; Latos,Cincinnati,145. SAVES —Kimbrel, Atlanta, 35; Grigi, Pittsburgh, homered andmadea run-saving 30, Mulica,St. Louis,30;RSoriano, Washington, 28; catch on the warning track, and Romo,San Francisco,27;Chapman,Cincinnati,26; Mat Latos pitched into the eighth Crshek,Miami, 23.

likely to miss rest of season By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press

K ANNAPOLIS, N .C . — Tony Stewart told anyone who would listen why he continued racing anywhere,anytime, regardless of purse or crowd or car. Even after he flipped five times last week, Stewart was quick to offer a stout defense for his short-track w eeknight r a cing w h i l e some questioned if his ext racurricular racing w a s putting his championship c hances in N A SCAR at risk. Well, his championship chances areofficially over for this season. T he t h ree-time N A S CAR champion broke his

right leg Monday night at Southern Iowa Speedway in Oskaloosa, where

he flipped his 360 winged sprint car w h ile l eading with five laps remaining in the 30-lap feature. He had s urgery Tuesday on t h e upper and lower parts of his leg, and Stewart-Haas Racing said he will need a second surgery. He remained hospitali zed and t h ere wa s n o timetable for h i s r e t urn to racing. Max Papis was tabbed to replace Stewart this weekend in the No. 14 Chevrolet at Watkins Glen, where Stewart is a f i v etime winner and his streak of 521 consecutive starts willend. "I told someone to go get my phone or else I was

going to get up and get it myself," Stewart said Tuesday in a F acebook post. "Finally got r e connected to the world and just want to say thank you for all the prayers and well wishes. Myteam will remain strong and I will be back." The 42-year-old Stewart has wrecked three times in the past month in extracurricular racing, and the latest came a day after he finished ninth at Pocono in a NASCAR event to position himself 11th in the Sprint Cup standings with five races remaining to set the Chase for the champi-

onship field. But Stewart had l o ng refused to slow down his sprint car racing schedule, and passionately defended it following the June death of friend Jason Leffler in an accident at Bridgeport Speedway in Swedesboro, N.J. He was just as impassioned last Friday at Pocono when asked about his accident last week in Canada in which Stewart flipped a sprint car five times. H is c h i l dhood h e r o , four-time Indianapolis 500 winner A.J. Foyt, defended Stewart on T uesday for sticking to his passion and being a true "racer." "He ain't no prima donna and life is short, and we don't know how we are going to die or what's going to happen," Foyt said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "I just hate to see anybody badmouth Tony for anything he's doing, and if they are, they are just jealous.

People saying he's putting his businesses at risk'? I had three dealerships, people respected me. "If they ar e w o r rying about their jobs and him getting hurt, what's to say he won't have a heart attack tomorrow and die'?" Foyt said. "He might die and it might not be from racing. I had business and I still raced. I always said I am going to continue racing until I d on't want to race anymore and he's the same way." Last week, in a sprint car race at Ohsweken Speedway in O ntario, Stewart rolled his car five times but walked away.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

Biking Continued from C1 Crawford and Roca have been flooded with emails after announcing on J u ly 19 on the website BikePortl and.com that t h e y w e r e looking for cyclists to film. Originally needing talent for four scenic bikeways — they have already shot and produced videos for the McKenzie Pass and Old West r outes (see the link in t h e toolbox) — Crawford and Roca are now looking for cyclists who are interested in the 59.3-mile Grande Tour in northeastern Oregon, a figure-eight loop that starts and ends in La Grande, and the 36.4-mile Twin Bridges route that starts in Bend and loops through Tumalo State Park. " We're trying t o wrap up filming for nine (scenic bikeways) by the end of the year," says Crawford, who like Roca is based out of Portland. "And then Travel Oregon will p ublish them (throughout the next year)." With loose narratives plotted out for each video, The Path Less Pedaled team has formed a rough outline for what kind o f c y clist they need for each film. For the Grande Tour, Crawford and

Roca are looking for four cyclists between the ages of 40 and 60 to film between Sept. 3 and Sept. 5. The schedule calls for two full days of shooting plus two overnight

stays, one camping and one in a hotel. The Twin Bridges shoot, which they hope to film Oct. 12 and 13, calls for a couple in their 40s or 50s. The filming for t h e T w in

Bridges loop includes riding and activities in Bend. "We're really excited to be involved in this project," says Crawford, whose company alsohas shoots scheduled for the Tualatin Valley and Sisters-to-Smith Rock bikeways later this summer. "People are just starting to clue into this idea that cycling tourism can be a huge boost to

Wanna go on a ride? Paths Less Pedaled

(www.pathlesspedaled. com) is seeking cyclists to film on two more

scenic bikeways this year. Here's a rundown of the rides and the (loose) narratives they havein mind: • Sept. 3-5, the Grande

Tour Scenic Bikeway, a 59.3-mile route that starts and ends in La Grande after looping through Baker City. Paths Less Pedaled is looking for four cyclists, in their 40s, 50s, or 60s, for two full days of filming. Riders will camp one night and be put up in hotel the other. Some

van support is available during the ride. • Oct. 12-13, the Twin

Bridges Scenic Bikeway, a 36.4-mile loop that starts and finishes in

Bend with two crossings ofthe Deschutes River. Filmmakers would like

to shoot a couple, in their 40s or 50s, for one full day of riding and activities in Bend. The trip includes one night in a hotel in Bend. Interested cyclists should email Laura Crawford

and Russ Rocaat pathlesspedaled©gmail. com andincludeaphoto of yourself and your group.

designated bikeways have long been p o pular r i d es among local c yclists, the signage and marketing that come with being an Oregon Scenic Bikeway makes the routes more accessiblefor tourists.

"Every day people come in

here looking for rides," says David Mitchell, a sales associate at Hutch's Bicycles' east-side Bend location. "One I sendthem on is Twin Bridgan economy, especially in es. You don't have to get out some of these smaller, rural a map, it's all signed. That's areas." a plus." That sentiment rings true The Path Less Pedaled's for T u m al o C o f feehouse Crawford says she and Roca owner and o p erator L o ri hope to eventually film all 11 Petrich, whose coffee shop of the state's official scenic is nestled along the Twin bikeways, including C enBridges bikeway. tral Oregon's Metolius River "(The designated bike Loops and Madras Mountain route) certainly brings busi- Views routes. "There's no definite dates ness into the coffeehouse on the weekends," says Petrich, or plans out there yet for who opened her shop last them,"she says. "But they're November. "They seem very on the radar." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, pleased we're here." While most of the state's beastes@bendbulletin.com.

Thomas Continued from C1 Now a j u n i or, T homas knows he needs to step up his game. While he is not talking about it, he is already on a number of H eisman Trophy watch lists. But there is th e m atter of position. Although he is officially listed at r unning back, he is obviously adept at receiver also. For the past two seasons, Thomas was not pigeonholed into traditional position meetings and instead was tutored directly

against." Thomas first grabbed attention when he played for

Snoop Dogg's youth football league in Los Angeles. The famous rapper nicknamed theyoung Thomas the"Black Mamba" because of his ability to change direction and

slip through defenses.

At Crenshaw High School, Thomas rushed for 1 ,299 yards and 18 touchdowns, while also picking off five passes on defense, to lead the Cougars to their second straight city championship in his senior year. by former head coach Chip All of the attention that he Kelly. received as a youngster set Now that Kelly has moved him up to handle the spoton to the NFL's Philadelphia light at Oregon, which came Eagles and offensive coor- from the moment he stepped dinator Mark Helfrich has on the field as a freshman in taken over as head coach, 2011. He was named the PacThomas says he is going to 12'sco-freshman of the year. "None of that stuff means meetings with t h e t e am's running backs. anything to me," he said of But do not read too much the accolades. "I feel like I've been through that. I've into that. Helfrich has been noncom- already experienced all that mittal about the specifics of before. For me, I'm never Thomas' role, obviously for satisfied. I just want to work strategic reasons. hard and get better." "To be determined — that's Thomas is such a speedthe coach answer, right?" ster that he doubles up on said the first-year Oregon the UO track team. Earlier head coach. "It depends. this year at the Oregon PreDe'Anthony likes that role (in view meet at Hayward Field, the backfield), he likes to be he won the 100 and 200 mea moving target that doesn't ters and helped the Ducks' 4x100 relay team set a school line up in one position all the time and certainly we record. like that, too. We have had But he is all football right that anchor for a long time. now. The Ducks open the You go back to LaMichael season at home on Aug. 31 (James) and other guys, and against Nicholls State, and we need to find more num- Thomas said he has been bers than just that one guy. ready all summer. Just don't That's a position (running a sk him w h ether he w i l l back) where we don't have a spend more time at running ton of depth, but De'Anthony back oratreceiver this year. likes the role of wideout, mo"People want t o k n ow," tionguy, movement guy,and he said. " People want t o we like that, too, to keep him know what's going on, so I versatile against nickel de- try to give them a little bit. fenses or whatever defense But like I said, I just want to we happen to be playing contribute."

PGA

Masters in 1995 by one shot t o Ben Crenshaw, and h i s best shot at a major was a year later at Oakland Hills in the U.S. Open when he threeputted the 18th and finished one back of Steve Jones. Love shot 66 in the third round and was tied for the 54hole lead with Justin Leonard, a good friend who had won his first major a month earlier at the British Open. Love was always in control over the final round in what became a two-man race, and he finally pulled away late. It was fitting that Love's major would be the PGA Championship — his father was a

Continued from C1 Oak Hill is the only New York course to hold the PGA more than once. This will be the third time. The tough part is figuring out the best five PGA Championships played in New York. Here's one offering:

5.Jackis back J ack Nicklaus never r e ally went anywhere during his peak years. In his first 20 years as a professional, his longest drought was 12 majors without winning — from the 1967 U.S. Open until the 1970 British Open, d uring which time his father died. Even so, he turned 40 in 1980. Tom Watson was the top player. Seve Ballesteros captured his second major at age 23 when he won the Masters, leading by 10 shots on the back nine until settling for a four-shot win. Nicklaus picked up his 16th career major by winning the U.S. Open at Baltusrol. But it was his 1980 PGA Championship win at Oak Hill that summer that affirmed his place in the game. He became only the second player, behind Ben Hogan in 1953, to win two majors in his 40s. Mark O'Meara would join them in 1998. N icklaus shot 6 6 i n t h e third round to take a threeshot lead, and he wound up winning by seven. The margin of victory remained a record for 33 years, until Rory Mcllroy won b y e i ght l a st year at Kiawah Island. Nicklaus tied Walter Hagen with his fifth Wanamaker Trophy.

4. The Silver Scot Tommy Armour was born in Scotland and took up U.S. citizenship after World War I. He picked up his first major in 1927 at Oakmont when he won the U.S. Open. But the odds were against him in the 1930 PGA Championship at F resh Meadow Country Club, even though t wo-time c h a m pion Jim Barnes and five-time winner Walter Hagen failed to qualify for match play. Armour faced Gene Sarazen, who not only was a three-time major champion, but the head professional at Fresh Meadow. Neither player led by more than two h oles during t he 36-hole match. They were all square with nine holes to play, and remained tied playing the 18th. Both hit t heir second shotsintoa greenside bunker. Armour blasted out to 12 feet, and Sarazen was just inside him. Armour holed the putt for a birdie, forcing Sarazen to

Eaton Continued from C1 So, how does the Mountain View High School graduate and former University of Oregon track star top all that in 2013? It may be n early i mpossible to do so in purely athletic terms, but Eaton did marry his college sweetheart and fellow multi-event star, Brianne Theisen, on July 13 in Eugene. That ranks pretty high on the life-changing scale for anyone. And Eaton will go for his first I nternational A ssociation of Athletics Federations

(IAAF) World Championships gold medal this weekend in Moscow. A victory in the Russian capital would do a lot to solidify Eaton's lofty status as a transcendent star in the track and field world. Eaton, who grew up in La Pine and Bend, is definitely t he favorite going into t h e Moscow competition, but he has competed in only one decathlon in 2013. He won the U.S. title in Des Moines, Iowa, in June, scoring a modest (for him) 8,291 points, well off his world-record total of 9 ,039. That score at t h e n ational championships puts him just 13th in the world so far in 2013. But Eaton was b othered i n Des Moines by a h a m string problem and held back throughout the competition. He and h i s c o ach, H arry Marra, managed the injury, getting through the competition and qualifying for worlds w ithout m aking t h e h a m string worse. In a recent email from his pre-World Ch a m pionships training base in Tallinn, Estonia, Eaton said the hamstring is not an issue going into the World Championships.

1

popular club pro who died in a plane crash nine years later. It might not have been a coincidence, then, that when Love holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole of a cloudy Sunday at Winged Foot, the sun had just broken through and a massive rainbow filled the sky. It rained tears that day.

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Phil Sandhm /The Associated Press file

Jack Nicklaus looks to the eky after sinking a 50-foot putt on the first hole for birdie during the third round of the PGA Championship in Rochester, N.Y., in 1980. Nicklaus shot 66 in the third round to takea three-shot lead, and he wound up winning by seven. The margin of victory remained a record for 33 years, until Rory Mcllroy won by eight last year at Kiawah Island. Nicklaus tied Walter Hagen with his fifth Wanamaker Trophy.

1. The Squire and TheHaig Gene Sarazen won the U.S. Open and PGA Championship in 1922, but the latter might have carried as asterisk — the great Walter Hagen didn't play the 1922 PGA C hampionship b ecause h e

had prior engagements.

There was n o d o u bting the Squire in the 1923 PGA C hampionship a t Pe l h a m Golf Club. Hagen crushed everyone i n his path — h e w o n h i s opening match 10 and 9, and beat George McLean in the match him. I t w o ul d h ave Wood built a I-up lead in semifinals, 12 and 11 — to been the first PGA Champi- the morning round, and he set up a championship match onship final to go extra holes. regained the lead in the af- against Sarazen that lived up But it wasn't. Sarazen missed ternoon with an eagle on the to its hype. The match was all the putt, giving the Silver Scot 29th hole. Runyan won back- square afterthe morning sesa 1-up win and his second to-back holes to take the lead, sion, and Sarazen was 2 up major. Sarazen atoned for the only for Wood to square the late in the match until Hagen loss by winning a U.S. Open match by nearly holing his ap- won the 34th and 35th holes at Fresh Meadow two years proach on the 35th hole. With to square the match again, later. the title on the line, both made setting up the first overtime birdie putts on the 36th hole to in the PGA's short history. O f the t hree majors Ar mour won, he got the least force overtime. Runyan beat On the second extra hole, amount of attention for this him on the 38th hole by mak- Sarazen hooked a tee shot one. It w a s o v ershadowed ing an 8-foot par putt. that was a few feet from goby Bobby Jones winning the It was the first of two PGA ing out-of-bounds. Sarazen Grand Slam. Championship titles for Ru- — whose birth name was EuArmour remains the last nyan, and it set the tone for genio Saraceni — later said Wood's career. He went on to Hagen complained there was player born in Britain to win the PGA Championship. lose the Masters, U.S. Open spaghetti sauce on the ball. a nd British Open i n e x t r a "He said the greens keeper 3. Little Poison and holes. Greg Norman, another lived there and was eating the Blond Bomber blond bomber of sorts, joined spaghetti and threw the ball C raig Wood was an i m - him six decades later by losing back out," Sarazen said in a 1999 interview. pressivefigure, known as the all four majors in a playoff in "Blond Bomber" because of stroke play. From deep rough, Sarazen slashed it onto the green his good looks and his ability to smash the ball a long way. 2. Somewhere to 2 feet away. Hagen was in In the final match of the 1934 over the rainbow a bunker and nearly holed it. PGA Championship at Park Davis Love III was consid- That left Sarazen a short putt, ered the best player to have which he made to win in 38 Club of Buffalo, he had his hands full against a man that never won a major when he holes for his second straight arrived at Winged Foot for PGA title. A year later, Haseemed half his size — Paul R unyan, who went b y t h e the 1997 PGA Championship. gen began his run of four in nickname "Little Poison." He was runner-up at the a row.

IAAF World

Championships on TV DAY 1 Friday, 10:30 p.m.-

Saturday, 2:30 a.m., Universal Sports Saturday, 12:30-2 p.m., NBC

Saturday, 4-5:30 p.m. (reair), Universal Sports DAY 2 Saturday, 10 p.m.-Sunday, 2 a.m., Universal Sports Sunday, 9:30-11 a.m., NBC

Sunday, 4-5:30 p.m. (reair), Universal Sports All times PDT Note: The decathlon will

take place during the first two days of the meet, which runs this Saturday

through Aug. 18 in Moscow.

by Pascal Behrenbruch, hold the top four spots on the 2013 world list, but it would be a monumental upset if any of them were to win. Trey Hardee, Eaton's U.S. teammate and the 2011 world champ, has not even completed a decathlon yet in 2013 but is picked by Track k Field News for the silver medal. Eaton believes that having competed in two world meets

"When a kid l ike Ashton Eaton comes to you (after the 2011 worlds) and says, 'Coach, that will never happen again,' that is a great thing," Marra sald. " I understand no w t h a t most often multi-event scores are not all that impressive," Eaton said. "You just have to compete. Anything can happen. With t h i s k n owledge, I'm more calm if something and one Olympics will help doesn't go the way I want behim in Moscow. His experi- cause I know now that that's ence at the 2011 World Cham- just the way it is." pionships in D aegu, South Eaton will compete on the first two d ays i n M o scow, Korea, especially, will h elp him mentally, he said. then will watch his wife com"(Going into a major com- pete in the heptathlon the next petition) you think you are two days. Theisen, a former going to have the meet of NCAA champion at Oregon your life, but that's just not who is competing for Canada, how it works," Eaton said. "I is ranked No. 5 in the world in went into Daegu with that at- the heptathlon going into the titude and totally let myself championships. M arra, wh o coac h e s down after the first event. I k ept wondering w hat w a s Theisen as well as Eaton, has wrong and why I wasn't run- the utmost confidence in their ning fast or jumping far and ability and i n t h eir m ental I kept digging myself into a toughness.

deeper and deeper hole of "My health i s g o od," he sa>d. "I was able to run and jump fine (in Des Moines), just the specific movement of the high jump and the hurdles hurt it," he said, referring to his left hamstring. "At nationals it had a decent affect on those events, but beyond that there weren't any issues." C oach Marra w a s e v en more emphatic than his athlete in p r o nouncing Eaton

ready. "(At nationals) he did just enough to win and get the hell out of there," Marra said. "Ashton is now 100 percent healthy. We said 'adios' to the hamstring thing." The decathlon competition in Moscow is difficult to handicap. German decathletes, led

disappointment." In that frustrating competition, Eaton did eventually rally, running a phenomenal 1,500 meters to edge Cuban Leonel Suarez for the silver medal behind Hardee. At the time, Marra said that Eaton's struggles were "the best thing that could h ave h appened to him" and would help him in the future. With a world record and an Olympic gold medal for Eaton the following year, the coach turned out to be quite the prophet.

"Our goal has always been

to get Ashton and Brianne there 90 percent in shape and 100 percent healthy, and then let the adrenaline of competition take over," Marra said. "Both Ashton and B r ianne compete very well in the big meets. They rise to that level of competition."

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

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

NASDAII 3,665.77

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Eye on credit

1,640 '

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16,000

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Close: 15,518.74

Change: -93.39 (-0.6%)

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June, down from an increase of $19.6 billion in May, which was the fastest pace in a year. Total borrowing reached a record $2.84 trillion in May. Increased borrowing typically means that consumers are feeling more confident.

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Alaska Air Group Source. Factset Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Superman effect? Boeing Co CascadeBancorp Time Warner, which owns HBO, Columbia Bnkg CNN and Warner Bros., reports its Columbia Sporlswear latest quarterly results today. CostcoWholesale Wall Street anticipates that the Craft Brew Alliance media company'searnings and FLIR Systems revenue improved in the second Hewlett Packard 6 quarter, thanks in part to Man of Home FederalBncpID Steel." The Superman film reboot Intel Corp has reaped some $650 million in Keycorp ticket sales since its premiere Kroger Co mid-June. Investors also will be Lattice Semi listening for an update on the LA Pacific company's plans to spin off of ailing MDU Resources magazine publisher Time Inc. Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Inc 0 Nordstrom Inc Nwst Nat Gas OfficeMax Inc PaccarInc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Inc Schnitzer Steel Sherwin Wms Stancorp Fncl New CEO in spotlight StarbucksCp A month since taking the top job at Triquint Semi UmpquaHoldings Duke Energy, CEO Lynn Good is US Bancorp slated to deliver the company's Washington Fedl latest earnings report. Wells Fargo 8Co Good, Duke's former chief financial officer, assumed the chief Weyerhaeuser executive post on July 1. Wall Street expects Good to report that the utility's second-quarter earnings

declined because of losses related to nuclear operations in Florida and more moderate weather in its service territory. $80

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+80 . 8 9 42 14 0 80 +8. 6 341 21 1 .22 e9 9 . 781245 26 0 . 04 + 1 79.0 19 35 0 . 52 +5 0 . 2 5021 20 1 . 94

-46 +2 70 +3 9 0 +4 2 1

4 40 L 150 20 0 .40 L +20. 7 +2 5 . 5 48 21 0 . 88 L +21. 0 +3 1 . 9 1248 26 1 . 24 L +49. 7 +1 0 . 2 34 L +48 . 1 + 6 1 .0 1123 21 0 . 36 L +85. 5 +5 1 . 010694 dd 0.58 L +14.5 +44 .3 28 cc 0.2 4 a w +10. 6 -9.2 28104 12 0 .90 L +47.0 +5 4 .4 10697 14 0 .22f L + 51 0 L +28 1 L -12.8 L + 38 3

+78 , 9 3 2 44 1 4 0, 6 0 + 37 6 1 0 31 d d

L

+42 . 1 3 0 40 2 5 0. 8 4

+50.1 4085 23 +3 64 4 70 CC 0 6 9 + 23.0 +37.0 3 3 1 2 3 0 . 18 w +18. 2 +9. 5 3 5374 12 0 . 9 2 + 29.0

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L

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+ 07 +3 9 L -.40 - 0.8 V

L L

L L

2.86 11 27 +.34 -.27 -.96 -.06 -.21 -.13 -.25 -.31 +. 0 2

+31 5 + 7.4

+22 3 +22. 5

2 dd 79 7 3 2 1.7 6

-1.3 w w -0.4 W -1.0 w L +0.2 W V -0.5 w L - 1,3 W L -08 ~ L -1,2 W L -0.3 w L -1,1 v L

w +17. 2 +4 3 .9 4 1 8 2 2 L + 38.1 +67 .2 4 864 11 L -13.6 - 11.4 15 2 9 4 L +15. 2 +3 1 .3 1 258 2 5 L +49.5 +8 6 .9 26 9 1 3 L + 35, 7 +7 0 ,3 3 877 3 5

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+32, 4

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+28.8

+32 . 0 13203 12 1 . 2 0

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+1.3

+22 . 0 3 732 26 0 .80f

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0. 1 2 0 .80f 0 . 75 2. 0 0 0. 9 3f 0, 8 4

L +64 2 +41 4 14 2 6 d d L + 46, 2 +4 5 ,5 5 0 0 1 8 0, 6 0f L +17. 8 +15 .1 4 867 1 3 0 . 92f

I

1.02

Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of 49 cents per share. Last year's first-quarter profit came to $68.6 million, or 34 cents per share. Revenue surged 55 percent, to $640.9 million from $414.9 million, surpassing analysts' prediction of $567.8 million For the year, which runs through March 2014, Michael Kors lifted its earnings outlook to $2.67 to $2.69 per share from a range of $2.43 to $2.47 per share.

