Bulletin Daily Paper 06/15/10

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Gearing up for a big week

Get down and dirty with compost

Bike fans in Central Oregon have a lot to look forward to • SPORTS, D1

AT HOME, F1

WEATHER TODAY

TUESDAY

Partly cloudy High 68, Low 36 Page C6

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Empathy, duty drive searchers to volunteer Volunteers in the Kyron Horman case included Central Oregonians Inside

By Lauren Dake

• Search is scaled back, but “the process is not over,” authorities say, Page C3

Raymond Lee, with Crook County Search and Rescue, didn’t wait for someone to call him to help look for the missing 7-year-old Portland boy. As soon as he heard on the news that the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office would be asking for help from searchand-rescue volunteers around the state, he started to prepare. He doublechecked his two backpacks, one full of

The Bulletin

overnight gear — extra socks, a tent, sleeping bag — and his small daypack. “I have two grandsons about the same age,” Lee said. “With a small child like that, you pull all the plugs. You don’t sit back.” Crook County Sheriff’s Office sent 13 volunteers to help Multnomah County officials search for Kyron Horman, a second-grader who was last seen at Skyline Elementary School on June 4. See Search / A5

CITY OF BEND PROGRAM

Few builders make use of fee deferrals

Can you help? Authorities are asking anyone with information about the case of 7-yearold Kyron Horman, who was last seen at Portland’s Skyline Elementary School on June 4, to call the tip line at 503-261-2847.

Impact of initiative difficult to assess amid slump in construction industry

A SPRING DAY AT SPARKS LAKE

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Nearly two years into a city of Bend program intended to stimulate development, 17 companies and individuals have used it to defer certain development fees. The city has deferred $291,561 in fees for 25 projects since the program began, and developers have paid off $175,000 so far, according to city data and an interview with City Finance Director Sonia Andrews. To put that in perspective, the city expects to receive a total of $3.8 million in development fees during the 200911 biennium, spokesman Justin Finestone wrote in an e-mail. The City Council extended the program last year. It is set to run through August. The city charges fees, known as system development charges, to pay for the impact of construction on sewers, streets and the water system. The developers who received the most fee deferrals are Mike

&

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Sunshine snow M

Highway on Monday morning. Mount Bachelor is in the background. The forecast for the

rest of the week includes temperatures in the 70s and partly cloudy skies.

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

MINNEAPOLIS — As a sheriff’s deputy dumped the contents of Joy Uhlmeyer’s purse into a sealed bag, she begged to know why she had been arrested while driving home to Richfield after an Easter visit with her elderly mother. No one had an answer. Uhlmeyer spent a sleepless night in a frigid Anoka County holding cell, her hands tucked under her armpits for warmth. Then, handcuffed in a squad car, she was taken to downtown Minneapolis for

MON-SAT

We use recycled newsprint

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Related • In some cases, debtors are fighting back in court, Page A2 booking. Finally, after 16 hours in limbo, jail officials fingerprinted Uhlmeyer and explained her offense — missing a court hearing over an unpaid debt. “They have no right to do this to me,” said the 57-year-old patient care advocate, her voice as soft as a whisper. “Not for a stupid credit card.” See Debt / A2

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Chad Elliott, 17, outgoing Mountain View High School Cadet Chief Petty Officer, places a flag along the Newport Avenue bridge in Bend on Monday morning to mark Flag Day and the beginning of Flag Week.

Vol. 107, No. 166, 42 pages, 7 sections

In a story headlined “Best path to a stronger food chain?” which appeared June 14 on Page A1, an amendment by Sen. Jon Tester, DMont., was incorrectly described. It would exempt food processing facilities with less than $500,000 in annual income from new safety regulations. The Bulletin regrets the error.

Rob Kerr The Bulletin

E2

Comics

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Local

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Business

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Community

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Crossword

Is the Internet making teenagers do more dumb things than ever? Some child specialists worry that it is. Teenagers have always been prone to taking foolish risks (thanks partly to the prefrontal cortex, which governs decision-making and is still developing in adolescence). But with the rise of sites like YouTube, these experts say, teens now face virtual peer pressure to emulate all kinds of dangerous stunts and dares, and post them online. There is not data to demonstrate whether Web-inspired recklessness is really increasing or whether teenagers are taking the same risks as earlier generations — just finding it easier to document idiotic exploits. But some doctors say that at the very least, the Internet is causing adolescents to ratchet up the danger level. See Teens / A4

Correction

TOP NEWS INSIDE

INDEX Abby

New York Times News Service

The Bulletin

IN CONGRESS

KICKING OFF FLAG WEEK

The Bulletin

By Keith Chu WASHINGTON—Freshly returned from a trip to the oil-tainted Louisiana coast, U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., on Monday released a plan to reduce the country’s reliance on foreign oil. M e r k l e y ’s plan concentrates on relatively noncontroversial items such as home and commercial energy efficiency, increasing auto fuel efficiency and encouraging quicker adoption of electric vehicles with research and implementation funding. It comes as the U.S. Senate inches forward on an energy bill scheduled for sometime this year and lawmakers consider ways to respond to the devastating spill in the Gulf of Mexico. See Oil / A4

down one of the snowmelt-swollen tributaries to Sparks Lake from the Cascade Lakes

By Chris Serres and Glenn Howatt

Virtual audience may be fueling a rise in stupid teenage tricks By Tara Parker-Pope

ike Barker, 62, right, and his wife, Sherrie Barker, 60, of Jefferson, paddle their kayaks

No debtors prisons here anymore – or are there?

Merkley floats plan to wean U.S. off of foreign oil

Tennant, through his company, Tennant Developments, and Yelas Developments. Both received deferrals on five single-family homes, for a total amount of $59,300 each, according to data from the city of Bend. Most of the projects that received deferrals were single-family homes. Developers also received deferrals on one light industrial building and one commercial building. The impact of the deferrals on the city’s budget has been “not much,” Andrews said. For Rick Wight, the managing member of Wight Development LLC, the program has made a difference. Wight is slowly building out a subdivision in northeast Bend, off Eagle Road. And for two homes there, he took advantage of a city of Bend program that began in August 2008 and allows builders and developers to defer payment of development fees for up to nine months. See Fees / A4

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Sports

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Movies

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Stocks

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Obituaries

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Weather

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IRAQ: New parliament convenes, but political fights continue, Page A3

OIL SPILL: Obama tries to boost hopes, economy in the Gulf, Page A3


A2 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

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Glen Stubbe/ Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Joy Uhlmeyer goes through some of her legal papers last month in Richfield, Minn. Uhlmeyer was arrested on Easter and spent a night in jail for a debt she owed on a credit card. Now, she is fighting to get back the money that was spent on her bail.

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Oregon Lottery Results As listed by The Associated Press

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawn are:

13 20 28 37 41 42 Nobody won the jackpot Monday night in the Megabucks game, pushing the estimated jackpot to $8.4 million for Wednesday’s drawing.

Continued from A1 It’s not a crime to owe money, and debtors prisons were abolished in the United States in the 19th century. But people are routinely being thrown in jail for failing to pay debts. In Minnesota, which has some of the most creditor-friendly laws in the country, the use of arrest warrants against debtors has jumped 60 percent over the past four years, with 845 cases in 2009, a Star Tribune analysis of state court data has found. Not every warrant results in an arrest, but in Minnesota many debtors spend up to 48 hours in cells with criminals. Consumer attorneys say such arrests are increasing in many states, including Arkansas, Arizona and Washington, driven by a bad economy, high consumer debt and a growing industry that buys bad debts and employs every means available to collect. Whether a debtor is locked up depends largely on where the person lives, because enforcement is inconsistent from state to state, and even county to county. In Illinois and southwest Indiana, some judges jail debtors for missing court-ordered debt payments. In extreme cases, people stay in jail until they raise a minimum payment. In January, a judge sentenced a Kenney, Ill., man “to indefinite incarceration” until he came up with $300 toward a lumber yard debt. “The law enforcement system has unwittingly become a tool of the debt collectors,” said Michael Kinkley, an attorney in Spokane, Wash., who has represented arrested debtors. “The debt collectors are abusing the system and intimidating people, and law enforcement is going along with it.” How often are debtors arrested across the country? No one can say. No national statistics are kept, and the practice is largely unnoticed outside legal circles. “My suspicion is the debt collection industry does not want the world to know these arrests are happening, because the practice would be widely condemned,” said Robert Hobbs, deputy director of the National Consumer Law Center in Boston.

The rise of aggressive debt collectors Debt collectors defend the practice, saying phone calls, letters and legal actions aren’t always enough to get people to pay. “Admittedly, it’s a harsh sanction,” said Steven Rosso, a partner in the Como Law Firm of St. Paul, which does collections work. “But sometimes, it’s the only sanction we have.” The laws allowing for the arrest of someone for an unpaid debt are not new. What is new is the rise of wellfunded, aggressive and centralized collection firms — in many cases run by attorneys — that buy up unpaid debt and use the courts to collect. Three debt buyers — Unifund CCR Partners, Portfolio Recovery Associates Inc. and Debt Equities LLC — accounted for 15 percent of all debt-related arrest warrants issued in Minnesota since 2005, court data show. The debt buyers also file tens of thousands of other collection actions in the state, seeking court orders to make people pay.

The debts — often five or six years old — are purchased from companies like cell phone providers and credit card issuers, and cost a few cents on the dollar. Using automated dialing equipment and teams of lawyers, the debt-buyer firms try to collect the debt, plus interest and fees. A firm aims to collect at least twice what it paid for the debt to cover costs. Anything beyond that is profit. Portfolio Recovery Associates of Norfolk, Va., a publicly traded debt buyer with the biggest profits and market capitalization, earned $44 million last year on $281 million in revenue — a 16 percent net margin. Encore Capital Group, another large debt buyer based in San Diego, had a margin last year of 10 percent. By comparison, Wal-Mart’s profit margin was 3.5 percent. Todd Lansky, chief operating officer at Resurgence Financial LLC, a Northbrook, Ill.-based debt buyer, said firms like his operate within the law, which says people who ignore court orders can be arrested for contempt. By the time a warrant is issued, a debtor may have been contacted up to 12 times, he said. “This is a last-ditch effort to say, ‘Look, just show up in court,’ ” he said.

‘Why wasn’t I told about it?’ Few debtors realize they can land in jail simply for ignoring debt-collection legal matters. Debtors also may not recognize the names of companies seeking to collect old debts. Some people are contacted by three or four firms as delinquent debts are bought and sold multiple times after the original creditor writes off the account. “They may think it’s a mistake. They may think it’s a scam. They may not realize how important it is to respond,” said Mary Spector, a law professor at Southern Methodist University’s Dedman School of Law in Dallas. A year ago, Legal Aid attorneys proposed a change in Minnesota law that would have required law enforcement officials to let debtors fill out financial disclosure forms when they are apprehended rather than book them into jail. No legislator introduced the measure. Uhlmeyer said she defaulted on a $6,200 Chase credit card after a costly divorce in 2006. The firm seeking payment was Resurgence Financial, the Illinois debt buyer. Uhlmeyer said she didn’t recognize the name and ignored the notices. Uhlmeyer walked free after

her nephew posted $2,500 bail. It took another $187 to retrieve her car from the city impound lot. Her 86-year-old mother later asked why she didn’t call home after leaving Duluth. Not wanting to tell the truth, Uhlmeyer said her car broke down and her cell phone died. “The really maddening part of the whole experience was the complete lack of information,” she said. “I kept thinking, ‘If there was a warrant out for my arrest, then why in the world wasn’t I told about it?’ ”

A vicious circle of debt One afternoon last spring, Deborah Poplawski, 38, of Minneapolis, was digging in her purse for coins to feed a downtown parking meter when she saw the flashing lights of a Minneapolis police squad car behind her. Poplawski, a restaurant cook, assumed she had parked illegally. Instead, she was headed to jail over a $250 credit card debt. Less than a month earlier, she learned by chance from an employment counselor that she had an outstanding warrant. Debt Equities, a debt buyer, had sued her, but she says nobody served her with court documents. Thanks to interest and fees, Poplawski was now on the hook for $1,138. Though she knew of the warrant and unpaid debt, “I wasn’t equating the warrant with going to jail, because there wasn’t criminal activity associated with it,” she said. “I just thought it was a civil thing.” She spent nearly 25 hours at the Hennepin County jail. A year later, she still gets angry recounting the experience. A male inmate groped her behind in a crowded elevator, she said. Poplawski also was ordered to change into the standard jail uniform — gray-white underwear and orange pants, shirt and socks — in a cubicle the size of a telephone booth. She slept in a room with 12 to 16 women and a toilet with no privacy. One woman offered her drugs, she said. The next day, Poplawski appeared before a Hennepin County district judge. He told her to fill out the form listing her assets and bank account, and released her. Several weeks later, Debt Equities used this information to seize funds from her bank account. The firm didn’t return repeated calls seeking a comment. “We hear every day about how there’s no money for public services,” Poplawski said. “But it seems like the collectors have found a way to get the police to do their work.”

MINNEAPOLIS — Herman Button listened in stunned silence as a judge in Perry County, Ind., threatened him with jail time unless he agreed to pay $25 a month toward an eight-year-old housing debt. Unemployed and living on a disability check, Button decided to fight back after the January 2009 hearing. He and an attorney from Indiana Legal Services appealed, citing the Indiana Constitution’s Bill of Rights, which says “there shall be no imprisonment for debt, except in case of fraud.” A state appeals court judge agreed. “I’m no lawyer, but I knew we abolished debtors prisons in this country a very long time ago,” said Button, 50, who now lives in Hawesville, Ky. The Button case highlights a potential pitfall for creditors that use the law enforcement system to collect old debts. Most state constitutions, including Minnesota’s, have clauses dating to the 1850s that expressly prohibit the jailing of people for their debts. As legal actions against debtors intensify, attorneys are taking a fresh look at these clauses. “We have created a de facto debtors prison system in the United States that is largely unconstitutional,” said Judith Fox, a law professor at Notre Dame Law School. “In some parts of the country, people are so fearful of arrest they are scrambling to pay money they might not even owe.”

Different states, different rules In states such as Indiana and Illinois, people are being locked up for not making court-ordered payments. Known as “pay or stay,” the system can mean days in jail and multiple arrests for the same debt. Some legal experts say the practice is unconstitutional because the arrest is directly linked to the failure to pay a debt. In Minnesota, the issue is less clear because warrants to arrest debtors are issued for disobeying court orders, such as not filling out a financial disclosure form and missing a required hearing, not for failure to pay debt. So long as a debtor fulfills the court order, he or she can avoid incarceration. “It looks on the surface like debtors prison,” said William Ross, a law professor at Samford University’s Cumberland School of Law in Birmingham, Ala. “But it’s really not, because the person isn’t being

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“We have created a de facto debtors prison system in the United States that is largely unconstitutional. In some parts of the country, people are so fearful of arrest they are scrambling to pay money they might not even owe.” — Judith Fox, law professor at Notre Dame Law School punished for the debt, but for failing to appear.” In Illinois, the issue is more straightforward.

Case studies Jack Hinton of Kenney, Ill., was sentenced to jail indefinitely in January after he fell behind on a court order that he pay $150 a month on a debt of $6,440. According to a court transcript, Hinton, then a self-employed roofing contractor, said he broke his neck and back in a fall from a roof and filed for disability. The judge got upset after learning that Hinton used $1,000 for other bills rather than his court-ordered payments. Hinton was ordered to the county jail indefinitely until he could come up with $300. After three hours in a holding cell, his wife got him released by borrowing $300 on a credit card. He is considering a challenge to the ruling on constitutional grounds. “I couldn’t pay, and I was stuck in jail until I did,” he said. “How is that any different from debtors prison?” In Button’s case, the judge threatened him with jail if he didn’t pay $25 a month toward a $1,865 judgment. After Button twice said, “I can’t,” Judge Lucy Goffinet responded, “I’m not going to accept, ‘I cannot,’ and if the next words out of your mouth are ‘I cannot,’ Mr. Button, then you’ll sit ... at the sheriff’s department until you find a way that, yes, you can,” according to the transcript. Alan White, a law professor at Valparaiso University in Indiana, says even the threat of jail for debts is unconstitutional. He also questioned the practice — common in Minnesota and elsewhere — of bail being set at the amount of the debt. “If, in effect, people are being incarcerated until they pay bail, and bail is being used to pay their debts, then they’re being incarcerated to pay their debts,” he said.

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THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 A3

T S Ted Kennedy was a magnet Iraqi rivals deadlocked as new parliament meets for death threats, FBI file shows Factions tussling over presidency, other top jobs By Leila Fadel The Washington Post

BAGHDAD — More than three months after Iraq’s national elections, parliament convened for less than 20 minutes Monday as the country awaited a new government. The session opened, and members took their oaths. But they then postponed their first order of business: choosing the president. Political blocs are still deep in negotiations over who gets Iraq’s top government jobs. The government that emerges will be the one that rules as the

United States pulls out of Iraq. By the end of the summer, only about 50,000 U.S. troops will remain in Iraq despite the lack of a government. Analysts and officials estimate that the political factions are likely months away from forming a government. When Iraq’s last parliament convened, it took more than a month to choose a president. In the March 7 elections, the Iraqiya bloc of secular Shiite Ayad Allawi narrowly won a plurality of parliamentary seats. But Shiite incumbent Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, whose party

came in a close second, is battling to keep his job. The deeper issues of the nation were apparent in the short session. The followers of fiery Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who strongly opposes the U.S. military role in Iraq, threatened to walk out in the days before Monday’s session to protest the presence of U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill. “We all told them to be disciplined,” said Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, a Kurdish member of the new parliament. The Sadrists stayed for the session and took the oath that was read in Kurdish and Arabic.

GULF COAST OIL SPILL

on the youngest brother’s life, and prompted fears that he, too, would be targeted by an assassin’s bullet. He died last year at 77 after fighting brain cancer.

By Andrew Miga and Glen Johnson The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — For decades after gunmen shot down his brothers, Sen. Edward Kennedy lived under constant assassination threats of his own, sometimes chillingly specific, as he became a target for extremist rage, previously private FBI documents disclosed Monday. Five years after President John F. Kennedy was killed and shortly after Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was shot, one letter warned that the third brother was next: “Ted Kennedy number three to be assassinated on Oct. 25, 1968. The Kennedy residence must be well protected on that date.” Nearly two decades later, in 1985, the threats continued, this time including the Republican president as well as the Democratic senator: “Brass tacks, I’m gonna kill Kennedy and (President Ronald) Reagan, and I really mean it.”

Threats came from ‘multiple sources’ Releasing 2,352 pages from Kennedy’s FBI file, many of them concerning threats over the years, the agency said on its website: “These threats originated from multiple sources, including individuals, anonymous persons and mem-

Not much on Chappaquiddick

The Associated Press

Most of the secret FBI files on the late Sen. Edward Kennedy that were released Monday concern death threats against him. bers of radical groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, ‘Minutemen’ organizations and the National Socialist White People’s Party.” Some of the threats prompted investigations, some resulted in warnings to Kennedy or local law enforcement authorities. There is no indication any attempts were carried out. In 1977, the FBI looked into allegations that Sirhan Sirhan — the man who assassinated Robert Kennedy — had attempted to hire a fellow prisoner to kill Ted Kennedy. The prisoner, who was housed next to Sirhan for 18 months, told the FBI he was offered $1 million and a car but declined. President Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. Robert Kennedy was slain in Los Angeles on June 6, 1968. Their deaths cast a long shadow

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President Barack Obama and Gov. Bob Riley of Alabama, center, listen during a tour of an oil containment facility in Theodore, Ala. on Monday. Obama started a two-day tour of the area affected by the BP oil spill on Monday, with planned stops in Mississippi, Alabama and Florida as well.

Obama tries to lift economy – and mood – during Gulf visit By Helene Cooper and Henry Fountain New York Times News Service

THEODORE, Ala. — President Barack Obama on Monday stepped up his efforts to limit the economic fallout from the oil spill, announcing steps to assure consumers that seafood from the Gulf of Mexico is safe and promoting tourism in the region as BP, under pressure from the White House, agreed to accelerate the cleanup. On his fourth trip to the region since the rig explosion that set off the leak, Obama visited Mississippi and Alabama a day before he was to deliver a nationally televised address from the Oval Office in his most visible step yet to show that his administration is in command of what he has called the nation’s worst environmental disaster. After a meeting with Gov. Haley Barbour of Mississippi and Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana in Gulfport, Miss., Obama urged Americans to come down to visit the area’s beaches, many of which were virtually deserted Monday. “There’s still a lot of opportu-

BP took risks to save time, money, documents show Internal BP documents, show a pattern of risky choices made to save time and money in the weeks before the April 20 blowout, according to a letter sent to the oil company by the leaders of a House committee Monday. The committee leaders cited five areas in which the company had made decisions that “increased the danger of a catastrophic well,” including choosing the design of the well and assuring that it was properly sealed on the top. — New York Times News Service

nity for visitors to come down here,” Obama said after the meeting at the Coast Guard station in Gulfport. The president made a point of

eating local seafood at lunch in Gulfport and again for dinner in Orange Beach, Ala., where he ordered crab claws, crawfish tails, ribs and nachos. Meanwhile, responding to a request by the administration over the weekend, BP announced a plan to siphon 40,000 to 53,000 barrels of oil a day from its leaking well by the end of June, up from the current 15,000 barrels a day. In a letter to Rear Adm. James Watson, the government’s onscene commander of the spill cleanup, Doug Suttles, BP’s chief operating officer, said that by today a drill ship, the Q4000, would be able to burn 5,000 barrels to 10,000 barrels of oil a day collected through pipes connected to the so-called choke line at the wellhead. By the end of the month, Suttles wrote, BP will add to the capacity by connecting a large flexible pipe to a second line at the wellhead, called the kill line. This oil would be collected by a ship that can handle 20,000 barrels to 25,000 barrels a day.

Supreme Court rules against deportation in minor drug cases By Robert Barnes The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Immigrants convicted of minor drug offenses should not face automatic deportation, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously Monday, a decision that could allow thousands of legal immigrants the chance to argue for leniency from immigration judges. The court overruled the legal interpretations of the federal government and a lower appeals court in saying that Jose Angel Carachuri-Rosendo should have had a chance to make his case for

staying in the country. Carachuri-Rosendo, a legal resident who had lived in the U.S. since he was 5, was deported to his native Mexico after being convicted of possessing a single tablet of Xanax and serving a 10-day sentence. He had been convicted of possessing a small amount of marijuana a year earlier and received a 20-day sentence. In an opinion by Justice John Paul Stevens, the court said that was not what Congress had in mind when it mandated automatic deportation for any immigrant convicted of an aggravated felony.

The government had contended that Carachuri-Rosendo’s second conviction put him in that category, even though local prosecutors did not increase the second offense to a more serious drug-trafficking charge. “We do not usually think of a 10-day sentence for the unauthorized possession of a trivial amount of a prescription drug as an ‘aggravated felony,’ “ Stevens wrote. Immigrants who break the law should receive the chance to plead their case before an immigration judge rather than face automatic deportation, he said.

Most of the documents released Monday are about death threats and extortion attempts against the Massachusetts Democrat. There is relatively little on a major controversy, Kennedy’s car accident on Chappaquiddick Island that killed Mary Jo Kopechne, a young woman who had been a worker in Robert Kennedy’s campaign. The files do show that the FBI was told almost immediately of the accident and Kennedy’s involvement, but authorities kept his identity quiet at the start. Kopechne drowned after Kennedy drove the car in which she was riding off a bridge into a pond. He swam to safety, leaving her in the car.

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A4 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Oil Continued from A1 Meanwhile, the political and popular momentum for passing a bill regulating greenhouse gases has stalled. Against that backdrop, now is a time when his ideas can gain traction, Merkley said, in a speech at the liberal Center for American Progress. “We have a chance to insert this plan into the current debate,” he said. “This is a key moment of opportunity.” Nick Berning, a spokesman for the environmental group Friends of the Earth, said Merkley’s plan is limited, but it lacks the serious flaws of many of the larger energy bills that have been introduced this year, including the cap-and-trade bill by Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn. From the point of view of environmental groups, that includes support for experi-

mental clean coal programs, as well as offsets that could allow companies to emit more greenhouse gases than government caps. “When you look at some of the specific provisions out there (before now) they leave a lot to be desired,” Berning said. “We welcome some strong proposals even if they’re not comprehensive.” Several pieces of Merkley’s plan come from bills he’s already introduced, including a measure to expand the development and use of electric cars he’s co-sponsored with Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn. Merkley rejected increased U.S. oil exploration as a solution to the nation’s reliance on foreign oil, citing data that the U.S. posesses roughly 3 percent of world oil reserves, but makes up about a quarter of the world’s demand. Congressional Republicans have differed on the need for contin-

C OV ER S T OR I ES ued offshore oil and gas exploration, following the spill, but several prominent GOP leaders, including Rep. Mike Pence, R-Ind., and the congressional Republican website, gop.gov, continue to call for offshore drilling as a way to reduce foreign oil imports. Merkley also wants the White House to set new automobile fuel efficiency standards that increases gas mileage by about 6 percent annually, once the current standards lapse in 2016. Merkley called for truck mileage to increase by more than 60 percent by 2030. Automakers have occasionally bristled at federal fuel economy targets. Last week, though, an auto trade group defended the most recent fuel standards in court filings, saying national rules are necessary to avoid confusing state-by-state targets. And in May, the same trade group, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, asked federal regulators

Teens Continued from A1 A few weeks ago, Dr. E. Hani Mansour, a burn specialist in Livingston, N.J., treated a teenager who had been severely burned after lighting fireworks. This was not your father’s fireworks accident. The boy had filled the family bathtub with fireworks, covered his body in protective clothing and set up a video camera to record the event. The resulting explosion, which the teenager later said he had hoped to post on YouTube, created a fireball that left the boy with burns on about 14 percent of his body. “Boys have been trying to be rocket scientists for many years,” said Mansour, medical director of the burn center at St. Barnabas Medical Center. “But now we’re seeing it in a more brazen way. They’re doing it for the purpose of filming it.”

Flaming basketballs and the choking game Indeed, what distinguishes many of today’s young burn victims is that unlike their counterparts from the past, they fully expect to create a flaming spectacle, and often take basic precautions like covering their skin. Last winter, a 15-year-old boy tried to film his attempt at shooting a basket — with a flaming basketball. He wore layers of clothing to protect his skin and doused the ball in gasoline before lighting it. But when he threw the ball, his clothing caught fire. The young man is recovering, Mansour said, but he will have lasting scars from second- and

Fees Continued from A1 “I’m a firm believer in it, and I hope they continue it,” Wight said of the program. “I would continue to use it, if they continue to offer it.” The deferred payment helps in the current economic climate, with banks reluctant to issue loans to developers, Wight added. When the city issues a deferral, it puts a lien on the property involved to ensure the developer will eventually pay. The developer cannot obtain a certificate of occupancy until he or she has paid the development fee, said Community Development Director Mel Oberst. Normally, the fees are charged at the beginning of the development process. Under the deferral program, builders can apply to pay them up to nine months later or when they apply for a certificate of occupancy, whichever comes first. This means developers don’t need to borrow as much money at the front end of a project. The program was the brainchild of Andy High, the government affairs director of the Central Oregon Builders Association. It was one of the first such ini-

The Associated Press file photo

A teenage boy suffered burns on about 14 percent of his body recently when he filled the family bathtub with fireworks and lit them after setting up a video camera to record the explosion, which he had hoped to post on YouTube. third-degree burns on his chest, abdomen and thighs. A search on YouTube for “flaming basketball” turns up more than 100 videos. In a presentation for the American Burn Association, Mansour studied 46 Web videos focused on “fire tricks.” Although a few involved adults, most participants appeared to be 13 to 20, and a few looked even younger. In April, Canadian researchers reported on the growing number of online videos documenting recreational asphyxiation, commonly called “the choking game.” The 65 videos showed young people intentionally choking themselves to create a brief high. Although the game has been around for decades (there is even a reference in a British medical journal from the 1890s), some experts are concerned that the

Web is giving it new popularity. The 65 videos had been viewed nearly 174,000 times, according to the report, in the journal Clinical Pediatrics. “YouTube is advertising these activities, getting a broader audience and informing people how to do these things,” said the lead author, Dr. Martha Linkletter, a pediatrics resident at IWK Health Center in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

tiatives in the state, but it’s difficult to assess whether it has succeeded, High said Monday. One issue is that homebuilding has slowed dramatically, so relatively few developers are working on projects, High said. He referred to Deschutes County statistics, which show the number of building permits issued in Bend from July 2009 to April 30 was about half what it was in the same period two years ago. High also blamed low utilization of the deferral program on the Bend Park & Recreation District, which has resisted the builders association’s calls to defer its development fees. The district’s fees are about $3,800, so some developers figure they might as well pay all the fees at once, High said. Nonetheless, he plans to push for Bend to extend the program. “Some people are taking advantage of it, and I know it’s helping,” High said.

a real heck of a lot of people using it,” said Councilor Tom Greene. “I don’t personally see anything wrong with (the program), if it’s getting contractors and people to work.” Greene said he would probably support an extension if the subject arises, although he also wants to examine the fiscal impact. Mayor Kathie Eckman said she hasn’t heard much feedback about the program, but she is willing to considering extending it. “I would have an interest in extending it for sure, because I don’t think things have bounced back at all,” Eckman said. Councilor Jeff Eager said he would have to take more time to investigate the issue, before saying whether he supports an extension of the fee deferral. “I’d want to look at it in more detail in terms of what the cost has been,” Eager said. The fees are used for infrastructure, and Eager said that is an important part of economic recovery. “If a new industrial employer comes to town, we need sewer and water and transportation capacity to serve that,” Eager said.

Some councilors are supportive Several members of the Bend City Council said Monday they might favor another extension of the program, although it might not come before them for a decision until August. All councilors voted for the program in 2008. “It didn’t seem like there were

A warning system?

As search crews on Monday found the 20th victim of the flash floods that ripped through a remote Arkansas camping area last week, local residents and officials began turning their attention to the financial effect of the disaster. Officials said that they expected to begin assessing the prop-

erty damage today at the Albert Pike campground, which took the brunt of the blow when more than 23 feet of water swept through early Friday. The area, part of the Ouachita National Forest, has about 200 campsites, many of which have cabins that people use as vacation homes or permanent residences. “Now that we’re getting a better

Keith Chu can be reached at 202-662-7456 or at kchu@bendbulletin.com.

recently conducted a study in which a MySpace persona called Dr. Meg reached out to teenagers who used their pages to boast of drinking or sexual exploits. “Are you sure that’s a good idea?” asked Dr. Meg, who went on to explain why they might want to remove the information. The note also warned them about the risks of sexually transmitted diseases. Teenagers contacted by Dr. Meg were twice as likely to remove references to sex or substance use during the next three months as those who were not contacted, according to the study, published in The Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine. Beyond the obvious risks of when young people film dangerous stunts, some doctors are intrigued by how the Internet may be influencing normal adolescent development. Moreno notes that one of the distinguishing characteristics of early adolescence is the “imaginary audience” — the self-conscious feeling that everybody is watching you. “For kids in middle school, a really normal part of that is the perception that you’re onstage, and that everybody is looking at you,” said Moreno. “But for kids today it’s a different world they’re growing up in. It’s a world where there really is that audience.”

AFGHANISTAN

Setbacks cloud plans to withdraw U.S. troops By Peter Baker and Mark Landler New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Six months after President Barack Obama decided to send more forces to Afghanistan, the halting progress in the war has crystallized longstanding tensions within the government over the viability of his plan to turn around the country and begin pulling out by July 2011. Within the administration, the troubles in clearing out the Taliban from a second-tier region and the elusive loyalties of the Afghan president have prompted anxious discussions about whether the policy can work on the timetable the president has set. For now, the White House has decided to wait until a review, already scheduled for December, to assess whether the target date can still work. But officials are emphasizing that the July 2011 withdrawal start will be based on conditions in the country, and that the president has yet to decide how quickly troops will be pulled out. Persistent violence in the southern area around Mar-

jah, which was supposed to be an early showcase of the new counterinsurgency operation, has reinforced doubts in Washington about the current approach — doubts only fueled by President Hamid Karzai’s abrupt dismissal of two security officials widely trusted by the Americans. As he manages that situation, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the commander in Afghanistan, said last week that operations in the Taliban heartland of Kandahar “will happen more slowly than we originally anticipated.” As a result, some inside the administration are already looking ahead to next year, said a senior administration official who, like others interviewed, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal conversations. The official said skeptics like Vice President Joe Biden, who opposed a new commitment of troops during last fall’s strategy review, favors rethinking the approach, while others who supported more troops, like Gen. David Petraeus, want to stay the course.

Dr. Brad Cockman & Dr. Vivian Rockwell Are currently accepting new and existing patients at

Bend Chiropractic Clinic 541-382-5422 Are You in Pain? Feel Good Again! Walk-Ins Welcome Insurance & Medicare Billing Complete Care Available for Auto, Sports and On-the-Job Injuries 1289 NE Second St., Suite 3 Bend, OR 97701

Some experts say YouTube, MySpace and the like should be used to alert teenagers to the consequences of risky behavior. Mansour said his hospital planned to launch a YouTube video depicting the pain and scars of burn accidents. Dr. Megan Moreno, an adolescent medicine specialist at the University of Wisconsin,

Hillary Borrud can be reached at 541-617-7829 or at hborrud@bendbulletin.com.

Deadly Arkansas flood also took a toll on property New York Times News Service

to begin planning for the next round of fuel efficiency targets as soon as possible, to give car makers time to prepare. The cost of Merkley’s plan could be one of its largest hurdles in a tight budget year, but because his office has yet to release the measure as a bill, no price tag was available. He’s also calling for more “advanced biofuels” — plant-based fuels that don’t come from ethanol — which are generally considered more environmentally friendly than the corn-based fuel. Finally, Merkley’s plan includes the creation of a National Energy Security Council, which would coordinate the energy efficiency programs and recommend other ways to cut oil consumptions.

handle on the human toll of this disaster, we can start looking at the property and financial loss,” said Matt DeCample, a spokesman for Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe. The governor issued a disaster declaration on the day of the flood, and in the coming days his office will assess the damage to determine what, if any, federal aid to request, DeCample said.

THANK YOU CENTRAL OREGON! Still over 4500 pairs of boots left, we are wheeling and dealing and they must all go. Our entire $2,000,000 inventory will be liquidated, including fixtures, glass cases, and antiques.


C OV ER S T ORY

Reality TV fracas brings more rough seas for teen sailor

W B

By Catherine Saillant Los Angeles Times

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — The parents of teen sailor Abby Sunderland ran into their own squall Monday, answering criticism that her father was working on a reality TV show deal as the 16-year-old set off on her roundthe-world trip. Laurence Sunderland told reporters outside the family’s Thousand Oaks home that he had been approached about a reality TV show months ago with Magnetic Entertainment, a Los Angelesbased production company. However, he said he cut ties with Magnetic a few weeks after Abby set off on her solo voyage due to a falling-out with producers. The father said he wanted a show that would depict his family as a kind of modern-day Swiss Family Robinson, with “inspiring kids doing inspirational things.” Their eldest son, Zac Sunderland, was 17 when he completed his own solo circumnavigation of the globe last summer, at the time the youngest sailor in the world to do so. Six months later, Abby boarded “Wild Eyes,” her 40-footsloop, and sailed out of Los Angeles’ Marina del Rey, intent on setting her own record. She was rescued by Australian and French responders last week after heavy seas Abby snapped off the Sunderland boat’s carbonfiber mast in the middle of the Indian Ocean. The TV deal went sour just weeks into Abby’s journey, the father said, when the producers were unable to sell his concept. Sunderland said he then learned that one of Magnetic’s partners was planning to take a different angle: that Laurence and his wife, Marianne, were sending their daughter on an all-but-certain death trip. “They were assuming Abigail was going to die out there,” he said in a brief interview Monday. Calls to the number listed on Magnetic’s website were not returned. The website lists a halfdozen projects in development, including three Sunderland-related pitches, a comic-book franchise and “Ropin’ with the Coopers,” a reality pilot about a family of rodeo artists.

Renewed criticism News about the botched deal brought a fresh wave of criticism to the Sunderlands, a devout Christian couple who don’t watch TV and home-school their brood of seven children — with another due any day. “Abby Sunderland’s Dad Shopping a Reality Show — Is She Balloon Girl?,” went the headline on Bonnie Fuller’s blog, Hollywood Life, in a typical post. Commenters galore agreed, suggesting that the Sunderlands had negligently allowed the teenager to embark on the trip that was doomed from the start. “Why did Mr. Sunderland do so? To promote his idea of a ‘Sunderland’ reality show” wrote Kenneth Treuter on the Hollywood Life blog. But the couple also has ardent defenders who admire the spirit of adventure that they are instilling in their children. “Sooner or later you have to let go and trust that something — inner resilience, good karma, the skills you’ve tried to impart — carries your child through,” wrote columnist Sandy Hingston in Philadelphia Magazine. “That’s what Laurence Sunderland is telling the world.” Sunderland, a career shipwright, on Monday said he has spent $250,000 financing Zac and Abby’s sailing trips. After Zac completed his voyage, the family produced a documentary called “Intrepid” that is for sale on the Internet. They plan to do the same for Abby, the father said. Abby also sells T-shirts and other items to help pay for her trip, he said. He would have welcomed revenue from a reality TV show as long as it contained a positive message for families, he said. “It’s good to see kids who are doing things other than playing on the computer or watching TV,” he said.

THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 A5

Don Ryan / The Associated Press

Children play during recess Monday outside Portland’s Skyline Elementary School, where 7-yearold Kyron Horman, who has been missing for over a week, was a student.

Search Continued from A1 Jefferson County sent two deputies, and Sgt. Scott Shelton, Deschutes County Search and Rescue coordinator, said Deschutes sent one deputy and 14 volunteers. “Our motto is, ‘Be prepared,’” Lee said. “And I’m not the only one that does this. Everyone in our team does.” Cpt. Drew Brosh, with the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office, said an estimated 1,300 people from all over the state helped search for the young boy. He believes it could be the largest search undertaking in Oregon. And although the boy has yet to be found, he said the volunteers were crucial. Search-andrescue volunteers are trained by their local sheriff’s offices and certified by the state. “(You need) fresh legs, fresh eyes,” he said. The large-scale search effort ended Monday morning. The case is now a criminal investigation. Lee spent Friday and his en-

“If they call us, I would be there at the drop of a hat. I would be there before they hung the phone up. And it wouldn’t just be me, the team (would be) with me.” — Raymond Lee, with Crook County Search and Rescue, on the possibility of being asked to help further with the Kyron Horman case

tire weekend searching for the boy. The terrain was rough, with searchers wading through blackberry bushes and stinging needles. “Everyone out there had one goal, to bring that little boy home,” Lee said. Community members helped where they could. One woman filled her car trunk with Gatorade and handed the bottles out to volunteers. Jillian McIntosh, 32, went

with her husband and their 2year-old Belgian Tervuren dog, Anya, who is trained to track human scent. “The support and outpouring from the community was incredible,” McIntosh said. “Usually we go on searches and we have to be self-sufficient and bring our own food and water. We’re on our own for 42 hours in the field. To have that much outpouring from the public, donation of food and volunteers who came in to cook for us....” Lee and McIntosh and the rest of their team stayed at the inmate-free Wapato Jail overnight. It was disappointing to head back Sunday morning without finding Kyron. Lee said if officials ask for any more help, he and his team would be there. “If they call us, I would be there at the drop of a hat,” he said. “I would be there before they hung the phone up. And it wouldn’t just be me, the team (would be) with me.” Lauren Dake can be reached at 541-419-8074 or at ldake@bendbulletin.com.

Kyrgyzstanis seek Russian intervention

Blasts kill 5 , injure scores at Kenya rally

OSH, Kyrgyzstan — As four days of ethnic violence in southern Kyrgyzstan threatened to build into a major refugee crisis Monday, both sides of the conflict were calling on Russia to step in, saying thirdparty peacekeepers were needed to defuse standoffs between Uzbeks and Kyrgyz. But an emergency meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, a regional alliance dominated by Russia, ended Monday without a commitment to send in troops, although President Dmitry Medvedev called the situation “intolerable” and intimated that troops could be deployed if conditions worsened. Last week’s events have introduced a host of new fears. Four days after armed mobs began raiding Uzbek neighborhoods in the southern city of Osh, the demographics of southern Kyrgyzstan have been redrawn. As many as 80,000 ethnic Uzbeks were believed to have crossed the border into Uzbekistan, which Monday announced it could accept no more refugees. The proportions of the violence were coming into focus slowly, and estimates of the dead were still unreliable. Kyrgyz officials gave the toll as 125 dead and nearly 1,500 wounded.

NAIROBI, Kenya — Two explosions ripped through a park in Kenya’s capital during a packed political rally late Sunday, killing five people and wounding at least 75, officials said. The rally was held to protest a draft constitution the country will vote on in August. The president and prime minister support it, but several prominent political leaders do not. Prime Minister Raila Odinga said officials don’t yet know the cause of the blasts. “I want to say clearly that the government will do everything possible to get to the root of this incident. We must condemn this,” he said.

Palestinian gunmen kill Israeli policeman JERUSALEM — Palestinian gunmen opened fire on a police vehicle in the West Bank on Monday, killing an Israeli police officer and wounding two others, police said. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the incident occurred near Hebron, where hard-line Jewish settlers live in enclaves amid tens of thousands of Palestinians. There was no claim of responsibility. But Rosenfeld said police were treating the incident as an attack by Palestinian militants, and were searching the area for suspects. — From wire reports

Kyrgyzstani special forces troops ready their rifles as they prepare to drive under fire from an airport to the center of the city of Osh on Monday. Sergei Grits The Associated Press


A6 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

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B

Tech Focus A new Wi-Fi buzz at Starbucks, see Page B3.

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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 2010

MARKET REPORT

s

2,243.96 NASDAQ CLOSE CHANGE +.36 +.02%

t

CLOSE 10,190.89 DOW JONES CHANGE -20.18 -.20%

t

1,089.63 S&P 500 CLOSE CHANGE -1.97 -.18%

s

BONDS

Ten-year CLOSE 3.27 treasury CHANGE +1.24%

t

$1223.20 GOLD CLOSE CHANGE -$5.70

STOC K S R E P O R T EXECUTIVE FILE

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

B U S I N E SS IN BRIEF AG warns about Medicare scam Attorney General John Kroger warns Oregon Medicare recipients not to provide personal information to anyone calling about the Medicare $250 rebate check. Beginning this month, many Medicare recipients will receive a one-time, tax-free $250 rebate check. Those who qualify will automatically receive the check, and do not need to provide additional information or take any action to receive it, according to a news release from the Oregon Department of Justice. Most Medicare drug plans have a coverage gap that can leave recipients paying the full cost of their prescriptions out-ofpocket, the news release notes. The one-time $250 rebate is the government’s first step toward closing the coverage gap. Medicare recipients can ensure the government has their correct home address by calling Social Security at 1-800-772-1213. For more information, or to report a scam artist, call 1-800-Medicare. Additionally, the AG’s Consumer Hotline can help with rebate questions at 1-877-877-9392.

Separating

FACT from FICTION

“The results of a polygraph examination can have a significant impact on a person’s life. Conducting an accurate exam that confirms that a person is being truthful is very satisfying.” — Peter and Becky Wanless

Bend couple find rewarding career in polygraph testing

Airport boardings up in Redmond Passenger boardings at Redmond Airport increased 3.25 percent last month over April’s tally, according to figures from the airport. In May, 18,451 passengers flew out of Redmond Airport, an increase of 581 over the 17,870 that boarded planes in April. So far this year, Redmond Airport has recorded 90,256 boardings, a 2.59 percent increase over the first five months of 2009

Microsoft introduces Kinect game system LOS ANGELES — Looking to outdo Nintendo and its popular Wii, Microsoft on Monday officially introduced Kinect, its camera-based, motion-control game system. The company also announced that it had redesigned its Xbox 360 game console, making it smaller and quieter, and adding a built-in hard drive and Wi-Fi. The new Xbox, which will still cost $299, will be available at retail stores this week. Nintendo reinvented the video game business several years ago with the Wii and its motion-sensitive controller. Kinect, which will be released on Nov. 4 (its price has not been announced), tries to one-up the Wii by eliminating the controller. Using advanced camera technology and software, Kinect recognizes a person who is merely standing in front of a television and allows the user to wave, lean or kick to drive a virtual car, run a virtual race or compete in a virtual dance contest. — From staff and wire reports

Retail sales rise Total monthly sales for retail trade and food services fell 1.2% in May. Seasonally adjusted

$362.5B $365 billion

355

345

335 2009

2010

Source: Department of Commerce AP

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Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Peter and Becky Wanless, at their Bend Polygraph Services LLC office in Bend, say their tests are designed to evoke a yes or no answer. “You want the subject to clearly understand the question,” Peter Wanless says. “If there is any confusion, they are not really answering the question you ask them. A polygraph exam is not about tricking somebody.”

By Andrew Moore The Bulletin

Think of a polygraph examination and you might conjure up images of a dark, smoke-filled room with a sweaty subject nervously eyeing a needle scrawling wavy lines of red ink across a scrolling paper. Nothing could be further from the truth, say Peter and Becky Wanless, licensed polygraph operators and owners of Bend Polygraph Services LLC. Polygraphs, also known as lie detectors, have been used as dramatic or comedic tools in numerous films and television shows. But most of those depictions are inaccurate, they say. First off, the Wanlesses’ polygraph isn’t a seismograph-like device but a small data-input device that feeds physi-

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ological information from three different sensors into sophisticated software on their laptop computers. Second, there is no smoky room, glaring lamp or prying investigator. The Wanlesses’ exam rooms are casual, clean offices with comfortable reclining chairs, and they approach their work with an al-

most indifferent, surgeonlike precision. As an example, the Wanlesses, both licensed Oregon polygraph examiners, spend vastly more time with the subject reviewing the exam’s questions before the exam than they do actually conducting the exam. Indeed, Peter Wanless said an exam takes roughly 20 minutes, while another 90 minutes are typically spent preparing for the exam. In addition to reading the questions to the subject and ensuring he or she understands them before the exam, the questions will then be repeated three to five times during the exam and they’re always worded exactly the same way, Wanless said. Each question is designed to evoke a yes or no answer. See Polygraph / B5

Awaiting the genome project payoff It’s still a work in progress as far as drug development is concerned

Francesca Santini, a research fellow at Merck’s automated biotechnology facility, holds a bucket containing cells that make up the entire human genome in North Wales, Pa.

By Andrew Pollack New York Times News Service

NORTH WALES, Pa. — At Merck’s “automated biotechnology facility” here, robot arms adapted from automobile factories deftly shuttle plates containing human cells. Assisted by the robots and other complex machinery, scientists are studying what happens to the cells as each of the roughly 22,000 human genes is turned off. They hope to find the genes involved in different diseases, the starting point for creating a drug. It is a merger of sophisticated biology and brute force made possible only because the Human Genome Project provided the identity of all the human genes. But as with so much else that has spun off from the genome project, it is also an expensive gamble, with success far from assured. “Can I point to a single drug

Laura Pedrick New York Times News Service

right now that this has facilitated?” said Michele Cleary, Merck’s senior director for automated biotechnology. “No, because we are in the early stages of this. There’s information feeding into the early stages of the pipeline that we’ll see the fruits of in years to come.” Ten years after President Bill Clinton announced completion of the first draft of the Human Genome Project, in June 2000,

its application to drug development is still, at best, a work in progress. But while many genetics scientists outside the drug industry say the project has had few medical benefits, industry researchers urge a wait-and-see patience. In fact, some of the first drugs based on genomic studies are now starting to reach the market. Several new “targeted” cancer drugs, for in-

stance, block the effects of genetic abnormalities that spur tumor growth. A drug from the biotech giant Amgen, an osteoporosis treatment called Prolia, was approved two weeks ago. The company got its initial clue for the drug by making different genes in mice overactive. Mice with one particular overactive gene had unusually thick bones. See Genome / B2

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$18.402 SILVER CLOSE CHANGE +$0.180

New tax is likely to make tanning costlier By David Holley The Bulletin

A new 10 percent federal excise tax starting July 1 will likely make it a little costlier to brown yourself inside your favorite tanning salon. The tanning tax, intended to be passed along to consumers, increases the cost of tanning services by 10 percent at salons. A part of the federal health care legislation enacted this year, the tax only impacts indoor tanning salons and is not charged to health and fitness centers that also provide members with tanning services, according to federal regulations. “What they’re trying to do is keep people from tanning,” said Jennifer Harpole, owner of Totally Tan in Redmond. “It’s unfortunate that they think of tanning like they do.” While the 10 percent tax would raise the cost of tanning services, adding $1.50 to the cost of a $15 tan, for example, it would not be charged on other products sold by a tanning salon, such as $2 protective eye wear, according to the federal regulations. And gyms or fitness centers that sell package memberships, which might include tanning, don’t have to pay a tax on any portion of the membership, according to the regulations. But tanning salons can’t avoid the tax by allowing members to access exercise classes or pieces of exercise equipment, regulations say. Snap Fitness on Northeast Fourth Street has one tanning bed and won’t be affected by the new tax. “Tanning is just a small, small part of our business,” said Anne Barrans, Snap Fitness’ owner. “It’s a nice option for people who want it.” See Tanning / B5

FINANCIAL REFORM

Giving in on trading, bankers shift their fight to derivatives By Edward Wyatt New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Bankers have all but given up on defeating one of the most contentious provisions in the financial regulation bill — one that would effectively bar federally insured banks from trading for their own accounts — and are now focusing on battles like heading off a prohibition on derivatives trading. As House and Senate negotiators head into a final push to send the legislation to President Barack Obama, they have largely agreed to stricter limits on so-called proprietary trading than those envisioned in the versions passed by either chamber. That outcome would be a victory for the White House and for the provision’s most dogged advocate, Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve chairman. But with the so-called Volcker Rule now likely to become law after appearing to be dead at earlier points in the legislative process, banks are battling to fend off further restrictions on their activities. See Reform / B5


C OV ER S T ORY

B2 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

News Corp. moves Fannie-Freddie fix at $160B, with $1T worst case toward pay model for online content By Lorraine Woellert and John Gittelsohn Bloomberg News

By Matthew L. Wald New York Times News Service

LAND MOWING FIRE SUPPRESSION

A matter of time Indeed, even though research and development spending by major pharmaceutical companies has roughly doubled in the decade since the genome project was largely completed, reaching $46 billion last year, the number of new drugs approved each year has stayed about the same. There were 25 in 2009. Genomics is not the only reason for the decline in the bang from the research buck. A big factor has been stiffer testing requirements by the Food and Drug Administration. For all that, drug industry executives say it is simply a matter of time before the Human Genome Project pays off. They note that because it can take 15 years or more to go from a basic discovery to a marketed drug, it is too early to expect many drug approvals yet. Moreover, pharmaceutical executives say that even if there are not many drugs yet, the genome project has transformed the way research is done. “It’s become a very standard part of what we do,” said Peter Kim, the executive vice president in charge of research at Merck. The company spent $1.1 billion in 2006 to acquire Sirna Therapeutics, which is developing the RNA interference tech-

Laura Pedrick / New York Times News Service

Francesca Santini, research fellow at Merck’s automated biotechnology facility, pulls up an image of muscle cells on a computer. nology that Merck uses to turn off genes. Kim said that having the genome sequence gave scientists “the ability to do science at a different level.” At Bristol-Myers Squibb, two-thirds of the drugs being developed have been “touched” in some way by genomics, said Elliott Sigal, president of research and development. At Genentech, one-third of the drugs in clinical trials and two-thirds of the newer compounds earlier in development “have been enabled in a significant way” by the genome project, said Marc Tessier-Lavigne, executive vice president for research at Genentech, a unit of Roche. One of those ways, he and others said, is allowing the potential side effects of a drug to be detected earlier. Often, drugs meant to inhibit one protein in the body also inhibit other fairly similar proteins, causing unintended effects. Knowing the genes can enable companies to find these similar proteins in advance and make sure their drug interacts with only the intended target. “By having the genome se-

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quence you can make better drugs, more specific drugs,” Tessier-Lavigne said. “In the old days you would only discover the side effects much later in the process and the drug would die.”

Dashed hopes Many drug companies now collect and analyze the DNA of patients in clinical trials, hoping to find genetic signatures that will allow drugs to be better tailored to specific patients. It was recently discovered, for example, that patients with a certain variation in a gene called CYP-2C19 did not respond well to the widely used anticlotting drug Plavix, leaving them at a higher risk of

having a heart attack. Still, some executives concede the genome project has not lived up to expectations, and in some ways might have even made life more difficult for drug companies. Finding a gene is merely the first step in a long process to develop a drug. Genes are the recipes the body uses to make proteins, and most drugs work by inhibiting or promoting the activity of a particular protein, which is known as the drug’s target. The initial attraction of genomics was the assumption that knowing all the genes would lead to the discovery of thousands of new targets. And to some extent that has happened. But compared to the past, when targets tended to be discovered by academic scientists already studying a disease and its genetic context, the genome project provided companies with thousands of potential new targets all at once. Targets discovered this way, without years of academic research behind them, can require companies to spend years understand the targets’ role in disease. “Putting the players on the stage does not tell you what they do,” said Stephen H. Friend, president of Sage Bionetworks, a nonprofit organization studying the genetic mechanisms of disease. Even after a target is understood, companies must then create a drug to interact with it. Some targets, because of their structure and location in the body, do not lend themselves to this. In industry parlance, the targets are “undruggable.” And when a drug is created, it must be tested for safety and efficacy, first in animals and then in lengthy clinical trials with humans. These elements of drug creation and testing have not been greatly accelerated by genomics. “If on the first day we had discovered a new molecular target, it’s still going to take 15 to 20 years to make the drug,” said Robert R. Ruffolo Jr., who ran research and development at Wyeth until 2008. “Genomics did not speed up drug development. It gave us more rapid access to new molecular targets.”