2Q '12 2 Q '13 Price-earnings ratio:

Michael Kors(KORS) Tuesday's close:$70.39

13

based on past 12 months' results

Total return YTD:38%

Dividend: $3.12 Div. Yield: 4.4%

Price-earnings ratio

52-WEEK RANGE

$40 ~

~

1-YR: 64%

~

~

72

Ann. d i v idend: none

Since IPO: 115%

total returns through Aug. 6

AP

(trailing 12 months):35

Market value:$14.2 billion *annualized

Source: FactSet

Source: FactSet

FundFocus

SelectedMutualFunds

This fund trails the majority of its peers over the last 12-months. A Marketsummary major factor has been its large Most Active stake in Apple which is down NAME VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG sharply this year. A. Veiga, J. Sohn • AP

BkofAm S&P500ETF Facebook iShEMkts Sprint n MktVGold iShJapan Microsoft BariPVix rs Potash

812449 734693 628458 461037 425018 360493 357373 353740 328566 322432

14.64 169.73 38.55 38.96 6.97 24.03 11.75 31.58 14.48 29.41

—.16 -.97 -.64 JPMorgan LgcapGrSelect SEEGX —.50 + .09 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH -1.40 + . 01 cC o —.12 99 IO +.43 IC -.10 IL

Gainers NAME

Dynatrn rs HeliosMAn SGDCD BDS Ltd rs Verenium Newtek

L AST

5 .57 8 .40 2 .45 4 .05 3 .14 2 .99 PCM Inc 1 1.46 e-Future 3 .48 Fossil Grp 1 26.55 VoceraCm 1 6.70

cC 29

C H G %C H G +2. 6 7 +3 . 8 8 +.73 +1. 1 7 +.85 +.74 +2 . 0 7 +.54 + 1 9.13 +2 . 5 0

CC

+92 . 1 +8 5 . 8 «C +42 . 4 69 +40 . 6 «C +37 . 1 IO +32 . 9 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +2 2 . 0 +18 . 4 O e Fund target represents weighted +1 7 . 8 average of stock holdings +1 7 . 6 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings

Losers

CATEGORY Large Growth NAME L AST C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * V t -3.23 -27.6 TravelCtrs 8.47 AlldNevG 4.37 -1.53 -25.9 ASSETS $5,154 million SkilldHcre -1.65 -25.5 4.83 EXP RATIO 0.91% ChAdCns rs 3.80 -1.27 -25.1 MANAGER Giri Devulapally -2.08 -22.9 Nautilus 7.02 SINCE 2004-08-02 RETURNS3-MD +5.8 Foreign Markets LAST CHG %CHG -17.40 -.43 4,032.57 London 6,604.21 -15.37 —.23 Frankfurt -98.65 -1.17 8,299.73 Hong Kong 21,923.70 -298.31 -1.34 Mexico -3.59 -.01 41,914.82 —.44 Milan 16,683.17 -74.07 Tokyo 14,401.06 +143.02 +1.00 Stockholm 1,242.12 -9.65 -.77 Sydney -5.80 -.11 5,088.00 Zurich 7,996.79 t 17.39 $. 2 2 NAME Paris

YTD +16.8 1- YR +18.6 3-YR ANNL +17.6 5-YR-ANNL +8.8

TOP 5HOLDINGS Google, Inc. Class A

MasterCard Incorporated Class A Biogen Idec Inc Home Depot, Inc. Apple Inc

PCT 4.72 4.02

500

18

M

J J 52-week range

$327.66 ~

A

$666.16

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 2 2.88 07 +13.1 +17.5 t13.4 $8.1 A A A BondA m 1 2.4 7 -2.4 -1.3 +3.3 t4.2 D D E CaplncBuA m 56.35 15 +87 +11.4 e10.1 $.4.9 C A C CpWldGrlA m 41.48 21 t13.2 +21.7 t10.7 t4.3 C D D EurPacGrA m 44.38 24 t7 7 +18.0 +7.0 +2.9 D D A FnlnvA m 4 7. 8 6 23 +18.0 +25.1 +15.3 +6.8 C D C GrthAmA m 41.00 29 +19.4 +27.9 +15.6 +6.8 A C C IncAmerA m 19.71 04 +11.0 +15.1 +12.4 +7.6 C A A InvCoAmA m 35.63 24 +19.1 +23.2 +14.5 +6.9 D D C NewPerspA m35.72 16 +14.3 +23.0 +13.0 +6.7 C 8 8 WAMutlnvA m37.25 12 +20.6 +23.7 +17.3 +8.0 D A 8 Dodge &Cox Income 1 3 53 . . . - 0 9 +1 0 +4 3 +7 0 A 8 8 IntlStk 39.27 +.01 +13.4 + 28.4 +8.8 +3.2 A 8 A Stock 151.36 -.90 e 25.2 +33.9 e18.5 e7.3 A A C Fidelity Contra 91.37 -.60 + 18.9 +22.4 +16.7 +8.3 C 8 6 GrowCo 114. 98 -1.10+ 23.3 +26.7 +20.1+10.5 8 A A LowPriStk d 48 .33 -.26+ 22.4 +32.9 +18.6+11.2 8 8 A Fidelity Spartan 500l d xAdvtg 60 .23 -.35+ 20.4 +24.4 +17.2 +8.0 C 8 8 FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 35 - .01 +7.6 +12.1 +10.0 +7.1 A A 8 IncomeA m 2.3 2 - . 01 + 7.6 +12.3 +10.5 +7.6 A A A FrankTemp-TemletonGIBondAdv 12.93 -.02-0.9 + 4 .8 + 5 .6 +9.3 A A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20. 22 - .11+16.9 +20.8 +14.7 +6.0 E D D RisDivB m 18. 30 - .10+ 16.2 +19.7 +13.7 +5.0 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 21 - .10+ 16.3 +19.9 +13.9 +5.2 E D E SmMidValA m41.02 -.43 + 26.6 +38.4 +14.6 +5.5 A E E SmMidValBm 34.46 -.36+25.9 +37.3 +13.6 +4.7 A E E PIMCO TotRetA m 10 . 80 +.01 -2.6 -0.2 +3.8 +7.1 B C B T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 31.49 - . 19+20.1 +27.1 +16.0 +7.8 C C B GrowStk 45.2 0 - . 25+ 19.6 +23.9 +18.1 +9.0 8 A B HealthSci 55.1 9 - . 58+ 33.9 +40.3 +30.9+17.1 8 A A Newlncome 9. 4 2 - .01 -2.9 - 1.5 +3.1 +5.7 D D C Vanguard 156.69 -.90 +20.4 +24.5 +17.3 +8.0 C 8 6 500Adml 500lnv 156.68 -.89 +20.4 +24.3 +17.1 +7.9 C 8 8 CapDp 43.42 -.40 t29.1 +40.5 e17.9 t9.5 A A A Eqlnc 28.76 -.14 +20.7 +23.8 +19.1 +9.6 D A A StratgcEq 27.02 -.28 +26.0 +35.9 t21.3 t9.3 A A B Tgtet2025 15.02 -.07 +10.5 +15.6 +11.2 +6.3 C 8 8 TotBdAdml 1 0 65 . . . -24 -1.9 +3.0 +5.3 D D D Totlntl 15.54 -.07 +5.3 +17.2 +5.7 +1.1 D E C TotStlAdm 42.82 -.29 +21.2 +26.3 +17.8 +8.6 8 A A TotStldx 42.81 -.28 t21.2 +26.2 +17.6 +8.5 8 A A USGro 25.35 -.16 +19.2 +25.1 t17.5 $7.7 6 8 C Welltn 37.72 -.14 t12.9 +16.8 +12.2 +8.2 6 A A FAMILY

3.59 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs ls paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 3.43 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee andeither 9 sales ot 3.21 redemption fee. Source: Motclngstar.

M J J A 52-week range $16.66 ~ $23.94

Vol.:167.6k (6.3x avg.) P E: 117.7 Vol.:22.8m (7.9x avg.) PE: 1 4 .3 Mkt. Cap:$3.68 b Yiel d : 6 .6% Mkt. Cap:$3.39 b Y ield:2.8% JCP Close:$13.28 V-0.54 or -3.9% New worries about the retailer's cash are expressed by J.P. Morgan and Citibank. Shares hit a 12 I/9-year low. $20 15

IBM IBM Close:$1 90.99 V-4.51 or -2.3% Credit Suisse issued a downgrade, citing concerns over growth from the technology company's existing businesses. $210 200 190-

M

J J A M J J A 52-week range 52-week range $12.66~ $32.55 $ 164.76 ~ $216 .93 Vol.:25.8m (2.7x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.:5.8m (1.5x avg.) P E: 13 . 6 Mkt. Cap:$2.93 b Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$209.22 b Yi e l d:2.0%

Molson Coors

TAP Close:$53.26L3.18 or 6.3% The brewing company topped profit expectations for the second quarter thanks in part to a big European acquisition. $55

Fossil FOSL Close:$1 26.55 %19.13 or 17.8% The accessory company beat expectations for the second quarter by defying the trend of declining European sales. $140 120

50

100

M

$39.46

J J A 52-week range $53.52

M J J A 52-week range $76.76 ~ $129 .26

Vol.:7.4m (4.9x avg.) P E: 24 .3 Vol.:5.2m (7.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$8.41 b Yiel d : 2 .4% Mkt. Cap:$7.42 b

Regeneron Pharma.

P E: 21 .6 Yield:...

R EG N Dell

Close:$254.50 %-t 6.49 or -6.1% The drugmaker's second-quarter earnings climbed and it will seek FDA approval for an additional use for its eye treatment. $300 250

DELL Close: $13.73 %0.05 or 0.4% Carl Icahn's revealed a bigger stake in the computer maker, backing his promise that the fight for the company will go on. $14.0 13.5 13.0

M

J J A 52-week range $13226 ~ $263 99

Vol.:2.0m (2.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$24.41 b

M J J A 52-week range $6.69 ~ $14.64

P E: 33 .9 Vol.:23.3m (0.9x avg.) PE: 1 3 .0 Yield: ... Mkt. Cap:$24.11 b Yiel d : 2. 3% AP

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

Company Shares of Michael Kors Holdings set an all-time high of $71.50 Tuesday, before closing at $70.39. The clothi ng, accessories and handbag maker reported that its fiscal first-quarter profit rose 82 percent and lifted its outlook for the year. Michael Kors said net income in the period, which ran through June 29, rose to $125 million, or 61 cents per share.

WPO American Eagle AEO Close:$593.00L24.30 or 4.3% Close:$17.57V-2.40 or -12.0% Shares hit five-year a high after anWeak sales for the teen retailer lead nouncing the sale of the paper to to a profit second-quarter profit Amazon.com founder JeffBezosfor warning, dragging down much of the $250 million. retail sector. $600 $22 20

+4 4 ,2 2 2 0 1 6 0, 3 6

Dividend Footnotes: 6-Extra dividends were paid, ttut are oot included. tt - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. 6 - Amount declared or paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, which was mcrsased bymost recent dividend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. I - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dlvldend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pald thls year, 9 cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Imtial dividend, annual rate not known, yleld not shown. I - Declared or paid in precsdmg t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, apprcxlmate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PE Footnotes:q - Stock is 9 closed-eod fund - oo P/E ratio shown. CC -P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last t2 months

76

50

ALK 32.69 ~ AVA 22 78 ~ BAC 7 . 4 4 — BBSI 23 64 — BA 6903 ~ CACB 4 58 ~ CDLB 16.18 — COLM 47.72 ~ COST 93.51 — BREW 5 62 — FLIR 18.58 — HPQ 11,35 — H OME 9.66 ~ INTC 19.23 ~ KEY 7. 81 — KR 2 1 57 — LSCC 3.46 LPX 11.25 MDU 19.59 — MENT 13.21 — MSFT 26.26 NKE 44 83 — JWN 50.94 NWN 41.01 DMX 4 . 27 ~ PCAR 38.76 ~

+.0047

StoryStocks

J.C. Penney

52-WK RANGE oCLOSE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI C LOSE CHG %CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

NAME

M

+

1.3305

The Standard & Poor's 5DD index fell on Tuesday to its sharpest drop in six weeks. It was the second straight day of declines for the index, the first time that has happened in nearly two weeks. The Dow Jones industrial average, meanwhile, suffered its largest loss since June. Worries about earnings for retailers helped drag the market down. Both American Eagle and CVS Caremark cut their profit forecasts. That helped offset a report showing that the country's trade deficit narrowed more than expected in June. L.S. companies exported more machinery, engines and other equipment during the month, while the country imported less oil.

t21.52%

NorthwestStocks F

+ -1.26 '

Washington Post

10

J

$105.30

Dow Jones industrials

.. C l ose: 1,697.37

669~

+

SILVER

GOLD ~ $1,283.20

S&P 500

Wednesday, August 7, 20t3

20

10-YR T-NOTE 2.64%

S8!P 500

27 q 6

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 5 2-wk T-bill

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note held steady at 2.64 percent Tuesday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.

. 0 4 .03 . 07 .07 .10 .10

2 -year T-note . 31 .31 5-year T-note 1 .39 1 .39 10-year T-note 2.64 2.64 3 0-year T-bond 3.73 3.73

BONDS

+0 .0 1 L ... L ... V

The price of oil fell for a third straight day to settle at $105.3D per barrel. It had been as high as $108 in midJuly. The whole sale price of gasoline also fell a third straight day.

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against the

Japanese yen and other major currencies. The dollar's drop against the euro puts it close to its lowest level against the 17-nation

currency since mid-June.

h5N4 QG

L

-

-

W

~

...

V

W

L L

...

L

L

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.24 .65 1.56 2.65

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO IlTRAGO

Barclays Long T-Bdldx 3.46 3.45 +0.01 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.12 5.10 +0.02 Barclays USAggregate 2.37 2.35 +0.02 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.15 6.14 +0.01 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 4.46 4.42 $0.04 YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.57 1.56 +0.01 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3 .26 3.23 +0.03 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Commodities

-

L L L L L L L

L L W W L W W

L L L L L L L

2.35 4.24 1 8. 1 6 7. 7 3.39 .91 2 9.9

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 105.30 106.56 -1.18 + 14.7 Ethanol (gal) 2.19 2.26 + 0.58 + 0 . 1 Heating Dil (gal) 3.01 3.05 -1.44 -1.2 -1.0 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.32 3.32 -0.03 Unleaded Gas(gal) 2.92 2.95 - 1.20 + 3 .7 FUELS

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. 1283.20 1302.60 19.52 19.71 1427.80 1448.10 3.17 3.17 721.90 734.30

%CH. %YTD -1.49 -23.4 -0.99 -35.3 -1.40 -7.2 +0.16 -12.9 - 1.69 + 2 .7

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -6.9 1.21 1.21 +0.31 1.20 1.20 -16.8 4.72 4.69 +0.64 -32.4 Corn (bu) Cotton (Ib) 0.86 0.85 +0.58 +14.0 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 300.40 300.40 -19.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.40 1.42 -1.51 +20.9 Soybeans (bu) 13.24 13.30 -0.41 -6.7 Wheat(bu) 6.45 +0.81 -16.4 6.51 AGRICULTURE

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5356 +.0006 +.04% 1 .5611 C anadian Dollar 1.0 3 67 —.0002 —.02% .9992 USD per Euro 1.3305 +.0047 +.35% 1 . 2399 —.63 —.64% 78.22 Japanese Yen 97.70 Mexican Peso 12. 6 568 —.0107 —.08% 13.1271 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.5475 —.0052 —.15% 3.9869 0040 —. 07% 5.9617 Norwegian Krone 5. 91 91 —. South African Rand 9.9356 +.0891 +.90% 8.1431 6. 5530 —. 0314 —.48% 6.7207 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9260 —.0022 —.24% .9692 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.1132 -.0090 -.81% . 9 451 Chinese Yuan 6.1215 -.0030 -.05% 6.3767 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7564 -.0004 -.01% 7.7555 Indian Rupee 60.791 -.089 -.15% 55.523 Singapore Dollar 1.2669 -.0024 -.19% 1.2406 South Korean Won 1114.50 -1.68 -.15% 1128.47 Taiwan Dollar 29.97 + .01 +.03% 29 . 96


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

BRIEFING

GM cuts price of Volt dy13 percent General Motors is knocking 13 percent off the sticker price of the Chevrolet Volt electric car as it tries to

keep pacewith rivals in the market for plug-in vehicles. The automaker said Tuesday that the 20f4Voltwill startat

$34,995, including shipping — $5,000 less than the current model. The new model is scheduled to reach

us ice sues o over securi ies By Jessica Silver-Greenberg

for misconduct in the pack-

New York Times News Service

aging and sale of mortgage

The Justice Department sued Bank of America on Tuesday, accusing the bank of defrauding investors by vastly underestimating the quality of m ortgage-backed securities. The lawsuit is the latest action by President Barack Obama's federal mortgage task force that has vowed to hold Wall Street accountable

securities during the housing boom. Bank of America, the Justice Department said, cloaked the risk associated with $850 million worth of securities backed by residential mortgages. In a corporate filing last week, Bank of America said it was bracing for the action. Eric Holder, the U.S. attor-

ney general, said the lawsuit was "the latest step forward in the Justice Department's ongoing efforts to hold accountable those who engage in fraudulent or irresponsible conduct." As Bank of America assembled securities in 2008, the government claimed, the bank ignored that more than 40 percent of the mortgages included did not meet underwriting guidelines. Even though Bank

of America knew about the troubled mortgages, the government said, the bank sold the securities anyway. Unlike other lawsuits, this case zeros in on prime mortgages, rather than subprime loans. Prosecutors portrayed Bank

of America's mortgage operations as emblematic of Wall Street's reckless practices in the heady days before the

financial crisis. Under pressure to generate profits, the lawsuit said, Bank of America pressured employees to churn through mortgage evaluations. The instructions for slipshod standards stemmed from the top of the bank, the lawsuit said.One employee, according to the lawsuit, said that her job was to "basically validate the loans," rather than to comb through them to spot flaws.

showrooms late this summer.

UBS topay$50M to settle SECcase UBS will pay $50 million to settle charges by the U.S. Securities and

Exchange Commission that the Swiss bank

misled investors, the regulatory agency announced Tuesday. UBS Securities was accused of violating securities laws while

structuring and marketing a collateralized debt obligation, or CDO,

during a 2008 mortgage bond transaction. Regulators said it failed to disclose that it retained $23.6 million in upfront

cash in the course of acquiring collateral for the CDO. — From wire reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR FRIDAY • Cricket Trailer Tour: Representatives from the travel trailer company will demo four new Cricket Trailers; registration requested at www.cricket trailer.com; free; 4-7 p.m.; BeaverCoach Sales & Service, 62955 Boyd Acres Road,Bend; 800-382-2597. SATURDAY • Cricket Trailer Tour (See above) TUESDAY • Professional Enrichment Series:Mike Hollern, president of Brooks Resources Corp., and Troy Reinhart, partner with Northwest Quadrant Wealth Management, answer questions; registration required; members $20, or $30 for both August sessions; nonmembers $35, or $45 for both August sessions; 7:30a.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.bendchamber.org. • Membership101 — Driving Your Membership:Connecting new membersoftheBend Chamber of Commerce with current members; registration required;10 a.m.; Charles Schwab if Co.,777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 20f, Bend; 541-382-3221, shelley@ bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. AUG. 14 • Howto Start a Business: Registration required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 N.W. TrentonAve.,Bend; 541-383-7290. AUG. 15 • City Club'sAugust Forum:Former Portland Mayor SamAdams discusses the city as an economicforce: what has worked, what has been learned andwhat would have beendone differently; register before Aug. f3; $20 for first-time guests and members; $35 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-f p.m.; St. Charles Bend Center for Health 8, Learning, 2500 N.E.Neff Road; 541-633-7163 or www.cityclubco.org. •LunchwithLandWatch: Discussion of Bend's Urban Growth Boundary and otherlandissues; free, BYOL(buy your own lunch); noon-'I p.m.; Zydeco Kitchen and Cocktails, 919 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 54f647-2930, sherryn© centraloregonlandwatch. org or www.centraloregon landwatch.org/blog/329lunch-with-landwatch.

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

emers I -

ase airine LlSBS a—QLl-can-Ba mo • Members can fly as often asthey like on 6-seat planes

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

By Billy Witz New York Times News Service

BURBANK, Calif. — Meticulous, well-thought-out plans

might be for some people, but not Wade Eyerly. At 16, he walked into the registrar's office at the University of Central Missouri, not knowing he was supposed to have applied for admission. He walked out with a schedule of classes. After arriving in Washington, jobless, he landed a position in Vice President Dick Cheney's press office, followed by stints in Iraq as a government operative and in Washington as a National Security Agency consultant. This all helps to explain why Eyerly, while projecting a Ferris Bueller-like certainty that everything will always work out in the end, eschewed graduate school at Stanford to start an airline. With Surf Air, Eyerly is bringing what he calls the allyou-can-eat-style pricing plan of the local gym or Netflix to air travel — pay a member-

ship ($500) and a monthly fee ($1,650) and fly as often as you like on six-seat, single-engine turboprops. Surf Air started flying in June, with service between smaller airports in Burbank, Calif., and San Carlos near Palo Alto, tapping into those who do business between Hollywood and Silicon Valley and would prefer to do so without the hassles of major airports. It added service last month to Santa Barbara, Calif., and is considering additional destinations by the end of the year. If it looks as if he is flying blind — a novice businessman

J. Emilio Flores/New YorkTimes News Service

Passengers board a plane from Surf Air, an airline that offers unlimited travel for a membership and a monthly fee, at Burbank Bob Hope Airport in Burbank, Calif.

"It's a home run or a strikeout. It works or it doesn't. If this doesn't workin a year, 18 months, we'll know. It won't drag out."

diving into an industry that is plagued by contractions, mergers and failed enterprises — Eyerly views his fledgling Surf Air as an opportunity to fundamentally change the way business travelers fly. It is a pitch to certain kinds of decision-makers — the small-business chief executives, those who have not yet made their fortune but are intent on making their mark. For his customers, Eyerly hopes Surf Air can be an incubator of ideas, where flights can be dinner parties in the air, where the membership can be a Facebook for entrepreneurs. If the business model works in California, it will work in more than 50 markets around

outside the Atlantic Terminal, which is separate from the main terminal, walk a few dozen steps to the lobby, grab — Wade Eyerly, founder, Surf Air a snack from the concierge cart and walk out on the tarmac to board the plane. There the country, he said. were no tickets, no lines and "Forgive the Kansas City no body scans. A valet parked reference, but it's Bo Jackson the customers' cars. at the plate," Eyerly, a 34-yearFor Surf Air, tapping into old Kansas City native, said, fliers' dissatisfaction with the referring to the former Royairline industry is the easy als slugger. "It's a home run part. Making a profit at it is or a strikeout. It works or it another matter. While Surf doesn't. If this doesn't work in Air might be the first to adopt a year, 18 months, we'll know. an all-you-can-fly fee strucIt won't drag out." ture on small aircraft on a narSurf Air has raised about row list of routes, others have $11 million in capital, Eytried elements of this model erly said. Its membership is with limited success. "It's all a great selling propnearing 300, each of whom has made a three-month osition," said Robert Mann, an commitment. airline industry analyst and It was not hard to see the former executive who helped lure recently when members American Airlines begin an arrived and departed from all-you-can-fly pass in 1981. "The key is very few people Burbank. It was possible to pull into the small parking lot make money doing it."

Obama outlinesplansfor Fannie, Freddie By Jackie Calmes New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — In another sign that the housing market has strengthened, President Barack Obama on Tuesday outlined his longawaited ideas for overhaul-

ing mortgage finance giants Fannie Maeand Freddie Mac to significantly reduce the government's risk in any future credit crisis. In an appearance in Phoenix, Obama endorsed bipartisan efforts in the Senate to wind down the two

Trucking company eyes Bend expansion

companies and end their longtime implicit guarantee of a federal government bailout. That dread prospect, once thought improbable, was realized in the fall 2008 financial crisis; Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, then bankrupt, were rescued by the government at great cost to taxpayers, who only now are

being repaid. The presidentmade clear that he would only sign into law a measure that puts private investors primarily at risk for the two companies,

which buy and guarantee many mortgages from banks to provide a continuing stream of money for lenders to provide to additional homebuyers. An acceptable measure also must specify the government's role and liabilities for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and — unlike legislation in the Republican-controlled House — must ensure Americans' continued access to a 30-year mortgage at a fixed interest rate. After years in which the

formerly formidable Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac and their congressional allies blocked proposals for payment of fees or risk premiums, Obama is calling for financial institutions to pay an assessment to the government on the value of mortgage-backedsecurities. Under his proposals, the revenue would help finance assistance for borrowers and subsidize construction of homes andrentalproperties that would be affordable to lower-income Americans.

Bend trucking company Taurus Freight is eyeing NorthWest Crossing as a possible location for its new headquarters. Taurus is looking at a nearly 1-acre piece of land near the intersection of Northwest Lolo Drive and Northwest York Drive to construct a 4,300-square-foot building, with space for a possible 2,100square-foot expansion. Taurus Freight operates as a freight logistics company, helping truck drivers coordinate their routes and delivery schedules along the West Coast. It works with independent truck drivers, so it does not park a fleet of semitrucks on-site. On July 30, Taurus submitted several blueprints and a request for a pre-application meeting with Bend's Community Development Department. The meeting is set for Aug. 22. The building plans are preliminary at this point, Taurus CEO Dustin Whitaker said. It's possible the company will stay in its existing office off of Mt. Bachelor Drive, between Century Driveand the Deschutes River in southwest Bend. The company leases its office and shares building space with several other tenants. "Right now we're just trying to match facts and figures. We're real early on" in the process, Whitaker said. "We're not going to go ahead with something without checking out our options." The new building would give Taurus some space to grow, if it moves ahead. Taurus has added several staff members in the past few years, with 10 fulltime dispatchers and support staff working out of its 2,400square-foot oNce today. "It's possible we could go forward and get our own place," Whitaker said, though he added there's no timeline in place at this point. The company's proposed NorthWest Crossing site lies south of Summit High School, and sits adjacent to a gym and nutritionist's office. The property is part of a long strip of industrial-zoned land surrounding the high school's south and east boundaries, where development has been sparse. While homes have sprouted up throughout NorthWest Crossing's residential areas, just five buildings have gone up in the industrial zone, which spans more than 27 acres, according to Deschutes County records. — Reporter:541-617-7820 eglucklich@bendbufletin.com

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed July 31 • David Harms, 64898 Nino Court, Bend • Ryan J. Pitt,1938 N.E. Veronica Lane,Bend • Justin 0. Close, 63180 Eastview Drive, Unit 1, Bend • Matthew B. Levi, P.O.

Box 731, Prineville • Derek 0. Camacho, 4f 0 N.W. 24th St., Redmond • Andrea C. Joyce, 3332 S.W. KalamaAve., Redmond • Wesley 0. Johnson, 194f2 CherokeeRoad, Bend • Christina M. Powell,

2357 N.E. Moonlight Drive, Bend • Suzanne P.Blakley, 62700 Todd Road, Bend • Aaron T. Coe,f6801 Gross Drive, Bend • Michelle K. Hurley, 2704 S.W. Glacier, No. 2, Redmond • Simon J.K. Delery, 2853

N.E. Buckboard Lane, Prineville Filed Aug. 1 • Karen J. Way,61535 Highway 97, Suite 9-145, Bend • Jeffrey W. Greiner, 20945 Miramar Drive, Bend • Russell L. Mathiasen,

40288 N. Twickenham Road, Mitchell Filed Aug. 2 • Todd D. Wycoff, P.O.Box 8522, Bend • Larry R. Heckathorn, 236 N.E. B. St., Madras • Michelle T. Stearns, 2048 S.E. Melrose Drive, Prineville

Filed Aug. 3 • Imelda Saldana, 1514 N.E. Seventh St., Redmond Chapter 13 Filed July 30 • Terry L. Avery, 2510 N.E. Bobbi Place, Prineville

Filed July 31 • Joseph T. Dillon, 64597

McGrath Road, Bend • Edward R. Petri, P.O.Box 1137, La Pine • Robert L. Novak, 1393 Foley Drive, Burns • Jeffrey R. Cornett, 19723 Buck Canyon Road, Bend


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4

THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

O www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

WATER REPORT

OUTING

ADVENTURE

For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

Perseidswill light the s

BRIEFING

ODFW: Donot keep blackwaters ment of Fish & Wildlife

• Prime places in Central Oregon to view theannual meteorshower

is reminding anglers that they cannot keep

By Anne Aurand

The Oregon Depart-

The Buttetin

blackwater trout as part of their daily limit. Last fall, the ODFW stocked East Lake, south of Bend, with the

The Perseidmeteor shower is supposed to be phenomenal this year. The small, new moon is well-timed to improve stargazing. And Central Oregon has ample open spaces with unobstructed views of dark skies. The Perseid meteor shower ignites our skiesaround the same time every August. Monday is the expected peak of fireball action, although stars will shoot for many days on either side of the apex. It's already begun.

Canadian strain of rainbow trout in hopes of controlling a potentially

explosive population of tui chub. A fair number of these blackwater trout

are now being caught. Anglers can identify

What are the Perseids? Meteor showers happen when small pieces of cosmic debris enter the Earth's atmosphere,according to the American Meteor Society's website. Comets leave a stream of particles behind them in their orbit. The Perseids are associated with the comet Swift-Tuttle. When the Earth's orbit passes through the cloud of debris left behind from the Swift-Tuttle comet each August, we witness the meteor shower. From ourperspective,meteor showers appear to come from a single point in the sky. In this shower, the location is the constellation Perseus, hence the name of the annual shower. SeePerseids/D2

the trout by the intact adipose fin, the small fin on the trout's back between the tail and the large dorsal fin. Traditional hatchery rainbow trout have had the fin re-

moved (fin-clipped) and may still be retained. If a rainbow trout still has its adipose fin,

anglers must release it unharmed. Tui chub reproduce quickly and compete with rainbow trout and

kokanee for food. ODFW is using the

same approach to remove chub from Paulina and Lava lakes. Paulina

has been stocked with the predatory Eagle Lakes strain of rainbow trout that, like the blackwater, should prey on tui

chub and grow to trophy size. These trout are not fin-clipped and must be

released unharmed.

Archery event set for this weekend The Bend Bowmen

Archery Club's Hunter's Classic 3D Shoot is scheduled for Friday

through Sunday. The event includes 40 targets per day with hunt-

er scoring. TheODFWwil

r .

.4f,

t'ii,"

also offera bowhunter

education course.

The Bulletin file photo

Registration starts at 7 a.m. each day. Entry

A single meteor streaks over Paulina Lake during the Perseid meteor shower in 2009. This year's Perseid shower is expected to peak Monday.

fees range from $5 to $50 depending on how many days andthe number of people. To find the classic,

HUNTING 8E FISHING

take Century Drive, southwest of Bend and

turn left on Forest Road 4613. Follow the signs to the shoot location.

For more information, call Jason Gillette at 541-390-5248 or visit

bendbowmen.com. — From staff reports

Photos by Mark Moncal/The Bulletin

Mason Morical, 5, makes his way through Canyon Creek's upper meadow toward the east face of Three Fingered Jack.

• Canyon Creek Meadowshike highlight of campingtrip y experience as a

TRAIL UPDATE

father is that young

WITH CHRISSABO

unlight seeped into the consciousness of the dark over the hills of the Columbia Basin. I thought back to the night before. We had checked into the Marriott in Wenatchee, Wash.,received a visitor basket full of apples, aplets, cotlets and other

goodness.

kids are often capa-

FIRE CONDITIONS Fire risk is very

high, with public-use restrictions in effect

expect.

LEWIS

areas posted as closed to fires (such as Green Lakes and Moraine

Lake areas). This restriction includes the

use of wood-fired camp stoves or charcoal. Restrictions are not in effect in wilderness

areas, but users are asked to avoid fires if not needed for cooking or warmth. If a fire is

used, keep it small and extinguish completely. Checkthe U.S. Forest

Service website (www. fs.usda.gov/centraloregon) and information boards at your destinaA challengingclimb above Canyon Creek's upper meadow leads to a cirque lake at the bottom of Three Fingered Jack's glacier.

So I should not

surprised w h e n what was supposed to be one night of relatively easy camping at Suttle Lake with my 5-year-old son turned into two nights of rather rugged camping on the Metolius River. And what was supposed to be a moderate 4Ãz-mile loop with 400 feet of elevation gain to the lower meadow below the east face of Three Fingered Jack turned into a difficult 7-mile loop with 1,200 feet of elevation gain. The whining (my son's) did not start until the last half-mile back to Jack Lake Trailhead, and even that bit of discontent was quashed with the always effective granola-bar bribe. Sure, Mason was ready to break camp and head back to Bend by our third day in the woods, but that was nearly 24 hours after our memorable hike to Canyon Creek Meadows. SeeJack/D3

the

highway

gARy

MARX ',:. f h MORICAL

within100 feet of a trail, body of water or

Off

ble of much more than we might

— no fires are allowed

tion for updated conditions and information. SeeTrail Update/D2

Reflectedlight on the UpperColumbia

a nd i n t o the lap of

luxu r y.

Then I called our guide for the morrow, Brad Wagner. "I'll be by to pick you up at 2:30," he said. Excuse me? I thought you said 2:30. He had. Dawn's firstrays reflected off the hilltops; trailer lights shimmered underw ater. There were dozens of boats out there already, like opening day on a trout lake. Hope is epidemic. SeeLewis/D5

Gary LewisI For The Bulletin

Tommy Brown, 15, of Bend, boated this bright hatchery chinook while fishing the Upper Columbia, 525 miles up from the ocean.


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

Perseids

I ' I

III'

' I I

Canyou work a camera, and capture a great picture? And canyou tell us a bit about it? Submit your color or black-and-white outdoors photos at bendbulletin.comlgardenor email them to readerphotos©bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. All entries will appear online, and every week we'll run a stellar local photo in this section. Once a month, we'll publish a whole photo page on a specific topic. This month, the topicis Garden. Submissionrequirements: Include in your caption as much detail as possible — who, what, when, where, why; 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.

CLEARLY BROKEN Laura Pritchard, of Bend, took this photo Aug. 3 on top of South Sister, looking toward Broken Top, using her iPhone.

California's SouthWarner gets wild Richard O'Neill For The (Roseburg) News-Review

Tucked away in the northeast corner of California lies the underused South Warner Wilderness. Eons ago, tectonic processes uplifted a block of the earth's crust and the Warner Mountains were born. The uplifts are dramatically visible on the east side of the mountains, rising morethan 4,000 feetabove Surprise Valley. Creeks and rivers on the west side of the Warner crest drain into the Pit River, and eventually the Sacramento River. Streams on the east side, however, have no place to go and they drain into alkali lakes dotting the Great Basin. Having never been to the South Wilderness was good enough reason for Ray Jensen and I to sample the wilderness delights in a recent backpack trip. The trailhead at Pepperdine Camp is nearly 7,000 feet above sea level and would gain another 2,000-plus feet. The altitude left me gasping for breath from the mere exertion of just tying my shoes. However, we had all day to hike the 6 miles to Patterson Lake, and it was a steady plod with frequent rest stops. A mile into the hike, we left a cool and shady coniferforest for open windswept hills of ankle-high vegetation. Exposed to the sun, we hikers baked on the slopes like a homemade tamale in a clay oven. Along with the dearth of

Trail Update Continued from D1 If you see smoke or fire in the backcountry, report it by calling 911. GPS coordinates are useful when reporting fires.

If you are present when afirefighting helicopter approaches a body of water to fill its bucket, don't stick around to watch. The Forest Service asks that you leave the area for safety. More lightning is forecast in the coming week. Know what to

do in case of being caught in a sudden lighting storm: Stay away

from exposed areas; get to lower ground if possible; don't stand next to tall trees; if ground strike

Trail, which parallels the Summit Trail, but about 1,000 feet below the Warner crest. Owl Creek Trail crosses the creek drainages, the basic rhythm being an up-and-down hike from one drainage to the next. It and dry alkali lakes (Upper, was a study in contrasts as M iddle, and L o wer A l k a l i ingly chopped by a gigantic the hills were covered with lakes) on the California-Ne- meat cleaverwielded by some sagebrush while the creek vada border. Views would be a fearsome deity of yore. This vegetation was incredibly recurring theme of this hike. was my favorite part of the lush with verdant meadWe also had nice views of whole trip as we had sweep- ows. The creeks were all massive Warren Peak, more ing views in all directions. At running full w ith melted of a tall cliff than a pointy 9,892 feet, Eagle Peak is the snow. Several of them dispeak. At the base of the War- highest point i n t h e S outh played world-class waterren Peak cliff lay pristine and Warner Wilderness and the f alls tumbling down t h e b eautiful P a t terson L a k e : trail headed unerringly toward escarpments prevalent in base camp forthe next several the snow-flecked peak. To the the area. days. Our campsite had an ex- southwest of Mount Shasta, On the last night, we pansive view toward Surprise we could just make out Las- camped at Cottonwood Valley, where thunderheads sen Peak in the summer haze. Creek as clouds formed formed over thevalley each Directly below the trail lay the o verhead. T h e whol e evening as the sun set. rugged topography of the Owl weather t h i n g r e a ched Over the next c ouple of Creek canyon. But it was the a climax when the wind days, we explored the area deep and wide Surprise Valley wormed its way under my beginning with a n o f f -trail with its three dry alkali lakes tent and basically uprooted scramblein search ofthe War- that commanded our rapt at- it with me inside. Clad only ren Peak summit. The sum- tention. We turned around af- in my Power Ranger undermit, as it turned out, required ter lunching atop Peak 9053, wear, I wrestled my unruly technical climbing, but a pre- a relatively innocuous peak in tent in the gale-force wind cipitous and d izzying view the Warner scheme of things. as lightning crackled and of Patterson Lake astounded All along the Summit Trail, made loud noises. But that despite being short of the top. there were several species of was just part of the South Also visible was a heretofore wild onions, buckwheat cush- Warner experience. Since hidden glacial tarn sitting in a ions of various colors, lupines, neither hiker in our party snow bowl with a rectangular p hacelia, b a lsamroot a n d got zapped, it's another iniceberg cube floating in it like miniature monkeyflower. All terestingexperienceamong a marshmallow in a cup of the magentas, pinks, whites, many from the spectacular rice milk. yellows, reds and blues in my South Warner Wilderness. Probably not t h e s m art- c amera viewfinder left m e — Richard O'Neill is a member est thing to do, but Ray and dazzled and seeing spots in of the Friends of the Umpqua I scrambled up to the small front of my eyes. hikingclub. To read m ore tarn t h r o ug h tr e acherous After a rainy night, it was about his adventures, visit snow fields, past shifting scree time to sample the Owl Creek richardhikes.com. treescame spectacular views as we walked on the Summit Trail atop the rugged Warner crest. To the west and 100 miles distant was snowy Mount Shasta, and to the east was prominent Surprise Valley, consisting of three large

er segments of the Metolius Trail east and west and theWizard Falls Fish Hatchery. Checkwebsite and information boards for updates. Flagline Trail, on thenortheast side of TumaloMountain, remains closed to hikers and cyclists until Aug. 15 because of wildlife con-

slopes, and over large boulders. It was worth it, though, to get next to the tarn with the massive cliffs of Warren Peak looming overhead. On a broad and t reeless ridge, the Summit Trail followed the abrupt escarpment that is the Warner crest, seem-

GENERAL TRAILCONDITIONS Due to early and vigorous volunteer work, most trails are clear

and free of blowdown, including dustyand busy,especiallyon weekends.

cerns. Some trails may beunpassable to stock users. Several trails in the northeast section of the Mount Jefferson

you hear a buzzing) drop anything metal and crouch low, with your boots on the ground but no other

Road 370 to Todd Lake opened

part of your body. TRAIL CLOSURES The GreenRidgefire has closed the Green RidgeTrail and the low-

road conditions, so high-clearance vehicles are highly recommended, and four-wheel-drive may be needed in someplaces. Users should stay on the road and pullouts; do not drive on the fragile

meadow areas.

Local Artist's Exhibition, Reception ck Live Music

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties,

ROAD OPENING repair erosion control culverts. The roadwork did not improve the

NEP'Lower Rates.r

(KRxtÃ3

I

• •

seems imminent (you feel static in Tuesday after work was done to the air, your hair starts to rise and

TV.APPLIANCE

eutrtishers Sssoctsta n

Wilderness Area remain impassable because of densebrush and blowdown, including Jefferson Lake, Sugar Pine Ridge, Minto Lake and Brush Creek trails.

HNIsoN

A Free Public Service

~> < Orepon taewspsper

QIQ~+

$g 88

Mosquitoes are mostly done for the season. Users are encouraged to know trail conditions before they go, know what restrictions are in place and use good trail etiquette with all users.

the Pacific Crest Trail. Trails are

per person, which includes transportation from Bend, all Continued from D1 necessary gear, a tour guide, Meteor showers h a ppen dessert and hot cocoa. Book all year long, but the Perseid as soon as possible; tours fill shower is particularly popular up fast. Wanderlust Tours, because it's in August when 541-389-8359,www.wanderpeople are happy be outside. lust tours.com. T his y e ar, t h e w a x i n g For a party crescent moon will set early enough that b y mid n i ght For those who want to watch there should be no moon, said the stars in s t yle, Brasada Pine Mountain Observatory's Ranch is hosting a "Stardust f acilities s upervisor M a r k and Moonshine" celebration Dunaway. on the expansive lawn by the "This is extremely lucky," Range Restaurant and B ar he said. on Monday, the predicted The best viewing is report- climax of the showers, said edly around 2 a.m., but by all Jack Newkirk, director of exaccounts, the excitement starts periences for Northview Hoas soon as it's dark. tel Group, which owns Eagle Here are a few suggestions Crest and B r asada Ranch for enjoying the Perseids this resorts. " Invariably, p e opl e a r e week. blown away by how clear and From the desert dark the sky is out here. It Getting a good meteor show makes the sky seem closer out doesn't require a lot of plan- there and a little bit bigger," ning or expense. You just need Newkirk said. "For our guests a place that offers expansive to be able to lie out on the lawn views of the horizon to the of a five-star restaurant and north and east, Dunaway said. watch the sky get illuminated, He suggests driving east from it's breathtaking." Bend on U.S. Highway 20 and Brasada runs an ongoing finding a dirt road off the high- astronomy program, so the way (for i nstance, between ranch can provide two teleHorse Ridge and Pine Moun- scopes and will have astronotain). Bring some reclining mers on hand to share inforlawn chairs and sleeping bags, mation with guests. Viewing warm drinks and settle in. starts around 9 p.m. on the Someone else recommends lawn and is open to the public Bessie Butte, off China Hat at no cost. Dinner at the resRoad on Forest Road 1810, just taurant prior to the stargazing a few miles out of town. is optional. "You want to be east of Bend "This year is supposed to be so there's no light pollution," phenomenal," Newkirk said. said Dunaway. "You want to Brasada Ranch is located be able to see north and east northeast of Bend, between as Perseus rises." the Bend Airport and Powell Dunaway concedes that the But te. For directions: www Pine Mountain Observatory is brasada.comldirections. probably not the best place to php or 541-526-6865. The view meteor showers. Range Restaurant and Bar: "People are welcome to 866-373-4882. come up here, but it's better to For some knowledge get a flat, open area without trees and mountains," he said. The Oregon Observatory at Telescopes are unnecessary Sunriver is open as usual durfor the experience. The facility ing the Perseids, and educais not holding any special Per- tional programs will emphaseid-related events, but regular size the topics of meteorites Friday and Saturday evening and meteor showers, said Bob programs that utilize the tele- Grossfeld, th e o b servatory scopes at the observatory will manager. run as usual (pmo-sun.uoreStaff will give talks on megon.edu). teorite activity an d d i scuss how showers happen. From the lakes "We'll pass around meteorThe Cascade lakes — espe- ites that create the showers. cially the larger ones — offer We'll have a display open durq uintessential C entral O r - ing the day at the center of meegon viewing spots, from the teorites, the largest display of shore or from a boat out on the meteoritesbetween San Franwater. cisco and Seattle that's open to "There's absolute wide-open the public." "We have dark, clear skies," skies up there," said Dave Nissen, president of Wanderlust he said. "People can (lie) on Tours in Bend. "You might the benches and watch the not get a 180-degree view, but showers after the observatory you'll get a 170-degree view. is closed." It's really so spectacular on Night viewing programs the lake, the stillness, the qui- are available from 9 to 11p.m. et, the darkness. No human Tuesday through Sunday, $6 lights to disturb our view." for adults, $4 for kids ages For those who don't have 2-12.For information or dithe gear or the gumption to rections to the observatory, go boating alone, Wanderlust www.oregonobservatory.org, Tours offersStarlight Canoe www.sunrivernaturecenter. tours nightly during the sum- org, or 541-598-4406. mer and from 7to 11 p.m. dur— Reporter: 541-383-0304, ing the Perseids. The groups aaurandIbendbulletin.com pull ashore to enjoy treats and hear stories about the stars from guides. Microwave Hood At the height of the Perseids, one may see up to 60 meteors per hour, Nissen noted. "That's one a minute!" he said. "On a normal night ... people are stoked if they see Aewea one shooting start each night. 220CFM Exhaust We'll see 60 an hour, and we're Bu wh ere the builders bu I on the lake for two hours." The tours to Sparks, Elk and Hosmer lakes cost $65

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Listen to Live Music and Meet the Artists!

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ct©X5(gllj939EI+ I3 iil or use the o QKg f~g ) service to be automatically emalled of notices that match your needs. Pa

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

a er,warm an won ers • Enjoy the moment or travel backin time at Washington's SunLakes-Dry FallsState Park By Brian J. Cantwell Seattle Times

SUN LAKES-DRY FALLS STATE PA R K, Wash . — Where else in the state of Washington can you go for a seven-minute hike and w i tness theresults of an underwater tornado? I was walking in the park's 4,027-acre sagebrush l andscape along a 19th-century trail used to take cattle from Oregon to the Cariboo Mine in British Columbia. But suddenly I was immersed in a history much older, as I stood before a rocky pothole big enough to swallow a suburban house. This was an artifact of the ice-age floods of some 15,000 years ago, when mammoth ice dams in Montana broke and the waters of a giant lake — with 500 cubic miles of water — swept across Northern Idaho and Eastern Washington and scoured out the dramatic coulees we see today. The raging floodwaters were hundreds of feet deep. "The potholes were created when the f l oodwaters created a vortex, or underwater tornado, that would burrow out these holes in basalt rock," said Chris McCart, an interpretive specialist at the nearby Dry Falls Visitor Center. "They're 50 feet deep or more and look like someone cut them out with a cookie cutter." Just"upstream" from where I stood, Dry Falls itself was once the site of, well, a sight to behold. Here, during those floods, raging waters dropped more than 400 feet over cliffs 3.5 miles wide — more than twice as high and three times as wide as Niagara Falls. Sun Lakes, a series of lakes in the coulee bottom below Dry Falls, has been a vacation playground for decades, drawing Puget Sounders hungry for desert heat. And while some visitors may be just as happy swimming, paddling and water skiing in perfect ignorance of this place's natural history, combine the educational opportunities with fun in the sun and you get a state park well worth a visit.

What makes it a gem? All of the above. And there's so much to do: Get up earlyfor a preheat bike ride along Park L a ke

%Ãkm~@ .3i 4

'4 a 4,

fE.

Peggy and John Richardson, of Eugene, take a self-portrait at a viewpoint above Dry Falls at Sun Lakes, Wash. The cliffs were the site of a stupendous waterfall during the last ice age.

Park-goers enjoy the water at Park Lake at Sun Lakes. Trail, a 3 - m i l e r o u nd-trip along a closed roadway bordering the park's biggest lake, and watch the rising sun light the coulee's fluted walls. Or take the 2.6-mile loop trail around a monolith called Umatilla Rock, seen from the p ark's campground i f y o u look for a s t one formation that looks like a man playing a grand piano. This trail is like a geologist's candy store: a showcase of soaring pinnacles, inexplicable " snowballs" o f rock thesize ofa camping yurt and rocky protrusions pointing skyward like the prow of a sinking ship. The sweet and smoky scent of sagebrush perfumes the air. A line I never thought I'd write: The rising sun brings out the pretty chartreuse of huge patches of lichen on the rocky cliffs. This is also a place layered in history. Before the ice-age floods, this area hosted life of all kinds until a massive lava flow, one of the largest ever recorded on Earth, covered the region. Just south of the state park a fossilized mold and a

few bones of a small rhinoceros were found in 1935 — the mold preservedinbasalt overlaying a thin sand bed. Nearby are Lake Lenore Caves, shallow recessesin cliffs reached by a challenging 10-minute hike, where Native American hunters once sheltered.

Not just a state park Few state parks are quite so devoted to fun. Not many state parks have a nine-holegolf course, as does Sun Lakes. It's named for Vic Meyers, a o ne-time Seattle bandleader who served as the state's lieutenant governor from 1932 to 1952 and who championed the park's creation. Not many parks have a large private resort within its bounds, such as Sun Lakes Resort, operated under lease from the state and i n cluding its own separate RV park (with 27 new sites nearing completion) as well as a large collection of r e ntal c abins, plus miniature golf, a waterballoon-fight concession, grocery, snack bar, marina and a

fleet of rental rowboats, pedal boats, water bikes and more. Fishing and water sports are big here, as is just relaxing around a campsite playing cards, as I found three generations of a western Washington family doing on a recent visit. "I've been coming here 25 y ears for the fishing in t he spring," said Pat Jacobs, the 78-year-oldgrandfather,from Snohomish, as he dealt another game of Hearts. "Fishing can be really great." Swimming is the big draw, insisted his grandson, 16-yearold Riston Ramirez, from Carnation. "There are cliffs you can jump off at Deep Lake," he confided. (The park strongly discourages it, including signs warning that j umpers have been injured or killed. Butmany

young people do it, judging by videos found on YouTube.) Water skiing a t n e a r by Banks Lake is another draw, or playing golf at the little golf course, "though it's not much of a course," laughed Laurell Ramirez, Riston's mom.