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A startup company with a design for a nuclear reactor that extracts far more energy from uranium than do conventional ones has attracted a $35 million investment from venture capital firms. TerraPower, a spinoff of Intellectual Ventures of Bellevue, Wash., is developing a “traveling wave” reactor that would run for decades without refueling, although the fuel might have to be reshuffled from time to time. Charles River Ventures of Waltham, Mass., said it was joining some other investors, including Khosla Ventures, in investing $35 million. “The traveling wave reactor is an incredibly exciting new design that could really advance the nuclear energy field,” Izhar Armony, a general partner in Charles River Ventures, said in a statement. The company is already backed by two software magnates, Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, and Nathan Myhrvold, who was Microsoft’s chief technology officer. TerraPower would not say how much of the $35 million came from Charles River and Khosla, or who the other investors were. Prior to this investment, the company said, it had raised “tens of millions” of dollars. The concept is for a reactor core that transforms a common, cheap form of uranium into reactor fuel, much the way a candle flame melts the wax that it will later burn as a liquid. Existing commercial reactors run on uranium that has been enriched to raise the proportion of uranium 235, the type that splits easily and gives off neutrons, the subatomic particles that sustain the nuclear reaction. With the traveling wave technology, the reaction would take place in only a small region of the core at any given time. It would start on one end, which would have a layer of enriched uranium; the remainder would be uranium 238, the hard-to-split form, which

often ends up as nuclear waste. When the reactor begins operating and throwing off neutrons, some of those would be captured by the uranium 238 and would then be transmuted into plutonium 239, a good reactor fuel. Because it would make use of the uranium 238, the reactor could extract 40 times more energy from uranium than do existing designs, the designers predict. (Existing reactors also make some plutonium as they operate, but they do not come close to using up the uranium 238, as the traveling wave design would.) Plutonium is usable in bombs, but because it would be produced bit by bit, the reactor would not be attractive to a bomb maker and therefore would be unlikely to contribute to nuclear proliferation, TerraPower said. If nuclear power becomes a major global energy player in future decades, bolstered by strong growth in energy demand and a need to limit carbon-dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels, more efficient use of uranium will be needed. Yet it is not fuel costs that have been the impediment to reactor construction in recent years, but capital costs. The design is for a 500-megawatt reactor, which is larger than the small, modular models that are on the drawing boards for the 2020s, but only one-third to onehalf the size of some new conventional reactors that companies are hoping to build in the next few years. The reactor would use sodium rather than water to carry away the heat it produces. Sodiumbased reactors have some attractive features on paper, but the few that have been built so far have experienced some operating difficulties. The traveling wave reactor is unusual for having attracted venture capital. Generally, new reactor designs are developed by global corporations, often with government aid, not by startups.

Continued from B1 And the drug company Human Genome Sciences, founded in 1992 as the genome project was just getting under way, applied last week for approval of Benlysta, which could be the first new drug in decades for treating lupus. That is nothing like the cornucopia of new drugs that some experts predicted the genome project would yield. A decade ago, drug companies spent billions of dollars equipping themselves to harness the newly revealed secrets of human biology. Investors bid the stocks of tiny genomics companies to stratospheric heights. That “genome bubble” has long since popped. And not only has there been no pharmacopeia, but some experts say the Human Genome Project might have at least temporarily bogged down the drug industry with information overload. As the head of Novartis’ pharmaceutical business lamented in 2000, “Data, data everywhere, and not a drug, I think.”

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News Corp. took several significant steps on Monday toward preparing to charge readers for access to its content online. The company said that it had acquired an electronic reading platform called Skiff and had made an investment in a company that was developing pay models for newspapers and magazines. News Corp. also named one of its strategic advisers, Jon Housman, to the new post of president of digital journalism initiatives. The moves reflect the belief of News Corp.’s chairman and chief executive, Rupert Murdoch, that consumers should pay more for what they read online. Skiff is a company that Hearst Corp. established last year to develop an online store and an e-reader for publications. News Corp. indicated that it was not buying the hardware plans; instead, it was interested in Skiff’s ability to deliver compelling rich media layouts for newspapers and magazines on the Web. Separately, News Corp. said it had made an investment in Journalism Online, a company cofounded by Steven Brill, L. Gordon Crovitz and Leo Hindery Jr. that wants to enable publications to charge for content. The terms of the two deals were not disclosed.

Barclays Capital analysts put the price tag as high as $500 billion in a December report on mortgagebacked securities, assuming home prices decline another 20 percent and default rates triple. Sean Egan, president of EganJones Ratings Co. in Haverford, Pa., said that a 20 percent loss on the companies’ loans and guarantees could cause even more damage. “One trillion dollars is a reasonable worst-case scenario for the companies,” said Egan, whose firm warned customers away from municipal bond insurers in 2002 and downgraded Enron a month before its 2001 collapse.

New York Times News Service

Jon Miller, the chief digital officer of News Corp., said in a statement that “both Skiff and Journalism Online serve as key building blocks in our strategy to transform the publishing industry and ensure consumers will have continued access to the highest quality journalism.” He declined a request for an interview. Speaking to investors last month, Murdoch said that News Corp. was in “final discussions with a number of publishers, device makers and technology companies” about digital delivery of news and entertainment. “We will soon develop an innovative subscription model that will deliver digital content to consumers wherever and whenever they want it,” he said. News Corp. owns properties like The Wall Street Journal that charge for access online, and those that are entirely free like The New York Post. Brill said that News Corp. and Journalism Online had been discussing how to work together for several months. “What brought the discussions really to a head was what we saw, I think, mutually. This was one of those situations where there was almost a complete complementary relationship between what we’re doing and the kinds of things they were thinking about doing,” Brill said.

in the hole Fannie and Freddie go depends on unemployment, interest rates and other drivers of home prices, according to the companies and economists who study them. The Congressional Budget Office calculated in August 2009 that the companies would need $389 billion in federal subsidies through 2019, based on assumptions about delinquency rates of loans in their securities pools. The White House’s Office of Management and Budget estimated in February that aid could total as little as $160 billion if the economy strengthens. If housing prices drop further, the companies may need more.

PERENNIALS & ANNUALS

By Brian Stelter and Jeremy W. Peters

WASHINGTON — The cost of fixing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage companies that last year bought or guaranteed three-quarters of all U.S. home loans, will be at least $160 billion and could grow to as much as $1 trillion after the biggest bailout in American history. Fannie and Freddie, now 80 percent owned by U.S. taxpayers, already have drawn $145 billion from an unlimited line of government credit granted to ensure that home buyers can get loans while the private housingfinance industry is moribund.

That surpasses the amount spent on rescues of American International Group, General Motors Co. or Citigroup, which have begun repaying their debts. “It is the mother of all bailouts,” said Edward Pinto, a former chief credit officer at Fannie Mae, who is now a consultant to the mortgage-finance industry. Fannie, based in Washington, and Freddie in McLean, Va., own or guarantee 53 percent of the nation’s $10.7 trillion in residential mortgages, according to a Federal Reserve report last week. Millions of bad loans issued during the housing bubble remain on their books, and delinquencies continue to rise. How deep

PLANTERS


B USI N ESS

THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 B3

T F Once just a site with funny cat pictures, now an empire of reader-fueled blogs By Jenna Wortham New York Times News Service

Michelle V. Agins / New York Times News Service

Mosey Levy, an engineer, works on his laptop at a Starbucks in New York on Monday. Starting July 1, Starbucks locations in the U.S. will offer wireless service via AT&T, and digital content will be offered through a partnership with Yahoo.

Starbucks stores to offer free Wi-Fi with no time limit By Claire Cain Miller New York Times News Service

Many coffee shops try to discourage people from buying a cup of coffee and then lingering for hours to use the free Internet access. Starbucks will soon encourage them to stay as long as they want. The company said Monday that as of July 1, its U.S. stores would offer free Wi-Fi, via AT&T, that anyone can reach with a single click. In case customers run out of distractions on the Web, Starbucks is giving them even more reason to sit and browse. It will offer free online articles, music, videos and local information through a partnership with Yahoo. Starbucks has been squeezed lately by competition from both independent specialty coffee shops, which have long offered free Wi-Fi, and big chains like McDonald’s, which added it this year. “Starbucks hit back,” said Chris Brogan, president of New Marketing Labs, a social media marketing agency, who blogs about working on the go. “They said, ‘Not only do we have free Wi-Fi, but we’re going to offer this huge raft of digital products you can get while you’re here — and you like our coffee better anyway.’ ” Howard Schultz, chief executive of Starbucks, who made the announcement at a conference in New York, described it as a way to bridge the online world and real-world coffee outlets.

Wi-Fi culture Of course, people have been bridging those worlds for years, using coffee shops as pseudo-offices by bringing their laptops and using free Internet connections. But Starbucks has never offered unlimited free Internet access. Customers who bought and registered a Starbucks card, and used it in the past month, have been able to use the Web for two hours, after a somewhat complicated log-in process. Cardholders who wanted to use the Web for more than two hours paid $3.99 for another two-hour session, and customers without cards who wanted to get online at all faced the same charge for a twohour session. Starbucks is making the change as many coffeehouses experiment with ways to cut off squatters who browse and do not spend. Some operations post signs asking people to continue buying food and drinks if they stay, while the more aggressive ones cover their power outlets with tape so people cannot charge their laptops. Other coffeehouse owners say Wi-Fi detracts from the atmosphere they are trying to foster. Four Barrel Coffee in San Francisco has no Wi-Fi or power outlets for customers’ use. “We all have had experiences of working at cafes where the laptops just took over, and it started to feel more like a library,” said Jodi Geren, head of operations for Four Barrel. “We just really feel like it’s important for people to talk to each other.”

Those who bring laptops to Starbucks now average an hour of Wi-Fi use, and the company does not expect that the free access and content will make people linger longer than that, said Stephen Gillett, chief information officer at Starbucks and general manager of a unit called Digital Ventures, which will oversee the new offerings. He said that Starbucks purposely kept video and music clips short.

‘The third place’ The coffee chain is catering in part to people who are out of work and need a place to perfect their résumés or do freelance jobs. In January, the company announced that same-store sales increased 4 percent after months of steady declines. Starbucks attributes the improvement, which came before consumer spending rebounded as a whole, in part to its role as an office for the unemployed. The new partnership with Yahoo, which is called the Starbucks Digital Network, will include an online section on business and careers that will include tools for people searching for jobs or writing résumés, Gillett said. “We expect this to be a very versatile tool for people who are using Starbucks for what we call the third place, between home and work,” he said. Customers will also get free access to paid websites, like those of The Wall Street Journal and Zagat, free iTunes downloads and previews of not-yet-released movies and albums. They will see local content based on the coffee shop’s location, like news from Patch, AOL’s local news site, check-ins on Foursquare and neighborhood photos on Flickr. For publishers and websites, the free content will serve as a marketing tool, Gillett said, letting customers sample things that they might be willing to pay for later. The digital network could also serve as a virtual storefront, Brogan said. He imagines Starbucks using it to sell songs and virtual goods, or to offer loyalty points for online shopping. “If you have eight people sitting in a store for four hours on one cup of coffee, that’s not moving revenue,” he said. “However, if that same group is there for four hours on one cup of coffee and buys 14 songs, that’s sales.” Starbucks is not disclosing the terms of its agreements with the content providers, including whether they are paying Starbucks or sharing revenue if customers make purchases, said Tamra Strentz, a spokeswoman. Many coffeehouses, including Grounded in the West Village of New York, which is a block from a Starbucks, offer free WiFi to set themselves apart from Starbucks. “It’s definitely been an attraction,” said David Litman, manager of Grounded. Still, he said he doubted that Wi-Fi at Starbucks would be a threat. “This is a very neighborhood place,” he said. “There is a Starbucks on the next avenue, but people like to support us.”

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

SEATTLE — Three years ago Ben Huh visited a blog devoted to silly cat pictures — and saw vast potential. Huh, a 32-year-old entrepreneur, first became aware of I Can Has Cheezburger, which pairs photos of cats with quirky captions, after it linked to his own pet blog. His site immediately crumbled under the resulting wave of visitors. Sensing an Internet phenomenon, Huh solicited financing from investors and forked over $10,000 of his own savings to buy the website from the two Hawaiian bloggers who started it. “It was a white-knuckle decision,” he said. “I knew that the first site was funny, but could we duplicate that success?” Huh has since found that the appetite for oddball Internet humor is insatiable. Traffic to the Cheezburger blog has ballooned over the past three years, encouraging Huh to expand his unlikely Web empire to include 53 sites, all fueled by submissions from readers. In May, what is now known as the Cheezburger Network attracted a record 16 million unique visitors, according to the Web analytics firm Quantcast. A more recent success for the company is a site called Fail Blog, which chronicles disastrous mishaps and general stupidity in photos and video. The network’s smaller sites include Daily Squee, with pictures of cute animals, and There I Fixed It, for photos of bad repair jobs. Huh said his company, which makes most of its money from Web advertising, has been profitable since Day 1. “Then again, it was just me and Emily in the beginning,” he said, referring to his wife, who also works at the company. Cheezburger now has more than 40 employees and has not sought additional investment. As the company has grown, so have the opportunities to make

Stuart Isett / New York Times News Service

Ben Huh, who owns the “I Can Has Cheezburger?” blog, poses with a fan at Cheezburger Night with the Seattle Mariners at Safeco Field in Seattle on June 3. Huh bought the original blog in 2007 and has expanded to a network of 53 blogs that are all fueled by submissions from readers. money, said Todd Sawicki, the company’s chief revenue officer. “Only 1 percent of what gets submitted goes on the website,” he said. “The rest we can turn into T-shirts, books and other content that the audience loves.” This year alone, Sawicki said, the company will generate a seven-figure sum from advertising, licensing fees and merchandise sales. The company has published five books based on its blogs, one of which, a collection of the cats-with-misspelled-captions images known as LOLcats, hovered on the New York Times list of miscellaneous paperback best-sellers for 13 weeks. Three more books are in production, along with a line of greeting cards and desktop calendars. One secret to the company’s success is the way it taps into the Internet zeitgeist. It seeks clues to what is funny right now by

monitoring the Web for themes bubbling up on community forums, blogs and video sites. Then it spins off new sites devoted to the latest online humor fads. “Cheezburger figures out what’s starting to get popular and then harvests the humor from the chaff,” said Kenyatta Cheese, one of the creators of a popular Web video series called “Know Your Meme” that documents viral online phenomena, known as memes. “Things like LOLcats and Fail are easy to make, easy to spread and hit on an emotional level that crosses a lot of traditional boundaries.” Most of the material the company posts is created by read-

ers, who can Photoshop a funny caption onto an image or remix a popular video in minutes and submit it to one of the Cheezburger sites for consideration. The company says that each day it receives more than 18,000 submissions from readers. If the wacky cats are a fad, they are one that has had surprising staying power, as shown by a recent Cheezburger happy-hour event at Safeco Field before a Seattle Mariners game. More than 1,000 fans turned up to listen to cat-themed songs blasted over the loudspeakers, snack on miniature cheeseburgers, slurp from plastic cups of beer and pose for pictures with Huh.

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B USI N ESS

B4 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

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8.53 -.56 17.64 -.25 0.44 18.01 +.33 0.54 21.40 +.23 1.26 51.39 +.13 7.84 +.11 10.38 1.12 42.49 -.30 13.87 +.25 27.94 1.76 36.93 +.41 0.20 13.96 -.03 1.12 27.11 +.29 8.45 +.19 20.75 -.25 0.27 30.05 +.61 1.68 25.17 -.12 16.11 +.28 9.87 +.40 0.09 9.51 +.01 1.61 +.16 0.18 13.70 -.05 0.05 19.65 +.21 1.76 47.33 +.13 0.70 36.34 +.34 0.42 6.11 -.02 2.73 +.17 14.50 +.20 0.72 18.91 +.29 0.75 37.80 +.16 5.40 -.09 6.90 +.34 0.23 15.35 +.52 27.90 +.04 32.98 -.58 0.15 10.94 +.08 0.04 19.74 -.24 0.52 42.54 +1.30 15.65 +.13 3.08 +.02 1.05 -.09 31.70 -.03 1.49 +.07 0.36 27.16 -.21 0.25 4.33 +.08 0.24 50.80 +.29 3.50 -.08 13.26 +.14 8.28 +.16 0.08 4.18 +.06 6.35 +.08 1.95 +.04 24.54 -.06 0.04 22.37 +.42 5.73 +.17 12.13 +.21 30.64 +.19 1.38 +.03 0.04 29.28 +.66 67.40 -1.13 6.20 -.11 3.16 +.07 31.46 +.73 0.12 7.47 +.24 0.18 59.07 -1.20 0.11 51.81 -.78 1.96 69.02 -.41 5.33 +.26 0.40 9.04 +.04 0.88 62.75 -.25 5.80 -.02 0.18 26.69 +.86 43.68 -.62 3.09 +.09 51.27 +.41 0.86 8.48 -.12 0.56 42.04 -.13 0.34 28.00 -.23 2.75 +.09 0.12 11.34 -.02 3.95 146.35 -.29 1.40 71.91 +.75 52.92 +.97 14.81 +.27 11.62 -.05 0.60 21.53 +.19 0.72 52.12 +.17 0.20 60.05 +.20 68.46 -.93 3.85 +.03 1.20 13.22 +.11 0.48 7.98 +.03 2.16 28.53 -.03 1.58 32.45 +.06 67.01 +.55 1.93 -.34 2.44 +.17 19.10 -.33 0.80 44.58 -.36 2.40 -.08 7.02 +.12 16.90 -.37 0.80 29.95 -.03 36.76 +.71 0.40 5.66 +.03 1.44 7.03 +.12 .46 +.04 0.20 24.30 -.08 0.40 18.46 +.25 28.13 +.82 13.59 +.08 1.40 19.57 -.51 20.12 +.13 2.29 +.16 2.30 101.09 +.04 123.83 +.80 .83 +.14 27.70 +.08 46.90 +.57 1.54 24.16 +.04 35.56 -.50 1.22 48.84 -.28 1.90 +.55 9.08 +.06 1.35 28.32 +.66 5.70 27.98 +.31 5.31 -.02 0.44 13.58 +.32 1.68 32.41 -.04 0.08 9.28 +.01 0.72 39.89 -.24 0.55 27.91 -.09 0.56 21.96 +.18 37.09 +2.01 39.24 +1.23 23.02 +.15 6.99 +.23 2.76 8.63 -.33 30.49 +1.08 43.67 -.55 0.84 20.66 +.56 20.26 +.05 0.72 39.48 +.01 0.32 32.21 +.29 0.42 17.49 -.09 0.24 41.70 +.36 54.07 -.03 6.34 -.02 0.06 41.06 +.07 17.79 +.77 0.36 42.00 +.21 3.71 +.14 0.88 28.88 -.16 16.97 -.05 0.17 42.26 -.02 0.53 49.58 +1.02 44.46 +.09 21.79 +.66 2.69 17.60 +.13 43.12 -.22 1.81 +.07 .95 +.00 1.08 6.92 +.06 0.60 38.27 -.32 8.15 +.14 0.60 95.34 +1.70 0.40 21.88 -.14 0.33 12.73 -.33 .31 +.01 47.60 -3.50 1.12 10.58 +.14 254.28 +.77 1.30 +.02 0.28 12.69 10.47 -.04 0.58 17.35 +.30 5.06 +.06 0.40 28.23 -.63 .56 -.02 0.75 29.75 +.84 74.11 +.17 0.40 22.24 +.04 0.60 25.65 +.01 23.85 +.45 2.92 -.03 34.79 -.41 1.40 13.51 +.05 3.41 -.03 15.99 +.42 0.12 22.24 -.06 0.11 12.78 -.01 33.44 -1.16 10.83 +.24 25.24 -.20 3.85 -.01 0.24 17.35 -.12 14.53 +.34 15.33 +.12 12.90 +.15 7.76 +.04 0.60 53.39 +.33 21.42 +1.11 0.60 24.90 +.21 11.55 -.24 1.40 -.04 0.04 13.15 -.12 0.64 35.75 -.10 0.18 14.57 -.02 0.52 14.46 -.18 2.30 45.03 +.01 23.59 -.08 31.88 +.43 52.25 +.76 32.65 +.25 10.19 +.22 5.02 +.04 1.34 27.86 -.02 26.53 -.02 4.85 +.07 21.41 +.08 27.49 -.09 1.20 50.30 +.93 1.36 41.89 +.06 190.66 +1.36 26.26 +.02 21.51 -.42 3.57 103.41 +.18 2.76 +.05

Nm AveryD AviatNetw AvisBudg Avnet Avon Axcelis AXIS Cap B&G Foods BB&T Cp BCE g BE Aero BGC Ptrs BHP BillLt BHPBil plc BJsRest BJs Whls BMC Sft BP PLC BPZ Res BRE BRFBrasil s BWAY Baidu s BakrHu Baldor BallCp BallyTech BcBilVArg BcoBrades BcoSantand BcSBrasil n BcpSouth BkofAm BkAm pfH BkIrelnd BkMont g BkNYMel BkNova g BankAtl A BarcGSOil BrcIndiaTR BiPNG Barclay BarVixMdT BarVixShT Bard BarnesNob Barnes BarrickG BasicEnSv Baxter BaytexE g BeaconPw BeacnRfg BeazerHm BebeStrs BeckCoult BectDck BedBath Belo Bemis BenchElec Berkley BerkH B s BerryPet BestBuy BigLots BigBand BBarrett Biocryst Biodel BiogenIdc BioMarin BioMedR BioMed pfA Bionovo h BioSante BioTime n Biovail BlkRKelso Blkboard BlackRock BlkDebtStr BlkDvAch BlkIntlG&I Blackstone BlockHR Blockbst h BlckbsB h Blount BlueCoat BlueNile Blyth Boeing Boise Inc BootsCoots Borders BorgWarn BostBeer BostPrv BostProp BostonSci Bowne BoydGm BradyCp Brandyw Braskem BridgptEd BrigStrat BrigExp Brightpnt Brinker Brinks BrMySq BristowGp BritATob Broadcom BroadrdgF Broadwind BrcdeCm BroncoDrl Brookdale BrkfldAs g BrkfldPrp BrklneB BrooksAuto BrwnBrn BrownShoe BrownFB BrukerCp h Brunswick BuckTch Buckle Bucyrus Buenavent BuffaloWW BungeLt BurgerKing C&D Tch CA Inc CB REllis CBL Asc CBS B CDC Cp A CF Inds CGG Verit CGI g CH Robins CIGNA CIT Grp n CKE Rst CLECO CME Grp CMS Eng CNA Fn CNH Gbl CNO Fincl CNOOC CNinsure CPI Intl CSX CTC Media CVB Fncl CVR Engy CVS Care Cabelas CablvsnNY Cabot CabotO&G Cadence CalDive CalaStrTR Calgon CalifPizza CallGolf Callidus CallonP h Calpine CAMAC n CamdnP Cameco g Cameron CampSp CIBC g CdnNRy g CdnNRs gs CP Rwy g CdnSolar Canon CapGold n CapOne CapitlSrce CapsteadM CpstnTrb CarboCer CardnlHlt s Cardiom g CardiumTh Cardtronic CareFusn n CareerEd CarMax Carmike Carnival CarpTech Carrizo Carters Caseys CatalystH Caterpillar CathayGen CaviumNet Cbeyond CedarF CedarSh CelSci Celanese Celestic g Celgene CellTher rsh Cellcom CelldexTh Cemex Cemig pf CenovusE n Centene CenterPnt CnElBrasil CentEuro CEurMed CFCda g

D 0.80 34.40 +.35 3.80 -.11 11.36 +.29 26.91 -.08 0.88 28.17 +.08 1.66 -.06 0.84 30.92 +.30 0.68 11.02 -.09 0.60 29.80 -.41 1.74 30.31 +.02 25.56 -.03 0.37 5.65 +.09 1.66 65.86 +.58 1.66 55.55 +.61 24.44 +.42 38.56 +.07 36.68 -.21 3.36 30.67 -3.30 4.79 +.25 1.50 40.99 +.53 0.06 13.82 +.18 19.98 -.01 72.93 +.08 0.60 41.94 -.67 0.68 39.46 -.53 0.40 52.14 -.21 39.66 -.05 0.59 10.29 +.01 0.51 16.78 -.19 0.82 10.45 -.10 0.20 10.99 -.44 0.88 18.89 -.04 0.04 15.41 -.19 2.05 24.80 -.02 1.04 4.05 +.01 2.80 59.83 +.62 0.36 25.67 -.52 1.96 48.46 +.07 1.51 +.02 22.33 +.05 62.97 +.68 11.64 +.43 0.22 17.47 +.38 88.51 -.79 28.43 -.42 0.72 79.80 -.27 1.00 18.04 +.06 0.32 18.11 +.03 0.40 42.00 -1.11 8.35 +.07 1.16 41.46 +.05 2.16 31.65 +.60 .33 +.02 19.76 +.07 4.12 -.11 0.10 6.74 +.09 0.72 59.29 -.03 1.48 70.19 +.50 44.88 +.44 6.64 +.05 0.92 28.52 -.12 17.50 +.01 0.28 27.36 -.31 74.92 +.51 0.30 32.79 +.63 0.56 41.05 -.15 34.26 +.61 2.90 -.02 35.54 +.44 6.41 +.03 4.29 +.08 46.79 +.57 19.89 +.49 0.56 17.40 +.52 1.84 22.34 +.06 .44 +.01 1.99 +.04 6.69 +.29 0.38 14.37 -.01 1.28 10.70 +.16 40.07 -.23 4.00 158.77 -.37 0.35 3.72 -.02 0.65 8.75 -.09 1.36 9.23 -.09 0.40 10.39 -.17 0.60 15.74 -.12 .22 -.06 .16 -.03 11.24 +.21 22.71 -.17 52.39 -.53 0.20 36.21 -.55 1.68 64.82 -.56 5.78 +.32 2.96 -.01 1.71 +.01 38.74 +.92 70.85 +1.47 0.04 6.21 -.06 2.00 79.26 +.24 5.82 +.05 0.22 11.17 +.02 11.14 +.20 0.70 27.16 -.34 0.60 11.88 +.11 0.02 13.07 +.09 19.63 -.07 0.44 20.20 +.12 17.97 +.04 7.94 +.28 0.56 16.84 +.05 0.40 20.76 +.52 1.28 25.29 +.21 32.16 +.21 3.07 64.05 +.77 0.32 33.91 +.03 0.56 19.31 -.24 2.43 +.09 5.36 +.04 3.72 +.09 16.50 +.45 0.52 24.04 +.22 0.56 14.74 -.03 0.34 9.34 -.05 7.44 +.25 0.31 20.00 +.29 0.28 17.03 +.16 1.20 59.39 +.64 12.92 +.09 0.05 16.91 +.77 11.86 +.41 0.80 35.17 +.32 0.10 51.72 +.18 0.42 38.37 -.09 38.64 +1.00 0.92 52.26 +.03 0.25 18.96 -.12 1.03 +.10 0.16 19.60 -.06 15.18 +.29 0.80 14.23 +.18 0.20 14.63 +.22 2.10 +.18 0.40 62.08 -3.27 20.34 +.71 15.86 +.01 1.00 58.70 +.49 0.04 34.55 +.06 37.11 -.90 0.24 12.45 +.02 1.00 26.08 +.20 4.60 307.21 +4.76 0.60 14.95 +.04 26.24 +.05 25.06 -.01 5.44 +.12 5.16 166.00 -1.38 0.26 27.19 +.21 15.67 -.13 0.96 51.87 -.28 0.26 14.73 +.37 0.34 9.63 -.17 7.96 -.01 0.35 31.87 -.21 16.57 +.04 0.40 24.57 +1.17 0.72 29.07 +.46 0.12 37.01 6.21 +.01 5.59 -.05 0.63 8.02 14.50 +.14 18.87 +.25 0.04 7.60 -.28 3.14 -.11 6.42 +.44 13.43 +.01 3.93 -.19 1.80 48.03 +.50 0.28 23.08 +.02 35.79 -.64 1.10 36.69 +.22 3.48 70.26 +.65 1.08 59.99 -.37 0.30 36.14 +.01 1.08 58.05 +.32 10.41 +.03 41.06 +.21 3.60 +.05 0.20 40.46 +.20 0.04 4.60 +.18 1.96 11.37 +.05 1.15 +.05 0.72 72.85 -.10 0.78 35.04 -.03 8.37 +.03 .47 +.01 12.87 +.10 25.55 +.05 26.20 -.78 20.83 +.79 6.96 -.80 0.40 36.37 +.06 0.72 39.37 +.38 19.94 -.09 30.99 -.02 0.34 35.93 +.52 38.46 +.37 1.76 61.00 +.77 0.04 10.68 -.23 26.05 -.35 13.79 +.15 12.67 -.52 0.36 6.61 -.08 .51 +.02 0.20 28.26 +.28 8.90 +.14 52.99 -.45 .50 +.06 3.22 27.19 +.79 5.14 +.01 0.43 10.87 -.05 0.86 14.04 -.02 0.80 28.74 -.05 22.83 -.08 0.78 13.34 +.07 1.56 12.81 -.04 24.74 +.05 20.71 +.16 0.01 15.01 +.05

Nm CenGrdA lf CentAl CntryLink Cenveo Cephln Cepheid CeragonN Cerner ChRvLab ChrmSh ChkPoint Cheesecake CheniereEn CheniereE ChesEng Chevron ChicB&I Chicos ChildPlace Chimera ChinAgri s ChiArmM ChinaAuto ChinaBAK ChinaBiot ChinaCbl rs ChiElMot n ChinaGreen ChinaGrnT ChHousLd ChinaInfo ChinaLife ChMarFd n ChinaMda ChinaMed ChinaMble ChinaNepst ChNBorun n ChinaPet ChinaSecur ChinaSun ChinaUni ChinaYuch ChipMOS Chipotle Chiquita ChrisBnk Chubb ChungTel ChurchDwt CIBER CienaCorp Cimarex CinciBell CinnFin Cinemark Cintas Cirrus Cisco Citigp pfJ Citigrp CitizRepB CitrixSys CityNC Clarient h ClayBRIC ClayGSol CleanEngy CleanH ClearChOut Clearwire Clearw rt CliffsNRs Clorox CloudPk n Coach CobaltIEn n CocaCE CocaCl Coeur CogdSpen CogentC Cogent CognizTech CohStQIR Coinstar ColdwtrCrk ColgPal CollctvBrd ColonPT ColumLabs CombinRx Comcast Comc spcl Comcast56 Comerica CmcBMO CmclMtls CmclVehcl ComScop CmtyHlt CommVlt CompssMn Compellent CompPrdS Comptn gh CompCrd h CompSci Compuwre ComstkRs Con-Way ConAgra ConchoRes ConcurTch Conexant Conns ConocPhil ConsolEngy ConEd ConstellA ConstellEn Contango CtlAir B ContlRes Continucre Cnvrgys ConvOrgan CooperCo Cooper Ind CooperTire CopaHold CopanoEn Copart Copel CoreLogic CorinthC CornellCos Corning CorpExc CorpOffP CorrectnCp Cosan Ltd Costco Cott Cp CousPrp Covance CovantaH CoventryH Covidien CrackerB Crane Cray Inc CredSuiss Cree Inc Crocs Crossh glf CrosstexE CrosstxLP CrwnCstle CrownHold Crystallx g Ctrip.com s CubistPh CullenFr Cummins Curis CurEuro CurAstla CurrCda CurJpn Cyberonics CybrSrce Cyclacel CyprsBio CypSemi CytRx Cytec Cytori DCT Indl DDi Corp DG FastCh DJSP Ent DPL DR Horton DST Sys DSW Inc DTE Daktronics DanaHldg Danaher wi Darden Darling DaVita DeVry DeanFds DeckOut DeerCon s Deere DelMnte Delcath Dell Inc DelphiFn DeltaAir DltaPtr Deltek Deluxe DenburyR Dndreon DenisnM g Dennys Dentsply DeutschBk DeutBCT5 pf DBGoldDL DBGoldDS DeutTel DevelDiv DevonE DexCom Diageo DiamMgmt DiaOffs DiamRk DianaShip DicksSptg Diebold DigitalRlt DigRiver Dillards DineEquity Diodes

D 9.32 +.32 9.85 +.12 2.90 34.24 -.17 7.38 +.12 57.52 +.19 18.12 -.17 8.02 +.77 80.16 +.34 35.81 -.18 4.36 +.16 30.89 +.18 25.48 +.46 3.08 +.17 1.70 16.50 +.15 0.30 24.62 -.02 2.88 74.18 +.12 19.24 +.83 0.16 11.59 +.12 48.98 +.24 0.63 4.11 +.06 12.77 +.71 3.96 +.08 18.37 +.70 1.86 +.02 14.18 +.10 .87 -.08 5.95 +.40 10.32 +.01 2.01 +.22 2.48 +.17 5.48 +.27 1.54 66.20 -.50 4.65 -.82 11.98 +.07 0.55 12.23 +.23 1.81 49.43 -.58 1.78 3.15 -.12 6.52 -.48 2.64 79.28 +.13 4.83 +.07 3.88 +.13 0.23 12.40 +.20 0.35 16.11 +.45 1.61 +.02 148.77 -.71 13.48 -.08 0.24 8.34 +.31 1.48 51.56 -.32 1.42 19.58 +.01 0.56 68.07 -.35 2.84 +.04 14.26 -.12 0.32 79.80 +.59 3.30 +.02 1.58 27.97 +.08 0.72 15.32 -.18 0.48 25.19 -.11 14.22 +.13 22.76 -.15 2.13 25.05 +.09 3.88 .90 -.02 43.87 -.10 0.40 57.10 +.65 3.11 -.04 0.51 39.23 -.11 6.82 +.02 16.99 +.14 67.84 +.08 9.41 +.15 7.77 -.02 .18 +.01 0.56 56.12 +.15 2.20 64.16 -.02 14.27 -.22 0.60 43.31 +.50 7.31 -.13 0.36 26.25 -.02 1.76 51.51 -.14 14.45 -.24 0.40 7.31 +.38 8.41 +.27 8.90 +.08 52.13 +.34 0.37 6.98 +.10 51.91 -.25 4.38 +.10 2.12 79.32 +.17 19.42 +.16 0.60 15.36 +.18 1.12 +.05 1.38 +.05 0.38 18.15 -.04 0.38 17.27 -.01 1.66 24.21 +.13 0.20 37.66 +.22 0.94 37.18 +.26 0.48 15.85 -.06 11.69 -.28 25.87 -.41 37.68 +.03 22.28 +.29 1.56 77.37 -.44 12.34 -.10 14.12 +.06 .70 +.00 0.50 3.87 -.54 0.60 49.10 -.14 8.26 +.06 32.42 -.39 0.40 32.19 +.38 0.80 24.91 +.03 59.70 +.86 43.52 +.22 2.40 +.04 6.82 -.32 2.20 52.80 -.70 0.40 39.10 +.22 2.38 43.35 +.22 16.94 +.08 0.96 35.96 +.37 45.41 -1.71 23.76 +.19 50.76 +.16 4.08 +.11 10.38 +.10 .80 -.04 0.06 36.92 +.12 1.08 47.06 -1.10 0.42 19.97 +.59 1.09 49.13 +1.37 2.30 24.81 +.50 36.83 -.02 0.92 18.75 +.05 18.90 +.55 11.69 -.24 25.92 -.06 0.20 18.37 +.23 0.44 28.24 +.05 1.57 38.93 +.46 20.47 +.13 9.47 +.03 0.84 57.52 7.83 +.08 0.13 7.62 +.26 54.29 +1.13 16.12 +.33 20.32 +.18 0.72 41.58 +.11 0.80 49.65 +.60 0.80 33.13 -.15 5.47 -.21 1.85 39.34 -.11 66.25 +1.97 11.27 +.41 .11 -.01 6.62 -.08 10.23 -.02 39.16 +.02 24.86 +.07 .45 39.40 +1.51 20.50 -.07 1.80 53.08 -.33 0.70 72.41 +.19 3.11 -.10 121.89 +1.32 2.37 86.00 +.84 96.33 +.07 108.31 +.27 24.29 +.52 25.68 1.83 -.10 4.29 -.07 10.78 +.01 .84 +.06 0.05 42.88 +.08 4.55 +.51 0.28 4.91 +.16 0.24 7.76 -.11 38.10 +.28 6.08 +.58 1.21 24.61 +.06 0.15 11.07 -.19 0.60 37.61 -.43 27.07 +.40 2.12 46.50 +.41 0.10 8.30 +.12 11.38 -.08 0.08 39.66 +.32 1.00 43.80 +.51 7.90 +.08 65.19 +.47 0.20 55.19 -1.91 10.85 +.16 160.58 +1.37 8.67 +.20 1.20 57.64 -1.22 0.36 15.24 -.04 9.79 -.43 13.09 -.06 0.40 24.71 -.05 13.69 +.24 1.21 +.02 7.88 -.13 1.00 20.14 -.39 16.85 -.07 38.78 -.02 1.28 -.01 2.77 +.02 0.20 31.27 +.07 0.93 58.38 -.21 2.01 24.89 -.08 32.58 -.21 11.08 +.08 1.05 11.48 +.08 0.08 12.15 +.24 0.64 67.71 -.45 10.13 2.36 65.68 +1.01 0.36 10.14 +.21 0.50 60.25 -.74 0.03 9.08 +.11 12.41 -.16 28.76 +.99 1.08 29.29 +.31 1.92 62.18 -.38 26.04 -.21 0.16 27.27 +1.03 33.29 +.74 18.65 -.25

Nm

D

DirecTV A DrxTcBll s DirxTcBear DrxEMBll s DirEMBr rs DirFBear rs DrxFBull s Dir30TrBear DrMCBll3x s DirREBear DrxREBll s DirxDMBear DirxSCBear DirxSCBull DirxLCBear DirxLCBull DirxEnBear DirxEnBull Discover DiscCm A DiscCm C DiscvLab h DishNetwk Disney DivX DrReddy Dolan Co DolbyLab DoleFood n DollarGn n DollarTh DllrTree DomRescs Dominos Domtar grs DonlleyRR DoralFncl DoublTake DEmmett Dover DowChm DrPepSnap DragnW g n DrmWksA DressBarn DresserR DryHYSt Dril-Quip DryShips DuPont DuPFabros DukeEngy DukeRlty DuneEn rs DyaxCp Dynavax DynCorp Dynegy rs

7.03 5.77 0.15 7.35 5.77 0.04 3.08 4.85 8.22 5.18 0.08

2.00 0.35 0.13

1.83 1.00 1.04 0.40 1.04 0.60 1.00

0.52 1.64 0.48 0.96 0.68

Nm 38.57 +.10 30.88 -.10 8.61 +.05 23.64 +.09 46.48 -.05 15.30 +.19 22.49 -.33 47.57 +.77 33.04 +.33 6.40 -.23 44.94 +1.78 17.38 -.32 6.85 -.12 45.10 +.78 15.53 +.05 47.06 -.10 10.70 +.11 30.74 -.29 13.40 -.26 38.36 -.15 31.95 -.13 .35 +.01 21.17 +.33 33.93 -.31 7.97 -.42 30.46 -.91 11.80 +.51 66.52 -.08 10.38 +.46 30.22 +.25 44.48 -.75 62.76 -.30 40.48 -.12 12.78 +.11 57.64 -.36 17.73 -.23 3.01 +.33 10.42 +.05 16.01 +.04 45.41 +.27 25.90 -.82 37.44 +.15 6.13 +.19 28.81 -.28 26.91 +.44 34.61 -.06 4.06 47.77 +.75 4.10 -.08 36.86 -.75 26.99 -.47 16.21 +.04 12.31 +.06 .17 -.01 2.62 +.11 1.89 +.07 17.23 -.02 4.91 -.07

E-F-G-H ETrade rs 13.78 -.10 eBay 22.21 -.44 eHealth 11.97 +.02 EMC Cp 18.57 -.10 EMCOR 24.42 -.06 ENI 2.84 38.07 +.64 EOG Res 0.62 108.95 -.91 EQT Corp 0.88 40.80 +.08 ev3 Inc 22.36 -.01 EagleBulk 4.61 +.01 EagleMat 0.40 28.76 +.79 EaglRkEn 0.10 4.87 +.12 EagleRk rt 2.96 +.03 ErthLink 0.64 8.29 -.03 EstWstBcp 0.04 16.67 +1.06 Eastgrp 2.08 37.80 +.57 EastChm 1.76 60.39 -.32 EKodak 5.14 +.03 Eaton 2.00 71.40 +.87 EatnVan 0.64 29.93 -.04 EV LtdDur 1.39 15.80 +.18 EV TxDiver 1.62 11.57 +.05 EVTxMGlo 1.53 10.36 +.05 EVTxGBW 1.56 12.18 +.11 Ebix Inc s 15.26 +.26 EchoStar 21.09 +.36 Eclipsys 18.80 -.60 Ecolab 0.62 45.98 -.46 EdisonInt 1.26 33.10 +.33 EducMgt n 18.01 +.05 EdwLfSci s 53.85 +.05 ElPasoCp 0.04 12.11 -.02 ElPasoEl 19.82 +.17 ElPasoPpl 1.52 30.25 +.23 Elan 5.15 +.03 EldorGld g 0.05 16.74 -.56 ElectArts 16.36 +.04 EFII 9.90 +.03 EBrasAero 0.72 21.80 -.05 Emcore .99 +.04 Emdeon n 12.84 -.07 EMS 55.61 +.84 EmersonEl 1.34 45.45 -.32 EmmisCm 2.27 -.01 Emulex 9.70 -.36 EnbrEPtrs 4.01 52.32 +.97 Enbridge 1.70 47.71 +.51 EnCana g s 0.80 33.60 +.07 EncoreEn 2.00 17.42 +.12 Encorm rsh 3.04 +.18 EndvrInt 1.16 -.03 EndvSilv g 3.41 -.03 EndoPhrm 21.15 -.46 Endologix 4.98 +.43 EndurSpec 1.00 38.16 +.62 Ener1 3.04 +.04 EnerNOC 27.39 +.76 Energen 0.52 47.62 +.25 Energizer 54.93 -.05 EngyConv 4.52 -.14 EnrgyRec 3.28 +.03 EngyTEq 2.16 31.90 +.29 EngyTsfr 3.58 44.86 +.18 EgyXXI rs 16.65 +.27 EnergySol 0.10 5.80 Enerpls g 2.16 22.88 +.14 Enersis 0.68 19.95 +.08 EnerSys 23.60 -.27 EnPro 31.27 -.25 ENSCO 0.14 38.28 -.03 Entegris 4.52 +.12 Entercom 10.12 -.12 Entergy 3.32 75.10 +.71 EntPrPt 2.27 34.39 +.20 EnterPT 2.60 41.49 +.18 EntreeGold 2.05 +.14 EntropCom 5.21 +.11 EnzonPhar 10.99 -.01 Equifax 0.16 29.63 -.05 Equinix 82.44 -2.21 EqLfPrp 1.20 51.93 +.89 EqtyOne 0.88 16.98 +.30 EqtyRsd 1.35 45.22 +.67 EricsnTel 0.28 10.49 -.02 EssexPT 4.13 106.82 +.26 EsteeLdr 0.55 58.16 +.30 Esterline 50.54 +1.08 EthanAl 0.20 18.25 +.55 Euronet 13.27 +.13 Evercore 0.60 26.81 +.51 EverestRe 1.92 72.21 +.71 EvergrnEn .15 -.01 EvrgrSlr .80 -.02 ExactSci h 4.50 +.01 ExcelM 5.17 -.08 ExcoRes 0.12 18.24 -.08 Exelixis 4.71 -.10 Exelon 2.10 40.25 +.36 ExideTc 5.72 +.03 Expedia 0.28 20.80 +.25 ExpdIntl 0.40 37.81 -.10 Express n 16.70 +1.04 ExpScrip s 53.26 +.59 ExterranH 26.34 +.32 ExtraSpce 0.23 15.10 +.52 ExtrmNet 2.64 ExxonMbl 1.76 61.37 -.49 EZchip 17.32 +.26 Ezcorp 18.62 -.03 F5 Netwks 70.47 +.52 FBR Cap 3.68 +.03 FLIR Sys 27.72 +.07 FMC Corp 0.50 61.76 -.15 FMC Tech 52.75 +.19 FNBCp PA 0.48 8.48 +.04 FSI Intl 3.73 -.12 FTI Cnslt 44.30 +.36 FactsetR 0.92 69.08 +.66 FairIsaac 0.08 22.99 +.88 FairchldS 9.43 +.01 FamilyDlr 0.62 38.98 +.41 FannieMae .91 -.01 FMae pfQ .81 -.01 Fastenal 0.80 52.00 +.29 FedExCp 0.48 81.47 +.84 FedAgric 0.20 14.53 +.80 FedRlty 2.64 75.26 +.76 FedSignl 0.24 6.65 +.51 FedInvst 0.96 22.26 +.01 FelCor 6.43 +.24 Ferro 7.76 +.08 FiberTw rs 4.18 +.33 FibriaCelu 16.10 -.50 FidlNFin 0.72 13.71 +.23 FidNatInfo 0.20 27.04 -.12 FifthStFin 1.28 11.80 -.01 FifthThird 0.04 13.53 +.17 FinEngin n 14.01 +.09 Finisar rs 15.25 +.25 FinLine 0.16 15.92 +.59 FstAFin n 13.33 +.22 FstBcpPR 1.06 +.02 FstCwlth 0.04 5.17 -.04 FstHorizon 0.75 11.69 -.20 FstInRT 6.02 +.24 FstMarblhd 2.41 -.06 FstMerch 0.04 8.22 -.24 FstNiagara 0.56 12.93 -.12 FstSolar 107.53 +.26 FT RNG 0.08 17.49 -.03 FirstEngy 2.20 37.18 +.30 FstMerit 0.64 17.78 +.04 Fiserv 47.83 +.32 FiveStar 3.56 +.17 FlagstB rs 3.93 +.20 Flagstone 0.16 10.96 +.19 Flextrn 6.63 -.04 FlowrsFds 0.80 25.09 +.16 Flowserve 1.16 91.53 +1.14 Fluor 0.50 45.81 +.20 FocusMda 16.31 -.02 FEMSA 0.32 46.01 +.14 FootLockr 0.60 14.58 +.27 ForcePro 4.22 +.07 FordM 11.46 +.06 FordM wt 4.19 -.01 ForestCA 13.38 +.49 ForestLab 26.06 +.20 ForestOil 31.60 +.29 Forestar 18.71 +.64 FormFac 10.80 -.30

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Sou ce The Assoc a ed P ess and L ppe Nm Fortinet n Fortress FortuneBr Fossil Inc FosterWhl FranceTel FrankRes FrkStPrp FredMac FredM pfU FredMac pfZ FredsInc FMCG FresKabi rt Fronteer g FrontierCm FrontierOil Frontline FuelSysSol FuelCell FultonFncl Fuqi Intl lf FurnBrds FushiCopp GATX GFI Grp GLG Ptrs GMX Rs GSI Cmmrc GT Solar GTx Inc GabelliET GabGldNR Gafisa s Gallaghr GameStop GamGld g Gannett Gap GardDenv Garmin Gartner GascoEngy GaylrdEnt GencoShip GenCorp GnCable GenDynam GenElec vjGnGrthP GenMarit GenMills s GenMoly GenSteel GenBiotc h GenesWyo GenesisEn Genoptix Genpact Gentex Gentiva h GenuPrt GenVec h Genworth Genzyme GeoGrp Geokinetics Geores Gerdau g Gerdau GeronCp Gerova wt GiantIntac GigaMed Gildan GileadSci GlacierBc Glatfelter GlaxoSKln Gleacher GlimchRt GlobalCash GlobCrsg GloblInd GlobPay GlbShip wt Globalstar GlbSpMet n GolLinhas GoldFLtd Goldcrp g GoldStr g GoldmanS Goodrich GoodrPet Goodyear Google vjGrace Graco GrafTech Graingr Gramrcy GranTrra g GrCanyEd GraniteC GraphPkg GrtAtlPac GrtBasG g GrLkDrge GtPlainEn GtChina GreenMtC s GreenPlns Greenhill Group1 GAeroPac GpTelevisa Guess GulfMrkA GulfportE Gymbree HCC Ins HCP Inc HRPT Prp HSBC HSN Inc HainCel Hallibrtn Halozyme HancHld Hanesbrds HanmiFncl HanoverIns HansenMed HansenNat HarbinElec HarleyD Harman Harmonic HarmonyG HarrisCorp HWinstn g Harsco HarteHnk HartfdFn HartFn pfA Hasbro HatterasF HaupgDig HawaiiEl HawHold Headwatrs HltCrREIT HltMgmt HlthcrRlty HealthNet HlthSouth HlthSprg HlthTroncs HrtlndEx Heckmann Heckmn wt HeclaM Heinz HelenTroy HelixEn HellnTel HelmPayne Hemisphrx HSchein Herbalife HercOffsh Hersha Hershey Hertz Hess HewittAsc HewlettP Hexcel hhgregg Hibbett HighwdPrp Hill-Rom HillenInc HollyCp Hologic

D 16.19 +.39 3.63 +.03 0.76 46.69 -.42 39.33 +.40 24.78 +.04 1.90 18.62 +.28 0.88 91.87 -1.63 0.76 13.10 +.17 1.20 -.01 .80 -.04 .98 +.01 0.16 12.41 +.26 1.20 65.26 +.33 .13 -.00 6.79 +.04 1.00 7.94 +.09 13.85 +.13 1.40 35.36 -.20 27.21 -.79 1.66 -.05 0.12 9.96 -.04 8.79 +.01 7.14 +.16 8.89 -.12 1.12 28.54 +.25 0.20 5.73 -.05 4.33 -.02 6.98 -.04 30.54 +.18 5.52 +.07 3.07 +.20 0.44 4.61 1.68 15.75 +.13 0.14 12.65 -.01 1.28 25.36 +.28 21.88 +.22 7.65 +.04 0.16 15.78 -.26 0.40 22.03 +.04 0.20 46.94 +.65 1.50 32.56 -1.74 25.24 +.31 .41 +.01 25.23 +.11 16.34 -.46 4.95 +.06 29.13 +.26 1.68 64.31 -.27 0.40 15.39 -.17 13.97 +.32 0.50 7.80 -.07 0.98 38.09 +.43 3.59 +.02 2.97 +.13 .36 -.01 38.36 -.63 1.47 19.04 +.02 22.06 0.18 17.03 -.23 0.44 19.65 +.28 28.00 +.37 1.64 40.80 +.02 .51 +.02 15.32 -.04 49.50 +.45 20.16 -.06 5.44 +.38 14.88 +.08 11.03 -.02 0.21 13.91 +.08 5.12 -.05 .66 +.17 0.18 7.14 -.03 2.35 +.04 31.30 +.22 34.64 +.11 0.52 15.35 -.31 0.36 11.30 -.05 1.98 35.24 +.27 3.34 +.12 0.40 6.80 -.17 7.94 +.07 10.97 -.24 5.30 +.03 0.08 41.46 -.11 .01 1.65 -.05 10.77 +.46 0.40 11.96 -.09 0.17 13.36 -.06 0.18 42.42 -1.29 3.94 -.12 1.40 133.44 -2.20 1.08 68.63 +.98 14.70 -.22 11.81 +.22 483.19 -5.31 23.47 +.14 0.80 31.09 +.40 16.26 +.17 2.16 104.64 +.38 1.52 +.11 4.98 -.03 23.42 -.21 0.52 26.70 +.30 3.24 +.09 4.08 +.01 1.76 -.01 0.07 6.00 -.02 0.83 17.54 +.40 0.10 10.75 +.10 25.10 +1.29 12.37 +.06 1.80 63.94 -1.36 28.00 +.69 1.48 33.07 -.75 0.52 18.60 -.10 0.64 35.48 +.51 25.98 -.21 13.12 +.06 45.50 +.66 0.54 24.85 -.04 1.86 33.44 +.59 0.48 6.93 +.18 1.70 47.37 +.07 25.02 -1.22 22.69 -.14 0.36 24.02 -.37 7.01 +.01 0.96 35.48 +.86 28.72 +.22 1.63 -.02 1.00 43.40 -.01 2.15 +.05 38.86 -.07 18.52 +.60 0.40 27.50 +.45 32.86 +.46 5.76 +.16 0.06 9.65 -.12 0.88 46.40 -.16 13.94 +.13 0.82 26.08 +.09 0.30 12.18 +.13 0.20 24.88 +.87 1.81 24.09 +.89 1.00 40.51 +.12 4.65 29.56 +.26 2.26 -.04 1.24 22.52 +.08 6.95 +.12 3.51 -.07 2.72 44.22 +.22 8.78 +.14 1.20 22.49 +.28 26.69 -.02 19.73 +.19 17.09 +.16 4.79 +.01 0.08 15.06 +.15 4.99 +.09 .49 -.03 5.25 -.06 1.80 45.46 +.42 24.19 -.14 11.59 +1.05 0.53 3.57 +.12 0.24 41.39 -.58 .58 -.02 55.74 +.67 0.80 46.57 -.57 2.82 +.04 0.20 5.22 +.22 1.28 50.88 +.11 10.55 +.28 0.40 53.67 +.32 35.98 +.63 0.32 46.88 -.23 16.29 +.16 28.30 +.50 25.98 +.99 1.70 30.65 -.09 0.41 29.53 +.11 0.75 22.03 -.09 0.60 25.93 +.23 14.67 +.10