Not to be missed The Dry Falls Visitor Center and viewpoint is 1.7 miles north of the park's main entrance off Highway 17. Built in the 1960s, the center is showing its age, but displays are informative and a recently made short film, produced with Cen-

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Photos by Brian J Cantwell I The Associated Press

jack

Wildflowers along a trail frame Umatilla Rock at Sun LakesDry Falls State Park, Wash. tral Washington University, is an excellent introduction to the area's natural history. Enjoy the view of the cliffs and swooping swallows and swifts. If you want more peace and quiet than you'll find around Park Lake, w h ich b o rders the resort and campgrounds, drive or bike the park's littleused back road (along which I saw mule deer and a scurrying marmot) 2.5 miles to Deep Lake. Powerboats are limited to 5 mph there. If you've never seen Grand Coulee Dam, take the 45minute drive up the highway to this l a rgest hydropower producer in the United States. A visitor center is open daily and free toursare available of a pump-generating plantfirst-come first-served (www.

usbr.gov/pn/grandcoulee).

Where to lay your head The park has campgrounds — some managed by park r angers, plus the R V p a r k managed by the privateresort — along with a variety of accommodations r ented out by Sun Lakes Resort. The campgrounds are fairly basic: Tenters will likely be pitching their shelters on gravel in the state campground (where campsites cost $23-$37 a night in peak season), though the

a night in peak season) allows tents on grassy areas. Many sites have shade trees, but don'texpect privacy between campsites. The attraction here is more the lakes, sunshine and natural wonders than the

camping. For a roof over your head, the resort has 65 units, including small and rather elderly lake-side cabins (Units 19 to 30 have views, others are blocked

by vegetation), pool-side cabins (there is a small swim-

ming pool, about 36 feet long), two-bedroom mobile homes and a few new lake-view cabins. Summer rates (through Sept. 2) range from $101 to $199 per night. Book far in advance for peak-season weekends.

Just for fun Play a round of golf at the

nine-hole course ($13-$15 per person); miniature golf ($4 per person); or try "Water Wars" ($2 per bucket of water balloons). Rent a rowboat ($5 per

hour), pedal boat ($10 per hour) or aqua cycle ($15 per hour). Bring binoculars and see h ow many t y pes o f b i r d s and other creatures you can s pot. Birds common to t h e

park include quail (bobbing through the campground), goldfinches (flitting every-

where), golden eagles (soaring over cliffs), wild turkeys

private campground ($36-$42 and more.

CanyonCreekMeadows

Continued from 01 Mason has always had a thing for mountains, and he can name just about every peak of the Cascade Range in Central Oregon. But before this turns into a gag-me Facebook-post-like

Hike:A relatively easy

4t/2-mile loop with 400 feet of

Directions:FromBend,drive state Highway 20 about12 miles

elevation gain reaches Canyon west of Sisters. At a Mount Creek's lower wildflower Jefferson WildernessTrailheads «I

meadow with views of the

east face of Three Fingered Jack. A challenging7/~mile loop with1,400 feet

bragging session about my

'yV'

sign, turn north on paved Jack Lake Road for 4.4 miles. Turn left

on one-lane road1230for1.6

meadow's viewpoint. Season:Mid-Julythrough

miles to the end of pavement, and stay left onto Road1234, which climbs 6 miles to the Jack Lake Trailhead. Fees:Northwest Forest Pass

October

or $5 day pass

of elevation gain reaches a cirque lake and the upper

p,l

kid, back to the hike. I wanted to find a route that would take us face to face with a peak — but a route that we could complete together. This left South Sister, Broken Top and other more challenging areas out of the question. (If I get any emails saying how "My 5-year-old reached the summit of South Sister," I'm going to roll my eyes and mutter to myself, "Only in Bend.") A quick online search led me to a post on Oregon.com

Source: William Sullivan, Oregon.com

Canyon CreekMeadow loop

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gggi

.'~.. Trailhead JackLake tThree,

by renowned Oregon hiking author William Sullivan. He wrote that the hike to Canyon Creek Meadows is "one of the easiest routes to the High Cascades' wildflower meadows, a loop leading to the craggy eastface of Three Fingered Jack." Perfect. Not only because itseemed doable,but because Three Fingered Jack had always r emained s omewhat of a mystery to us, a reclusive peak — not easily visible from highways — tucked away somewhere b etween Mount Wa s h ington and Mount Jefferson. Now, to figure out the campsite. Located just a mile from the turn off state Highway 20 to the Mount Jefferson Wilderness trailheads, Suttle Lake was the obvious choice. But as I would discover in great frustration, showing up at noon on a Friday to find a campsite at Suttle, where more than half the sites require a reservation, was a bit like hoping for Three Fingered Jackthe eroded coreof an extinct volcano — to erupt again.

'•

't

Mark Morical i The Bulletin

Wildflowers dot the lower meadow of Canyon Creek, with Three Fingered Jack in the background.

Fingered Jack Mount'Jefferson WildernessArea

So, cursing myself, we headed back southeast on Highway 20 and made the turn north toward Camp Sherman along the Metolius River. The first campground we reached, aptly named Riverside, offered walk-in tent camping. So we walked in a few hundred feet and found a site not 100 yards from the river — a spot well worth hauling all of our equipment to from the car. Mason approved, and following an afternoon of biking the dirt trails and wading in the chilly water of the stunning Metolius, w e c h atted by the f ir e b efore heading to the tent to get some sleep before the big hike the next morning. We awoke early and made the 20-minute drive to Jack Lake Trailhead, a trip t h at took us 6 miles over a rough dirt-and-gravel road. We arrivedat 8:30 a.m. and I was expecting to be back at

the trailhead sometime before noon. But the sheer beauty of the meadows, wildflowers and Three Fingered Jack kept us going farther than planned. Every time I asked Mason if he wanted to keep going, he

arrived at the green meadow — dotted with gold, red and violet wildflowers. The spired cliffs of Three Fingered Jack's east face dominated the horizon, an d C a nyon C r eek gurgled through the colorful said yes. meadow. The trail starts out at Jack The trail blazed a ribbon Lake and climbs gradually of singletrack up through the into the Mount Jefferson Wil- greenery toward th e p eak. derness. A bonus of this loop There the climbing became hike is that the U.S. Forest much steeper, and we encounService asks hikers to walk tered a group of women who the loop clockwise, thereby had decided not to continue. limiting the number of trail But they mentioned to me that users encountered. Indeed, we a blue-green cirque lake at the hardly saw anybody until we bottom of the mountain's glareached the out-and-back trail cier was visible just over the through the upper meadow. next crest. The early part of the hike Climbing up there along a climbs through a section of precipitous, rocky trail proved wilderness stil l r e c overing arduous, but we made it, as I from the 2003 Bst:B Complex stayed behind Mason in case Fires, then descends through he slipped. At the top of the deep woods t o t h e l o w er ridge, the small lake glimmeadow. It seemed odd to be mered about 100 feet below, descending during the middle right at the base of the craggy parts of the hike, but we soon peak. The drop was nearly

Paciftc Crest Trail

Square '... Lake. To SantiamJunction

12

Round Lake Long Lake

12

P To Suttie Lake Sisters Greg Cross/The Bulletin

straight down, and I made sure Mason knew to stay back. From there, we could have continued on just a little farther to the viewpoint saddlewhere one can see from Mount Jeffersonto the Three Sisters — but I deemed the path just too steep and exposed for a 5-year-old. We settled for the view of the remote glacier and lake, and we enjoyed being face to face with the elusive Jack. The hike back along the loop included intricate beaver dams along Canyon Creek and a picturesque waterfall, be-

fore thetraildescended back through the burned snags to the trailhead. Back at Jack L a ke, f ive hours after we started, Mason and I exchanged a high-five and immediately began hatching plans for our next big Cascade hike. But th e M e t olius R i v er campsite was calling, and Mason was fixated on something else that awaited us that evening, a welcome treat after a hard hike: S'mores, of course. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmoricalCbendbulletin.com


D4

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

U TDOORS

A L E NDAR

and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; 6 p.m.; meets on the first Monday of each month; Oregon Natural Desert Association offices, Bend; 541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BEND CASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541306-4509 or bendcastingclub© gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org.

CYCLING WOMEN'S CYCLOCROSS TRAINING GROUP:Sessions will include skills and interval workouts; 5:15 p.m. Sept. 1Nov. 17; $99 by Aug. 12, $125 thereafter; class space is limited; register at poweredbybowen.com; jleastwood©hotmail.com.

EQUESTRIAN TRAIL COURSE PRACTICE:The Deschutes County Sheriff's Posse is holding atrail course practice, open to the public; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday; $15 donation per horse; 65432 Deschutes Pleasant Ridge Road, Redmond; SueCox at 541-977-8808 or Debbie Brix at 541-639-9334.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet

HUNTING LEARN THE ART OFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guided walks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learn howto

identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; 8 a.m. to noon; two or more walks per month; $35; 541-6337045; dave@wildernesstracking. com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meets the second W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

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

deschuteschildrensforest.org.

angela@footzonebend.com; www. footzonebend.com.

PADDLING

SHOOTING

KAYAKINGCLASSES:W eekly classes and open pool; $3; 4-6 p.m. Sundays; equipment provided to those who preregister, first-come, first-served; Cascade Swim Center, Redmond; 541-548-7275, www. raprd.org. NATIONALPADDLESPORTS CONFERENCE:Conference includes events for paddlers of all experience levels as well as educational sessions and the Reel Paddling Film Festival; Sept. 27-29; Mt. Bachelor Village Resort, Bend; www. americancanoe.org.

MISCELLANEOUS RUNNING PREDATORSANDPREY:Discover Nature Days are presented by the partners of the Deschutes Children's Forest; learn about the diverse critters that call Central Oregon home through exciting games and interactive science activities; free; 11 a.m. to noon; Aug.15; Hillside Park, Bend; katieO deschuteschildrensforest.org;

20, Bend; Bill Grafton at 541-3831428 or www.bendtrapclub.com. CENTRAL OREGONSPORTING CLAYS ANDHUNTING PRESERVE: 13-station, 100-target course and five-stand; 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and Sunday, 11 a.m. to dusk Monday,Tuesday,Thursday and Friday; 9020 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; www.birdandclay.com or 54 I-383-0001. REDMOND ROD 8I GUN CLUB: Archery, pistol, rifle, skeet, sporting clays and trap; club is open to the community and offers many training programs; three miles east of Redmond on the north side of state Highway 126; www.rrandgc.com. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club; second Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-8199, www.pinemountainposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.

FOOTZONEPUBRUN:A group run to Worthy Brewing Co.; strollers, friendly dogs and all paces and running levels are welcome; Garmin will be on hand to let runners testwear a Garmin GPSwatch during the run; starts at 5:30 p.m. Aug. 12 at FootZone; free, brewery will offer runners $1 off a pint; FootZone, 824 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 54 I-317-3568;

COSSA KIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. BEND BOWMENHUNTER'S CLASSIC 3DARCHERY TOURNAMENT: Shots will be hunting situations; ODFWwill be offering a bowhunter education class in tandem with this shoot; Aug. 9-11; Bend Bowmen outdoor range; www.bendbowmen.com. BEND BOWMEN INDOORARCHERY LEAGUE:Traditional league; Wednesday evenings; Lenny at 541-480-6743;indoor3-Dleague Thursday; 7 p.m.; Bruce at 541-4101380 or Del at 541-389-7234. BEND TRAPCLUB:Trap shooting, five-stand and skeet shooting; 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursdays and Sundays; milepost30,U.S.Highway

Utah outdoorshowfeatures lighter gear By Paul Foy

Canoe that weighs only 3 2 into a mecca for the outdoor pounds. "The hard part about action-sports world," said PeSALT LAKE CITY — It's a making it light is making it ter Kray, publisher of the Gear showcaseof technology for ev- strong," said Michael Looman Institute of Santa Fe, N.M., a erything from socks that can of the Winona, Minn.-based network of outdoor gear testake a beating to water bottles company. ters and experts who try out equipped with b a ttery-powThe Outdoor Retailer Sum- and promote the best gear. ered ultraviolet purifiers. mer Market opens for a fourA number of magazines At the world's largest trade day run starting today. More and websites, including gearshow for outdoor gear, one than 1,300 manufacturers and junkie.com, also rate the gear trend this year is lighter or suppliers are packing the floor and fashions to come out of the more powerful eq u ipment. of a Salt Lake City convention Salt Lake show before the new The makers of a pi n t-sized hall, plus three outdoor cano- products hit the mainstream. Kray's picks in clude Smith hydrogen battery say it can pytents. give a cellphone five complete More than 25,000 people Chroma Pop lenses - "awecharges before it needs a re- areexpected atthe trade show some color"— and an im provecharge itself. Others are show- this week, many of them re- ment on Easton tent poles that casing solar cells that roll up tailers, who are placing bulk nearly doubles their strength for easy packing. orders for specialty outdoor and flexibility in heavy winds. Also on di s p lay w a s a shops around the world. Kray also is c e l ebrating "This show has morphed a hydration bladder not for $2,000 kayak from Wenonah The Associated Press

I I

/

I

by Brunton, can charge a cellphone five times. The Associated Press

established brands including Petzl, best known for its headlamps and climbing gear. A hydrogen battery pack the size of a deck of ca rds can be found at an e xhibit for Brunton, a subsidiary of Stockholm-based Fenix Outdoor AB., which specializes in navigation, optics and now, "portable power." At $150, Brunton's hydrogen battery pack can be recharged at re tail shops for $8 a pop. Brunton says the

D E S E R T

~ " '" 9 ™ ~

Kids andsleep: Depr'vat'en

«~

H IGH D E S E R T P U L S E

. 'The Bulletin

HELPING CENTRAL OREGONIANS STAY HEALTHY

PRESENTINGA COLLECTION OF ORIGINALLOCALLY WRITTEN,AWARD-WINNING MAGAZINESANDEVENT GUIDESPUBLISHEDBY THE BULLETIN

The Bulletin pudlication thatanswerstough questions about local healthcare topics. High Desert PUI SE is a quarterly magazine created to help promote, encourage and maintain an active and healthful lifestyle. Each issue features local stories that seek answers to tough questions about local health topics, with in-depth reporting that Central Oregonians expect. The magazine is distributed in The Bulletin and at health outlets, medical offices and on area racks.

avigati maz

battery takes hydrogen out of water and mixes ambient o xygen when i t ' s t i m e t o charge a cellphone or other electronic device. "It's the lightest, toughest, most portable hydrogen reactor," said Walter Kaihatu, vice president for sales and marketing at Boulder, Colo.based Brunton. "It has really high capacity. It can charge a cellphone five times from dead, and works in a range of temperatures."

I

/

FAILIWIIPBI20ll

-L w~

pack, made

I II

H I G H

water, but whisky or tequila — "perfect," he said. Even socks have come along way, with more than 100 companies in a foot race to stitch the finest wool blends. A pair can cost $25, but makers say they last practically a lifetime. Cabot Hosiery Mills Inc. says its Darn Tough Vermont socks can withstand 30,000 machine rubs before wearing thin. The jam-packed expo underscoresa t hriving corner of the economy. Outdoor-gear sales have grown at 5 percent or moreannually through recent years of recession, analysts said. Utah has become a cottage industry for in n ovators and

The hydrogen battery

WHEN TOLOOK FOR IT: publishing four editions ayear

HOVE RTISERS: LOONIN GFOR llNIOUE , LOCHL HtjYERIT BING :OPPORTUNITIES' ?

Monday, August 12 Monday, November 11

Reachyourtarget audience

C ONN E C T I O N S

with these well-read

publications.

FROM OFFERING HELPING HANDS TO INSPIRING CREATIVITY

Call your Bulletin advertising

'C

The guidethat CO nneCtSPeOPle in needWith thOSeWhogiVe their beSt. Connections is a guide that defines the scope of Central Oregon's nonprofit community. The publication contains a categorized nonprofit directory, briefs describing the work of various nonprofit organizations, and human interest feature stories that demonstrate the outreach of these organizations. This guide provides readers with a wealth of options for giving, volunteering and serving their communities, as well as connecting them to needed services.

representativefor acomplete marketing consultationand results-orientedplan. •

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a-Jh~ W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: publishesannually Wednesday, December 25, 2013

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,:S41-382-1811 TO GETACOPY OF ONE OF THESE PUBLICATIONSOR TO STARTA SUBSCRIPTION, CALL

841-38S-SBO O


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

FLY-TYING CORNER

Tiger trout may join fight against shiners •IdahoFishandGame considersbringing in sterile predator tohelp Deer CreekReservoir By Eric Barker Lewiston Tribune

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Shoo Fly, tied by Pete Ouellette.

There are morethan 200 insects for every type of

on when exploring lakes or

land bird in the land Down

erwise use aRoyal Coachman or a Beetle.

Under. Some of the flies are downright annoying, and it

pondswhen you mightothTie this fly on a No. 12-14

is always a pleasure to watch dry fly hook. For the tail, use a trout sip one from the sur- scarlet hackle fibers. Build face of a lake. the body with peacock herl. The Shoo Fly is a New For the wings, useveined Zealand favorite for explorplastic or Swiss Straw. Fining still waters. Its wings are prominent, durable and lend

to a crunchy profile. Tie one

ish with a Rhode Island red hackle. — Gary Lewis, For The Bulletin

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

Anglers are reporting good actiononboth.Thesespecies are available for harvest. Opportunities for Atlantic salmon and brook trout continue to be good. CENTRAL ZONE LAKE BILLY CHINOOK: Opportunities for 8- to 10-inch ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: The smallmouth bass are excellent. reservoir has been turbid, which has Bull trout fishing continues to be negatively impacted fishing. Anglers excellent with good numbers of trolling hardware seem to be having fish in the18- to 24-inch range. the most success. Recent sampling Kokanee angling is fair. A tribal suggests most of the trout average angling permit is required in the around12-inches long with a good Metolius Arm. Please check the number of trout around 20-inches special regulations for this area. long available. METOLIUS RIVER:Trout fishing BEND PINENURSERYPOND:The has been good. Insect hatches pondhasbeen stocked and fishing should offer lots of opportunities is good for bluegill and fair for trout. for good, dry fly fishing. Fishing A small number of bass are also for bull trout should be excellent. available. Large streamer flies fished in the deeper pools and slots are the BIG LAVALAKE:Anglers are having best bet. good success with rainbowtrout in the12- to18-inch range making up OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing most of the catch. All gear types are for trout has been good. Anglers producing fish. are reporting trout up to18inches long. Recent sampling CLEAR LAKE RESERVOIR: Anglers indicated there is a good number are mostsuccessful in Clear of trout averaging 12- to 14Lake early in the spring while the inches long available, and some reservoir is full of water. Anglers nice bass and crappie on the will find rapidly decreasing waters south shore. levels, although fishing can still be productive throughout the summer. ODELL LAKE: Kokanee angling is fair with most fish in the11- to CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: 13-inch range. Lake trout are Anglers are catching large brook available in the deeper water. trout, kokanee and rainbows. Anglers are reporting success with Bull trout are also present and flies, lures and bait. Kokanee in the must be released unharmed. 16- to 18-inch range are showing Anglers are reminded to be up in good numbers. With the familiar with the difference between these two species. warmer weather, anglers should concentrate their efforts in the old PAULINA LAKE: Kokanee and channels. rainbow trout fishing is very good. Catch-and-release only CRESCENTLAKE:Opportunities for rainbow and brown trout are good. on nonfin clipped rainbow trout. Large brown trout are CROOKED RIVERBELOW also available. Catch-andBOWMANDAM:Fishing for 10- to 16-inch rainbow has been excellent. release only on all nonadipose Recent sampling by ODFWindicates fin-clipped rainbow trout — all strong populations of both rainbow rainbow trout with an intact trout and mountain whitefish. Trout adipose fin must be released. over 20 inches are considered PRINEVILLERESERVOIR: Fishing has been good and the steelhead. trout that have been caught were DAVIS LAKE: Anglers are catching trout near the mouth of Odell Creek. large. Bass and crappie fishing has been picking up in the east DESCHUTESRIVER(MOUTH end of the reservoir. To THEPELTON REGULATING PRINEVILLEYOUTHFISHING DAM):Good to excellent reports of POND:Bass fishing has been trout fishing from the Deschutes good. above Maupin have been reported. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING Best trout fishing typically occurs early morning and evening before POND:The pond is fishing well temperatures warm. Fly anglers will and was stocked last week. find best success with mayfly and SOUTH TWIN LAKE:Fishing caddis patterns. continues to be good.Thelake EAST LAKE:Rainbowtrout fishing was stocked with 5001-pound trout last week. has been excellent. Anglers are reporting the best action in SUTTLE LAKE:Anglers are many years. Brown trout are also reporting good numbers of available. All gear types are resulting large brown trout. Trolling in in success. ODFW is continuing its approximately 30 feet of water is chub removal efforts. effective. Kokanee are abundant FALL RIVER:Fishing is restricted but average size is small. to fly fishing with barbless hooks. WALTONLAKE:Fishing has The river is periodically stocked with been good for catchable and hatchery rainbow trout throughout larger-sized trout. There are also the summer months. some holdover fish up to 20HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: Fishing inches long available. has been good for warm-water WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Fish species with anglers still catching are scattered, but anglers are some trout and kokanee. reporting catches of18-20 HOSMERLAKE: Rainbow and kokanee as well as a few large cutthroat trout are now available. brown trout.