Nm HomeDp Home Inns HomeProp HomexDev Honda HonwllIntl Hormel Hornbeck HorsehdH Hospira HospPT HostHotls HotTopic HstnAEn HovnanE HubbelB HudsCity HugotnR HumGen Humana HuntJB HuntBnk Huntsmn HuronCon HutchT Hyatt n Hypercom Hyperdyn

D 0.95 32.06 -.16 39.05 -.09 2.32 48.78 -.22 26.36 +.40 29.65 +.94 1.21 41.53 +.21 0.84 41.80 +.30 14.41 +.30 8.48 -.09 53.91 +.14 1.80 22.77 +.35 0.04 15.02 +.19 0.28 5.36 +.11 0.02 13.75 +.28 4.72 -.01 1.44 43.00 +.54 0.60 12.91 -.15 1.12 21.45 -.37 26.21 -.30 48.10 +.15 0.48 34.90 +1.16 0.04 6.08 -.03 0.40 9.58 +.02 21.39 +.17 4.96 +.40 39.51 +.92 4.78 1.16 +.03

I-J-K-L IAC Inter IAMGld g ICICI Bk ICO Glb A IDT Corp iGateCorp ING GRE ING INGPrRTr ION Geoph IPC iPass IQMrgArb iShCmxG iSAstla iShBraz iSCan iShGer iSh HK iShJapn iSh Kor iSMalas iShMex iShSing iSPacxJpn iSSpain iSSwedn iSSwitz iSTaiwn iSh UK iShChile iShSilver iShS&P100 iShDJDv iShBTips iShAsiaexJ iShChina25 iShDJTr iSSP500 iShBAgB iShEMkts iShiBxB iSSPGth iShNatRes iShSPLatA iSSPVal iShB20 T iShB7-10T iShB1-3T iS Eafe iSRusMCV iSRusMCG iShRsMd iSSPMid iShiBxHYB iShNsdqBio iShC&SRl iSR1KV iSMCGth iSR1KG iSRus1K iSR2KV iShBarc1-3 iSR2KG iShR2K iShBShtT iShUSPfd iSSPMatl iShDJTel iShDJTch iShREst iShDJHm iShFnSc iShDJBkr iShUSEngy iShSPSm iShBasM iShDJOG iShEur350 iSSCVal iStar ITC Hold ITT Corp ITT Ed icad h Icon PLC IconixBr Idacorp IdenixPh IDEX Ikanos ITW Illumina Imax Corp Immucor ImunoGn Imunmd ImpaxLabs Incyte IndiaFd Infinera infoGRP InfoLgx rsh InfoSpace Informat InfosysT IngerRd IngrmM Inhibitex InlandRE InovioPhm InsitTc Insmed InspPhar Insulet IntgDv ISSI IntegrysE Intel InteractBrk IntractDat IntcntlEx Intrface Intermec InterMune IBM Intl Coal IntFlav IntlGame IntPap IntlRectif InterOil g Interpublic Intersil IntPotash Intuit IntSurg inVentiv Invernss Invesco InvMtgC n InVKSrInc InvTech InvRlEst IridiumCm IronMtn IsilonSys Isis IsleCapri ItauUnibH Itron IvanhoeEn IvanhM g Ixia JCrew JA Solar

23.30 +.06 0.06 17.02 -.63 0.53 36.59 +.01 1.55 +.05 10.57 +.31 0.11 13.21 -.31 0.54 6.75 +.17 7.97 +.15 0.33 5.51 +.04 4.64 +.05 26.26 +.18 0.48 1.17 -.03 25.45 +.01 119.70 -.42 0.66 20.78 +.15 2.72 64.97 -.68 0.33 26.66 +.07 0.55 19.50 +.16 0.38 15.10 +.01 0.14 9.48 +.06 0.32 45.93 +.82 0.24 11.40 +.05 0.70 50.60 -.15 0.33 11.30 +.04 1.43 38.24 +.10 2.05 33.79 -.22 0.50 23.94 +.06 0.30 20.23 +.04 0.21 11.39 +.02 0.42 14.40 +.12 0.60 56.56 -.21 17.86 +.01 1.04 49.46 -.15 1.65 44.60 +.10 3.80 105.73 0.70 53.09 +.20 0.55 40.11 -.16 0.95 78.68 +.42 2.22 109.88 -.11 3.93 105.81 +.15 0.58 38.77 +.01 5.52 105.83 -.20 0.82 56.18 -.06 0.36 33.31 -.17 0.75 44.18 -.37 1.20 52.80 -.07 3.72 96.91 -.50 3.82 93.32 -.08 1.25 83.85 +.02 1.44 49.22 +.31 0.72 39.07 +.17 0.39 46.88 +.13 1.22 86.29 +.33 0.93 76.22 +.33 8.00 84.37 +.11 81.49 +.25 1.93 59.98 +.65 1.22 57.39 -.17 0.51 82.38 +.38 0.69 48.71 +.01 1.06 60.62 -.02 1.00 61.27 +.37 3.71 103.47 -.04 0.42 70.80 +.34 0.75 65.35 +.41 0.15 110.22 -.01 2.79 36.98 +.03 0.46 55.87 +.12 0.73 19.71 -.01 0.25 54.93 -.12 1.86 51.17 +.60 0.09 12.47 -.01 0.68 52.10 -.24 0.15 25.95 -.24 0.48 31.08 -.11 0.54 57.68 +.31 0.79 57.63 -.35 0.24 53.62 -.03 1.00 33.41 +.23 0.84 61.14 +.29 5.46 +.13 1.28 52.91 +.09 1.00 47.11 +.35 95.79 -1.93 1.77 +.19 28.36 +1.21 16.16 +.06 1.20 33.25 +.40 4.94 -.06 0.60 31.33 +.48 1.82 -.04 1.24 45.65 +.10 44.45 -.54 15.97 +.19 19.55 -.14 8.47 -.27 3.38 +.06 20.92 +.11 13.05 +.16 30.00 +.38 6.79 +.34 7.91 -.03 6.90 +3.29 7.74 -.21 25.99 +.62 0.56 61.10 +1.67 0.28 38.08 +.37 17.29 +.08 2.49 -.01 0.57 8.21 1.06 +.04 19.94 +.20 .75 -.03 5.37 +.07 15.10 +.11 5.45 +.01 8.77 +.11 2.72 44.55 -.13 0.63 20.89 +.25 17.26 -.08 0.80 32.88 +.12 122.92 -.49 0.04 11.79 +.14 10.70 -.47 9.63 +.07 2.60 128.50 +.05 4.06 -.03 1.00 45.36 -.37 0.24 19.23 +.01 0.50 25.05 +.75 20.14 -.21 54.36 -.24 7.97 -.01 0.48 13.17 -.09 22.04 -.40 36.55 +.23 327.40 -9.71 24.99 -.01 27.91 +.22 0.44 18.92 +.02 2.44 20.77 +.03 0.33 4.54 +.07 17.08 +.19 0.69 8.91 +.06 9.08 +.03 0.25 24.36 +.31 12.31 -.40 9.44 +.12 11.79 +.32 0.55 18.99 -.28 67.30 +1.45 2.28 +.04 14.25 +.25 9.49 -.03 42.79 -.03 4.69 -.10

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D 11.13 +.03 0.20 37.33 -.76 12.80 -.51 1.79 30.14 +.25 0.28 13.19 +.10 0.38 24.32 +.26 21.81 -.07 1.57 -.01 40.78 -.04 9.06 -.09 2.57 +.06 16.93 +.17 0.04 10.39 -.21 0.33 30.23 +.04 1.46 -.02 8.06 +.17 0.30 22.28 -.40 6.63 +.13 43.79 +.55 2.30 +.06 2.16 58.42 -.04 0.52 27.98 +.42 0.20 19.62 +.40 0.20 71.44 +1.00 1.78 +.01 60.36 +.12 0.70 55.33 +.76 24.87 -.12 43.01 +.34 0.25 12.80 -.18 0.20 22.44 +.15 0.40 8.20 -.06 0.60 29.30 +.14 20.26 -.10 1.18 +.02 0.96 38.31 -.83 39.24 +.02 11.46 +.21 0.72 36.31 -.47 1.92 24.39 -.21 1.92 26.27 +.02 1.50 54.47 +.81 0.48 28.74 +.18 4.25 +.18 9.99 0.04 8.12 -.12 1.40 32.85 +.19 2.64 62.45 +.30 0.64 14.83 +.29 4.28 64.92 +.43 4.28 56.00 +.13 39.93 -.27 8.06 +.08 0.10 17.17 -.29 40.06 +.19 20.90 +.41 14.42 +.12 0.24 21.56 +.47 3.36 +.01 52.29 +.63 3.46 -.01 14.07 +.12 13.93 +.06 1.16 29.39 +.09 3.67 -.08 0.38 19.72 -.27 7.58 -.01 9.63 +.34 7.90 +.21 1.60 80.26 +.65 0.33 19.17 -.28 5.66 -.01 17.03 +.32 18.91 +.03 5.04 -.05 3.00 -.04 12.40 +.09 1.01 78.81 +.57 1.45 +.10 40.40 +.25 28.67 -.18 0.18 41.62 +.64 25.99 +.27 0.04 23.76 +.79 4.66 +.16 8.21 -.11 0.50 30.90 -1.13 14.56 -.33 5.11 +.24 68.30 +1.87 2.99 +.14 2.08 22.96 -.44 0.16 32.28 -.09 1.04 22.80 +.06 0.40 33.70 -.37 0.16 15.25 -.30 0.60 43.59 -.14 21.26 +.14 1.22 +.02 1.37 +.08 0.40 5.96 +.21 37.18 -.32 9.85 0.29 4.27 +.08 25.34 -.07 25.36 -.01 12.95 -.04 41.11 -.21 1.90 31.48 +.10 50.02 +.19 36.59 +.42 34.88 +.60 1.62 +.04 0.60 35.71 +.01 1.96 33.87 +.20 4.00 -.05 0.60 25.53 +.45 49.50 +.07 0.04 27.41 +1.05 0.92 27.60 -.20 2.52 25.67 -.13 4.81 +.08 6.92 -.05 0.20 7.86 +.25 11.81 +.22 5.52 +.16 1.45 3.22 +.06 2.52 79.67 +.92 4.29 +.30 0.25 32.74 +.19 14.55 -.02 27.62 -.64 32.32 +.92 11.99 -.33 4.00 73.62 -.09 7.67 -.26 0.44 23.45 -.03 1.44 87.86 -.37 2.30 +.30 42.43 +.67 27.63 +.21

M-N-O-P M&T Bk MBIA MCG Cap MDC MDS g MDU Res MEMC MF Global MFA Fncl MGF MIN h MGIC MGMMir MIPS Tech MKS Inst MPG OffTr MSC Ind MSCI Inc Macerich MackCali Macquarie Macys Magma MagnaI g MagHRes MaidenBrd ManTech MgHiYP Manitowoc MannKd ManpwI Manulife g MarathonO MarinerEn MktVGold MktV Steel MktVRus MktVJrGld MktV Agri MktV Indo MktVCoal MarkWest

2.80 77.53 -.86 6.04 +.01 0.11 5.28 +.01 1.00 28.76 -.07 8.33 -.12 0.63 18.69 +.01 10.84 +.06 6.83 -.16 0.96 7.56 +.05 0.52 7.43 -.14 0.58 6.75 +.06 8.43 +.22 11.95 +.35 5.36 -.11 19.47 +.18 2.90 +.18 0.80 52.51 +.08 29.25 -.44 2.00 41.61 +.65 1.80 32.17 +.49 14.88 +.61 0.20 21.73 +.49 2.98 +.14 0.18 69.21 +2.14 4.78 +.17 23.36 +.61 46.50 +.30 0.23 2.12 +.05 0.08 10.82 +.44 6.43 -.07 0.74 43.77 -.14 0.52 15.86 -.19 1.00 32.56 +.19 22.55 +.13 0.11 49.90 -.89 0.98 57.88 +.08 0.08 29.33 27.50 -.55 0.42 38.23 -.25 0.18 69.23 +.01 0.31 32.24 +.05 2.56 30.27 +.03

Nm MarIntA MarshM MarshIls MStewrt MartMM MarvellT Masco Masimo MasseyEn Mastec MasterCrd Matrixx Mattel Mattson MaximIntg McClatchy McCorm McDermInt McDnlds McGrwH McKesson McMoRn McAfee MeadJohn MeadWvco Mechel MedAssets MedcoHlth Mediacom MedProp MediCo Medicis Medifast Medivation Mednax Medtrnic MelcoCrwn MensW MentorGr MercadoL MercerIntl Merck Meredith MergeHlth MeridBio MeritMed Meritage Metabolix Metalico Metalline Methanx MetLife MetroPCS MetroHlth Micrel Microchp Micromet MicronT MicroSemi Microsoft Micrvisn MidAApt MdwGold g Millicom Millipore MindrayM Mindspeed Minefnd g Mirant MitsuUFJ MizuhoFn MobileTel s Modine Mohawk Molex MolsCoorB MoneyGrm MonPwSys Monsanto MonstrWw Montpelr Moodys MorgStan MSEMDDbt MorgHtl Mosaic Motorola Move Inc MuellerWat MurphO Mylan MyriadG NBTY NCI Bld rs NCR Corp NETgear NGAS Res NICESys NII Hldg NIVS IntT NPS Phm NRG Egy NV Energy NYSE Eur Nabors NalcoHld Nanomtr NaraBncp NasdOMX NBkGreece NatFnPrt NatFuGas NatGrid NatInstru NOilVarco NatPenn NatRetPrp NatSemi NatwHP Navios NaviosMar Navistar NeenahP NektarTh Nelnet Ness Tech Net1UEPS NetServic NetLogic s NetApp Netease Netezza Netflix Netlist NetSolTc h NetwkEng Neuralstem Neurcrine NeuStar NeutTand Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NewOriEd NY&Co NY CmtyB NY Times NewAlliBc Newcastle NewellRub NewfldExp NewmtM NewpkRes Newport NewsCpA NewsCpB Nexen g NexMed NextEraEn Nextwave h NiSource NichACv NichACv2 Nicor NightwkR NikeB 99 Cents NipponTT NobleCorp NobleEn NokiaCp Nomura NordicAm Nordstrm NorflkSo NA Pall g NoestUt NthnO&G NorTrst NthgtM g NorthropG NStarRlt NwstBcsh NovaGld g Novartis NovtlWrls

D 0.16 33.97 +.65 0.80 22.85 +.77 0.04 7.74 -.01 5.42 -.03 1.60 91.92 -.06 17.49 -.39 0.30 12.63 +.27 2.00 23.56 -.09 0.24 31.01 -.09 10.52 -.06 0.60 204.17 -.71 4.91 +.34 0.75 21.69 +.14 3.83 -.01 0.80 17.45 -.07 4.36 +.11 1.04 39.61 -.07 23.18 +1.08 2.20 69.30 -.24 0.94 28.68 -.19 0.72 69.81 +.14 11.68 +.68 32.23 -.49 0.90 52.75 +.85 0.92 23.86 +.11 21.13 -.04 24.69 +.19 61.23 -.08 7.10 +.31 0.80 9.82 +.26 7.65 -.22 0.24 23.06 -.02 29.75 +.25 10.76 -.29 58.83 +1.08 0.82 38.82 +.69 4.22 +.08 0.36 22.31 +.27 9.29 -.10 57.84 +.04 4.59 -.10 1.52 35.02 +.16 0.92 34.53 +.27 2.75 +.15 0.76 17.48 +.13 16.16 +.39 18.20 -.02 14.94 +.36 4.73 -.05 .60 -.01 0.62 21.31 +.13 0.74 41.05 -.05 8.89 +.24 4.04 +.09 0.14 10.67 -.04 1.37 28.36 +.10 6.71 +.16 8.91 -.02 14.70 -.01 0.52 25.50 -.17 2.77 +.02 2.46 53.25 +.25 .54 -.04 7.24 84.42 -.72 106.56 -.11 0.20 31.64 +1.00 8.08 +.13 9.12 -.06 12.22 +.22 4.71 +.03 3.50 +.06 19.34 +.14 8.94 -.32 53.76 +3.62 0.61 20.11 +.05 1.12 44.01 +.33 2.53 -.03 18.61 +.05 1.06 49.99 -1.24 12.70 -.52 0.36 15.17 +.13 0.42 19.91 +.23 0.20 25.33 -.67 1.10 14.97 -.04 7.25 +.18 0.20 43.97 -1.27 6.96 -.15 2.24 +.04 0.07 3.97 +.06 1.00 54.56 +.30 17.95 -.37 18.04 +.45 35.11 +.67 8.97 +.41 12.83 +.03 20.60 -.20 1.16 +.04 28.40 +.26 38.27 +.75 2.22 6.99 +.32 22.92 -.02 0.44 12.21 +.15 1.20 28.82 20.81 -.33 0.14 22.06 +.26 10.68 -.04 8.36 +.04 19.10 -.05 0.31 2.43 +.06 10.96 +.24 1.38 50.61 +.62 7.17 41.72 +.51 0.52 31.30 0.40 36.85 -.68 0.04 6.33 -.06 1.50 22.21 +.22 0.32 14.23 +.02 1.80 36.31 +.24 0.24 5.57 -.09 1.66 15.70 +.01 53.50 -.11 0.40 19.50 +.53 13.14 +.44 0.28 19.64 4.43 +.02 14.07 -.01 10.43 +.10 28.27 -.09 39.92 -.07 30.97 +.55 13.17 -.11 126.81 +6.12 2.88 +.43 .82 +.05 2.95 +.06 3.27 +.23 4.51 -.13 21.26 +.31 12.00 -.10 3.48 -.04 .08 -.00 6.23 -.31 95.37 +2.65 2.71 +.17 1.00 15.82 -.22 9.14 -.04 0.28 11.48 -.02 2.98 +.08 0.20 16.63 +.01 54.23 -.16 0.40 54.94 -1.31 6.86 +.56 9.39 +.22 0.15 13.12 -.25 0.15 15.45 -.14 0.20 21.95 -.23 .29 -.02 2.00 50.50 +.50 .29 +.01 0.92 15.03 -.03 1.08 9.07 +.05 1.02 8.54 +.05 1.86 41.30 +.38 3.01 +.02 1.08 72.22 -.11 13.83 -.23 19.79 +.01 0.20 30.00 +.22 0.72 63.68 -.30 0.56 9.44 -.10 5.79 -.05 1.45 29.29 +.40 0.80 38.81 +.96 1.36 56.18 -.62 3.33 -.01 1.03 26.08 +.07 14.01 -.39 1.12 49.34 -.59 2.98 +.04 1.88 59.74 +.05 0.40 3.05 +.04 0.40 11.57 +.09 6.83 -.07 1.99 48.26 +.01 5.81 -.13

Novavax h Novell Novlus NovoNord NSTAR NuSkin NuVasive NuanceCm Nucor NustarEn NutriSyst NuvMuVal NvMSI&G2 NuvQPf2 Nvidia OGE Engy OReillyA h OcciPet Oceaneer OceanFrt h Och-Ziff Oclaro rs OcwenFn OdysseyHlt OdysMar OfficeDpt OfficeMax OilSvHT OilStates Oilsands g OldNBcp OldRepub Olin OmegaHlt OmniEn h Omncre Omnicom OmniVisn OnSmcnd ONEOK OnyxPh OpenTxt OpenTable OpnwvSy Oracle OrbitalSci Orbitz Orexigen OrientEH OrientFn OriginAg OrionMar OrmatTc Orthovta OshkoshCp OvShip OwensM s OwensCorn OwensIll Oxigene PDL Bio PF Chng PG&E Cp PHH Corp PLX Tch PMA Cap PMC Sra PMI Grp PNC PNM Res POSCO PPG PPL Corp PSS Wrld Paccar PacerIntl PacCapB PacEthan PacRim PacSunwr PackAmer Pactiv PaetecHld PallCorp Palm Inc PanASlv Panasonic PaneraBrd ParPharm ParagShip ParamTch ParaG&S Parexel ParkDrl ParkerHan PartnerRe PatriotCoal Patterson PattUTI Paychex PeabdyE Pengrth g PnnNGm PennVa PennVaGP PennWst g PennantPk Penney PenRE Penske Pentair PeopUtdF PepBoy PepcoHold PepsiCo Peregrne rs PerfectWld PerkElm Prmian Perrigo PetChina Petrohawk PetrbrsA Petrobras PetroDev PtroqstE PetsMart Pfizer PhmHTr PharmPdt Pharmacyc Pharmerica PhaseFwd PhilipMor PhilipsEl PhlVH PhnxCos PhnxTc PhotrIn PiedNG PiedmOfc n Pier 1 PilgrmsP n PimCpOp PimIncStr2 PimcoHiI PinnaclA PinnclEnt PinWst PionDrill PioNtrl PiperJaf PitnyBw PlainsAA PlainsEx Plantron PlatUnd PlaybyB Plexus PlugPwr h PlumCrk PluristemT Polaris Polo RL Polycom PolyMet g PolyOne Poniard h Pool Corp Popular PortGE PostPrp Potash Potlatch PwrInteg Power-One PSCrudeDS PwshDB PS Agri PS Oil PS BasMet PS USDBull PS USDBear PwSClnEn PwSWtr PSFinPf PSBldABd PSVrdoTF PwShPfd PShEMSov PShGlbWtr PSIndia PwShs QQQ Powrwav Pozen Praxair PrecCastpt PrecDrill PrmWBc h Prestige PriceTR priceline PrideIntl Primerica n PrinFncl PrivateB ProShtDow ProShtQQQ ProShtS&P PrUShS&P ProUltDow PrUlShDow ProUltMC PrUShMC ProUltQQQ PrUShQQQ ProUltSP ProUShL20 ProShtEafe ProShtEM PrUShtSem PrUSCh25 rs ProUSEM rs ProUSRE rs ProUSOG rs ProUSBM rs ProUltRE rs ProUShtFn ProUFin rs PrUPShQQQ PrUPShR2K

D 2.32 +.02 6.19 -.07 26.99 +.33 1.41 80.98 +.89 1.60 35.03 +.10 0.50 27.06 +.29 38.23 +.23 17.03 -.01 1.44 42.43 -.20 4.26 56.38 -.36 0.70 22.87 +1.04 0.47 9.89 -.06 0.75 7.78 +.03 0.65 7.33 +.01 11.36 -.25 1.45 36.22 +.24 50.32 +.51 1.52 84.71 -.30 45.54 -.37 .46 -.01 0.76 14.37 +.36 12.99 +.05 10.98 +.58 26.59 -.15 1.16 -.03 5.50 +.10 16.76 +.23 2.66 97.35 -1.29 42.05 -.26 .70 -.02 0.28 11.10 -.11 0.69 13.26 +.03 0.80 20.05 +.21 1.28 20.17 +.17 2.66 0.09 25.87 +.05 0.80 37.47 +.06 19.21 +.20 6.78 1.76 45.60 +.30 23.09 +.26 40.03 -1.06 41.62 +.83 2.07 0.20 22.69 15.38 +.22 4.80 -.04 4.57 +.04 8.83 +.43 0.16 12.97 -.21 9.01 -.03 15.18 -.17 0.20 28.72 +.53 2.49 -.11 34.82 +.16 1.75 41.78 +1.27 0.71 29.99 -.02 32.70 +.21 29.74 -.11 .58 +.00 1.00 5.37 -.06 0.17 45.46 +.78 1.82 41.48 +.06 20.40 +.07 3.81 -.15 7.00 -.05 7.74 -.03 4.21 +.09 0.40 60.20 -1.05 0.50 11.77 +.03 1.71 95.28 +.64 2.16 64.07 -.71 1.40 25.65 +.11 22.72 +.15 0.36 42.02 -.15 7.19 +.04 1.30 -.03 .80 .19 -.00 3.44 +.07 0.60 22.56 +.18 29.69 -.25 3.50 -.03 0.64 36.53 -.28 5.70 0.05 24.86 -.45 0.13 13.59 +.32 83.52 +.53 26.24 +.19 0.20 3.87 -.02 16.22 +.05 1.35 -.07 22.24 +.81 4.46 -.01 1.04 60.89 -.17 2.00 72.20 +.16 16.88 -.10 0.40 30.08 +.13 0.20 14.48 -.19 1.24 28.23 -.13 0.28 40.05 +.27 0.84 9.72 +.10 27.40 +.23 0.23 23.70 +.01 1.56 17.32 -.04 1.80 19.89 +.33 1.04 10.23 +.24 0.80 27.14 +1.15 0.60 13.32 +.18 13.07 +.31 0.76 33.82 +.34 0.62 14.08 -.10 0.12 9.44 -.05 1.08 15.85 +.10 1.92 63.85 +.29 3.06 +.05 25.36 -.27 0.28 22.45 -.13 1.08 19.02 +.12 0.25 59.76 -.14 3.72 111.61 -1.10 21.05 +.22 1.30 31.98 -.89 1.30 37.21 -1.11 25.98 +1.01 7.60 +.20 0.40 33.06 +.51 0.72 15.33 -.13 7.49 60.31 -.05 0.60 26.03 +.23 6.35 -.06 14.77 -.08 16.63 +.02 2.32 45.57 +1.22 0.95 31.18 +.71 0.15 54.09 +.95 2.44 +.02 2.70 -.21 4.97 +.15 1.12 25.86 +.08 1.26 19.28 +.27 7.99 +.25 7.61 -.29 1.38 16.50 +.49 0.70 9.30 +.42 1.46 11.56 +.20 5.20 -.10 12.01 +.15 2.10 35.77 +.11 6.17 -.03 0.08 69.64 -.46 32.90 -.19 1.46 22.78 +.14 3.74 58.35 +.20 23.49 -.63 0.20 30.05 -.05 0.32 37.03 +.07 3.90 -.04 31.37 -.03 .41 +.03 1.68 36.40 +.17 1.15 +.05 1.60 60.80 +.60 0.40 84.17 +.72 30.62 -.01 1.47 -.01 9.34 +.05 .84 -.04 0.52 24.05 +.16 2.85 -.05 1.04 18.69 0.80 25.58 -.19 0.40 98.88 -1.74 2.04 38.36 +.90 0.20 33.56 +.74 7.01 -.09 74.91 -.50 22.01 +.06 23.79 +.24 24.52 -.07 18.33 +.31 25.23 -.23 24.71 +.23 8.67 +.08 0.12 16.07 +.05 1.35 16.41 +.11 0.64 25.99 -.06 0.16 25.00 1.03 13.67 +.02 1.66 25.74 -.03 0.23 16.69 +.12 0.13 21.62 +.21 0.21 45.49 -.01 1.60 +.05 7.40 -.06 1.80 77.50 -.28 0.12 109.07 +.14 7.38 +.08 .43 -.05 7.61 -.11 1.08 49.38 -.46 184.14 +.23 24.09 -.14 21.52 +.10 0.50 25.88 +.13 0.04 11.99 -.15 51.87 +.08 42.77 52.11 +.08 33.95 +.10 0.53 42.03 -.14 28.60 +.10 0.11 45.25 +.42 18.31 -.17 57.32 +.01 17.93 +.02 0.41 36.25 -.07 39.26 +.33 62.83 -.37 39.49 -.04 16.73 -.19 40.15 +.33 53.81 -.03 25.55 -.61 64.82 +.61 39.55 +.46 0.50 41.53 +.94 21.38 +.21 0.30 55.40 -.38 61.20 +.15 50.36 -.76

Nm

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ProUltO&G ProUBasM ProUShEur ProShtR2K ProUltPQQQ ProUSR2K ProUltR2K ProUSSP500 ProUltSP500 ProUltCrude ProUSSlv rs ProUShCrude ProUShEuro ProctGam PrognicsPh ProgrssEn ProgsvCp ProLogis ProlorBio ProspctCap Protalix ProtLife ProvET g Prudentl PsychSol PSEG PubStrg PubSt pfI PulteGrp PPrIT

0.22 29.56 -.18 0.15 28.54 -.42 24.70 -.48 40.59 -.20 89.25 +.05 20.52 -.25 0.04 30.19 +.36 33.72 +.11 0.23 136.22 -.44 9.84 -.05 34.42 -.06 14.93 -.01 25.06 -.54 1.93 61.25 +.24 6.35 +.20 2.48 38.77 -.07 0.16 19.44 -.16 0.60 11.17 +.28 8.35 -.23 1.64 10.50 +.12 6.55 -.18 0.56 21.29 -.02 0.72 7.37 +.05 0.70 57.98 -.83 32.55 +.03 1.37 32.32 +.21 3.20 91.51 +.24 1.81 25.01 +.13 9.48 -.07 0.71 6.42 +.07

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D 0.42 28.56 -.26 3.39 +.01 44.06 +.16 0.28 5.63 +.02 18.39 +.13 19.53 +.13 0.08 6.68 -.07 8.03 -.01 2.40 88.41 +1.33 0.40 27.90 -.04 36.66 -.37 5.77 +.18 4.20 +.10 .00 -.01 34.76 +.90 41.32 +.61 0.16 13.46 +.11 16.43 +.12 5.15 -.13 6.25 +.21 6.39 +.20 4.27 +.02 0.78 48.04 -1.19 0.48 39.68 -.55 10.22 +.24 17.15 +.10 2.74 +.54 1.60 56.86 +.79 1.20 43.21 +.20 0.62 33.76 -.14 43.53 -.29 2.40 20.92 -.78 7.77 -.34 18.32 +.02 0.25 34.89 +.29 15.12 -.14 4.94 +.08 9.16 +.21 9.74 +.21 8.99 -.70 11.23 -.03 1.12 31.84 -.17 2.66 +.02 0.27 28.40 -.20 0.20 31.39 +.29 20.78 +1.37 .28 +.00 1.82 33.17 +.14 1.16 30.41 -.15 0.60 22.79 +.27 0.02 12.04 -.03 43.54 -.37 16.25 -.30 0.10 5.55 +.35 1.00 20.68 +.06 4.09 +.04 19.22 +.47 9.53 -.05 4.79 -.08 11.72 -.16 0.80 43.01 -.41 0.52 30.37 -.30 0.53 29.21 +.05 0.73 26.62 +.15 0.41 32.34 +.09 1.00 54.04 -.28 0.20 14.45 -.06 0.59 29.14 -.03 0.31 21.70 -.04 1.26 29.39 +.17 0.20 8.67 +.17 4.11 -.08 1.32 55.31 +.35 0.36 21.72 -.01 1.51 +.09 0.40 27.46 +.31 0.20 47.32 +.37 0.04 37.03 -.65 1.02 21.04 +.13 0.30 14.38 +.10 0.16 7.70 +.34 .99 +.03 63.72 +.15 0.44 32.15 +.73 0.06 5.16 -.06 .73 -.03 0.15 14.19 +.39 34.74 +1.17 0.12 5.46 -.04 45.00 -.54 13.03 +.31 13.56 +.06 4.65 +.24 0.60 50.45 -.14 22.98 +.30 9.03 +.09 1.44 29.07 +.16 0.40 32.50 -.21 .54 +.02 0.60 31.31 +.60 5.03 -.02 13.51 +.11 12.16 +.11 3.94 +.12 11.45 +.13 9.81 -.10 0.04 25.69 -.20 19.98 -.04 16.68 -.22 0.35 12.36 +.12 0.04 8.56 -.02 7.03 +.05 31.39 -.09 64.57 -.03 16.30 -.12 14.43 -.24 5.27 -.02 10.51 +.06 6.15 -.06 27.34 -.39 1.13 45.77 +.08 18.63 -.07 21.89 +.14 0.04 2.64 -.13 2.06 25.07 -.63 3.65 +.35 2.00 +.01 1.00 30.74 -.21 31.21 -.76 0.90 13.75 -.03 0.20 16.67 -.15 17.83 -.33 0.82 15.80 +.15 0.28 12.83 4.91 -.64 0.71 27.99 +.13 0.60 46.08 +.03 31.46 +.51 9.65 -.32 17.40 +.39 0.46 9.85 +.05 10.03 -.41 12.76 +.51 21.88 +.07 0.25 17.23 +.14 1.55 41.29 +.40 2.07 23.59 +.07 1.00 54.05 +.34 4.98 -.02 4.20 +.07 0.13 17.28 +.05 1.66 42.02 +.92 39.61 -.41 0.40 33.93 +.32 1.27 27.90 +.48 1.90 21.07 +.07 1.18 11.81 +.36 13.94 +.05 4.73 -.10 2.93 16.29 +.28 0.84 6.62 +.11 0.68 11.45 +.13 4.78 58.06 -.11 1.36 14.19 -.07 0.45 32.19 -.18 9.43 +.05 .75 +.04 0.08 6.93 +.04 0.25 17.84 -.39 18.79 -.27 0.44 22.48 +.55 0.54 9.36 +.03 33.44 +.57 0.68 37.24 +.56 5.06 -.01 24.21 +1.09 32.98 +.43 10.65 +.11 20.56 +.16 7.81 +.08 .44 11.47 +.10 17.62 -.24 21.41 +.41 9.25 -.24 0.68 53.28 +.31 0.30 32.94 -.44 0.48 24.57 +.12 14.13 +.16 0.08 19.30 -.16 4.07 +.07 15.52 +.18 52.16 +.21 38.76 +.18 9.52 +.38 1.16 37.43 +.66 0.28 26.77 +1.21 44.04 -.75 2.10 78.14 -.16 10.20 +.25 11.38 +.07 1.00 41.08 -.33 1.00 43.96 +.35 18.92 -.45 1.00 1.60 54.68 +1.11 0.85 31.58 +.05 0.52 28.88 +.22 0.02 10.45 +.15 20.07 +.51 8.02 +.39 18.64 -.20 0.60 51.70 -.20 6.63 +.23 0.72 54.84 +.33 2.44 69.03 +.83 3.23 47.83 +.72 0.28 14.38 -.03 0.28 21.99 +.03 1.46 +.05 0.30 43.23 +.47 71.02 +.21 0.56 67.88 +1.38 7.39 -.06 1.60 35.19 +.32 0.84 47.25 +.56 3.30 +.11 7.65 52.27 +.55 7.90 +.05 44.78 -2.07 1.44 50.05 -.36

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C OV ER S T OR I ES

Polygraph Continued from B1 “You want the subject to clearly understand the question,” he said. “If there is any confusion, they are not really answering the question you ask them. A polygraph exam is not about tricking somebody.” The Wanlesses started their business in 2007 after leaving long careers in law enforcement. Becky Wanless started with the state Department of Corrections in 1974 before retiring in 2007 as Deschutes County’s adult parole and probation director. Peter Wanless had a 22-year career in the Secret Service, including stints in the White House (he was assigned to Nancy Reagan’s protective detail when President Ronald Reagan was shot in 1981, though he was not on duty when it happened), and later served as the chief of police in Sunriver and as a captain in the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office. Though each was retired, neither was finished working. They decided to become polygraph examiners and enrolled in an intensive, graduate-level polygraph examination school in Illinois, where they studied for two

Reform Continued from B1 Much of the action centers on a provision sponsored by Sen. Blanche Lincoln, D-Ark., to effectively bar banks from trading derivatives, the complex instruments that have been implicated in the financial system chaos that followed the near-collapse of the mortgage market in 2008. On Monday, Lincoln offered to ease some of the toughest elements of her provision, but not enough to assuage Wall Street’s concerns. Under her latest proposal, banks would have two years to spin off their derivatives arms. A bank holding company could still maintain a derivatives operation — but as a separate affiliate with its own capital, not as part of a commercial bank. In addition, companies that are not major dealers in derivatives would be exempted from her ban.

THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 B5

months. They then pursued licensing in Oregon, which they say has some of the strictest licensing requirements in the country. “I think it’s a good thing,” Becky Wanless said. “In some cases, you are making a call which can affect a person’s life, the repercussions of which can be enormous.” Much of their study at the polygraph school focused on anatomy, psychology and physiology. Polygraphs work off the subtle signals a person’s body gives off when he or she doesn’t tell the truth, according to the Wanlesses. In essence, it is the fight-orflight response at work, they explained. For instance, when someone becomes stressed, i.e., tells a lie, their hands become more moist. Their pulse might pick up. Or someone might breathe a little heavier. All of these are measured with small sensors that are placed over the subject’s chest, over their bicep (like in a blood pressure exam) and with sensors placed on two fingers of the same hand to measure electric resistance (which is affected by the moisture content of the skin). The resulting data can then be analyzed to see if a subject’s

body gave off heightened physiological responses to any of the questions asked. The Wanlesses work part-time, but they say they could stay busy all week if they wanted. They say they enjoy their work and find it interesting and, more importantly, feel like they are helping to make the community safer. “To a certain degree, it’s a deterrant, and helps offenders be honest,” said Becky Wanless. “People know they work and so they tell us stuff.” The Wanlesses answered a few more questions about their business in an e-mail to The Bulletin.

We test the clients of criminal defense attorneys, civil attorneys and family law attor-

Andrew Moore can be reached at 541-617-7820 or amoore@ bendbulletin.com.

Even so, the six largest Wall Street banks, which dominate the derivatives trading business, quickly indicated that they would lobby fiercely to defeat the entire provision.

said last week that House and Senate negotiators had reached “conceptual agreement” on a proposal by Sens Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., and Carl Levin, D-Mich., to expressly forbid banks from trading for their own accounts or from investing in hedge funds or private equity funds. The House bill, approved in December before Obama endorsed the ban on proprietary trading, gives the Federal Reserve the right, but not the obligation, to prohibit proprietary trading by a “systemically important” financial company. The Senate bill, approved last month, calls for a study of the effects of a ban on proprietary trading and empowers a systemic risk council to put a ban into effect. Days after Obama said in January that he wanted new financial regulations to include a ban on proprietary trading by federally insured banks, Volcker went to Capitol Hill to explain the concept.

“Every banker I speak with knows very well what ‘proprietary trading’ means and implies,” Volcker told members of the Senate Banking committee in early February. Four months later, Congress is still debating what it means. Some members of the conference committee were expressing concern last week that Congress had not laid out the specifics of what Sen. Richard Shelby called “the Volcker concept” — exactly what activity was to be allowed and what was to be forbidden. “Despite assurances from high-ranking Treasury officials that clarity would be provided on what constitutes proprietary trading and what does not, no such clarity has been provided,” Shelby said. “This is why I call it a concept.”

Tough climate The House-Senate conference committee is to take up a variety of other issues today, including the regulation of credit rating agencies, and in coming weeks it will address other flash points with the banks, like limits on credit-card fees. But the likelihood that the legislation will include a relatively tough version of the Volcker Rule on proprietary trading shows how the climate has only grown more difficult over the past few months for Wall Street, banks and their lobbyists. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee and a leader of the conference process,

neys, as well as individuals who are on parole or probation for sexual offenses and domestic violence offenses. We do not do infidelity tests or any exam involving employment, as employment-related exams are prohibited in Oregon.

Q: A:

Are polygraph tests admissible in court? The results of a polygraph exam are admissible under certain circumstances in federal court and in some state courts. In Oregon courts, the results are admissible if both sides agree beforehand to allow test results.

Q: A: Q: A:

Q: A:

What is the biggest misconception about polygraph tests? The biggest misconception … is that an examination can address a variety of different issues. Exams that focus on a single issue have an accuracy rate of between 85 and 90 percent, whereas exams that cover multiple issues become progressively less reliable.

Q: A:

What is the hardest part of running your business? Clients who fail to appear for their scheduled exams.

What do you find most rewarding about your business? The results of a polygraph examination can have a significant impact on a person’s life. Conducting an accurate exam that confirms that a person is being truthful is very satisfying.

Who are your customers?

A popular proposal If few members of Congress can agree on a definition of the

Tanning Continued from B1 The tanning tax replaced what was known as the “Botax,” which would have put an excise tax on cosmetic surgery and was originally slated to be included in the health care legislation. More powerful lobbies, such as the American Medical Association and the American Academy of Dermatology Association, took credit for replacing the Botax with one on tanning, said John Overstreet, executive director of the Indoor Tanning Association. Congressional pamphlets estimate the tanning tax will raise $2.7 billion over 10 years for the general fund. The Wall Street Journal reported the Botax would have raised $5.8 billion over the same period. Concern about the health risks of ultraviolet rays, whether from the sun or a tanning bed, has brought increased scrutiny on tanning salons in recent years. The Melanoma Research Foundation says using a tanning bed before the age of 35 increases chances of developing melanoma by 75 percent.

Volcker Rule, even fewer have been willing to oppose its inclusion in the final version of the bill. The logic behind the ban is, for some members of Congress, more certain: Banks should not be allowed to use a guarantee of government deposit insurance — indirectly financed by taxpayers — to provide themselves with cheap capital that they then use for risky trading activities. The big banks argue that the Volcker proposal is misguided, for several reasons. Although losses at major Wall Street and banking firms were clearly driven in part by sophisticated trading operations that turned out to be far riskier than assumed, the banks assert that the financial crisis of 2008 was a lendingbased crisis caused by reckless loans made to unqualified home buyers. It was not, they say, a trading crisis. While supporters of the trading ban urge banks to get back

Harpole said that, like with taxed products such as alcohol and cigarettes, people should take an “everything in moderation” approach with tanning. She said tanning salons help provide people with necessary vitamin D, and said her beds have helped customers with other health problems. “Do it in moderation, don’t burn yourself, don’t go every day,” Harpole said. Though the federal regulations imply that the tax would be passed along to consumers, it can be paid by the tanning bed owners. Harpole thinks she’ll only raise prices at her salon, which range from $6 to $115, for people who use credit or debit cards. In 2009, she said she had 9,800 customers. Overstreet thinks the $2.7 billion in estimated tax revenue is too high. He said some people should be more careful than others regarding tanning, adding that it does have health benefits. “Balance and moderation is key to everything in life,” he said. David Holley can be reached at 541-383-0323 or at dholley@ bendbulletin.com.

to “plain vanilla” lending, the banks say that trading can in fact be a less risky activity. And although it looks like there is considerable support for a strengthened version of the Volcker Rule, Congress did see fit to carve out a few exemptions for banks to trade for their own accounts — in government securities. Perhaps mindful that the federal government is burdened with debt related in part to the financial crisis and its aftermath, the proposals say that banks will continue to be allowed to trade government bonds, including securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae and other government-sponsored enterprises.

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PE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

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

... 1.00 .04 .32 1.68 ... .20f .72 .84f ... ... .32 .22 .63 .04 .38 ... ... .63 ... .52

15 13 73 ... 40 ... ... 25 21 33 19 13 33 19 ... 10 52 ... 13 ... 13

51.27 +.41 +48.4 19.65 +.02 -9.0 15.41 -.19 +2.3 13.01 -.03 +5.9 64.82 -.56 +19.7 .59 -.01 -13.2 38.37 +1.73 +39.6 51.58 +.32 +32.1 57.52 ... -2.8 4.00 +.06 +66.7 27.72 +.07 -15.3 46.88 -.23 -9.0 13.72 -.22 +3.1 20.89 +.25 +2.4 8.12 -.12 +46.3 19.72 -.27 -3.9 4.66 +.16 +72.6 7.67 -.26 +9.9 18.69 +.01 -20.8 9.29 -.10 +5.2 25.50 -.17 -16.4

Name

Div

PE

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

1.08 .80f 1.66 ... .36 ... 1.68 .12 .48f .07 1.44 .80f .40 ... .20 .20 .20 .20 ... .20

21 18 17 43 98 ... 37 17 ... 70 20 9 27 20 ... 21 ... 11 ... ...

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

Price (troy oz.) $1220.00 $1223.20 $18.402

Pvs Day $1229.00 $1228.90 $18.222

Market recap 72.22 38.81 44.39 16.76 42.02 1.87 36.40 109.07 20.95 44.18 76.63 43.01 27.46 6.59 12.30 22.82 17.08 27.40 2.96 40.44

-.11 +.96 +.14 +.23 -.15 +.12 +.17 +.14 +.11 +.41 -.01 -.41 +.31 ... +.03 -.49 +.11 -.44 +.10 -.57

+9.3 +3.3 -1.4 +32.1 +15.9 -33.5 -3.6 -1.2 -1.6 -7.4 +24.3 +7.5 +19.1 +9.8 -8.3 +1.4 -11.7 +1.5 +41.0 -6.3

Prime rate Time period

NYSE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

Percent

Last Previous day A week ago

3.25 3.25 3.25

Amex

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

Citigrp S&P500ETF BkofAm BP PLC SPDR Fncl

3562394 1848125 1173572 1086595 892523

Last Chg 3.88 109.51 15.41 30.67 14.45

... -.17 -.19 -3.30 -.06

Gainers ($2 or more) Name ChinaMM ScorpioT n DoralFncl AmbacF pfZ CSGlobWm

Last

Chg %Chg

2.21 +.37 +19.8 11.96 +1.58 +15.2 3.01 +.33 +12.3 10.54 +1.14 +12.1 6.14 +.63 +11.4

Losers ($2 or more) Name MS oil2010 Goldcp wt BP PLC Navistr pfD BlueLinx

Last

Indexes

Chg %Chg

23.18 -3.39 -12.8 5.25 -.70 -11.8 30.67 -3.30 -9.7 18.07 -1.93 -9.7 3.25 -.33 -9.2

Nasdaq

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

GoldStr g NwGold g AmApparel ChMarFd n AntaresP

34554 32943 24822 20152 19727

Most Active ($1 or more)

Last Chg

Name

3.94 6.23 1.90 4.65 1.81

Intel PwShs QQQ Cisco Microsoft MicronT

-.12 -.31 +.55 -.82 +.07

Gainers ($2 or more) Name GerovaFn CagleA AmDGEn n LucasEngy GlblScape

Last

Vol (00)

17.25 +3.37 +24.3 5.78 +.80 +16.1 3.55 +.47 +15.3 2.30 +.30 +15.0 2.35 +.25 +11.9

+.25 -.01 -.15 -.17 -.02

Last

Arbinet rs SmthtnBcp DJSP un Netlist Servidyne

9.84 +2.20 +28.8 2.74 +.54 +24.5 8.30 +1.55 +23.0 2.88 +.43 +17.6 2.56 +.37 +16.9

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Name

ChMarFd n StreamGSv CmtyBT un CompTch BovieMed

4.65 5.85 2.78 2.10 3.35

-.82 -15.0 -.85 -12.7 -.38 -12.0 -.22 -9.3 -.28 -7.7

WestwdO n CompCrd h THQ BridgeCp SecNtl lf

246 236 43 525 13 10

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last Chg 20.89 45.49 22.76 25.50 8.91

Name

Last

Diary 1,920 1,192 101 3,213 65 7

661214 650998 561878 498065 234340

Gainers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more)

Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

52-Week High Low Name

Chg %Chg

11.69 -2.60 -18.2 3.87 -.54 -12.2 4.91 -.64 -11.5 9.75 -1.20 -11.0 2.05 -.24 -10.4

Diary 1,491 1,170 125 2,786 52 30

11,258.01 4,812.87 408.57 7,743.74 1,994.20 2,535.28 1,219.80 12,847.91 745.95

8,087.19 2,988.88 338.37 5,552.82 1,451.26 1,727.05 869.32 8,900.27 473.54

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

World markets

Last

Net Chg

10,190.89 4,342.09 369.35 6,817.97 1,849.98 2,243.96 1,089.63 11,461.49 652.27

-20.18 +22.21 +1.58 +3.21 +7.19 +.36 -1.97 -4.43 +3.27

YTD %Chg %Chg -.20 +.51 +.43 +.05 +.39 +.02 -.18 -.04 +.50

52-wk %Chg

-2.27 +5.91 -7.20 -5.11 +1.37 -1.11 -2.28 -.75 +4.30

+18.33 +34.93 +5.42 +14.26 +16.72 +23.54 +17.96 +21.06 +27.44

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed Monday.

Key currency exchange rates Monday compared with late Friday in New York.

Market

Dollar vs:

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

Close

Change

331.45 2,498.24 3,626.04 5,202.13 6,125.00 20,051.91 32,238.41 20,188.54 3,042.67 9,879.85 1,690.60 2,818.07 4,516.50 5,678.73

+1.81 s +1.40 s +1.98 s +.74 s +1.28 s +.90 s +.36 s +2.69 s +.05 s +1.80 s +.91 s +.78 s +1.53 s +.69 s

Exchange Rate

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

Pvs Day

.8613 1.4771 .9707 .001870 .1462 1.2243 .1283 .010927 .079133 .0318 .000800 .1272 .8765 .0310

.8488 1.4514 .9643 .001860 .1463 1.2077 .1283 .010918 .078877 .0316 .000800 .1258 .8692 .0309

Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAV Chg %Ret Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 16.24 -0.02 -1.1 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 6.51 +0.01 -0.3 GrowthI 21.74 -0.02 -1.4 Ultra 18.98 -0.02 -2.5 American Funds A: AmcpA p 16.30 -0.02 -1.8 AMutlA p 22.71 -0.01 -1.3 BalA p 16.02 -0.03 -0.1 BondA p 12.05 -0.01 +3.9 CapWA p 19.67 +0.05 -1.1 CapIBA p 45.35 +0.08 -4.5 CapWGA p 30.76 +0.06 -9.3 EupacA p 34.88 +0.22 -9.0 FdInvA p 31.54 -2.9 GovtA p 14.36 -0.03 +4.0 GwthA p 26.40 -0.03 -3.4 HI TrA p 10.58 +0.01 +2.9 IncoA p 15.12 +0.03 -1.4 IntBdA p 13.36 -0.01 +2.9 ICAA p 24.58 -0.03 -4.3 NEcoA p 21.40 -4.8 N PerA p 24.10 +0.08 -6.0 NwWrldA 45.67 +0.20 -3.2 SmCpA p 31.84 +0.20 +1.0 TxExA p 12.13 -0.03 +2.5 WshA p 23.91 -0.01 -2.4 American Funds B: CapIBB t 45.30 +0.08 -4.8 GrwthB t 25.52 -0.04 -3.7 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 25.67 +0.19 -9.1 IntlEqA 25.03 +0.18 -9.2 IntEqII I r 10.61 +0.08 -9.9 Artisan Funds: Intl 18.05 +0.13 -12.6 MidCap 26.52 +0.07 +3.8 MidCapVal 18.00 +0.04 +0.1 Baron Funds: Growth 43.52 +0.07 +5.3 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.57 -0.02 +4.4

DivMu 14.48 -0.02 TxMgdIntl 13.40 +0.13 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 15.26 GlAlA r 17.38 +0.01 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 16.20 BlackRock Instl: GlbAlloc r 17.47 +0.01 CGM Funds: Focus 27.15 +0.17 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 43.84 +0.07 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 24.70 +0.13 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 25.44 +0.13 AcornIntZ 32.78 +0.33 ValRestr 41.04 -0.01 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 9.24 +0.09 USCorEq2 9.32 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 30.07 +0.04 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 30.40 +0.03 NYVen C 29.00 +0.03 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.34 -0.02 Dimensional Fds: EmMktV 29.59 +0.18 IntSmVa 13.98 +0.16 LargeCo 8.59 -0.02 USLgVa 17.47 -0.01 US Micro 11.25 +0.05 US Small 17.49 +0.08 US SmVa 20.78 +0.13 IntlSmCo 13.63 +0.16 Fixd 10.33 IntVa 15.21 +0.16 Glb5FxInc 11.24 -0.01 2YGlFxd 10.23 Dodge&Cox: Balanced 63.42 -0.11 Income 13.20 -0.01

+2.0 -12.3 -3.2 -2.9 -3.2 -2.7 -8.7 -1.4 +3.1 +3.2 -2.5 -4.0 -7.5 +2.5 -2.9 -2.8 -3.3 +2.7 -5.3 -6.4 -1.4 +3.0 +6.7 +6.4 +5.9 NA +0.5 NA +3.0 +0.9 -0.4 +3.1

IntlStk 29.54 Stock 94.08 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 16.19 NatlMunInc 9.64 Eaton Vance I: LgCapVal 16.23 Evergreen C: AstAllC t 10.55 FPA Funds: NwInc 11.04 FPACres 24.82 Fairholme 31.52 Federated Instl: KaufmnK 4.59 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 17.00 StrInA 12.06 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 17.17 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 12.42 FF2015 10.34 FF2020 12.36 FF2025 10.20 FF2030 12.11 FF2035 9.98 FF2040 6.96 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 11.26 AMgr50 13.84 Balanc 16.45 BlueChGr 37.78 Canada 49.66 CapAp 22.26 CpInc r 8.54 Contra 57.65 ContraK 57.66 DisEq 20.63 DivIntl 25.19 DivrsIntK r 25.19 DivGth 23.58 EmrMk 21.27 Eq Inc 38.66 EQII 15.97

+0.20 -7.3 -0.23 -1.8 -0.03 NA -0.03 +3.7 -0.03

NA NA +1.9

+0.06 +0.15 +4.8 -1.5 -0.02 -1.2 +0.02 +1.4 -0.02 -1.1 +0.02 +0.02 +0.02 +0.03 +0.03 +0.03 +0.02 +0.02 +0.02 +0.02 +0.01 +0.02 -0.09 -0.09 +0.02 +0.22 +0.22 +0.02 +0.17 -0.06 -0.03