Idaho could turn to a new fish to solve what is becoming a persistent, if not old, problem. Shiners have once againbeen found in Deer Creek Reservoir near Headquarters. The lake is only 9 years old, but Idaho Fish and Game officials have had to poison and drain it twice in the past seven years to rid it of nonnative golden shiners. Nowthe lake is infested with red-side shiners, a native fish, but still an unwanted species that threatens to destroy the rainbow trout fishery there. But this time the department is considering a new solution. By chance, their colleagues at the Wyoming Game and Fish Department called and said they have an abundance of tiger trout eggs in their hatchery system and wanted to know if Idaho would like some. Tiger trout are a cross between a brook trout and a brown trout. They are sterile, r eportedly easy and fu n t o catch and also voracious eaters ofother fish. "It perked our attention," said Joe DuPont, regional fisheriesmanager for the department at Lewiston. Deer Creek Reservoir isn't the only water body in the state

a!rsy tr,

eating a lot of chub," she said. But the process takes some time, especially with chub that can grow to 15 inches. "There is a patience aspect to it. Dumping tiger trout in is not going to solve any probIl,„ r lems overnight. "Shiners, I would guess, are smaller and tiger trout would be able to consume them easier because they are not getting to thoselarger sizes," Winters l r'e' sa>d. DuPont said since tiger trout are sterile, there would be Courtesy Lisa Winters little concern if a few of them Lisa Winters, a graduate student at Utah State University, holds a escape from the reservoir and large tiger trout caught on Scofield Reservoir in Utah. Idaho Fish follow Deer Creek down to and Game officials are considering planting tiger trout to control Dworshak Reservoir. "It wouldn't be unreasonunwanted fish in a handful of lakes end reservoirs. able to think 10 or 20 of them may get in there (Dworshak) teeming with unwanted fish. rather catch a big trout." and that number of fish isn't "There are several smaller How big? Scofield Reservoir going to have an impact on a lakes in Idaho that have either has produced staterecord ti- reservoir that is 50 miles long an overabundance of certain ger trout each of the past two unless they could reproduce," fish or unwanted fish," Duyears. The standing record is he said. "Ten or 20 fish getting a 32'/4-inch trout that weighed in there every year isn't somePont said. "We are trying to figure out how we can control 18 pounds. thing that would concern me." these fish so they don't impact Winters is studying the resOther areas where tiger trout other fish we want, and at the ervoir in Utah. It was once a could be planted include Jim same time provide us with a hugely popular rainbow trout Moore Pond near Idaho Falls, new type of fishery." fishery but has become in- Wallace Lake near Salmon Enter tiger trout. They prey fested with Utah chub that are and Mirriam Lake in the Lost on other fish and grow quickly. out-competing the rainbows. River drainage. But the depart"Because they are sterile, The Utah Division of Wildlife ment is taking time to make all that energy that w ould Resources introduced tiger sure positives outweigh posgo to reproduction goes into trout to the reservoir six years sible negative side effects. "We are kind of excited to growth," said Lisa Winters, a ago with the idea the new fish graduate student at Utah State would knock back the chub try it but as we have learned University. "They are growing population. from the past, you can potenbig and fast and there is a lot of Winters is evaluating the tially get yourself in a situation potential for (the fishing pub- project, andalthoughresultsare you can't get yourself out of, lic) to really like them because not final, she said the program like brook trout, mysis shrimp they are growing fast. I don't is showing some promise. and lake trout that are in some "What I havefound is they are lakes." know about you but I would

w ifl' ' " jt ,

collection of stories about everything fishing. From finding the perfect fishing companion to why it's sometimes good to fish alone, Dauble's storiesgive the reader a peek into the "inner sanctum of angling." He also offers a good dose of humor as well as a

'

Lewis Continued from D1 Before us, the moonlight danced on glassy water. We were on the lake early because the temperaturewas expected to hit 103 on the surface of Lake Pateros, seven dams up the Columbia. We were here because Dave Vedder, that sage of all things salmonid, had sniffed out a fishery he said I needed to partake of. With us, we had Danny Cook, a steelhead guide from Seattle, 15-year-old Tommy Brown, from Bend, and Sam Pyke from Sisters. We clipped lines to down-

Sockeye and chinook salmon fishing on the Columbia River is a lot like trout fishing on a lake, except the baits are

bigger. Here, Brad Wagner, of Wenatchee, Wash., guides his boat upstream, trolling for kings.

rigger cables and dropped baits into dark water. I never thought I'd fish for sockeye on the Columbia, but the last couple ofyears of returns had caught my attention. Washington's Department of Fish and W i ldlife opens the season above Wells Dam when 60,000 sockeye climb the ladder into the Brewster Pool. It didn't happen often for many years, but in 2008, managers counted over 213,000 fish. Upper Columbia sockeye runs have been strong ever since, which causes one to ask, how did this happen? One reason is that water managers and fisheries man-

Gary Lewis For The Bulletin

On the boat we also had

therewas a pile ofbig summer fish in the river. We started with the sockeye gear because the bluebacks were the priority and they are nothing if not f i nicky. Like their l a n dlocked k o k anee cousins, they are plankton eaters. There is no good reason they should bite the lures we tempt them with, and a lot of times they don't. Around us, the fish were acagers in Canada are working tive, both sockeyes and kings together now to m ake sure broke the water with their tails that out-migrating juveniles or leaped clear to crash back get the water they need when to the surface. they need it. A large hatchery It took 20 minutes to get the program at Canada's Skaha first grab. I lost that one, but Lake, run by the Okanogan it wasn't long before we had Tribal Nations Alliance, re- another chance, and soon, our leases hundreds of thousands first nickel-bright sockeye was of juvenile sockeye each year. in the boat. And lastly, the fish that return This salmon fishing bore to Lake Osoyoos, in Wash- little resemblance to the river ington, have found restored fishing anywhere else. With spawning habitat. the downriggers in the slow Biologists point t o f a vor- water, it was more like a calm able ocean conditions as an- day on Crescent Lake or Odell. other reasonfor the increase Except the sockeye were bigin fish numbers; and there is ger than most kokanee. These little commercial harvest of fish run 18 to 26 inches. And these smaller Pacific salmon then there are the chinook, because Snake River sockeye which can go 40 pounds or are on the endangered list. more. The silver rockets blast up It seemed like everyone was the Columbia from A storia hitting s ockeye. U pstream, and cross seven dams before Indian f i shermen c a refully they stop at the mouth of the drew their net around their Okanogan, where they meet a harvest then selected out the flotilla of fishermen. fish they couldn't keep and reOur b aits w e r e M a c k 's leased them. We fished close Lure's Ch a C h a S o c keye and caught a couple they had Squidders to which Wagner missed. h ooked a p r aw n c u red i n Afterwe had abunch of sockPautzke's purple Fire cure. eye in the box, we rigged the big

wealth of solid information covering a good portion of northeast Oregon and southeast Washington. Dauble touches on the correct gearand lures for many of ourarea's most sought-after species as well as great places and the proper time of year to

rods. Wagner dipped into the

rods rigged for kings because bait cooler and pulled out cut

Fishing seerets laid bare inDauble's latest book The Associated Press "The Barbless Hook," by Dennis Dauble 147 pages, $11.95 Attention fishermen (and women): Your secrets are out. Dennis Dauble brings a lifetime of f i shing experiences to "The Barbless Hook," a

DS

catch them; fishing etiquette on the shore, in your own boat or on a charter trip; and what to do with all those fish once they're landed. Dauble is a retired fisheries biologist and the author of "Fishes of the Columbia Basin," a natural history guidebook.

plugherring, dyed in two colors,

green apple and grape.

of salmon. This time, the light was reflected in a younger pair of eyes. These moments are brief, but they can be so bright. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Adventure Journal" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "Black Bear Hunting," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

For chinook, Wagner uses

biggerflashers. We dropped the downriggers down to 15 feet and cut a zigzag pattern through the field of boats. It was less than 20 minutes before Tommy set thebarbless hook and the rod stayed buried. It is hard to imagine that, 525 miles up from the ocean, a chinook could be so bright, but this one threw a flash like a king at Astoria. Dave Vedder, Wagner and Danny Cook have caught a lot

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

Streamso consciousness:8showsto inge-watch -I

TV SPOTLIGHT By Eric Webb

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Cox Newspapers

AUSTIN, Texas — Whoever said "Moderation in all things" must not have had a Netflix account. Staying in on a Saturday night to binge-watch one of the online streaming service's hundreds of television shows? Don't b e a shamed: Netflix has 37 million subscribers worldwide. Powering through episode after episode of a series in one sitting is the beauty of paying $8 a month for unlimited entertainment. Not every show is a winner, though. Hereare eight series worth addicting yourself to:

able? With a revolving cast keeping things fresh, it's unrelentingly fun and fast-paced — the TV equivalent of sugary breakfastcereal.Nerd out.

. iIi.' s

When you're finished, try:

"Torchwood." A spinoff that tackles the darker side of saving the universe.

i -y

5.'Archer' Why you should binge:An Courtesy Netflix

"Orange Is the New Black," Netflix's latest original series, follows Piper (played by Taylor Schilling, center), a yuppie who gets sent to federal prison for a past indiscretion. The show explores race, privilege, identity and sexuality.

2.'Freaks and Geeks'

1.'Orange Is the New Black'

needs extra p r aise. Aaron

Why you should binge: Sorkin, the pen behind "The

Just like "Orange Is the New Why you should binge: Black," Judd Apatow's cult Netflix's latest original series, series has enough episodes comedy-drama "Orange" has to knock out the whole shewon critical and audience ac- bang in a couple days. Half the claim. At just 13 cliffhanger fun of watching "Freaks and episodes, the show has mo- Geeks" is beholding a who's mentum in it s D NA . W h en who of future stars, including yuppie Piper (Taylor Schilling) James Franco and Jason Segets sent to a federal lockup for gel. The show deals warmly a past indiscretion, a fish-out- and honestly with coming of of-water tale quickly becomes age in 1980, like a serialized a character-driven exploration "Dazed and Confused." When of race, privilege, identity and you finish, you'll feel like your sexuality — and that's just in best friends just moved away. the first episode. About those When you're finished, try: "Parks a nd Rec r e ation." wonderful characters: With names like Crazy Eyes and Warmth and humor, starting Yoga Jones, you'll await flash- with Season 2. backs to each inmate's backstory like a kid on Christmas Eve. 3.'The West Wing' When you're finished, try: Why you should binge:The "Louie." Similar in big laughs show won enough Emmys to and dark tones. fill the Oval Office, so it hardly

animated James Bond flick with a hangover, "Archer" is the sharpest show around, cartoon or not. Machine-gun joke delivery, a heart as black as its protagonist's hair and noteperfect voice acting (particularly from H. Jon Benjamin as superspy Sterling Archer and "Arrested Development" alum Jessica Walter as his mother) will help you knock this one out in no time. When you're finished, try: "Bob's Burgers." Another toon for grownups featuring Benjamin's dulcet tones.

Newsroom," wrote the book on rat-a-tat dialogue and lofty plots with "The West Wing." Devour it by the season and feel like a Rhodes scholar each episode as President Bartlet (Martin Sheen) and his Pennsylvania Avenue staff tackle 6.'Mad Men' issues still relevant today. When you're finished, try: Why you should binge:Be"House of Cards."If "West cause you should already be Wing" is t h e g l ass-half-full watching it. The sixth season version of politics, "Cards" is of "Mad Men" just wrapped glass-drained-dry. up in June, and Netflix has the first five seasons avail4.'Doctor Who' able to stream. Following Don

Why you should binge:An

Draper (Jon Hamm) from

immortal a l ie n a d venturer with a sonic screwdriver. A sentient time machine with infinite rooms inside. Space monsters with British accents. What makes the 2005 reboot of "Doctor Who" so watch-

slick Madison Avenue pitches to steamy trysts, the show draws you into a glamorous web of betrayal and ambition. (It's funnier than it gets credit for, too.) Every time you press play is like settling in for an

one surve or as s or resect

Oscar-caliber movie. Right now, no show does television better. When you're finished, try: "Breaking Bad." It's hard to take your eyes off anti-heroes.

7.'Buffy the Vampire Slayer' Why you should binge:If you didn't watch "Buffy" g r owing up, grab a stake and a scrunchie and make up for lost time. From the mind of "Avengers"director Joss Whedon, it's the perfect teen soap opera. There are breakups, hookups, homework, witty banter

and weekly near-apocalypses spilling out through a subterranean hellmouth. Just typical

coming-of-age stuff. When you're finished, try: " Supernatural." M o r e h o r ror/humor, this time with a Y chromosome.

8.'The X-Files' Why you should binge: The truth is out there. Each hourlong installment carries its own paranormal mystery for FBI agents Mulder and Scully (David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson) to solve; the show itself is steeped in a

larger conspiracy theory. In the case of "The X-Files," you might find yourself less addicted and m ore o bsessed. Especially effective for nighttime binge-watching, because you'll be too scared to sleep after a couple episodes. When you're finished, try: "Fringe." They're basically the same show.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and /MAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby: I'm hoping you will pass this on to your readers. Many of us these days have to work two jobs to make ends meet. In addition to a full-time job, I work a second one in a call center. I would like to remind everyone that we are people on the DEAR other end of the line. ABBY I have been cursed at and called names. I have had the phone slammed in my ear. A little courtesy

hostile if they hadn't been called repeatedly and asked to participate in these surveys and had asked not to be called again. They might be more polite if they hadn't registered on a "Do Not Call" list that was ignored. Dear Abby: I am recently retired. I en-

joy it, and my daily routine is filled with activities that keep

me busy.

My problem is relatives who retired a few years ago who would go a long way. are bored. They show up at my home If you don't want to participate unannounced at all hours of the day in the survey, that's fine. We under- and disrupt my routine. They assume stand that. But say, "Not interested" I have nothingto do like them. I am not or "No, thank you," and show a lit- interested in baby-sitting these people tle respect. We're simply trying to sotheirwives won'thavetoputup with do a job, earn a living and pay our them. What should I do? — Retired fn Boston bills like everybody else. — Happy To Be Employed Dear Retired: Tell your relatives DearHappy To BeEmployed:Iam — nicely — that you have a definite not excusing poor manners, and I routine and things scheduled that do sympathize with your position. you must attend to. If you feel they But when companies make these would be receptive, suggest that incessant calls, they are entering they drop by a senior center and people's homes without being invit- ask about what activities it offers or ed, and it can make some of them look for volunteer opportunities in angry, particularly if t hey have the community. Then suggest that been interrupted while were eating, instead of dropping by, they CALL working, napping or caregiving. FIRST to see if you are available. The people you call might be less Dear Abby: My b e st f r i e nd's

HAPPYBIRTHDAYFOR WEDNESDAY,AUG. 7, 2013: This

YOURHOROSCOPE

yearyou could beunusually optimistic and By Jacqueline Bigar forward-looking. Sometimes youwant to radically changeyour life in some key way. If single, you areable to meet many people. why push it? A partner clearly wants what It is likely that you he or she wants. Tonight: Your treat. Stars showthekind couldmeetand CANCER (June21-July22) of day you'll have be attracted to ** * * * D ynamic someone who might** * * * Y ou might be in a positive, buoyant mood, but a friend could be in the ** * * P ositive b e emotionally mood to play power games. Usecaution ** * A verage unavailable. Resist ** S o-s o jumpi n gin before with your word choice. The only way to win a power play is not to play; don't give * Difficult you really knowthis this person any type of reaction. Tonight: person. If attached, the two of you will benefit from taking some Do what makes you happy. LEO (Joly 23-Aug. 22) romantic weekendsalone. LEOis always ** * Y ou might want to express your friendly. Look past that behavior when dismay at everything that is happening. You dealing with one. will want to take your time andsort out how ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You could feel challenged by a much you are projecting into the situation, as well as how much is directed at you. boss or parent you respect a lot, but who Tonight: Dowhatyoucan,and don'tputany can become very controlling. It seems unnecessary pressure on yourself. to be this person's way or the highway. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) Meanwhile, your emotions mightflow into your personal life. You will be doing a ** * * You might want to consider taking a different approach or finding a juggling act of sorts. Tonight: Relax. new way of dealing with a rebelliousTAURUS (April 20-May20) and sometimes vindictive — loved one. ** * * * Y our perspective could change You certainly do not seem to be getting radically after a discussion forces your the results you desire. Tonight: Hang with hand.You mightwonderhowyou aregoing people who have positive vibes. to be able to cover ali the ground you need to cover. Listen to newsfrom afriend. You might want to chat with this person more openly. Tonight: As you like it.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

** * * You might want to try a new approach and avoid having to deal with a very grumpy associate. You could find that GEMINI (May 2t-June20) you are overwhelmed by everything you ** * Use extreme caution with your have to do. Try to take care of any errands finances. You could be juggling more than or work that you can, then complete the you normally would like. Your ability to get rest. Tonight: Head home first. past problems is well known. You have an SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) extraordinary amount of resilience, but

mother has dementia. It is usually worse in the evenings, but she can function during the day — somewhat. My friend and her husband both work, leaving the m other alone at home during the day with the door locked from the outside so she can't wander off. I have told my friend many times how dangerous this is, but she continues to do it. It makes me sick worrying about her mother, but I don't know what to do about it. — Friend in Florida Dear Friend:Your friend and her husband may have the best of intentions, but locking a demented person inside the house is not the answer to their problem. If a fire were to start, she might not be "with it" enough to know how to put it out or summon help. She could also fall and injure herself. A better solution would be to find aday-care program where the mother would have company, be entertained and safely looked after. Please suggest it to them. However, if they are not receptive, Adult Protective Services should be notified because the woman's life could depend on it. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com

or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

** * * You understand people who are controlling better than they understand themselves— possiblybecauseyou have the same trait. If you detach, you could find this situation amusing. Thesmart move is not to get tangledup inthis web, no matter what. Tonight: Chat the night away.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec.21) ** * Y ou could feel as ifyou are right about a moneyventure and everyone else is wrong. Truth be told, you areyour best and biggest supporter, so follow your instincts. Ifyou care aboutyour relationships, try to see the validity in what others share. Tonight: Till the weehours.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * You could be pushing people away left and right with your authoritarian attitude. Try to minimize this behavior, even if you are the boss. If you do, others will demonstrate more resilience. Think before you speak. Tonight: Accept a dear friend's or loved one's offer.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * You might want to try something else or do something differently. You might witness, or perhaps evenparticipate, in the clash of wills around you. Sometimes it is difficult for you to pull away from such intensity. It would serve you weil to do so now. Tonight: With a favorite person.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Y our plans could go up in smoke because one person wants things one way and someone else wants it his or her way. You might need to use your unusual resourcefulness in order to find a resolution. Everyone will be happier as a result. Tonight: Work till the wee hours. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate

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Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 2 GUNS(R) 12:10, 4:40, 7:35, 10:10 • AFRICANCATS(G) 10 a.m. • CHIMPANZEE (G) tga.m. • THE CONJURING (R) 12:50,4:20, 7:40, 10:20 • DESPICABLE ME 2 (PG)10:50a.m.,t:20,3:50,6:50,9:30 • GROWNUPS 2(PG-l3) 12:25, 3:10, 6:05, 9:15 • THE HEAT (R) 11:50 a.m., 3:40, 7:20, 10:05 • THE LONE RANGER(PG-13) 1 t a.m., 2:20, 6:10, 9:40 • PACIFIC RIM(PG-13) 12:20, 3:25, 7:15, 10:15 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)t0:55a.m., 2:25, 6:15, 9:10 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS3-D (PG) lt:55 a.m., 3, 6:45 • RED 2(PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:50, 6:40, 9:25 • R.I.P.D.(PG-13) 9:50 • THESMURFS23-D(PG)10:45a.m.,9:05 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) 1:15, 3:55, 6:35 • TURBO (PG) 11:15 a.m., 2:30, 5 • WE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 12:30, 3:15, 7: IO, 7:30, 9:55, 10:15 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) t 1:45 a.m., 12:45, 3:30, 4:30, 6:25, 7:25, 9:20, to:20 • WORLDWARZ IMAX3-D (PG-13) Noon, 4 t0, 7, 950 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. t

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TV TODAY 8 p.m. on H A, "The Middle" —Everybody's going back to school in this episode, including Frankie (Patricia Heaton), who's determined not to take just any job after being fired from the car dealership. She decides to enroll in tech school to prepare fora real career. It's a newyear of high school for Axl (Charlie McDermott), now a senior, and sophomore Sue (EdenSher), who's mentoring a freshman (Baiiey Buntain,"Bunheads"). 9 p.m. on HIST,"Only in America With Larry the Cable Goy" — In this new episode, Larry is in the TennesseeValley, where he goes spelunking through a mile of caverns to get to the Lost Sea, the largest underground lake in the U.S. Backabove ground, he takes a trip down the nation's most winding highway, nicknamed The Dragon. Then he hikes part of the Appalachian Trail to see the Fontana Dam in North Carolina. 10 p.m. on l3, "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" —And you thought reunions were boring. When the prom queen is murdered at David Phillips' (David Berman) high-school reunion, Russell (Ted Danson) and company join him at the event to investigate in "Dead of the Class." Elisabeth Shue, Jorja Fox and George Eads also star. 10 p.m. on BRAVO,uTop Chef Masters" —"Sex, Greedand Murder" — how canyou resist that episode title? A meal inspired by one of those three staples of soap operas is the assignmentfor the elimination challenge, which will be judged by cast members from "Days of our Lives." First, though, the contestants must prepare a dish using scraps left over from the sous-chefs' challenge. 10 p.m. on FX,"The Bridge" — As Sonya and Marco (Diane Kruger, Demian Bichir) investigate a suspected cover-up, Charlotte (Annabeth Gish) turns to Marco for some advice. A troubled girl arrives in Juarez in search of adventure. Linder (Thomas M. Wright) gets a surprise visitor in the new episode. 10:01 p.m. on H f3, "Camp" — Little Otter is in the grip of record-breaking heat, but that isn't about to stop Buzz (Charles Grounds) from planning the coolest 16th birthday party in camp history. Sarah (DenaKaplan) runs into her crush, Miguel (Juan Pabio Di Pace), while on a mission to borrow a generator from Camp Ridgefield. ©Zap2rt

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • PERCYJACKSON: SEAOF MONSTERS (PG)t:45,4,6:15, 8:30 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG)2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • TURBO (PG) 1:15 • WE'RE THE MILLERS(R) 2, 4:30, 7,9:30 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • 2 GUNS(R) 5:45, 8 • THEHEAT(R)5: l5 • RED 2(PG-13) 5:15, 7:30 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG)5, 7:15 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 7:45 rt

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Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway97, 54t-475-3505 • 2 GUNS(R) Noon, 2:t5,4:30, 7, 9:20 • DESPICABLE ME2 (PG)Noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:05, 9:25 • PERCYJACKSON: SEA OF MONSTERS (PG)t1:45a.m., 2:05,4:25, 6:45, 9: i0 • THE SMURFS 2 (PG) 1:45, 7: IO,9:35 • THE SMURFS 23-D (PG)11:50 a.m., 4:50 • THE WOLVERINE (PG-13) 4:10, 6:50 • THE WOLVERINE 3-D (PG-13) 2: IO,9:30 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • PERCYJACKSON: SEA OF MONSTERS (PG)t,4,7 • Asof press time, the complete movie times for the Pine Theater were unavailable. Visit wyyw pinetheatercom for more information.

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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 208

00 I Want to Buy or Rent Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006

VV.

C h a n d i e r

Items for Free

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• B en d

O r e g o n

9

Q7~

210

246

258

261

266

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Travel/Tickets

Medical Equipment

Heating & Stoves

Pine Trestle Table w/2 benches, made by Forest Furniture of LaPine. Paid $1000; like new, sell $750. 541-531-7903 or 541-282-2356

Yorkie pups AKC, tiny, short-nosed, health guar, TWIN OAK headboard, only$25. UTD shots.541-777-7743 541-388-9223.

210

Furniture & Appliances

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

The Bulletin advertisers may recommends extra place an ad 5-pc. brown sectional, with our 0 • 0 -I good shape, paid $1699 chasing products "QUICK CASH or, n ew; sell f o r $ 5 5 0. services from out of I SPECIAL" 541-548-7126 l the area. Sending t 1 week3lines 12 oi' c ash, c hecks, o r ' A1 Washersa Dryers k 20! l credit i n f o rmation ~2 $150 ea. Full warAd must may be subjected to ranty. Free Del. Also l FRAUD. include price of For more wanted used W/D's tf f 05 0 0 information about an ~ 541-280-7355 or less, or multiple advertiser, you may I items whose total I call t h e Ore g onI DAYBED, mattress ' State Attor ney ' does not exceed sets, $75. $500. l General's O f f i c e 541-317-5590 Consumer P r otec- • Call Classifieds at t ion ho t l in e at I 541-385-5809 l 1-877-877-9392. www.bendbuiletin.com

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I Thf: B~llf:tfPg

Dining table 42"x58" (42"x94" with three

12" leaf extensions), 4 straight back 8 2 arm chairs. 25+ yr. old set has had but 2 owners. Asking $185obo 541-419-5060

A pet sitter in NE Bend, warm and loving home Ethan Allen Desk, with no cages, $25 day. good condition, $95. Linda at 541-647-7308 541-420-2220 Bengal purebred pap ered male 6 m o . , GENERATE SOME Great Danes neutered, shots, $500. EXCITEMENT in your AKC Blue 3/4 Euro 503-860-8974. neighborhood! Plan a 2 Males 2 Females left garage sale and don't Boxer, beautiful fawn AKC $1,500 (541)306 8391 forget to advertise in male puppy, all shots, Irish Wolfhound/Great classified! $700. 541-325-3376 D ane, 7 wks, 3 f e - 541-385-5809. Boxer Puppy M-Brindle male, XL, $ 500/ea. http://goo.gl/hLCc41 541-390-2830 $499 - 541-595-8773 Jack Russell/Lab mix

puppy. m a le , 11 weeks old. $65 please call (541) 233-6872 or email kayla.millard O hdesd.

A v e .

208

Pets 8 Supplies 0

+

Kimber 1911 carry package, $850.

Willamette Country Mu- Ambulalarm method for sic Festival 3-day pass, fall prevention. Alarm Brownsville OR 8/16-18, will sound automati$95. 541-306-8799 cally when p e rson moves toward standi ng, k n eeling, o r Get your crawling pos i t ion, business summoning immediate assistance. Never used. $150.00 OBO G ROW I N G 5 41-408-5092 cio ciekelly@yahoo.com with an ad in for photos.

The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Commercial/Officeg Equipment & Fixtures Commercial s t a inless s teel 30x30 x 30

Misc. Items 2 burial plots, sect C ¹945

8 946 Redmond Memorial, $500 each. 509-630-8348

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655 BUYING

Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories.

cooler, pre v iously used b y b e v erage distributor. Also smaller cooler available. 541-749-0724.