-0.1 -0.1 -0.8 -1.2 -1.6 -2.1 -2.2 -1.6 +0.3 +1.0 -0.4 +2.4 +3.9 +1.8 -0.9 -0.9 -1.8 -10.0 -10.0 -0.4 -5.9 -0.9 -1.9

Fidel 27.58 GNMA 11.75 GovtInc 10.66 GroCo 69.18 GroInc 15.66 GrowthCoK 69.20 HighInc r 8.33 Indepn 19.93 IntBd 10.41 IntmMu 10.22 IntlDisc 27.44 InvGrBd 11.59 InvGB 7.25 LgCapVal 11.00 LatAm 47.43 LevCoStk 23.63 LowP r 32.84 LowPriK r 32.88 Magelln 62.77 MidCap 24.54 MuniInc 12.61 NwMkt r 15.12 OTC 45.39 100Index 7.65 Ovrsea 27.28 Puritn 16.10 SCmdtyStrt 10.07 StIntMu 10.66 STBF 8.40 SmllCpS r 16.40 StratInc 10.76 StrReRt r 8.63 TotalBd 10.72 USBI 11.32 Value 58.54 Fidelity Selects: Gold r 45.87 Fidelity Spartan: 500IdxInv 38.72 IntlInxInv 29.77 TotMktInv 31.41 Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv 38.72 TotMktAd r 31.42

-0.06 -2.6 +4.9 -0.01 +3.7 -0.01 +0.3 -0.03 -2.4 +0.4 +0.02 +1.5 +0.1 -0.01 +4.2 -0.01 +2.2 +0.35 -9.6 -0.01 +4.2 -0.01 +4.6 -0.04 -2.2 -0.22 -8.5 +0.02 +3.1 +0.18 +2.8 +0.19 +2.9 -0.04 -2.3 +0.11 +5.1 -0.02 +3.1 +0.03 +3.2 -0.06 -0.7 -0.03 -3.5 +0.37 -11.8 -0.02 +0.8 +0.15 -9.0 +1.2 +2.0 +0.02 +2.9 +0.02 +1.6 +0.04 +1.4 -0.01 +4.1 -0.01 +3.9 +0.05 +2.8 -0.63 +8.0 -0.07 -1.4 +0.39 -10.9 -0.02 -0.2 -0.07 -1.4 -0.01 -0.1

First Eagle: GlblA 40.47 +0.24 OverseasA 19.72 +0.16 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FedTFA p 11.84 -0.01 FoundAl p 9.52 +0.04 HYTFA p 10.06 -0.02 IncomA p 2.00 +0.01 USGovA p 6.79 -0.01 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv p IncmeAd 1.98 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.01 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 18.99 +0.07 Frank/Temp Temp A: ForgnA p 5.84 +0.09 GlBd A p 13.05 +0.07 GrwthA p 15.42 +0.15 WorldA p 12.78 +0.10 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.07 +0.07 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 35.55 -0.06 GMO Trust III: Quality 17.95 -0.01 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 11.59 +0.06 Quality 17.96 -0.01 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 6.85 +0.01 HYMuni 8.49 -0.01 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.60 -0.01 CapApInst 31.56 -0.07 IntlInv t 49.44 +0.40 Intl r 49.96 +0.41 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 29.23 -0.04 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI 29.19 -0.04 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 35.52 Div&Gr 17.09 -0.03

+1.2 +1.3 +2.8 NA +4.3 +0.1 +4.3 +4.4 -0.4 -0.7 -0.4 NA +4.4 -8.3 -8.5 +4.2 -3.6 -7.2 -5.5 -7.1 +2.1 +6.2 +4.2 -4.3 -9.1 -8.9 -4.7 -4.6 -3.0 -2.6

Advisers 17.42 -0.03 TotRetBd 11.01 -0.02 HussmnStrGr 13.43 +0.04 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 14.43 -0.02 CmstkA 13.57 -0.02 EqIncA 7.65 -0.01 GrIncA p 16.71 -0.03 HYMuA 9.33 -0.02 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 20.34 +0.12 AssetStA p 20.89 +0.13 AssetStrI r 21.04 +0.13 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.38 -0.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 11.37 -0.02 HighYld 7.66 +0.02 IntmTFBd 10.91 -0.02 ShtDurBd 10.93 -0.01 USLCCrPls 17.87 -0.05 Janus T Shrs: Janus T 25.38 -0.06 OvrseasT r 42.21 +0.23 PrkMCVal T 20.10 +0.01 Twenty T 57.58 -0.11 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 11.73 LSGrwth 11.32 +0.01 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p 20.24 +0.06 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 17.83 +0.17 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p 18.07 +0.17 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p 15.88 +0.01 Longleaf Partners: Partners 25.76 +0.02 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 13.49 StrInc C 14.00 +0.01 LSBondR 13.45 +0.01 StrIncA 13.94 +0.02 Loomis Sayles Inv:

-0.3 +4.1 +5.1 -3.9 -1.0 -0.8 -2.6 +5.0 -6.6 -6.2 -6.2 +4.0 +4.1 +2.4 +1.6 +1.6 -1.7 -3.4 -0.7 +1.5 -6.5 -0.1 -1.1 +2.1 -1.0 -1.1 +2.6 +6.9 +3.7 +3.0 +3.6 +3.4

InvGrBdY 11.91 -0.01 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 9.99 -0.04 BdDebA p 7.28 +0.01 ShDurIncA p 4.57 MFS Funds A: TotRA 12.96 -0.02 ValueA 20.14 -0.01 MFS Funds I: ValueI 20.24 -0.01 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.62 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 7.46 +0.10 Matthews Asian: PacTiger 18.91 +0.19 MergerFd 15.58 -0.01 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.29 -0.02 TotRtBdI 10.29 -0.01 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 26.60 +0.19 GlbDiscZ 26.93 +0.18 QuestZ 17.02 +0.10 SharesZ 19.15 +0.07 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 38.91 +0.03 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 40.39 +0.04 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 25.55 +0.05 Intl I r 16.47 +0.14 Oakmark r 37.37 -0.03 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.21 +0.02 GlbSMdCap 12.83 +0.07 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 37.52 -0.07 DvMktA p 28.45 +0.18 GlobA p 51.12 +0.24 IntBdA p 6.14 +0.02 MnStFdA 27.53 RisingDivA 13.53 -0.03 S&MdCpVl 26.69 +0.16 StrInA p 4.02

+4.1 -2.0 NA +2.7 -0.3 -2.8 -2.6 +2.6 -8.1 -1.7 +0.3 +6.2 +6.3 -0.4 -0.4 NA -0.2 NA NA -2.2 +0.9 +2.0 +0.5 -6.0 -1.1 -3.6 -2.2 -2.1 -2.7 +0.4 NA

Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 12.28 -0.02 S&MdCpVl 22.99 +0.13 Oppenheimer C&M: RisingDvC p 12.24 -0.02 Oppenheimer Roch: RcNtMuA 7.12 -0.01 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 28.16 +0.17 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.11 -0.01 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AllAsset 11.87 +0.02 ComodRR 7.60 +0.13 HiYld 8.74 +0.02 InvGrCp 11.04 -0.01 LowDu 10.43 RealRet 11.49 -0.01 RealRtnI 11.07 ShortT 9.85 TotRt 11.11 -0.01 TR II 10.75 -0.01 TRIII 9.85 PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.43 RealRtA p 11.07 TotRtA 11.11 -0.01 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 11.11 -0.01 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.11 -0.01 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.11 -0.01 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 40.04 +0.01 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 34.75 +0.01 Price Funds: BlChip 31.93 -0.11 CapApp 18.47 EmMktS 28.55 +0.24 EqInc 20.90 -0.05 EqIndex 29.46 -0.05 Growth 26.97 -0.09 HlthSci 26.21 +0.08

-3.1 -3.0 +4.3 -0.9 +4.2 NA -5.9 NA +3.7 +2.2 +5.9 +3.8 +0.7 +4.3 +4.0 +4.5 +2.0 +3.6 +4.1 +3.7 +4.1 +4.2 +3.5 -2.5 -2.6 +1.7 -5.1 -1.5 -2.0 +0.2

HiYield 6.34 IntlBond 9.23 IntlStk 11.68 MidCap 50.12 MCapVal 21.13 N Asia 15.93 New Era 40.11 N Horiz 27.16 N Inc 9.46 R2010 13.98 R2015 10.66 R2020 14.53 R2025 10.53 R2030 14.97 R2040 14.96 ShtBd 4.85 SmCpStk 28.79 SmCapVal 30.91 SpecIn 11.80 Value 20.44 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 11.60 VoyA p 19.55 RiverSource A: DEI 8.56 DivrBd 4.92 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 9.78 PremierI r 16.89 TotRetI r 11.18 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 32.72 S&P Sel 17.10 Scout Funds: Intl 27.02 Selected Funds: AmShD 36.36 AmShS p 36.34 Sequoia 116.91 TCW Funds: TotRetBdI 10.09 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 17.37 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 43.35

+0.01 +0.06 +0.10 +0.08 +0.02 +0.21 -0.13 +0.10 +0.01 +0.02 +0.02 +0.01 +0.02 +0.01 +0.17 +0.13 +0.01 -0.03

+2.2 -5.4 -7.3 +5.5 +2.0 -1.3 -8.1 +6.2 +3.9 +0.2 -0.1 -0.5 -0.8 -1.0 -1.3 +1.7 +6.9 +4.9 +1.8 -0.2

-0.03 -2.8 -0.03 -0.9 -0.01 -2.4 -0.01 +4.0 +0.03 +0.05 +0.03

NA NA NA

-0.04 -0.8 -0.03 -1.4 +0.21 -7.3 +0.05 -2.4 +0.05 -2.5 +0.83 +6.4 +5.0 +0.30 -10.0 +0.50

NA

Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 23.43 IntValue I 23.96 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 21.23 Vanguard Admiral: CAITAdm 10.93 CpOpAdl 66.49 Energy 103.37 500Adml 100.81 GNMA Ad 10.93 HlthCr 47.91 HiYldCp 5.37 InfProAd 25.29 ITsryAdml 11.44 IntGrAdm 50.38 ITAdml 13.51 ITGrAdm 9.84 LtdTrAd 11.04 LTGrAdml 9.11 LT Adml 11.02 MuHYAdm 10.42 PrmCap r 58.85 STsyAdml 10.80 ShtTrAd 15.91 STIGrAd 10.68 TtlBAdml 10.59 TStkAdm 27.25 WellslAdm 49.85 WelltnAdm 49.11 Windsor 39.52 WdsrIIAd 40.58 Vanguard Fds: AssetA 21.94 CapOpp 28.78 DivdGro 12.85 Energy 55.04 EqInc 17.98 Explr 59.67 GNMA 10.93 GlobEq 15.10 GroInc 23.23 HYCorp 5.37 HlthCre 113.51

+0.21 -5.5 +0.23 -5.4 +0.24 +0.1 -0.02 +0.21 -0.52 -0.18 -0.01 +0.18 +0.01 +0.01 -0.01 +0.48 -0.03 -0.01 -0.01 -0.03 -0.02 -0.02 +0.03

-0.01 -0.01 -0.01 -0.02 -0.07 -0.10

+2.7 -4.2 -7.8 -1.4 +4.7 -4.6 +1.7 +3.2 +5.0 -6.8 +2.0 +5.0 +1.1 +4.9 +2.4 +3.3 -4.6 +1.9 +0.6 +2.5 +4.0 -0.3 +2.0 -0.8 -1.7 -3.4

-0.03 +1.9 +0.09 -4.2 -2.4 -0.28 -7.8 -0.01 -0.8 +0.26 +4.1 -0.01 +4.6 +0.08 -3.6 -0.01 -0.6 +0.01 +1.7 +0.41 -4.6

InflaPro 12.87 IntlGr 15.83 IntlVal 27.17 ITIGrade 9.84 LifeCon 15.31 LifeGro 19.43 LifeMod 17.82 LTIGrade 9.11 Morg 15.15 MuInt 13.51 MuLtd 11.04 MuShrt 15.91 PrecMtls r 19.64 PrmcpCor 11.89 Prmcp r 56.70 SelValu r 16.61 STAR 17.41 STIGrade 10.68 StratEq 15.73 TgtRetInc 10.74 TgRe2010 20.71 TgtRe2025 11.26 TgtRe2015 11.36 TgRe2020 19.95 TgRe2030 19.11 TgtRe2035 11.45 TgtRe2040 18.76 TgtRe2045 11.84 Wellsly 20.57 Welltn 28.43 Wndsr 11.71 WndsII 22.86 Vanguard Idx Fds: 500 100.78 Balanced 19.53 EMkt 24.50 Europe 22.38 Extend 34.35 Growth 26.68 ITBnd 11.08 MidCap 17.15 Pacific 9.29 REIT r 16.81 SmCap 29.01

+3.1 +0.15 -6.8 +0.25 -11.2 -0.01 +4.9 +1.7 +0.01 -0.7 +0.01 +0.7 -0.03 +4.8 -0.8 -0.03 +2.0 -0.01 +1.1 +0.6 +0.09 -3.9 +0.04 -1.8 +0.02 -4.6 +0.04 +4.1 +0.01 -0.7 +2.4 +0.06 +2.9 +0.01 +2.0 +0.01 +0.9 +0.01 -0.5 +0.01 +0.4 +0.02 -0.1 +0.02 -1.0 +0.02 -1.5 +0.03 -1.5 +0.01 -1.5 -0.01 +1.9 -0.01 -0.8 -0.02 -1.7 -0.05 -3.5 -0.18 -1.4 -0.01 +1.5 +0.10 -5.4 +0.28 -13.7 +0.16 +5.1 -0.02 -2.1 -0.01 +5.3 +0.05 +4.8 +0.06 -4.0 +0.19 +14.1 +0.15 +5.5

SmlCpGth

17.67 +0.09 +5.0

SmlCpVl

13.85 +0.07 +6.1

STBnd

10.54

TotBnd

10.59 -0.01 +4.0

+2.3

TotlIntl

13.07 +0.12 -9.3

TotStk

27.24 -0.01 -0.4

Value

18.47 -0.04 -0.4

Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst

19.54 -0.01 +1.6

DevMkInst

8.48 +0.09

NS

ExtIn

34.39 +0.17 +5.3

GrwthIst

26.69 -0.02 -2.0

InfProInst

10.30

+3.2

InstIdx

100.13 -0.18 -1.4

InsPl

100.14 -0.18 -1.4

InsTStPlus

24.63 -0.01 -0.3

MidCpIst

17.20 +0.05 +4.9

SCInst

29.05 +0.15 +5.7

TBIst

10.59 -0.01 +4.1

TSInst

27.25 -0.02 -0.4

Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl

83.27 -0.15 -1.4

STBdIdx

10.54

TotBdSgl

10.59 -0.01 +4.0

+2.3

TotStkSgl

26.30 -0.01 -0.4

Victory Funds: DvsStA

13.24 -0.06 -5.2

Wells Fargo Instl: UlStMuIn p

4.81

+0.5

Western Asset: CorePlus I

10.57 -0.01

NA


B6 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

M BUSINESS CALENDAR TODAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Pizza Hut, 2139 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-4476384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. REDMOND CHAMBER BUSINESS AFTER HOURS: 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Redmond Habitat for Humanity ReStore, 1242 S. U.S. Highway 97; 541-548-1406. CENTRAL OREGON LEGAL PROFESSIONALS MONTHLY MEETING : Pam Fortier will speak. E-mail freelancecla@aol.com with questions; attendance is free, dinner is ordered from the menu; 5:30-7 p.m.; Greg’s Grill, 395 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-2200. “INTERMEDIATE DREAMWEAVER”: Preregistration required; $89, continuing education units available; Tuesdays through June 29 from 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.

WEDNESDAY “A BLUEPRINT FOR FUNDRAISING SUCCESS IN ANY ECONOMY”: Learn to create a sustainable, comprehensive development model and to build donor relationships that maximize giving potential. Hosted by the Association for Financial Professionals of Oregon & SW Washington. Registration required; $15 (free for AFP members); 8-10 a.m.; Deschutes Children’s Foundation’s Rosie Bareis Campus, 1010 N.W. 14th Ave., Bend; 541-3883101 or https://afporegon.afpnet.org. “BEGINNING EXCEL 2007”: Preregistration required; $59, continuing education units available; 1-4 p.m., and class continues June 23 from 1-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. “GAIN THE WORLD AND KEEP YOUR SOUL”: Network of Entrepreneurial Women’s June meeting starts at 5 p.m. with a no-host bar, program and dinner from 6-8 p.m. Registration required by June 10; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-388-9787 or www.networkwomen.org. “CENTRAL OREGON INTERNET TV REAL ESTATE SHOW”: Jim Mazziotti of Exit Realty Bend hosts a live Internet show to discuss “How to Sell Your Home Yourself Without a Realtor.”; free; 7 p.m.; www.ExitRealtyBend.com.

THURSDAY “LEAD PAINT, RENOVATION, REPAIR AND PAINTING”: Hosted by Parr Lumber, and led by The Connor Institute of Baltimore, this all-day seminar will teach contractors to become compliant with the EPA’s new lead paint law. Register and pay online; $175. (includes lunch); 7:15 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Parr Lumber Co., 1311 S.E. Wilson Ave., Bend; www. andersenrrptraining.com/Events. “CAREER AND COMMUNITY RESOURCE FAIR”: Meet with local employers and connect with free or low-cost community resources. Dress for success and bring copies of your resume. For more information, call Kathy at WorkSource of Central Oregon. 541-322-2421; free; 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; COCC — Mazama Gym, 2600 College Way, Bend. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Pizza Hut, 2139 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-4476384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

Moody’s slashes rating on Greek sovereign debt MarketWatch NEW YORK — Moody’s Investors Service on Monday downgraded Greece’s government bond ratings to junk in a move that knocked some gains off U.S. stocks. The ratings agency slashed Greece’s sovereign-debt rating by four notches to junk status of Ba1 from A3. “The Ba1 rating reflects our analysis of the balance of the strengths and risks associated with the euro-zone/IMF support package. The package effectively eliminates any near-term risk of a liquidity-driven default and encourages the implementation of a credible, feasible, and incentive-compatible set of structural reforms, which have a high likelihood of stabilizing debt service requirements at manageable levels,” said Sarah Carlson, Moody’s senior analyst.

ETFS EXPLAINED: Learn why exchange-traded funds are a growing investment option. Presented by Luiz Soutomaior of Charles Schwab & Co. Registration required by June 15; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794. EMPLOYMENT TRANSITION GROUP: Networking group to help with the unemployment process by exchanging tips and learning about resources; free; 1-3 p.m.; Dudley’s Bookshop Cafe, 135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010 or bendetg@gmail.com. CROOKED RIVER RANCHTERREBONNE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE “NETWORKING SOCIAL”: Hosted by Linda Murtaugh of American Pacific Mortgage. Refreshments will be served; 5:30 p.m.; 13300 River Terrace Place.. ETFS EXPLAINED: Learn why exchange-traded funds are a growing investment option. Presented by Luiz Soutomaior of Charles Schwab & Co. Registration required by June 15; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794.

FRIDAY BEND CHAMBER TOWN HALL BREAKFAST: A panel, including Bend City Councilors Jeff Eager and Oran Teater and city Finance Director Sonia Andrews, will talk about the city’s budget and its impact on local business; $25 for members, $35 at the door; 7:30-9 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. COFFEE CLATTER: 8:30-9:30 a.m.; Britz Beads, 249 N.W. 6th St., Suite 2, Redmond; 541-923-1807. EDWARD JONES COFFEE CLUB: Financial adviser Mark Schang will discuss updates on the market and economy; free, coffee provided; 9-10 a.m.; Sisters Coffee Co., 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-617-8861.

SATURDAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Pizza Hut, 2139 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-4476384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. “HOME BUYING BASICS”: Learn what it takes to qualify for a home loan before you shop for your home. Offered by Cathy Freyberg of Directors Mortgage; free; 11 a.m.noon; Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-5009. “DESIGNING AND BUILDING ENERGY-SMART HOMES” : Learn about structural insulated panel construction, solar electric photovoltaic panels and solar hot water panels. Workshop is 3 1/2 hours. Registration requested by June 17; free; 1-4:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Timber Frame Homes, 67775 Cloverdale Road, Sisters; 541-9778285 or timberinfo@ykwc.net.

MONDAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 4-9 p.m.; Pizza Hut, 2139 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-4476384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

TUESDAY June 22 “BEND CHAMBER BUSINESS SUCCESS PROGRAM”: Bob Phillips, president and CEO of RW & Associates, will speak about

influential leadership styles; $25 for chamber members, $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437. “REALIZING THE AMERICAN DREAM”: Learn about the process of shopping for and buying a home, including the basics on budgeting, credit and getting a mortgage loan. Registration required. Class continues June 23, 5:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.; 5:309:30 p.m.; NeighborImpact, 2303 S.W. First St., Redmond; 541-318-7506 ext. 109. DENTAL RADIOLOGY: Learn the fundamentals of oral radiology. Lectures on Tuesday and Thursday 5:30-8 pm, June 22 - July 22. Labs on Friday and Saturday 8:30 am - 3:30 pm, June 25-26 and July 9-10. Registration required. Fee does not include required text; $649; 5:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. “BUILD A BASIC BUDGET , THE FIVE-STEP SPENDING PLAN”: Learn to create a spending plan, set realistic goals and track your spending. Refreshments will be served. Call to reserve your seat; free; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795.

WEDNESDAY June 23 HOME ENERGY ANALYST TRAINING: Three-day heating and cooling training for building professionals. Registration required by June 11; $549; June 23-25 from 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Abby’s Pizza, 1938 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. “2010 SUMMER OREGON BUILDING CODES FORUM”: Oregon energy efficiency specialty code introduction and discussion; free; 1-5 p.m.; Bend Park & Recreation District Office, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 541-312-4901 or bmandal@ci.bend.or.us. “CENTRAL OREGON INTERNET TV REAL ESTATE SHOW”: Jeromy Cockrell, broker with Exit Realty Bend, hosts a live Internet show to discuss “The Hazards of Lead Base Paint in Your Home.” Go to www.ExitRealtyBend.com and follow the show icons; free; 7 p.m.; www.ExitRealtyBend.com.

If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact John Stearns at 541-617-7822, e-mail business@bendbulletin.com, or click on “Submit an Event” on our website at bendbulletin.com.

Panel OKs first contracts for movie futures MarketWatch LOS ANGELES — The firstever futures contracts for movies won regulatory approval on Monday, but the proposal to trade on a film’s prospects may not ever see the light of day. Media Derivatives got the nod

from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to start trading box-office futures on the upcoming Sony Corp. release, “Takers.” By a 3-2 vote, CFTC commissioners determined that Media Derivatives’ plans “do not violate

the Commodity Exchange Act or the commission’s regulations,” since a film’s box-office receipts qualify as a commodity. But the decision may be for naught, as financial-reform measures making their way through Congress could outlaw movie futures trading.

NEWS OF RECORD DEEDS Deschutes County

Northwest Trustee Services Inc., trustee to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Parks at Broken Top, Lot 47, $286,660.94 Northwest Trustee Services Inc., trustee to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., American West First Addition, Lot 8, Block 3, $204,157.22 Northwest Trustee Services Inc., trustee to Federal National Mortgage Association, Ranch Way Acres 1st Addition, Lot 5, Block 5, $207,079.22 Jerry Hendricks to Gayle L. Dosher, Westside Meadows, Lot 60, $238,500 Tina M. Chapman, representative for the estate of Robert D. Johnston to Rodge and Deberah Butler, Cinder Butte Estates West First Addition, Lots 9-10, Block 2, $186,000 Scott E. and Carrie E. Fitzwater to Levi J. and Elizabeth A. Martin, Yardley Estates Phase III, Lot 59, $202,000 Jane E. Hanson to Virginia L. Vader, Miller Heights Phase I, Lot 4, $300,000 Stone Bridge Homes NW LLC to Thomas F. and Jennifer B. Warton, NorthWest Crossing Phases 9 & 10, Lots 452-3, $409,900 Robert W. and Margaret C. Leary, trustees of Holman Leary Trust to Jeff and Rhonda Curtis, East Meadow Homesite Section First Addition of Black Butte Ranch, Lot 47, $1,525,000 Virgina A. Bryant to Theresa Liero, The Cottages of Westside Terrace A Condominium Stage 2, Unit 14, $162,000 Federal National Mortgage Association to Randall Gardner, T

15, R 11, Section 31, $175,000 Triad Homes Inc. to George W. and Barbara A. Hegarty, trustees of Hegarty Family Trust, Rocky Point Phases 1 & 2 A Planned Unit Development, Lot 10, $612,000 Edmund C. P. and Colleen A. Wadeson to Kreighton A. and Kathryn L. Edmonds, Terrango Glen Phase One, Lot 33, $170,000 Chawna Monaghan fka Chawna Ashenbrenner to Kirk E. and Nancy E. Flannigan, Summerhill Phase 2, Lot 27, $199,600 Hayden Homes LLC to Dianne E. Norwood, trustee of Dianne E. Norwood Revocable Trust, Aspen Rim No. 2, Lot 169, $231,900 Paul and Connie Pastoor to Jerry E. and Sharon P. Bishop, Riverrim Planned Unit Development Phase 3, Lot 350, $340,000 Gordon R. Hanna, trustee to OR Resolutions LLC, Caldera Springs Phase One, Lots 26-7, $250,000 Todd W. Hoffman to David Marchi, Bonne Home Addition to Bend, Lot 5, Block 28, $235,000 Pineriver Homes LLC to Jeffrey C. and Mary B. Spanks, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Lot 25, Block 31, $260,000 David R. and Susan E. Downey to Michael and Cynthia Morsilli, Hillside Park Phase I, Lot 4, Block 1, $385,000 Jeffery and Kelley J. Delauter to David and Heidi Eveland, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Lot 8, Block 24, $165,000 U.S. Bank NA, trustee to William A. and Delores E. Gilmartin, Mountain High, Lot 7, Block 8, $330,000 Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Richard J. Davies and Lisa Britt-Davies,

Stonegate Planned Unit Development Phase 1, Lot 26, $237,000 Recontrust Company NA to Federal National Mortgage Association, NorthWest Crossing Phase 5, Lot 223, $368,199.56 K3 Inc. to John A. Hayes, Juniper Hill Phase 2, $168,000 Chevy Chase Bank FSB to Joseph Talbott, T 15, R 13, Section 30, Lot 2, $290,000 Columbia State Bank to Bend Area Habitat for Humanity, Merrick Subdivision Phases 1 and 2, Lots 10-13 and 25-31, $288,585 Secretary of Veterans Affairs USA to John Batzer, Northpointe Phase III, Lot 118, $225,000 Sterling Real Estate Partners II LLC, Marguerite Hrabak, trustee of the Franklin J. Hrabak Family Trust, Todd and Kim Sotero, trustees of Sotero Revocable Family Trust and Christopher and Kristen Frensley to Annette and Detlef M. Fisher, T 20, R 10, Section 35, $217,500 First American Title Insurance Co., trustee to Suntrust Mortgage Inc., Madison Phases 1, 2 and 3, Lot 20, $478,549.98 Brian and Christa Gunnell to Michael J. Thomas and Divya Sharma, Sun Meadow No. 3, Lot 100, $249,000 Crook County

Thomas A. DeWard to Tracy J. and Marsha R. Reed, T 14, R 16, Section 34, $184,500

JOIN US FOR

THURSDAY June 24 “2010 SUMMER OREGON BUILDING CODES FORUM”: Oregon fire code update; $40; 8 a.m.-noon; Bend Park & Recreation District Office, 799 S.W. Columbia St.; 541-312-4901 or bmandal@ci.bend.or.us. WORK ZONE FLAGGER CLASS: Covers fundamental principles of traffic safety and meets the Oregon Department of Transportation’s construction requirements. Successful completion results in an ODOT credential for flaggers. Preregistration required; $69; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or http://noncredit.cocc.edu. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB: Learn to research investments, place online trade orders for stocks, bonds and mutual funds, and manage your finances with account features. Presented by Luiz Soutomaior of Charles Schwab & Co. Registration required by June 22; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794.