Tools

NOTICE TO

ADVERTISER

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

10' contractors ladder rack for a pickup, has 6' toolboxes each side,

Fuel & Wood

$475. 541-416-9686 WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... 10'rollerpanels for feedcut-off saws /moving Antiques & To avoid fraud, Mossberg 3-06 b o l t, BUYING & SE L LING ing objects. Rollers 8" The Bulletin Leupold 3x9x40, sling, All gold jewelry, silver heavy Collectibles spacing 52/2". 15 @ recommends paybi-pod, ammo, sleeve and gold coins, bars, long; $20 ea. 541-416-9686 rounds, wedding sets, ment for Firewood The Bulletin reserves $475. 334-477-2354 only upon delivery the right to publish all S8W 9mm auto, ¹6906, class rings, sterling sil- Airco 300amp S uper ver, coin collect, vinHornet DC arc welder/ and inspection. ads from The Bulletin stainless, extra clip, 6 A cord is 128 cu. ft. newspaper onto The boxes ammo, $650 obo. tage watches, dental gen ¹1350-1121; best ofr • 4' x 4' x 8' gold. Bill Fl e ming,accepted. 541-389-2636 Bulletin Internet web- 541-306-0280 541-382-9419. should site. Generac 5000W gen- • Receipts include name, Check out the erator, new! Tecumseh phone, price and The Bulletin classifieds online 10hp engine, 5 gal fuel Serkng Centra( Oregkn tfnre 1903 kind of wood tank, 120/240V plug-ins, www.bendbulletin.com m anual, $ 35 0 ob o . purchased. 240 Updated daily • Firewood ads 541-480-7024, anytime. Crafts & Hobbies MUST include Wanted: Collector Call The Bulletin At species 8 cost per seeks high quality FOUNTAIN. Must sell 541-385-5809 A Large n umber o f cord to better serve fishing items. lovely patio or inside Sfampin' U p s t amp Call 541-678-5753, or Place Your Ad Or E-Mail our customers. water fountain. $199 sets and accessories. 503-351-2746 obo. 541-382-9295. At: www.bendbulletin.com most l i ghtly u s e d, The Bulletin Old car collector stuff, Sewing Central Oregon ance 1003 some new and a few Weatherby 300 W. 50th anniv. Ford Horn p urchased used . Building Materialsg Mag, Mark V Euroring, etc. Call for info 541-678-8878 mark, Leupold 541-598-7636 Vari-X-III 3.5-10 La Pine Habitat AH Year Dependable Serger - JUKI MO-634, scope, muz break, Wantedpaying cash RESTORE Firewood: Seasoned for home use, light prosling, some ammo, for Hi-fi audio & stu- Building Supply Resale Lodgepole, Split, Del. duction, alterations & dio equip. Mclntosh, Quality at Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 hobby sewing. E xtra $1250. 541-604-6099 LOW PRICES for $335. Cash, Check J BL, Marantz, D y blades & needles. $150 or Credit Card OK. 52684 Hwy 97 obo. Patty, 541-548-4800 Winchester 30-30 lever- naco, Heathkit, San541-420-3484. 541-536-3234 action rifle, very good sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Open to the public . Where can you find a cond, $500. 360-390-8227 Call 541-261-1808 W inchester Mod 7 0 helping hand? Classic 7mm S TW, From contractors to 3x9 N i ko n s c o pe. yard care, it's all here $650. 541-419-9331 in The Bulletin's Winchester Mod. 94 "Call A Service Special Ser. Professional" Directory 32 ¹1213708, Redfield Peep Sight, 2 Boxes 241 Hornaday Ammo 282 286 $499 541-604-6099 Bicycles 8 Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend i Accessories Youth shotgun, MossGARAGE SALE Huge Moving & StorElectra Cruiser b i k e,berg 20ga pump, $160. selection of items ** FREE ** age Sale! Fri. & Sat. very gd cond., asking M auser M odelo A r - Great 8-4. 62988 L a yton. entino 1891, 7.65mm, in excellent condition! $150. 541-420-4624 Garage Sale Kit Bam-12 noon Sat. only, Place an ad in The Antiques, f u r niture, 150. 541-948-3382 310 NW Greyhawk Ave. king bed and dress245 Bulletin for your ga247 ers, table, art and pic, 284 rage sale and reGolf Equipment Sporting Goods stereos, ski e q uip., ceive a Garage Sale Sales Southwest Bend new designer cowboy - Misc. Kit FREE! CHECK YOUR AD boot, restaurants and Garage Sale! Lots of glassware, desk and KIT INCLUDES: Windsurfing gear, acfurniture & misc. Garage Sale Signs c redenza, t ools 8 cepting best o f fer. Fri-Sat, 8-2, 1106 SW •• 4 $2.00 Off Coupon To building materials, 541-389-2636 Ellenhurst Place. Use Toward Your No Early Admittance. 212

541-610-3287

541-408-2191.

High Quality King Bedroom Set with Storage - 1 yr old, in puppies, teascreen HDTV, as is, Chihuahua P ERF ECT condition! cup, shots 8 dewormed, KITTENS! Fo s t ered, FREE. 541-388-9270 Beautiful medium oak $250. 541-420-4403 friendly, fixed, shots, hardwood bedframe Bengal pure b red,CHIHUAHUA, very ID chip, more! Variwith storage drawers, ety of colors & perchampion line female, f riendly 10 mo . o l d king pillow-top matfrom retiring from breeding, male, tri-colored, cur- sonalities. Adopt tress, 2 night stands, foster home see Adoption fee is price rent on vaccines ex2 lamps, 1 5-drawer to spay her. cept rabies. Free. Ap- TomTom Motel Mgr, dresser, 1 dresser + 503-860-8974 plicants wi l l be across from Sonic mirror, ALL for only interviewed to help in- Sat. & Sun. 1-5 PM. $3000. 541-410-1010 Dbl. pane picture win- sure he goes to the Just $25/kitten; adopt dow, 7 5-1/BX60-3/8. right home. 2 for $40! 389-8420. Leather couch & otwww.craftcats.org. 541-447-1 699 541-410-8783. toman, dark brown, $ 450, large g o ld FREE DeLaval Milker Donate deposit bottles/ Find exactly what mirror, $50, Vacuum pump No. 75 cans to local all vol- you are looking for in the framed make o f fe r on unteer, non-profit res12/2-2 HP, mounted on cue, to h elp w /cat CLASSIFIEDS dresser with n ight metal frame with H3/4 stand. HP Dayton capacitor spay/neuter vet bills. for Cats trailer Lab Pups AKC, black & 541-389-8813. motor, switch & cord. Cans Works. 541-383-8820. at Ray's Foods on yellow, Master Hunter Century Dr. Donate sired, performance pediCall a Pro Stepper, adjustable re- Mon-Fri at Smith Sign, gree, OFA cert hips 8 el541-771-2330 sistance, easy to m ove, 1515 NE 2nd; or at bows, Whether you need a www.kinnamanretrievers.com CRAFT i n T u m alo needs hydraulic fluid, anytime. 3 8 9 -8420.Labrador purebred pup- fence fixed,hedges Free! 541-388-9270 www.craftcats.org trimmed or a house pies, black, both females VGA computer monitor built, you'll find & males, ready now! with cables & software. DO YOU HAVE $200. 541-771-5511 professional help in Next Ad 255 286 Free! 541-280-4925 SOMETHING TO • 10 Tips For "Garage on the first day it runs Lovebird babies, hand- The Bulletin's "Call a SELL Computers Sales Northeast Bend PeopleLookfor Information Sale Success!" fed, sweet, ready in 1-2 Service Professional" to make sure it is corFOR $500 OR weeks. $60 each; taking rect. "Spellcheck" and T HE B U L LETIN r e - ESTATE SALE Fri. & LESS? AboutProductsand Pets 8 Supplies Directory deposits. 541-279-3578 human errors do ocNon-commercial quires computer adSat. 8 a.m.-4 p.m. PICK UP YOUR 541-385-5809 cur. If this happens to S ervi cesEveryDaythrough advertisers may vertisers with multiple No early sales GARAGE SALE KIT at Maltese AKC champion your ad, please conThe Bulletin recomplace an ad with ad schedules or those 63615 Hughes Road, 1777 SW Chandler bloodlines 7 wks , The Buletin Classifieds tact us ASAP so that oui' Mattress queen, mends extra caution selling multiple sys- Tools, f i s hing gear, Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $600. 541-420-1577 excellent cond, $75. corrections and any when purc h as"QUICK CASH tems/ software, to dis- welding equip, house541-549-0805 adjustments can be ing products or serSPECIAL" Part-time dog walker, close the name of the hold items, furniture, made to your ad. vices from out of the 1 week 3 lines 12 wanted, mornings, business or the term b lack d i n ing se t , Sales Other Areas 541-385-5809 area. Sending cash, ~ 2 k 20 ! "dealer" in their ads. swing rocker, tables, in Cascade area. The Bulletin Classified checks, or credit inAd must include 541-317-5590. Private party advertis- recliner, yard tools & G.-SALE BONANZA! North La Pine f ormation may b e price of single item ers are d efined as Garage Sale! garden tractor, patio Sunrise t o s u n s et POODLE Toy pups & 246 subjected to fraud. of $500 or less, or those who sell one furniture, dog crates, Fri.-Sat.-Sun. F r e e Saturday August 10, teens. Also, POMAPOOS For more i nformamultiple items computer. Guns, Hunting serger, sewing ma- world f lag po s t er! 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 pm Call 541-475-3889 tion about an adverwhose total does MOVING, MUST SELL. chine, ceramic molds 1935 NE Lotus Dr., Sale features building 8 Fishing tiser, you may call not exceed $500. Two recliners $500 for tools, yard tools, Want to impress the (over 100 sell as lot), 541-965-0663. Queensland Heelers the O r egon State both. Custom made doll molds, will sell housewares, furniture, Bend local pays CASH!! relatives? Remodel Standard & Mini, $150 Call Classifieds at Attorney General's sectional an d o t t oseparately c l othing Just bought camping equipment, for all firearms 8 anewboat? & up. 541-280-1537 your home with the Office C o n sumer 541-385-5809 50" TV, toys; Motorman $850. Leather ammo. 541-526-0617 books, hunting supwww.rightwayranch.wor www.bendbulletin.com help of a professional Sell your ol d one i n the Protection hotline at sofa $ 650. C o ffee home, 440 Dodge enpliesand many home dpress.com 1-877-877-9392. from The Bulletin's table $100. See Bulgine good, interior is C laSSifiedS!ASkabOut Our decor items. CASH!! 15135 West Drive, German Shepherds AKC Wolf-Husky pups, $400. letin web ad for more For Guns, Ammo & "Call A Service not); 1987 4x4 Ford Super Sel l e r rates! www.sherman-ranch.us Only 4; reserve now! photos. Call Steve at Reloading Supplies. Professional" Directory Bronco, 75k mi.Silent La Pine, OR 541-281-6829 541-977-7019 503-585-5000. 541-408-6900. bids on some items. 541-385-5809 (503)730-3367 32" Mintek LCD wide

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The Bulletin

The Bulletin


E2 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

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

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

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Add your web address Wildland Firefighters to your ad and readTo fight forest fires. ers on The Bulletin's Must be 18 years old web site, www.bend8 drug free. Apply bulletin.com, will be between 9 a.m. to 3 able to click through p.m., Mon. thru Thurs. automatically to your Bring two forms of ID fill website. out Federal 1-9 form. No ID =No Application.

Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. ATTENTION Elk Hunters! Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Colorado Outfitters hiring experiSaturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • now e nced hunters t o work as Elk hunting for 2013 ArSaturday • • • •. . . . . . . 3 : 0 0 pm Fri. guides chery and Rifle seaNo guide ex• • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • sons. Sunday. • • • • perience required.

a

P ATR I C K

1199 NE Hemlock, Redmond, OR (541) 923-0703

fg,tF~>Jirr Ji,jj Jl)IJjjJ~ jg Can be found on these pages:

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

FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

PHARMACIST

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The Bulletin Staff pharmacist position at independentcommu- I Recommends extra nity pharmacy, in Des- caution when purchutes County. Full-time; chasing products or I A full time Janitorial BE'NDSURGERY position is available no nights, no Sundays. services from out of ' C •6 • N •T • e •R se t t ing,I the area. Sending at T he Bul l e tin Professional hkr Care Ikmr kr Cankrr Bow hunters c ash, c hecks, o r Building S e r vices competitive wage/benefits. Call 541-419-4688. I credit i n f o rmation preferred. Housekeeping I Department. CleanPlace a photoin your private party ad Environmental ing and janitorial ex- Ranch Manager for 400 I may be subjected to Call (800) PRIVATE PARTY RATES Services for only $15.00 per week. p erience ar e r e - acre ranch in Central Or- FRAUD. 342-7016 Starting at 3 lines (Part-tr'me,20 hrs quired. S u ccessful egon. Responsible for For more informa"UNDER '500in total merchandise Mon- Fri, 5-9:30pm with OVER '500in total merchandise c andidates will b e day-to-day operations & tion about an adveravailability to flexinto self-motivated, have management of staff, un- I tiser, you may call 7 days .................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 40 hrs as needed) k een a ttention t o der direction of board of the Oregon State Chemical 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 We are looking for a detail, and must be directors. Must provide I Attorney General's Handling Co n s umert *Must state prices in ed 14 days .................................................$33.50 motivated team player able to lift up to 50 exceptional & p r ofes- Office Technician with an eye for detail pounds. Hours are sional service to ranch Protection hotline at I 28 days .................................................$61.50 Microsemi CorporaGarage Sale Special 10 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. owners and guests, Will I 1-877-877-9392. to join our team at tion in B e nd, O r(call for commercial line ad rates) 4 lines for 4 days.................................. thr o ugh provide maintenance of Bend Surgery Center. Sunday egon has an immeE nvironmental s e r - Thursday. equipment & e n viron-iT} ie BLtlletiii diate opening for a mental stewardship of vices is r esponsible chemical h a ndling A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: for daily housekeep- Send an updated re- property. Must have 5 technician. Responsume and/or applicayears' ranch manage- Looking for your next ing functions as well s ibilities incl u de Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. as maintaining a high t ion form t o B e n ment or related experiemployee? set-up of chemical * BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) level of quality. Can- Anderson, Building ence & high school di- Place a Bulletin help process baths, disServices Manager, at ploma. No calls. Send didate must have reli- PO Box 6020, Bend resume: ranchmanager@ wanted ad today and REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well posal of waste prodable t r a nsportation reach over 60,000 ucts, monitoring gas as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin 97708 or email aperionmgmt.com a nd be able t o l i ft OR readers each week. and liquid usage as bandersonobendYour classified ad reserves the right to reject any ad at bendbulletimcom well as cle a ning 25lbs. High S chool bulletin.com. Need help fixing stuff? Diploma req u ired. production process Call A Service Professional will also appear on any time. is located at: Prior experience in All hiring is continbendbulletin.com equipment. Some find the help you need. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. medical cleaning a which currently relevant experience www.bendbulletin.com gent on passing a receives over 1.5 plus, but not required. drug test. EOE. a nd education i n Bend, Oregon 97702 Submit resume with million page views chemical handling is cover letter to every month at highly desired. Interobsobendsur e .com The Bulletin no extra cost. PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is ested c a n didates Open until Bulletin Classifieds should visit our webneeded. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or August 11, 2013. Get Results! site a t www . m ireject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher Call 385-5809 c rosemi.com a n d shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days Driven, professional MOTEL- Housekeeping or place please apply on-line. will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Staff, Full-time.Apply in SALES PEOPLE your ad on-line at person at front desk, needed. bendbulletin.com Sugarloaf Mo u ntain Oregon's largest indeCustomer service & proGet your Motel 62980 N. High- pendent maior appliduction, full 8 part-time, Fuel & Wood • Hay, Grain & Feed • ance retailer seeks Saturda s A MUST! way 97, in Bend. business motivated sales proApply in person: Mirror Seasoned Juniper fireX!M !i(HQ fessionals. Excellent Pond Cleaners. Looking for your w ood d elivered i n customer service skills PARTS MANAGER Q Dtgggl~ next employee? C entral Ore . $ 1 7 5 Big Country RV has & professional apPlace a Bulletin cord. 541-419-9859 pearance are a must. Garage Sales immediate opening for help wanted ad inside and outa F/ T E x perienced Both Young man willing to split sales opportunitoday and Garage Sales lstack firewood. Wage Parts Manager who side available. Incenreach over negotiable. 541-419-6651 will share our com- ties tive based compenWith an ad in 306 421 Garage Sales 60,000 readers mitment to customers. sation. Ext e nsive each week. Competitive pay, and product training proTURN THE PAGE Farm Equipment Schools & Training Find them The Bulletin'6 528 Your classified ad benefit package. vided. Send resume & Machinery For More Ads will also Apply in person at or appiyin person at Oregon Medical Trainin Loans & Mortgages The Bulletin 63736 Paramount Dr. appear on ing PCS - Phlebotomy "Call A Servlce 3500 North Hwy 97, The Bulletin Bend, OR 97701 classes begin Sept. 3, bendbulletin.com Bend, Oregon; email WARNING 2013. Registration now or apply online at Classifieds resume to which currently The Bulletin recomProfessional" standardtvand oe o p :~ bcrvhireo mail.com Gardening Supplies mends you use caureceives over appliance.com medicaltrainin .com 541-385-5809 25-ft 3 axle pintle or call Rick Breeden at tion when you pro1.5 million page & Equipment Directory 541-343-3100 541-419-8680 vide personal hitch trailer, views every information to compaCustomer Service $2500. month at no SALES Look at: nies offering loans or BarkTurfSoil.com Growing dealership Call 54'I -480-8009 extra cost. Bendhomes.com ROBBERSON credit especially seeking s alespeople Bulletin for Complete Listings of those asking for adlooking for a perforPROMPT D E LIVERY Classifieds 325 Area Real Estate for Sale vance loan fees or mance-based pay plan, 541-389-9663 Ad Services Admin Get Results! We are looking for a potential commissions companies from out of Hay, Grain & Feed The Bulletin is seeking an individual to play a Call 541-385-5809 476 qualified Internet of up to 35% equaling state. If you have vital role on the Ad Services team. The Ad Seror place your ad customer service concerns or ques$100,000+, Retirement For newspaper 1st quality grass hay, Employment vices Admin position is 32 hours per week and on-line at representative. Plan, Paid Vacation, tions, we suggest you 70-lb. bales, barn stored, delivery, call the is eligible for benefits. An Ad Services Admin Opportunities bendbulletin.com Must have a positive at- works closely with others on the Ad Services and a com p etitive consult your attorney Circulation Dept. at $250/ton. 750-Ib bales, titude with a w illingmedical benefit packor call CONSUMER $240/ton. Patterson Ranch 541-385-5800 team to coordinate and track ads though our ness to learn. We will age. Looking for team HOTLINE, Sisters, 541-549-3831 CAUTION: production system. At times taking corrections To place an ad, call train the r ight i ndiplayer with a positive 1-877-877-9392. Ads published in from customers via phone, faxing ads to cus541-385-5809 Barn stored 2 string 100 Horses & Equipment attitude to operate with vidual. The ideal can- tomers, and ensuring all corrections have been "Employment Opor email lb. orchard grass, energy and to be cusdidate will have strong made prior to printing. In addition, this position The Bulletin classifiedObendoultetin.com portunities" in clude tomer service oriented. clover mix, exc. horse Vintage s leigh b e l ls employee and indeverbal an d w r i tten will include training for a path to page composTo Subscribe call Will provide training. feed. $220/ton. The Bulletin communication skills, ing responsibilities. The ideal candidate will be leather strap, 30 bells pendent p o sitions. 541-385-5800 or go to krvca centralOmgon srnce lha Send resume' to: Delivery available. $195. 541-508-0207 Ads fo r p o sitions strong c o mputer/in- computer literate, have outstanding customer www.bendbulletin.com bcrvhire@ mail.com 541-350-8515 or ternet skills, and exservice skills, above average grammar skills, that require a fee or Prompt Delivery 541 -447-481 5 ceptional o r g aniza- the ability to multi-task and a desire to work at a upfront i nvestment BANK TURNED YOU Rock, Sand & Gravel tional skills. successful company. must be stated. With Tick, Tock DOWN'? Private party Multiple Colors, Sizes Grass hay, e xcellent • P roduce 8 Food • Please call Mark at any independentjob will loan on real esInstant Landscaping Co. q uality, $ 20 0 to n . 541-420-9670. To apply, submit a resume by Friday, August opportunity, please TiCk, Tock... 541-788-4539 tate equity. Credit, no 541-389-9663 THOMAS ORCHARDS Robberson Ford is a 9th, with qualifications, skills, experience and a i nvestigate tho r problem, good equity Kimberly, Oregon ...don't let time get drug free workplace. past employment history to The Bulletin, attenSUPER TOP SOIL Hay tarps, G.l. 35 oz oughly. Use extra is all you need. Call www.hershe soilandbarhcom treated canvas, 20' x 40', LI- ick& EOE. tion:James Baisinger, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR away. Hire a ~ c aution when a p Oregon Land MortScreened, soil & com- $200 ea. 541-480-8009 97708-6020. Pre-employment drug screening is eead -Picked ~ plying for jobs ongage 541-388-4200. professional out post mi x ed , no required prior to hiring. The Bulletin is an equal • Freestone canning line and never proFacilities rocks/clods. High huopportunity employer. ORCHARD GRASS peaches (Sunbright) of The Bulletin's vide personal inforLOCAL MONEY:Webuy Maintenance mus level, exc. for 1st cutting, no rain, • Santa Rosa Plums mation to any source "Call A Service secured trustdeeds & flower beds, lawns, $205/ton; or $200/ton • Early nectarines Mechanic note,some hard money you may not have for 15 ton. Powell Microsemi CorporaProfessional" gardens, straight loans. Call Pat Kellev researched and tion in B e nd, O rs creened to p s o i l . Butte, 541-350-3164 541-382-3099 ext.13. deemed to be repuDirectory today! BRING CONTAINERS egon has an immeBark. Clean fill. Detable. Use extreme for U-PICK!!! diate opening for a liver/you haul. c aution when r e The Bulletin is your Open 7 days week, 8 541-548-3949. f acilities mai n t es ponding t o A N Y a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! nance m e c hanic. Employment online employment e • 270 541-934-2870 Responsibilities inad from out-of-state. Look for updates on Faclude maintenance Lost & Found Marketplace We suggest you call cebook. We are at the and repair of plant the State of Oregon Bend Farmers Market on HVAC, process pipCall Consumer H o tline Call 54/-385-5809 to promoteyour service ' Advertise for 28 daysstarting at 'l40 (rtris spedar packrrgeisaotavailable oaour websitei Wednesdays, 3-7 p.m. ing, waste treatment, at 1-503-378-4320 and e nvironmental 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 For Equal Opportusys t ems. Need to get an nity Laws c o ntact control Current experience Oregon Bureau of Building/Contracting • Hand y man LandscapingNard Care Landscapingfyard Carej to advertise. ad in ASAP'? HVAC systems is $400 Reward for Labor & I n d ustry, in a must. Interested You can place it 'Miley' 4-mo. female Civil Rights Division, Oregon state I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon LandNelson candidates s h ould NOTICE: Springer Spaniel, liver www.bendbulletin.com online at: 971-673- 0764. law requires anyone Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law visit our website at Landscaping & & white, has tags. who contracts for Small jobs to remodels (ORS 671) requires all www.bendbulletin.com www.microsemi.com Maintenance Lost 7/24 on ShumThe Bulletin and please apply construction work to Honest, guaranteed businesses that adkrvrngCenr al OmW s ce 19e Serving Central way Rd., in Powell be licensed with the vertise t o pe r f orm work. CCB¹151573 on-line. 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 Oregon Since 2003 servrna central oregonrrnce \903 Butte. 541-604-6232 Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 Landscape ConstrucResidental/Commercial tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: F ound 8/1 o n B e a r active license ERIC REEVE HANDY p lanting, decks , Sprinkler Creek Road, east of SERVICES. Home & means the contractor fences, arbors, Ward Road, o l der Activation/Repair Commercial Repairs, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inBorder Collie, friendly. Back Flow Testing Carpentry-Painting, Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irfemale 541-420-7450 Pressure-washing, CCB li c ense at rigation systems to be Maintenance Honey Do's. On-time www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the Good classified ads tell eThatch & Aerate promise. Senior contractor.com Landscape Contrac• Spring Clean up the essential facts in an Discount. Work guaror call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit interesting Manner. Write • Weekly Mowing The Bulletin recom- anteed. 541-389-3361 & Edging number is to be i nfrom the readers view - not or 541-771-4463 mends checking with cluded in all adver•Bi-Monthly & Monthly the seller's. Convert the the CCB prior to conBonded 8 Insured tisements which indiMaintenance facts into benefits. Show tracting with anyone. CCB¹181595 cate the business has •Bark, Rock, Etc. the reader how the item will Some other t r ades a bond,insurance and help them in someway. also req u ire addi- LandscapingNard Care workers c ompensaLandsca in ~ tional licenses a nd tion for their employThis •Landscape advertising tip certifications. ees. For your protecConstruction tion call 503-378-5909 brought to youby •Water Feature Concrete Construction or use our website: Installation/Maint. Zodns Qua/uP •Pavers The Bulletin www.lcb.state.or.us to JJ & B Construction, Z'a~~ ga ~ y,. •Renovations check license status before contracting with quality concrete work. More Than Service •Irrigations Installation Found backpack with GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES, QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! the business. Persons Over 30 Years Exp. Washington state Peace Of Mind doing land s cape We are three adorable, loving Modern amenities andall the quiet Sidewalks; RV pads; identification. Call to Senior Discounts maintenance do not Driveways; Color 8 Bonded & Insured identify, 541-388-9017 puppies looking for acaring hom you will need.Roomto grow jn your Fire Protection r equire an LCB Stamp wor k a v a il. 541-815-4458 Fuels Reduction LOST between 7/11-12. cense. Please call right away. $500. own little paradise! Call now. Also Hardwood floorLCB¹8759 •Tall Grass womans 10-diamond ing a t af fo r dable •Low Limbs anniversary ring. Very prices. 541-279-3183 ALLEN REINSCH Painting/Wall Coveringj sentimental. Reward! •Brush and Debris CCB¹190612 Yard maintenance & FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck Sisters, 541-549-1132 clean-up, thatching, WESTERN PAINTING Protect your home Debris Removal can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, plugging & much more! CO. Richard Hayman, LOST: Saddlehorn bags with defensible space Call 541-536-1294 a semi-retired paintat Peterson Ridge and a tough V8 engine will get JUNK BE GONE ing contractor of 45 Road horse parking, the job done on the ranch! Villanueva Lawn Care. I Haul Away FREE Landscape years. S m al l J obs Hwy 20 t o T umalo. Maintenance, cl ean-up, For Salvage. Also Welcome. Interior & Need horse i t ems! Maintenance thatching + more! Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Exterior. c c b ¹ 5184. 541-548-4667 Full or Partial Service Free estimates. 541-388-6910 Mel, 541-389-8107 • Mowing «Edging 541-981-8386 L ost w o men's p i n k i • Pruning Weedtng heather f r on t zip Concrete/Paving Sprinkler Adjustments USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! fleece, along r i ver trail, n e a r Ar c h ie GarageSales Door-to-door selling with Doug Strain Fertilizer included Briggs. Call Construction, Inc. with monthly program fast results! It's the easiest 541-41 9-7368 Concrete Division way in the world to sell. Residential & Its not too late Commercial concrete; for a beautiful The Bulletin Classified foundations, driveways, REMEMBER: If you sidewalks & curbs. landscape 541-385-5809 have lost an animal, Call Chris for appt. •Lawn Restoration don't forget to check 541-280-0581 •Weed Free beds The Humane Society Find them in CCB¹109532 Remodeling/Carpentry • Bark Installation Bend The Bulletin 541-382-3537 Decks SILVER LINING EXPERIENCED Redmond Classifieds! CONSTRUCTION Commercial 541-923-0882 Oregon Decks & Fencing Residential const., & Residential PI Expert installation,all types remodels, maint. Senior Discounts 541-447-7178; Excellent work! Over 50 & repair. CCB ¹199645 To PlaCe yOur ad, ViSit WWW.bendbulletin.com Or 541-385-5809 541-390-1466 or Craft Cats yrs exp. Serving all of CO Cody Aschenbrenner 541-389-8420. ccb 20010• 541-526-1973 Same Day Response 541-263-1268

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E4 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'sortz h

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By FRANK STEWART T/ibune Media Se/.vices

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Cy the Cynic says that the nice thing about having standards is that there are so many to choose from. My opinion, doubtless not shared by everyone, is that the standard of play — not among top experts but among all players — is in decline. I wonder how many would handle today's 3NT correctly. At the second trick, South led a diamond and finessed with dummy's jack. East took the king and returned a heart, and South won and cashed the queen of diamonds. West's discard was a blow, and South could take only eight tricks. South's play was substandard. How would you play?

io T ake v ie w of i4 City known as the Navel of Sicily i s "Are we ? " is Eat by candlelight 27 Jim Beam and others ie Airport feature ie Some airplane

What do you say? ANSWER: The textbook call is a leap to four hearts. If your partner plays there, he may make it, but your primary intent is t o p r eempt the opponents. A possible option is a bid of four diamonds, showing heart support and diamond shortness. If your partner has A 2 , K J 9 6 4, 10 7 6, K J 6, you may need to direct a diamond opening lead to beat four spades. South dealer N-S vulnerable

cargo

2o "Mamma Mia!" number 2i Vandyke locale -free (lowcal, maybe) 24 Preserves on a farm 26 Sharpie feature 28 Witherspoon of "Walk the Line" 2e Grand display 3i Boat turner 32 Collar 34 Fifth-century sacker

NORTH 4 KQ 7 l2 64

O A J94 2 4 K5 3

OVERTRICK South always makes an overtrick if diamonds break 3-2. To guard against a 4-1 break, South should lead a diamond to the ace at Trick Two and return a low diamond. If East grabs the king, South has 10 tricks. If East plays low, South takes the queen and leads a club, winning four spades, two hearts, two diamonds and a club. South could still win four diamond tricks if West had K-IO-x-x.

WEST 4 1063 g Q 10852 C7 3

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You hold: 41 10 6 3 l2 Q 10 8 5 2 Opening lead — g 5 Cy 3 4 A1 0 8 4 . Yourpartneropens one heart. The next player doubles. (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

S N A G

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

44 Risking a

PA E P R E uS

S I A V L Y O A O L A NT E A R E R I S S E A I SR P A A L P N A T Y

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N D O E E P EM E N AR I A N A L N D S K S S A R E T I E B E A D A E L S I N L A N E E G O S Y EWS

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Puzzle by PAMELA KLAWITTER

3s Cookies that flavor some ice cream 36 British poet laureate Duffy 37 Spot 3e Go one better than 3e B-52's home: Abbr. 4o Moscow ballet company

si Take home the top pnze s3 Ninnies ss Suffix with 4s What a origin or slingshot or comment wishbone has sy When doubled, a dance 47 Jot down se Stuff to dig up 4s Chew, as a so Part of many steak bone a Halloween 4e Shining brightly costume 44 J. Alfred

Prufrock creator's monogram

For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, S1.49 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 nylimes.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: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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"Have you heard that expression 'You are what you eat'?"

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: T A I N MA E M R E

C L O U D C AM O D I V A C E MA R

O P A C A R U P T S E T U L A O R U M R A M P B E K AP E S T S A R I E I L YN M R O A S T OB L O N G D E A N A N D D E V 0 I R I S P A N N A N xwordeditorfeaol.com 5

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(c)2013 Trtbune Content Agency, LLC

08/07/13


THE BULLETIN » WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 2013 E5

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

~

u

I •

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

f • •

n

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

ATVs

875

880

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Honda TRX 450R sport Class 870. Monaco Windsor, 2001, quad 2008, low hrs, new 541-385-5809 loaded! (was $234,000 wheels 8 DNC perf. pipe new) Solid-surface counters, convection/ $4250. 541-647-8931 micro, 4-dr, fridge, 870 washer/dryer, ceramic Boats & Accessories tile 8 carpet, TV, DVD, 880 satellite dish, leveling, Motorhomes 8-airbags, power cord reel, 2 full pass-thru trays, Cummins ISO 8.3 350hp turbo Diesel, 7.5 Diesel gen set. $85,000 obo. 503-799-2950 12~/2' HiLaker f ishing boat with trailer and Brougham 1978 motor Say "goodbuy" newly overhauled 18 home, Dodge chassis, to that unused h.p. Johnston o u t17' coach sleeps 4 b oard, $ 85 0 o b o . rear dining. $4500. item by placing it in Eves 541-383-5043, 541-602-8652. The Bulletin Classifieds days 541-322-4843

The Bulletin

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's 14'8" boat, 40hp Mer"Call A Service cury outboard (4-stroke, electric trim, EFI, less Professional" Directory than 10 hrs) + electric trolling motor, fish finder, $5000 obo. 541-548-2173

5 41 -385-580 9

Tra v el Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Can o pies & Campers )

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Jayco Eagle 26.6 ft long, 2000

Lance 8~/2' camper, 1991 Fleetwood Prowler 32' Great cond; toilet 8 full2001, many upgrade size bed. Lightly used. options, $14,500 obo. Recently serviced, 541-480-1687, Dick.

$4500. 503-307-8571

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

Keystone Challenger Lance Camper 1994, 2004 CH34TLB04 34' fits long bed crew cab, fully S/C, w/d hookups, tv, a/c, loaded. $6200 Mallard 2 2 ' 19 95 by new 18' Dometic awOBO. 541-580-7334 F leetwood, sleeps 7 , ning, 4 new tires, new Just bought a new boat? Kubota 7000w marine fully equipped, v ery Sell your old one in the clean, good cond, $5000 diesel generator, 3 classifieds! Ask about our slides, exc. cond. inobo. 541-678-5575 Super Seller rates! s ide & o ut . 27 " T V 541-385-5809 dvd/cd/am/fm ent. center. Call for more gx nn» ~ MS- N' ==details. Only used 4 times total in last 5~/2

Monte Carlo 2012 Limited Edition, 2 slides, 2

years.. No pets, no smoking. High r etail $27,700. Will sell for

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$24,000 including slidA/Cs, 2 bdrm, sleeps i ng hitch that fits i n 6-8 comfortably, has your truck. Call 8 a.m. w/d, dishwasher, many to 10 p.m. for appt to extras, fully l o aded. see. 541-330-5527. NATIONAL DOLPHIN 37' 1997, loaded! 1 $29,600 obo. Located in Bend. 682-777-8039 slide, Corian surfaces, Aircraft, Parts wood floors (kitchen), & Service 2-dr fridge, convection 775 microwave, Vizio TV 8 Manufactured/ roof satellite, walk-in Alfa See Ya 2005 40' shower, new queen bed. Mobile Homes excellent cond, 1 owner, White leather hide-aKeystone Montana 14' a luminum bo a t 4-dr frig w/icemaker, gas bed 8 chair, all records, 2955 RL 2008, LOT MODEL w/trailer, 2009 Mercury stove/oven, convection no pets or s moking. Orbit 21'2007, used 2 slides, arctic only 8 times, A/C, LIQUIDATION 15hp motor, fish finder, oven, washer/dryer $28,450. insulation, loaded, oven, tub s hower, 1/3 interest in Columbia Prices Slashed Huge $2500. 541-815-8797 combo, flatscreen TV, all Call 541-771-4800 excellent never used micro, load leveler Savings! 10 Year 400, $150,000 (located electronics, new tires, condition. $29,900 hitch, awning, dual I Bend.) Also: Sunriconditional warranty. many extras. 7.5 diesel 541-923-4707 RV batteries, sleeps 4-5, ver hangar available for Finished on your site. gen, lots of storage, 745 CONSIGNMENTS EXCELLENT CON605 sale at $155K, or lease, ONLY 2 LEFT! basement freezer, 350 WANTED Homes for Sale DITION. All acces@ $400/mo. Redmond, Oregon Roommate Wanted Cat Freightliner chassis. We Do The Work ... sories are included. 541-948-2963 541-548-5511 Asking $86,500. See at You Keep The Cash! $15,000 OBO. NOTICE JandMHomes.com 14' LAZER 1993 sail- Crook County RV Park, Retired on d i s ability, On-site credit 541-382-9441 ¹43. 520-609-6372 female armed security All real estate adverboat with trailer, exc. Rent /Own approval team, officer, 58, looking for tised here in is sub- 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes c ond., $2000 o b o . web site presence. ranch caretaker, cook/ ject to t h e F e deral $2500 down, $750 mo. Call 503-312-4168 RV MONTANA 3585 2008, BOUNDER 1993 We Take Trade-Ins! housekeeper position F air H o using A c t , OAC. J and M Homes exc. cond., 3 slides, 34.6', 43k miles, Free Advertising. CONSIGNMENTS which makes it illegal or share rent. Inside WANTED king bed, Irg LR, 541-548-5511 loaded, $13,900. BIG COUNTRY RV Border Collie, clean to advertise any pref1/3 interest i n w e l lArctic insulation, all Info - Call Bend: 541-330-2495 We Do The Work ... equipped IFR Beech Bowell mannered. Refer- erence, limitation or 541-536-8816. Redmond: You Keep The Cash! options $35,000 obo. Just too many discrimination based nanza A36, new 10-550/ ences. 541-383-8820. 541-548-5254 On-site credit 541-420-3250 on race, color, relicollectibles? prop, located KBDN. approval team, ~ lnr Nuu/a 297LKHitch$65,000. 541-419-9510 gion, sex, handicap, 627 14' Seadoo 1997 boat web site presence. Hiker 2007, All seafamilial status or naSell them in twin modified engines We Take Trade-Ins! Vacation Rentals tional origin, or intensons, 3 slides, 32' 210hp/1200lbs, fast Free Advertising. & Exchanges perfect for snow birds, tion to make any such The Bulletin Classifieds $5500. 541-390-7035 BIG COUNTRY RV left kitchen, rear preferences, l i m itaBend: 541-330-2495 E lounge, extras, must Ocean front house, tions or discrimination. 541-385-5809 Redmond: Winnebago Suncruiser34' see. Prineville Fleetwood D i scovery each walk from town, We will not knowingly 541-548-5254 541-447-5502 days 8 40' 2003, diesel mo- 2004, only 34K, loaded, accept any advertis2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, too much to list, ext'd 541-447-1641 eves. ing for r ea l e s tate torhome w/all 1/5th interest in 1973 Fireplace, BBQ. $95 16' O ld T o w n options-3 slide outs, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Cessna 150 LLC per night, 3 night MIN. which is in violation of Dennis, 541-589-3243 :o. Camper c a n oe, Q this law. All persons satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, Find It in 150hp conversion, low 208-342-6999 exc. cond, $ 750. are hereby informed etc. 3 2 ,000 m i l es. time on air frame and 881 The Bulletin Classifiedsl 541-312-8740 that all dwellings adWintered i n h e ated engine, hangared in 632 Travel Trailers 541-385-5809 vertised are available shop. $89,900 O.B.O. Bend. Exce//entperApt./Multiplex General on an equal opportu541-447-8664 formance & affordWEEKEND WARRIOR 17.5' Glastron 2002, nity basis. The Bulleable flying! $6,500. Toy hauler/travel trailer. CHECK YOUR AD Chevy eng., Volvo tin Classified 24' with 21' interior. 541-410-6007 outdrive, open bow, Sleeps 6. Self-con750 stereo, sink/live well, tained. Systems/ w/glastron tr a i ler, Redmond Homes appearancein good • Sno w m obiles • incl. b oa t c o v e r, condition. Smoke-free. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th Like new, $ 8 500. Newer large home on • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Cougar 33 ft. 2006, Tow with ~/2-ton. Strong 541-447-4876 ac r e s. EXT, $1000. G ulfstream S u n on the first day it runs almost 1/ 4 14 ft. slide, awning, suspension; can haul TV,full awning, excelsport 30' Class A to make sure it is cor- 3000 sq. ft., 3 bdrm, • Yamaha 750 1999 easy lift, stability bar, ATVs snowmobiles, lent shape, $23,900. 1988 ne w f r i dge, bumper extends for rect."Spellcheck" and 2~/2bath, landscaped Mountain Max, SOLD! even a small car! Great 541-350-8629 1974 Bellanca and fenced with RV • Zieman 4-place TV, solar panel, new human errors do ocextra cargo, all acprice - $8900. 1730A gates. $299,999. MLS refrigerator, wheelcur. If this happens to trailer, SOLD! cess. incl., like new Call 541-593-6266 201304622 Pam c hair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W your ad, please conAll in good condition. condition, stored in 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Lester, Principal Bro g enerator, Goo d tact us ASAP so that Located in La Pine. RV barn, used less 180 mph, excellent ker Century 21 Gold corrections and any Call 541-408-6149. 17' Cris Craft Scorpion, condition! $18,000 t han 10 t i mes l o Fifth Wheels condition, always Country Realty, Inc. obo 541-447-5504 adjustments can be c ally, no p et s o r fast & readytofish! I/O & 541-504-1338 (2) 2000 A rctic C at hangared, 1 owner made to your ad. smoking. $20,000 CAMEO LXI 2003, 35 ft. trolling motor. Lots of exZ L580's EFI with n e w Recreation by Design for 35 years. $60K. 541 -385-5809 O nan g e n . 36 0 0 , obo. 541-536-2709. electric start w/ tras! $5000. 541-318-7473 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. The Bulletin Classified Looking for your next covers, wired 8 plumbed for 2013 JAMEE 1982 20', reverse, low miles, both Top living room 5th In Madras, employee? low miles on it, W/D, 3 slides, Fan- wheel, has 3 slideouts, 2 Advertise your car! with new 2009 Place a Bulletin help excellent; self-contained. Runs tastic fan, ice maker, call 541-475-6302 Add A Picture! Have an item to Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, A/Cs, entertainment r ange top 8 o v e n wanted ad today and drive off/on w/double tilt, Great, everything Reach thousands of readers~ fireplace, W/D, sell quick? reach over 60,000 (never been used) center, works. $3,000. Catt 541-385-5809 lots of accys. Selling due garden tub/shower, in Executive Hangar very nice; $29,500. readers each week. 541-382-6494 The Bulletin Classffieds If it's under great condition. $42,500 at Bend Airport (KBDN) to m edical r e asons. Your classified ad 541-548-0625. or best offer. Call Peter, 60' wide x 50' deep, $6000 all. 541-536-8130 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, '500 you can place it in will also appear on 307-221-2422, w/55' wide x 17' high biinboard motor, g r eat CHECK YOUR AD bendbulletin.com Arctic Cat ZL800, 2001, ( in La Pine ) The Bulletin fold dr. Natural gas heat, cond, well maintained, which currently reshort track, variable $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 WILL DELIVER offc, bathroom. Adjacent Classifieds for: ceives over exhaust valves, electo Frontage Rd; great 1.5 million page tric s tart, r e verse, visibility for aviation busiRV '10 - 3 lines, 7 days views every month manuals, rec o rds, ness. Financing availCONSIGNMENTS at no extra cost. new spare belt, cover, able. 541-948-2126 or '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Creek Side 20' WANTED Bulletin Classifieds KOUNTRY AIRE on the first day it runs heated hand g rips, email 1)etjock@q.com We Do The Work ... 2010, used 8 (Private Party ads only) to make sure it is cor- You Get Results! nice, fast, $999. Call 1994 37.5' motorKeep The Cash! times, AC, flat Piper A rcher 1 9 80, Call 385-5809 or home, with awning, rect. "Spellcheck" and Tom, 541-385-7932, On-site credit 19.5' Bluewater '88 I/O, screen TV, oven, based in Madras, alhuman errors do ocplace your ad on-line and one slide-out, 634 approval team, new upholstery, new elecmicrowave, tub/ 860 ways hangared since at Only 47k miles cur. If this happens to web site presence. winch, much more. and good condition. Apt./Multiplex NE Bend shower, awning, new. New annual, auto bendbulletin.com your ad, please conMotorcycles & Accessories tronics, We Take Trade-Ins! $9500.541-306-0280 been stored, pilot, IFR, one piece tact us ASAP so that $25,000. Free Advertising. Call for Specials! windshield. Fastest Arnon-smokers, no corrections and any 2002 Blindside Five-0 541-548-0318 BIG COUNTRY RV Limited numbers avail. FIND IT! cher around. 1750 toHO Faf Bo 7996 adjustments can be (photo aboveis of a pets, 1 owner. Mojo 138 wakeboard, Bend: 541-330-2495 BUY IT! 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. made to your ad. w/nice bindings. $100. similar model & not the $13,900 obo. Redmond: W/D hookups, patios SELL IT! 541-475-6947, ask for actual vehicle) 541 -385-5809 541-382-6806 541-410-2360 541-548-5254 or decks. Rob Berg. The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classified 20' 1993 Sea Nympf Fish MOUNTAIN GLEN, 763 541-383-9313 & Ski, 50 hrs on new engine, fish finder, chart Professionally Recreational Homes plotter & VHF radio with managed by Norris 8 Completely & Property antenna. Good shape, Stevens, Inc. Rebuilt/Customized full cover, heavy duty 2012/2013 Award 637 Acres in forest trailer, kicker and electric 648 Winner west of Silver Lake, motors. Showroom Condition Houses for OR, with recreation $7500 or best offer. Many Extras cabin and stream. 541-292-1834 Rent General 541-480-7215 Low Miles. $77,000 PUBLISHER'S 771 PRlfucRNUCN! 541-548-4807 NOTICE Lots 20.5' Seaswirl SpyAll real estate adverder 1989 H.O. 302, tising in this newspaScreaming Eagle NW Bryce Canyon HD 285 hrs., exc. cond., per is subject to the 3438Lane, Electra Glide 2005, Lot ¹111 stored indoors for F air H o using A c t 103" motor, two tone Awbrey Park. l ife $ 9 90 0 O B O . which makes it illegal candy teal, new tires, $167,000. "any to a d vertise 23K miles, CD player, 541-379-3530 541-382-8559 preference, limitation hydraulic clutch, exor disc r imination cellent condition. 775 'Littie Red Corvette" based on race, color, Highest offer takes it. Manufactured/ religion, sex, handi541-480-8080. Mobile Homes cap, familial status, marital status or na20' Seaswirl 1992, 4.3L tional origin, or an in- Delivered and Set up P V6 w/OMC outdrive, open tention to make any '02 3/4 bd, 2 ba. 42,900 '10 2/3 bd, 2 ba. 47,900 bow, Shorelander trlr, nds such pre f e rence, 541-350-1782 some interior trim work. Nlonaco Dyna Y limitation or discrimi2004 Corvette Smart Housing LLC 2ppg . LOADEO! ~ nation." Familial staHonda Shadow/Aero $4500. 541-639-3209 Convertible so!id tus includes children 750, 2007 Black, 11K Ads published in the Fea atures include Coupe, 350, auto SPECIAL rs, 4-dr under the age of 18 FACTORY mi, 60 mpg, new de"Boats" classification counte New Home, 3 bdrm, with 132rniles gefs Surtace living with parents or micro, tachable windshield, include: Speed, fishfinished 1 'd e, convection 26-24 mpg Add lots legal cus t o dians, $46,500 Mustang seat 8 tires; ing, drift, canoe, • on your site. er, cepregnant women, and detachable Paladin bui!t in washer/drye more description and J and M Homes house and sail boats. people securing cusbackrest 8 luggage 541-548-5511 For all other types of interesting facts for ramic ti'le f!oor, TU,o tody of children under rack w/keylock.Vancewatercraft, please go gite dish, $99! Look how much 18. This newspaper Hines pipes, great FIND YOUR FUTURE to Class 875. • will not knowingly ac- HOME INTHE BULLETIN sound. Cruise control, ass-through n agirl couldhave in 541-385-5809 • cept any advertising audible turn signals d aking size bed Your auto, RV, motorcycle, tray, an asweet car likethisi for real estate which is Your future is just a page for safety. $4495 obo. AII for onlY in violation of the law. away. Whether you're looking Jack, 541-549-4949 boat, or airplane $72,5OP @49,000 O ur r e aders ar e for a hat or a place to hangit, 547-oOO-OOO 541-000-000 ad runs until it sells hereby informed that The Bulletin Classified is Street Glide 2006 black all dwellings adveryour best source. cherry metal f lake, tised in this newspaor up to 12 months good extras, 8 ,100 Every day thousandsof per are available on miles, will take some (whichever comes first!) an equal opportunity buyers and sellers of goods trade of firearms or basis. To complain of and services do business in small ironhead. Beautiful h o u seboat, these pages. They know discrimination cal l $85,000. 541-390-4693 Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" |n length, with border, $14,000. HUD t o l l-free at you can't beat TheBulletin www.centraloregon 541-306-8812 full color photo, bold headline and price. Classified Section for 1-800-877-0246. The houseboat.com. toll f re e t e l ephone selection and convenience GENERATE SOME exnumber for the hear- - every item isjust a phone • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. citement in your neigcall away. ing im p aired is borhood. Plan a ga1-800-927-9275. The Classified Section is • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED rage sale and don't easy to use. Everyitem forget to advertise in to over 30,000 households. 693 is categorized andevery classified! 385-5809. cartegory is indexed on the Victory TC 2002, Office/Retail Space • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over section's front page. runs great, many for Rent Serving Central Oregon since 1903 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon accessories, new Whether youare looking for tires, under 40K Spectrum Profession a home orneed aservice, • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com miles, well kept. al Bldg. several of- your future is in the pagesof Watercraft • The Bulletin Classified. fices for r ent. C a ll $5500 or P artial * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the Andy, 541-385-6732 9.5' Old Town Kayak with Trade/firearms or Jim at Exit Realty, paddles & life jacket, above publications. Private party ads only. The Bulletin 541-647-4232 541-480-8835 $190. 541-593-5312

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The Bulletin


E6 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 2013 • THE BULLETIN •

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

v

Automobiles •

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

"My little red Corvette" Coupe

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

l e~

1996, 350 auto, 132,000 miles. Non-ethanol fuel & synthetic oil only,

garaged, premium Bose stereo,

$11,000.

541-923-1781

932

Pickups

Oregon Aurnsnurce

I

Trucks 8 Heavy Equipment

1987 Freightliner COE 3axle truck, Cummins en-

530-515-81 99

Ford Ranchero 1979 with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677

gine, 10-spd, runs! $3900 obo. 541-419-2713

541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.com

%L

CORVETTE Convertible 2005 Automatic LS2 high performance motor, only 29k miles, Sterling S ilver, b l ack leather interior, Bose premium sound stereo, new quality tires and battery, car and

seat covers, many extras. Rec e ntly factory serviced. Garaged. Beautiful S uperCab car, Perfect cond.

Ford F250 2001, Triton V8, May '15 tags, ONLY 89K miles,

$29,700 SOLD!

$6495 obo 541-610-6150

International Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1

ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950.

5 CORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010 Grand Sport - 4 LT

loaded, clear bra hood & fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor Toyota Tacoma 4x4, mats, 17,000 miles, 1996 reg. cab, exc. Crystal red. glass & u p holstery, $45,000. AM/FM/disc, 4 cyl. 5 503-358-1164. spd, $5,150. La Pine, 541-419-5480.

541-306-1021

541-389-9569

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking

Backhoe 2007 John Deere 310SG, cab 4x4, 4-in-1 bucket Extendahoe, hydraulic thumb, loaded, like new, 500 hours. New $105,000. Sell 875,000. 541-350-3393

SOLD!

Ford F-150 2009

Super crew Cab ¹A03905 $34,988

and drives as new. Economical flying Satin Silver color with in your own black leather interior, IFR equipped Cessna 172/180 HP for mint dash. PS, P B, AC, 4 speed. Knock only $13,500! New offs. New tires. Fresh Garmin Touchscreen avionics center stack! 327 N.O.M. All Corvette restoration parts Exceptionally clean! in and out. $64,500. Hangared at BDN. CalI: 541 410-2870 Call 541-728-0773 T-Hangar for rent Ford Mustang Coupe at Bend airport. 1966, original owner, Call 541-382-8998. V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO.

$8,500. 541-480-3179

Ford Bronco 1981

4 speed 4x4, 302 engine, low miles, h eaders, roll b a r , hitch kit, good tires, straight body, runs great, $950.

Mustang GT 1995 red 133k miles, Boss 302

motor, custom pipes, 5 s p ee d m a n ual, power windows, custom stereo, very fast. $5800. 541-280-7910

541-350-7176

needs turbo seal. $3500 or best offer. 541-420-2323

Ford Thunderbird 1955, new white soft top, tonneau cover Oregon and upholstery. New AatoSource chrome. B e a utiful 541-598-3750 Car. $25,0 0 0 . aaaoregonautosource.com 541-548-1422

• ~lgpg

541-820-3724

Antique 8 Classic Autos

MGA 1959- $19,999 Convertible. O r iginal body/motor. No rust. 541-549-3838

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963 1 952 Ford Customline Coupe, project car, flathead V-8, 3 spd extra parts, & materials, $2000

~ Oo MOre PiXat Bendbijletil).CO m

I,

Nissan 350Z 2005 Black, excellent condition, 22,531 gently driven miles, 1 owner, non-smoker, $14,000.

Jeep Grand C herokee 1 9 99, 1 59,970 mile s . 4WD, au t o matic transmission, cloth interior, power everything, A/C, trailer hitch. Well maintained & runs great. $3850. 541-385-5286

Toyota Venza 2012 XLE AWD wagon, 9k $28,988 ¹031994

Oregon

AutoSource 541-598-3750 aaaoregonautosource.com

Porsche 911 Carrera 993cou e

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior,

moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

Mustang 1966 2 dr. Buick Century Limited coupe, 200 cu. in. 6 runs gr e a t, cyl. Over $12,000 in- 2000, beautiful car. $3400. vested, asking $9000. 541-312-3085 All receipts, runs good. 541-420-5011 What are you looking for? You'll find it in

Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., Chevy C-20 Pickup 530 HP! Under 10k 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model The Bulletin Classifieds miles, Arctic silver, .I gray leather interior, CST /all options, orig. Must Sell! Health forces new quality t i res, owner, $19,950, sale. Buick Riviera 1991, and battery, Bose 541-923-6049 541-385-5809 classic low-mileage car, premium sound stegaraged, pampered, Chevy 1955 PROJECT reo, moon/sunroof, Buick Lucerne CXS car. 2 door wgn, 350 non-smoker, exclnt cond, car and seat covers. 2006 Sports sedan, $4300 obo 541-389-0049 small block w/Weiand Many extras. Gaacceptable miles, all dual quad tunnel ram the nice features you'll raged, perfect conwith 450 Holleys. T-10 want, truly an exc. buy dition $5 9 ,700. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, at $8000. Come 8 see 541-322-9647 Weld Prostar wheels, no charge for looking. extra rolling chassis + Ask Buick Bob, extras. $6500 for all. Find exactly what 541-318-9999 541-389-7669. Plymouth B a r racuda you are looking for in the D o r ado People Look for Information 1966, original car! 300 Cadillac E / CLASSIFIEDS hp, 360 V8, center- 1994, T otal C r e a m About Products and Puff! Body, paint, trunk lines, 541-593-2597 Services Every Day through as showroom, blue The BulletinClassllfeds PROJECT CARS: Chevy leather, $1700 wheels Porsche Carrera 911 convertible with 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & w/snow tires although 2003 50K miles, car has not been wet in hardtop. Chevy Coupe 1950 new factory Porsche rolling chassis's $1750 8 years. On t rip to motor 6 mos ago with ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Boise avg. 28.5 mpg., 18 mo factory warcomplete car, $ 1949; $5400, 541-593-4016. ranty remaining. Cadillac Series 61 1950, $37,500. 2 dr. hard top, complete 541-322-6928 Chevy Nova - 1976, w/spare f r on t cl i p ., $3,400. $3950, 541-382-7391 Rebuilt 327 engine. Toyota Camrys: Call Matt 541-280-9463. 933 1904, SOLD; Pickups 1985 SOLD; Chevrolet Corvette Coupe 2007, 20,700 1986 parts car mi., beautiful cond. only one left! $500 3LT loaded, victory Call for details, two-tone recl, 541-548-6592 leather, powerseats, Chevy Wagon 1957, with logos, memory, 4-dr., complete, VW Passat TDI 2013, $7,000 OBO / trades. Chevy 2500 HD 2003 headsupdisplay, 2k miles. $28,000. Please call 4 WD w o r k t ru c k , nav., XM, Bose, tilt, 619-733-8472 541-389-6998 140,000 miles, $7000 chrome wheels, upobo. 541-408-4994. graded drilled slotChrysler 300 C o upe ted b rake r o tors, Looking for your 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, extra insulation, alnext employee? auto. trans, ps, air, ways garaged, seriPlace a Bulletin help frame on rebuild, reous only $36,500. wanted ad today and painted original blue, 541-771-2852. reach over 60,000 original blue interior, readers each week. original hub caps, exc. Chevy Silverado 2004 Your classified ad chrome, asking $9000 HD 2500 2WD auto- Chrysler Concord 2001 4 door sedan, good will also appear on or make offer. matic V-8, 6.0L, excond., 63k mi., $2900. bendbulletin.com 541-385-9350 tended cab, canopy, 541-548-6860 which currently reAC, Cruise, G reat CLASSIC CARS ceives over 1.5 milT ow P k g. ! P o w e r wanted for lion page views tinted windows & 1st Annual C.O. Sat. every month at l ocks, AM/FM C D , Market Car Show! no extra cost. BulleFully carpeted bed ThisSat. Au ust10th tin Classifieds canopy. Only 26,345 in downtown Bend. Get Results! Call Chrysler Newport People's Choice Awards miles. $18,000. 385-5809 or place 541-546-5512 Entry fees donated to lo(2) 1962 4 door sedans, your ad on-line at al "Words forWheels" leave message on $2500 and $5500. bendbullefin.com Info: 541-420-9015 Answering machine La Pine, 541-602-8652.

I

©

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E

C I R CUIT

COURT FOR THE STATE O F OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. U.S BANK N A TIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS

M ORGAN M O R T G AGE T RUS T 2 006-A3, its s u c cessors in interest and/or ass i gns, Plaintiff, v . UNKNOWN HEIRS OF NONDA S U NDAY CLARK AKA NONDA SUNDAYCLARK FKA N ONDA L . H ARW ICK; DAR W I N EUGENE SUNDAY AND DAN I ELLE BETH SMITH INDIVIDUALLY AND AS SUCCESSOR

CO-TRUSTEES OF

THE NONDA SUNDAY CLARK LIVING TRUST DATED SEPTEMBER 7, 2006; JPMORGAN

C HASE BANK , N .A.; RIVE R ' S EDGE O W N ERS ASSOCIATION, I NC.; STATE O F O REGON; OC C U P ANTS O F T H E P REMISES; A N D THE REAL PROPERTY L O C ATED AT 3148 NORTHWEST QUIET RIVER LANE, BEND, O R E GON

97701, Defendants. Case No. 1 3CV0111. S U MMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEFENDANTS:

UNKNOWN HEIRS OF NONDA SUNDAY CLARK AKA NONDA SUNDAYCLARK FKA N ONDA L . H A R -

WICK: In the name of the State of Oregon, y o u are hereby required to

above-entitled Court

541-480-9822 GMC V~ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low 95 Peterbilt 35 9 p o tablemile, exceptional, 3rd water t r uck, 1 9 9 0, owner. 951-699-7171 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" h o ses, camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000.

1000

Legal Notices

appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the

Jeep Grand Cherokee 2011 Overland. 29k mi. ¹6407. $35,988

Mitsubishi Fuso 1995 14' box truck with lift gate, 184,000 miles,

1000

Legal Notices

TRUSTEE FOR J.P.

Antique & Classic Autos

Superhavvk Corvette Coupe 1964 Ownership Share 530 miles since frame off restoration. Runs Available!

1000

Legal Notices

a nd cause on o r before the expiration of 30 days from the date of the first p ublication of t h i s summons. The date of first publication in this matter is July, 17, 2013. If you fail timely to appear and answer, plaintiff will apply to the above-entitled court for the relief prayed for in its complaint. This is a j u d icial foreclosure o f a d eed of t r us t i n which the p l aintiff r equests that t h e plaintiff be allowed to foreclose your interest in the f ollowing d e s c ribed real property: LOT THIRTY-NINE (39), R IVER'S EDG E VILLAGE, P HASE 111, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly k nown a s : 31 4 8 N orthwest Qui e t River Lane, Bend, Oregon 97701. NOTICE TO D E FENDANTS: REA D T HESE PA P E RS CAREFULLY! A

l awsuit has b e e n started against you in th e a b o ve-entitled court by U.S Bank National Association, as trustee for J.P. MORGAN M ortgage Trus t 2006-A3, p l a intiff. Plaintiff's claims are stated in the written complaint, a copy of which was filed with the a b ove-entitled C ourt. You mu s t "appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he court a legal document called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "an-

swer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or ad-

ministrator within 30 days of the date of first publ i cation

s pecified her e i n along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof o f service on t h e plaintiff's a t t orney or, if t h e p l aintiff does not have an a ttorney, proof o f service on the plaintiff. If you have any questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may contact the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Re f e rral S ervice online a t www.oregonstatebar.org or by calling (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This

summons is issued pursuant to ORCP 7. RC O L E G AL, P.C., Michael Botthof, OSB ¹113337, mbotthof@rcolegal. com, Attorneys for P laintiff, 51 1 S W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205, P: (503) 977-7840, F: (503) 977-7963.

LEGAL NOTICE

LEGAL NOTICE

check, the real prop-

CIR C U IT erty commonly known E l k horn COURT O F THE COURT O F THE as 6 1 37 6 STATE OF OREGON STATE OF OREGON Street, Bend, Oregon 97702, an d f u r ther DESCHUTES DESCHUTES Lo t COUNTY, C i t iMort- COUNTY. Wells d escribed as , IN

THE

CIR C U IT

IN

THE

Fargo Bank, N.A., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Jin W. Lee; and Occupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0834. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL D ER WRIT OF E X - PROPERTY. Notice is ECUTION REAL hereby given that I will PROPERTY. Notice is o n S eptember 2 6 , hereby given that I will 2013 at 1000 AM in on August 27, 2013 at the main lobby of the 10:00 AM in the main Deschutes Co u n ty l obby of t h e D e s - Sheriff's Office, 63333 chutes County W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff's Office, 63333 Oregon, sell, at public W. Highway 20, Bend, o ral auction t o t h e Oregon, sell, at public h ighest bidder, f o r o ral auction to t h e cash o r ca s hier's h ighest bidder, f o r check, the real and cash o r cas h ier's personal pro p erty check, the real prop- commonly known as erty commonly known 2448 NE Snow Wilas 3427 NE Sandallow Court, Bend, Orwood Drive, B end, egon 97701, and furOregon 97701, and t her d escribed a s , further described as, LOT ONE (1) THE L OT T H R EE (3), WILLOWS, PHASE I, SANDALWOOD DESCHUTES PHASE 1 , DES- COUNTY, OREGON. CHUTES COUNTY, and 1 99 0 G o l den OREGON. Said sale West m a nufactured is made under a Writ home, Home Informaof Execution in Fore- t ion N o . 353 6 2 9 , closure issued out of Manufacturer's Home the Circuit Court of ID No(s). the State of Oregon GWDWO4DS112546 for the County of Des- A and chutes, dated June GWDW04DS112546B 26, 2013. The Notice HUD No(s). ORE of Sale will be pub- 249435 a n d ORE lished in The Bulletin, 249436. Said sale is a newspaper of gen- made under a Writ of eral circulation in DeExecution in Forecloschutes County, Orsure issued out of the egon, on the following C ircuit Court of t h e dates: July 24, 2013; State of Oregon for July 31, 2013; August the County of Des7, 2013; and August chutes, dated J une 14, 2013. B E FORE 20, 2013. The Notice BIDDING A T TH E of Sale will be pubSALE, A PROSPEClished in The Bulletin, TIVE BIDDER a newspaper of genSHOULD INDEPENeral circulation in DeDENTLY I N V ESTI- schutes County, OrGATE: (a)The priority egon, on the following of the lien or interest dates: July 31, 2013; of t h e jud g ment August 7, 2013; Aucreditor; (b) Land use gust 14, 2013; and laws and regulations August 21, 2013. BEapplicable t o the FORE BIDDING AT property; (c)ApTHE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER proved uses for the gage, Inc., its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff/s, v. T revor J . Ost b y ; Megan A. Berg; US Bank, NA; Deschutes County; and O ccupants of the Premises, D efendant/s. C a s e No.: 12CV0560. NOTICE OF SALE UN-

property; (d)Limits on f arming o r for e s t practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO

Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Portland, OR 97205,

503-977-7840. Condi-

tions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e . LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Anthony Raguine, Civil Technician. Date: July 13,

SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY I N V ESTI-

GATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of t h e jud g ment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable t o the

property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d) Limits on f arming o r for e st practices on the propof erty; (e) Rights neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. Attorney: Michael T h ornicroft, OSB ¹981104, RCO Legal, P.C., 511 SW 10th Ave., Ste. 400,

Portland, OR 97205, 503-977-7840. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to re-

view bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County 2013. Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a yment must be made in full LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT immediately upon the COURT O F THE close of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, STATE OF OREGON Deschutes Co u n ty FOR THE COUNTY S c ot t B. OF DES C HUTES, Sheriff. Haynes, Civil TechniProbate Department, In the Matter of the cian. Date: July 29, Estate of M A RILYN 2013. M. ROSS, Deceased, Case No. 13PB0091. BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS NOTICE TO INTER- Search the area's most ESTED P E RSONS. comprehensive listing of NOTICE IS HEREBY classified advertising... GIVEN that the u n- real estate to automotive, dersigned has been merchandise to sporting appointed p e r sonal goods. Bulletin Classifieds representative. All appear every day in the print or on line. persons having claims against the estate are Call 541-385-5809 required to p r esent www.bendbulletin.com them, with vouchers attached, to the unThe Bulletin Serv ngCentrai Oregon s>ncei903 dersigned p e rsonal representative at 747 LEGAL NOTICE SW Mill View Way, IN T H E CI R CUIT Bend, Oregon 97702, COURT O F THE within four m o nths STATE OF OREGON after the date of first DESCHUTES publication of this noCOUNTY. F e d eral tice, or the claims may National M o r tgage be barred. All perAssociation, its sucsons whose r i ghts cessors i n i n t erest may be affected by and/or assigns, Plainthe proceedings may tiff/s, v . Un k n own obtain additional inHeirs of P atrick C. f ormation from t h e McGinnis; Jennifer M. records of the court, McGinnis; Brittany A. the personal repre- McGinnis; J e n nifer sentative, or the lawMcGinnis as General yers for the personal G uardian o f Br i a n representative, Ryan McGinnis; J e n nifer P. Correa. Dated and McGinnis as General first published on July Guardian o f Erik 31, 2013. DUNCAN A. McGinnis; J e n nifer ROSS, Personal Rep- McGinnis as General resentative. G uardian o f Ev a n M cGinnis; State o f Oregon; D e schutes Sell an Item Property Ma n agement; andOccupants of the premises, Defendant/s. Case No.: 12CV0609. NOTICE

FAST! If it's under 6500

you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: $10 • 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days

(Private Party ads only)

O F S AL E

U N DER

WRIT O F E X ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. N o t ic e is hereby given that I will o n S eptember 2 4 , 2013 at 10:00 AM in

the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r cas h ier's

Two, Elkhorn Estates Phase 1,2 and 3, Deschutes County, Ore gon. Said sale i s made under a Writ of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of the C ircuit Court of t h e State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated July 1, 2013. The Notice of Sale will be published in Th e B u lletin, a

view bidder's funds. Only U.S. c urrency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. P a y ment must be made in full immediately upon the c lose of t h e s a l e. LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff. Anthony Raguine, Civil Technician. Date: July 23, 2013.

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CIR C U IT THE newspaper of general COURT O F c irculation i n D e s - STATE OF OREGON DESCHUTES chutes County, Or-

egon, on the following dates: July 31, 2013; August 7, 2013; August 14, 2013; and August 21, 2013. BE-

COUNTY. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for M eritage M o rt-

gage

2005-2,

Plaintiff/s, v. Gonzalo O. Najar; R a mona Najar; Mort g age Electronic R e gistration Systems, Inc. as GATE: (a)The priority N ominee C/0 M e r itage Mortgage Corof the lien or interest of t h e j ud g ment poration, an Oregon creditor; (b)Land use Corporation and Perlaws and regulations sons or Parties Unknown Claiming Any applicable t o the Right, Title, Lien or property; (c)ApInterest in the Propproved uses for the property; (d) Limits on erty Described in the Her e in, f arming o r for e s t Complaint practices on the prop- D efendant/s. C a s e of No.: 11CV1072. NOerty; (e)Rights neighboring property TICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXowners; and (f) EnviECUTION - REAL ronmental laws and regulations that affect PROPERTY. Notice is the property. Attorney: hereby given that I will Dirk Schouten, OSB on September 3, 2013 ¹115153, RCO Legal, a t 10:00 AM i n t h e P C., 511 S W 1 0 t h main lobby of the DeCount y Ave., Ste. 400, Port- s chutes l and, O R 9720 5 , Sheriff's Office, 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, 503-459-0138. Conditions of Sale: Poten- Oregon, sell, at public tial bidders must ar- o ral auction t o t h e h ighest bidder, f o r rive 15 minutes prior ca s h ier's to the auction to allow cash o r the Deschutes County check, the real property commonly known Sheriff's Office to review bidder's funds. a s 1364 N W 1 9 t h Only U.S. c urrency Street, Redmond, Orand/or cashier's egon 97756, and furchecks made payable t her d escribed a s , to Deschutes County LOT 1 , F O R REST DESSheriff's Office will be C OMMO NS , accepted. P a yment CHUTES C O UNTY, must be made in full OREGON. Said sale is made under a Writ immediately upon the close of t h e s a l e. of Execution in Foreclosure issued out of LARRY B L A NTON, Deschutes Co u n ty the Circuit Court of Sheriff. S c o t t B. the State of Oregon Haynes, Civil Techni- for the County of Deschutes dated April 29 cian. Date: July 29, 2013. The Notice of 2013. Sale will be published LEGAL NOTICE in Th e B u lletin, a IN T H E CIR C UIT newspaper of general COURT O F THE c irculation i n D esSTATE OF OREGON chutes County, OrDESCHUTES egon, on the followCOUNTY. Deutsche ing dates: July 24, Bank Trust Company 2013; July 31, 2013; Americas as Trustee August 7, 2013; and for RALI 2006QA4, its August 14, 2013. BEsuccessors in interest FORE BIDDING AT and/or assigns, Plain- THE SALE, A PROtiff/s, v. Adam Peter- SPECTIVE B IDDER s on; Samantha D . SHOULD INDEPENLoza; Fo x b orough DENTLY IN V E STIHomeowners Asso- GATE: (a)The priority ciation, Inc.; JPMor- of the lien or interest gan Chase Bank, as of t h e jud g ment Successor to Wash- creditor; (b) Land use ington Mutual Bank; laws and regulations Wadden Research 8 applicable t o the W riting ASC, L L C ; property; (c)Apand Occupants of the proved uses for the Premises, property; (d)Limits on D efendant/s. C a s e f arming o r for e s t No.: 12CV0575. NOpractices on the propTICE OF SALE UNerty; (e) Rights of DER WRIT OF EXneighboring property ECUTION REAL owners; and (f)EnviP ROP ERTY. Notice is ronmental laws and hereby given that I will regulations that affect o n September 1 0 , the property. Attorney: 2013 at 10:00 AM in Craig A . P e t erson, the main lobby of the OSB ¹120365, RobinDeschutes Co u n ty son Tait, P.S., 710 Sheriff's Office, 63333 Second Avenue, Suite W. Highway 20, Bend, 7 10, S e attle, W A Oregon, sell, at public 98104, 206-676-9640. o ral auction t o t h e C onditions of S a le h ighest bidder, f o r Potential bidders must cash o r ca s h ier's arrive 15 minutes prior check, the real prop- to the auction to allow erty commonly known the Deschutes County as 20632 R edwing Sheriff's Office to reLane, Bend, Oregon view bidder's funds. 97702, an d f u r ther Only U.S. c urrency d escribed as , L O T and/or cashier's SEVENTY (70), checks made payable FOXBOROUGH-PHA to Deschutes County SE 2, DESCHUTES Sheriff's Office will be COUNTY, OREGON. accepted. P a yment Said sale is made un- must be made in full der a Writ of Execu- immediately upon the tion in Foreclosure is- close of t h e s a l e. sued out of the Circuit LARRY B L A NTON, Court of the State of Deschutes Co u n ty Oregon for the County Sheriff. Anthony Raof Deschutes, dated guine, Civil TechniJune 25, 2013. The cian. Date: July 23, Notice of Sale will be 2013. published in The Bulletin, a newspaper of LEGAL NOTICE general circulation in Deschutes C o unty, Redmond Fire 8 Oregon, on the folRescue lowing dates: July 24, Public Notice Regular Board 2013; July 31, 2013; August 7, 2013; and Meeting August 14, 2013. BE- Notice of Ordinance FORE BIDDING AT ¹2 to be Considered THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER The second reading SHOULD INDEPENand consideration of DENTLY I N V ESTI- the Notice of OrdiGATE: (a)The priority nance ¹2 Authorizof the lien or interest ing th e I n t ergovof t h e j ud g ment ernmental creditor; (b)Land use Agreement Creatlaws and regulations ing a P ublic Proapplicable t o the curement Authority will occur at Redproperty; (c)Approved uses for the mond Fire & Resproperty; (d) Limits on cue, 341 NW Dogf arming o r for e st w ood Aven u e , practices on the prop- Redmond, Oregon erty; (e)Rights of on August 14, 2013 neighboring property at t h e Dis t rict's owners; and (f) EnviBoard Meeting beronmental laws and ginning at 7:00 p.m. regulations that affect Copies o f the the property. Attorney: planned ordinance Michael T h ornicroft, a re a v ailable a t OSB ¹981104, RCO R edmond Fire & Legal, P.C., 511 SW R escue, 341 N W 10th Ave., Ste. 400, Dogwood Avenue, Portland, OR 97205, Redmond, Oregon 503-977-7840. Condi- 9 7756. Age n d a tions of Sale. Potenitems include: Mintial bidders must arutes from July 10, rive 15 minutes prior 2013 Board Meetto the auction to allow ing and the District's the Deschutes County Finance, D i vision, Sheriff's Office to reIT, and Fair reports. FORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE B IDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY IN V E STI-


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