SUNDAY, JUNE 13TH through SUNDAY, JUNE 20TH Brasada Ranch will feature a week of fun events for all ages, open to our members, guests and the Central Oregon Community. ~ J.D. Platt and his world-famous high flying dog tricks ~ Smores and Movies on the Lawn ~ Oregon Naturally, by Intel Photo Display ~ Bird Hike & Education

~ Fireman’s Pipe & Drum Band ~ Salsa Dancing, Mixology and Cooking Classes ~ Much More!

There is something for everyone! For a complete list of activities www.brasada.com or call (541) 526-6865 Brasada Ranch, Powell Butte, Oregon

ENTER TO WIN A GETAWAY TO THE OREGON COAST! Sign up for our AUTO-RENEW PAYMENT PROGRAM and be entered to WIN A $400 LODGING PACKAGE to the Elizabeth Street Inn on the Oregon Coast!

Plus, you’ll receive a FREE OREGON COOKBOOK with recipes from around the state. The Bulletin’s Auto-Renew Payment Plan is our most convenient and environmentally friendly method of payment. No mailed statements. No envelopes or stamps. No monthly reminders.

BUT HURRY, COOKBOOK SUPPLIES ARE LIMITED, OREGON COAST WINNER WILL BE DRAWN JULY 1ST

TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE BULLETIN OR TO SIGN-UP FOR THE AUTO RENEW PAYMENT PROGRAM, CALL 541-385-5800 Black out periods apply for coastal package. Winner is responsible for any taxes. Must not have been enrolled in the Auto-Renew Payment Plan within the last 30 days. Cookbooks are limited to stock on hand.


L

C

Inside

CALIFORNIA Study touts “smart growth” in urban areas, see Page C2. OREGON Search for missing Portland boy scaled back, see Page C3.

www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 2010

Jefferson schools face $33K DEQ fine

Attention, photographers! These photos were among scores readers posted on www.bendbulletin.com/wellshoot. We publish reader photos every other Tuesday, the week after our photographers offer advice.

B y K ate Ramsayer

We asked for readers’ photos, and today we’re publishing some of the best

Well sh t!

Installment 20:

Lines

T he B u l l et in

After receiving reports that maintenance workers at Metolius Elementary broke up tiles containing asbestos, the Department of Environmental Quality has issued a $33,000 fine to the Jefferson County School District and the two employees. The work was done last summer, and it doesn’t appear that asbestos fibers remain in the area or pose a risk to students now attending the school, said Frank Messina, environmental specialist with the DEQ in Bend. However, the work probably re-

leased asbestos fibers into the air when the school was open for summer school in June and July of 2009, according to the agency.

District appeals fine The school district is appealing the fine. Superintendent Rick Molitor said the workers handled the floor tiles properly. “We believe all the asbestoscontaining material that was removed from the project was done in accordance with all requirements,” Molitor said. See DEQ / C5

BEND

Wilson development in works once again By Adrianne Jeffries The Bulletin

Submitted by user BillMcD

“Standing room only”

Submitted by user Lisa Bagwell

“Walkway through autumn”

A group of developers is again pushing for about 32 acres of vacant land on the east end of Wilson Avenue in Bend to be rezoned from low-density residential to a mix of higher density commercial and residential use. An attempt to rezone and develop the land into an ambitious mixed-use neighborhood fizzled in 2007, and Bank of the Cascades claimed the developers were in default on their $7.8 million loan. This time, the new owners are not sure if they will develop or sell the land, said Tim Weishaupt, a local civil engineer who is working on the project. The owners are only seeking a zone change and corresponding amendment to the city’s comprehensive plan, Weishaupt and Deborah McMahon, a local land use consultant working on the project, repeatedly told 24 residents of the surrounding neighborhoods at a meeting Monday. Developers originally proposed a neighborhood with a commercial core, high-density housing and an underground

57 victims identified in PRG embezzlement By Erin Golden The Bulletin

Bend police detectives believe they have identified all of the victims who may have lost money in an alleged embezzlement by the owner of PRG Property Management — but it could be months before the case goes to a grand jury. In September, PRG’s owner, Elizabeth J. Rose, told investigators with the state Real Estate Agency that she’d embezzled $150,000 from customers’ accounts to keep the business running. The agency prepared a report and notified the Bend Police Department, which opened its

Submitted by user Kris

“I got it!”

Submitted by user Carolyn

“Covered walkway between tunnel, Columbia River Gorge”

Submitted by user WestCelt

“Railroad bridge near Suisan Bay, Mothball Fleet, Martinez, Calif.”

Submitted by user David Oziel

“Housing in Shanghai, China”

parking structure that would hold 1,000 cars, according to Bulletin archives. Wilson Heights LLC, a group of investors scattered from California to New York, paid $12 million for two empty parcels southeast of the intersection of Wilson Ave. and Southeast 15th St. in 2006, The Bulletin reported. A commercial real estate broker said at the time that the $416,000 an acre paid by Wilson Heights was among the highest prices paid for undeveloped land in Bend. Wilson Heights LLC did a traffic study, solicited input from neighbors and brought their proposal to the city for feedback in May 2007, Weishaupt said, but the head investor died shortly afterward and the project lost steam. Bank of the Cascades filed suit alleging that the developers were in default on their loan in February 2009. Wilson Heights Partners LLC, a new company that includes some of the same investors, bought the loan from Bank of the Cascades and took over the property in December 2009. See Wilson / C5

investigation in April, after the Bend-based company abruptly closed its doors. Lt. Ben Gregory said police spent the last two months searching through PRG’s customer lists and contracts to identify potential victims. Last week, the department wrapped up that stage of the process after identifying 57 victims believed to have lost a total of $235,000. He said some of the alleged victims are local, while others live elsewhere in Oregon or in other states. Some own several properties. See PRG / C5

MARSHALL HIGH SCHOOL

The Bulletin assumes that submitted photos are the original work of the entrants and that no excessive postprocessing has altered the content of the images.

Readers’ photos

May 4 Flash

May 18 Composition

June 1 Emotion

Each installment of Well shot! features photos submitted by readers for the previous week’s theme.

Today Lines

June 29 Shadows

July 13 Shapes

July 27 Black & white

Aug. 10 Color

Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

Kasee Dershimer adjusts her cap before walking into the graduation ceremony at Marshall High School on Monday.


C2 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Goodyear patents galvanized rubber in 1844 The Associated Press Today is Tuesday, June 15, the 166th day of 2010. There are 199 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On June 15, 1215, England’s King John put his seal to the Magna Carta (“the Great Charter�) at Runnymede. ON THIS DATE In 1775, the Second Continental Congress voted unanimously to appoint George Washington head of the Continental Army. In 1836, Arkansas became the 25th state. In 1844, Charles Goodyear received a patent for his process to vulcanize rubber. In 1849, James Polk, the 11th president of the United States, died in Nashville, Tenn. In 1864, Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton signed an order establishing a military burial ground, which became Arlington National Cemetery. In 1904, more than 1,000 people died when fire erupted aboard the steamboat General Slocum in New York’s East River. In 1944, American forces began their successful invasion of Saipan during World War II. B-29 Superfortresses made their first raids on Japan.

T O D AY I N HISTORY In 1960, the Billy Wilder movie “The Apartment,� starring Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine, premiered in New York. In 1978, King Hussein of Jordan married 26-year-old American Lisa Halaby, who became Queen Noor. In 1994, Israel and the Vatican established full diplomatic relations. TEN YEARS AGO Al Gore named Commerce Secretary William Daley to take over his presidential campaign, replacing Tony Coelho, who’d abruptly resigned, citing health problems. Denis Savard, Joe Mullen and Walter Bush Jr. were selected to the Hockey Hall of Fame. FIVE YEARS AGO The autopsy released on Terri Schiavo backed the contention of her husband, Michael, that she was in a persistent vegetative state, finding she was severely and irreversibly brain-damaged and blind as well. Iraqi and U.S. forces freed Australian hostage Douglas Wood. Former Baylor basketball player Carlton Dotson was sentenced to 35 years in prison, a week after he unexpect-

edly pleaded guilty to murdering teammate Patrick Dennehy. ONE YEAR AGO Gen. Stanley McChrystal took charge of nearly 90,000 U.S. and NATO troops in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama, pushing health care reform before the annual meeting of the American Medical Association in Chicago, told the doctors he was against their highest legislative priority — limiting malpractice awards. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Rock musician Lee Dorman (Iron Butterfly) is 68. Singer Russell Hitchcock (Air Supply) is 61. Rock singer Steve Walsh (Kansas) is 59. Comedian-actor Jim Belushi is 56. Rock musician Brad Gillis (Night Ranger) is 53. Baseball Hall-of-Famer Wade Boggs is 52. Actress Helen Hunt is 47. Actress Courteney Cox is 46. Actor-rapper Ice Cube is 41. Actor Jake Busey is 39. Actor Neil Patrick Harris is 37.

Study touts ‘smart growth’ for California urban areas By Catherine Saillant Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — A California law that encourages home building that is both compact and close to public transit has the potential to help the state accommodate future growth in ways that are economically and environmentally sound, a report by the Urban Land Institute says. General plans that encourage redevelopment within a city’s core and squeeze more residences onto smaller lots are an important component of Senate Bill 375, which was enacted in 2008 to help the state meet its greenhouse gas reduction goals,

according to the report released earlier this month. The institute is a nonprofit education and research group made up of 30,000 planners, architects, developers and scholars. Such development — when located near buses, trains and subways — will go a long way toward providing for the 2 million additional homes needed to accommodate the state’s anticipated population growth over the next two decades. So-called smart growth will also entitle cities to a greater share of transportation dollars to build public transit options, said the 20-page report titled “SB 375 Impact

Analysis Report.� Builders are often reluctant to take on this “infill� development because of higher costs and regulatory hoops. But it makes more sense in the long run to construct homes in areas already served by city services such as sewer and water than to sprawl into undeveloped land, the report found. Kingsley, co-chairman of the Urban Land Institute Panel that analyzed SB 375, said the law doesn’t preclude construction of single-family homes on large lots. But it does encourage cities to consider a better mix of housing options.

UNIVERSITY OF OREGON GRADUATION

THOUGHT FOR TODAY “In trying to make something new, half the undertaking lies in discovering whether it can be done. Once it has been established that it can, duplication is inevitable.� — Helen Gahagan Douglas, U.S. Representative (1900-1980)

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

Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered and purse stolen at 7:31 a.m. June 10, in the 400 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 12:03 p.m. June 10, in the 1000 block of Northeast Kayak Loop. Theft — An MP3 player was reported stolen at 4:59 p.m. June 10, in the 800 block of Northeast Watt Way. Theft — A coat was reported stolen at 1:55 a.m. June 11, in the 900 block of Northwest Bond Street. Burglary — Chain saws were reported stolen at 8:12 a.m. June 11, in the 60600 block of China Hat Road. Theft — A wallet was reported stolen at 9:03 a.m. June 11, in the 2600 block of Northwest College Way. Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 10:10 a.m. June 11, in the 700 block of Northwest Bond Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:33 a.m. June 11, in the 61500 block of American Loop. Theft — A theft was reported at 1:20 p.m. June 11, in the 500 block of Southeast Third Street. Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 4:52 p.m. June 11, in the 200 block of Northwest Riverfront Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:22 p.m. June 11, in the 63400 block of North U.S. Highway 97. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6 p.m. June 11, in the area of Northeast Studio Avenue and Northeast Webster Road. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at 11:34 p.m. June 11, in the 300 block of Southeast Third Street. DUII — Pauline M. Marchand, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:29 a.m. June 12, in the 1700 block of Northeast U.S. Highway 20. Theft — A wallet was reported stolen at 12:54 a.m. June 12, in the 900 block of Northwest Bond Street. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen and an arrest made at 10:57 a.m. June 12, in the 1800 block of Northeast Hollow Tree Lane. Theft — A camera was reported stolen at 11:13 a.m. June 12, in the 500 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 5:17 p.m. June 12, in the 100 block of Northwest Minnesota Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 6:08 p.m. June 12, in the area of Cooley Road and U.S. Highway 97. DUII — Benjamin Keith Richardson, 20, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:34 a.m. June 13, in the area of Northeast Fourth Street and Northeast Seward Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 7:02 a.m. June 13, in the 2100 block of Mistletoe Court. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 10:54 a.m. June 13, in the 1800 block of Northeast Curtis Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 11:54 a.m. June 13, in the 200 block of Northeast Irving Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 12:05 p.m. June 13, in the 2300 block of Northwest Labiche Lane. Theft — A cell phone was reported stolen at 2:37 p.m. June 13, in the 1600 block of Northeast Watson Drive.

Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 6:02 p.m. June 13, in the 2100 block of Northwest Harriman Street. Redmond Police Department

Robbery — A robbery was reported at 5:50 p.m. June 11, in the 500 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 4:23 p.m. June 11, in the 200 block of Southwest Evergreen Avenue. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 12:36 p.m. June 11, in the 100 block of Northwest Greenwood Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:40 a.m. June 11, in the 3300 block of Southwest Salmon Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 9:17 a.m. June 11, in the 2200 block of Southwest Pumice Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:08 a.m. June 11, in the 2500 block of Northwest 13th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:34 a.m. June 11, in the 900 block of Southwest 23rd Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 7:05 a.m. June 11, in the area of Southwest Canal Boulevard and Southwest Reindeer Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:05 a.m. June 11, in the 400 block of Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 7:29 p.m. June 12, in the 600 block of Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft — A theft was reported at 4:06 p.m. June 12, in the 200 block of Southwest 11th Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 1:34 p.m. June 12, in the 3500 block of Southwest 32nd Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 9:59 a.m. June 12, in the 1300 block of Northwest 19th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:14 p.m. June 13, in the 2800 block of Southwest 50th Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:12 p.m. June 13, in the 1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 1:24 p.m. June 13, in the 1700 block of Northwest Larch Avenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:56 a.m. June 13, in the 2100 block of Southwest Salmon Avenue. Prineville Police Department

Theft — A theft with a loss of $3000 was reported at 3:03 p.m. June 11, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 7:58 a.m. June 12, in the area of Northeast Elm Street. Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office

Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 4:32 p.m. June 11, in the area of North U.S. Highway 97 and Northwest Eby Avenue in Terrebonne. DUII — Lon Neil Bryant, 79, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:34 p.m. June 11, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 and O.B. Riley Road in Tumalo. Theft — A purse was reported stolen from a vehicle at 2:46 p.m. June 11, in the 10000 block of Northeast Crooked River Drive in Terrebonne. Theft — Cash was reported stolen at 2:40 p.m. June 11, in the 200 block of West Cascade Avenue in Sisters. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 1:57 p.m. June 11, in the 16100 block of Sparks Drive in La Pine. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 1:42 a.m. June 11, in the area of Cinder Butte Road and Lakeview Drive in Bend. DUII — Andrew Untermeyer, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving

under the influence of intoxicants at 11:12 p.m. June 12, in the area of Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Lava Road in Bend. DUII — Michael Dean Benson, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:56 p.m. June 12, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 near milepost 146 in Sunriver. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:02 p.m. June 12, in the 600 block of North Arrowleaf Trail in Sisters. DUII — Michael Eugene Brooks, 46, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:09 p.m. June 12, in the area of Southwest 19th Street and Southwest Airport Way in Redmond. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:51 a.m. June 12, in the 20900 block of Tumalo Road in Bend. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:57 p.m. June 13, in the 64200 block of Old Bend Redmond Highway in Bend. Theft — Cash in the amount of $1000 was reported stolen at 6:02 p.m. June 13, in the 52600 block of Ranch Drive in La Pine. Theft — A cell phone was reported stolen at 5:58 p.m. June 13, in the 63300 block of U.S. Highway 20 in Bend. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:01 p.m. June 13, in the 16400 block of Riley Drive in La Pine. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:44 a.m. June 13, in the 51300 block of Riverland Avenue in La Pine. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:19 a.m. June 13, in the 4600 block of Smith Rock Way in Terrebonne. Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office

Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:27 a.m. June 6, in the 2400 block of Southwest Belmont Lane in Madras. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 8:31 a.m. June 7, in the 100 block of Southwest Crestview Lane in Madras. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported June 9, in the 600 block of East Grandview Lane in Culver. Oregon State Police

DUII — Thomas Robert Penn, 32, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:14 a.m. June 13, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 near milepost one. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 12:46 p.m. June 13, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 West near milepost 89. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 7:03 p.m. June 13, in the area of U.S. Highway 20 West near milepost 93. DUII — Jacqueline Ann Bocol, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:34 p.m. June 13, in the area of State Highway 126 near milepost 95.

BEND FIRE RUNS Thursday 16 — Medical aid calls. Friday 7:59 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, adjacent to Northwest Mount Washington Drive. 23 — Medical aid calls. Saturday 9:13 a.m. — Unauthorized burning, 21650 Boones Borough Drive. 11:10 a.m. — Unauthorized burning, 65370 Kiowa Drive. 10 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 4:49 p.m. — Unauthorized burning, 62032 Dean Swift Road. 31 — Medical aid calls.

Brian Davies / The Register-Guard

University of Oregon graduate Andrea Dekoning grabs one last photo with Puddles, the Oregon Duck mascot, before joining fellow graduates for the “Duck Walk� to Hayward Field for graduation exercises Monday morning in Eugene.

L B Compiled from Bulletin staff reports

Jury finds Bend man guilty in stabbing

Guerra is scheduled to be sentenced on June 29.

A Bend man was convicted on Monday of attempted murder, assault and unlawful use of a weapon in the November stabbing of a 25-year-old man. Luis Raymon Guerra, 45, was arrested on Nov. 16 after he got into a fight with Jacob Calhoun at the Bend Keystone RV Park on Northeast Burnside Ave. Calhoun, who suffered several stab wounds to his face and neck, walked across the street to the parking lot of Stars Cabaret before police were notified. Deschutes County Deputy District Attorney Kandy Gies said attempted murder and first-degree assault are Measure 11 crimes which carry a minimum sentence of 90 months in prison.

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Class project causes small fire at school The Bend Fire Department was called to a small fire at High Desert Middle School late Monday morning after rocket being launched as part of a class project malfunctioned. One of the rockets tipped over and started a small fire, which spread over an approximately 9-square-foot area, according to the department. The fire was quickly contained.


THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 C3

O KYRON HORMAN

20% of Oregon doctors plan to retire in 5 years The Associated Press PORTLAND — A statewide survey indicates that more than a fifth of Oregon doctors plan to retire in the next five years. The survey released Monday by the Oregon Health Authority and the Oregon Medical Association covered nearly 3,300

Oregon physicians. The survey also showed doctors are concerned about patients losing access to health care and Oregon’s low Medicare reimbursement rates. Health officials say the survey adds to worries about a potential physician shortage in the coming years.

O B

Andrew Burto / The Oregonian

Desiree Young, second from left, Kyron Hormon’s mother, is consoled by Tony Young, Kyron’s stepfather, while Capt. Monte Reiser speaks at a news conference in Portland on Sunday. At right are Kyron’s father, Kaine Horman, and his stepmother, Terri Horman.

Search for boy scaled back By Nigel Duara The Associated Press

PORTLAND — Authorities overseeing one of the largest search-and-rescue operations in state history said Monday that a missing 7-year-old Portland boy likely didn’t simply walk away from school when he disappeared 11 days ago. Multnomah County Sheriff’s Capt. Jason Gates said the massive search for Kyron Horman has been scaled back, but it continues as a criminal investigation. Kyron went missing June 4 after a science fair at his elementary school. “The process is not over,” Gates said. “We as an investigative team are resolved to bring Kyron home. This will not become a cold case for us.” The teams searching for Kyron had included more than 1,300 volunteers from across the

“The process is not over We as an investigative team are resolved to bring Kyron home. This will not become a cold case for us.” — Capt. Jason Gates, Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office state, as well as from southern Washington state and northern California. Most of those teams were sent home Sunday. A more limited search team from Multnomah County will canvass Skyline Elementary School again this week. That’s where Kyron was reportedly last seen. “It’s not a search-and-rescue operation anymore,” Gates said. He added that parents in the area shouldn’t take extra precautions with their children. Authorities have said since the earliest days of the investigation

that they believe Kyron’s disappearance was an isolated case. “There is no reason to believe that the kids are in any danger here,” Gates said. The Sheriff’s Office has offered a $25,000 reward for information that leads to the boy. Despite the announcement that the disappearance is now being investigated as a criminal case, the Sheriff’s Office has refused to say whether it has identified any suspects or has any theories about Kyron’s disappearance. Gates reiterated Monday that the release of any details could com-

promise the investigation. Kyron’s family, including his mother, stepmother, stepfather and father, have made two public appearances. In the first one Friday, they pleaded for Kyron’s return but did not take questions. They re-emerged Sunday at a press conference but did not release a statement. Capt. Monte Reiser of the Sheriff’s Office has said that authorities can charge a suspect without finding Kyron. The search-and-rescue teams spent 10 days combing the twomile radius around the school, as well as “individual areas” which Gates again declined to identify Monday. Gates said the Sheriff’s Office will establish a “war room” in its downtown Portland building which will be dedicated to the search and investigation.

Journalists seek Scouts’ files on abuse suspects By Tim Fought The Associated Press

PORTLAND — News organizations asked a Portland judge on Monday to make public more than 1,000 files on suspected child molesters — records a jury used in April when it found the Boy Scouts of America liable for $20 million in damages. The Oregon Constitution’s requirement for open courts requires the release of the files that were evidence in the case of Kerry Lewis, a man abused in the early 1980s, the organizations’ lawyer argued in court. The Scouts’ lawyer said the judge has discretion with such records and that releasing them would damage the Scouts’ ability to get a fair trial in upcoming abuse cases. Five more await trial in Portland.

The documents were introduced as evidence in the case involving Lewis. One of his lawyers, Kelly Clark, called them “the evidentiary centerpiece of this trial.” The jury saw them, but Judge John Wittmayer sealed them. On Monday, the judge promised to “get a decision out as fast as I can.” The jury awarded Lewis $1.4 million in compensatory damages and assessed the Scouts $18.5 million in punitive damages. The 1,247 files were described in court Monday as covering two decades and totaling more than 20,000 pages. The groups seeking the records are The Oregonian, The New York Times, Oregon Public Broadcasting, KGW-TV, The Associated Press and Courthouse News Service.

Their lawyer, Dan Lindahl of Portland, cited the state constitution’s Bill of Rights: “No court shall be secret, but justice shall be administered, openly and without purchase.”

Public interest The public has an interest in understanding the basis for the decision in the Lewis case involving the use of the government’s power to punish a defendant, he said. The Scouts argue that releasing the information would deter victims and others from coming forward. Their lawyer, Robert Aldisert of Portland, read a letter from one victim asking the judge not to make the documents public because releasing the names would

run counter to standards set in state laws protecting victims of child abuse and in newsrooms, which usually don’t use the names of such victims. Clark joined the journalism organizations and said the Scouts’ resistance showed the group “still doesn’t get it. The healing doesn’t begin until the secrets are out.” During the trial, Lewis told reporters he had no objection to being named. In May, The Oregonian reported that it had obtained access to a similar set of files that showed no record that the Scouts had alerted authorities to adults suspected of child abuse in 11 cases in Oregon from 1971 to 1991, and that 46 people were dismissed from Scouting in Oregon in those years, most on grounds of child molestation.

Rights zealot objects to forced entry in ‘road rage’ case By Bennett Hall The Corvallis Gazette-Times

ADAIR VILLAGE — A local man known for confronting law enforcement and judicial officials in defense of his rights is crying foul after Benton County sheriff’s deputies broke down his door to serve a search warrant in a misdemeanor traffic case. Law enforcement authorities say the charges against Dave Picray are serious, that they followed proper procedure and that they forced entry only because Picray wouldn’t come to the door. Picray, 61, faces charges of reckless driving and reckless endangering stemming from a “road rage” incident that occurred on Highway 99W on the afternoon of May 27. The other driver in the case, an 18-year-old man whom police have not publicly identified,

claims that Picray tailgated him as they were driving south into town, took pictures of him and nearly caused an accident by stopping in the middle of the highway near Conifer Boulevard. Picray contends that he was the victim. He said that he documented what he termed the 18year-old driver’s dangerous and aggressive behavior using a digital videorecorder and a still camera that Picray had in his truck. That was the evidence deputies were looking for at his Adair Village duplex Thursday evening. The search warrant covers a wide range of electronic gear and storage media, as well as printed photos. According to property receipts left with Picray, deputies seized CDs, photos, a cell phone, two computers, two cameras, a minicassette recorder and two “recording devices.”

Picray has a long history of confrontations with local law enforcement for what he calls “standing up for my rights.” He has filed many formal complaints against police officers, sheriff’s

deputies and prosecutors. “It’s pure vindictive; that’s all it is,” Picray said. “They want to get me. That’s why they use this traffic complaint to arrest me and bust down my damn door.”

Body pulled from Willamette River

separate illegal drug sales on the street in the Portland area.

SALEM — The body of a man has been found in the same area along the Willamette River in Salem where a swimmer was reported missing. The Polk County Sheriff’s Office responded to a water rescue call near Riverfront Park in Salem on Sunday after receiving a report that a man who had been swimming was seen going underwater and did not resurface. The sheriff’s Marine Patrol was on the scene within minutes of the call just before 6 p.m. Sunday and began to look for the swimmer but called off the search about 10 p.m. Deputies said a dive team located a body just before noon Monday. Investigators were trying to identify the man, described as 18 to 25 years old, about 6 feet and 150 pounds.

Railroad dike breach repair may face delay

$1.5M of heroin seized in Portland PORTLAND — Portland police say they seized 10 pounds of heroin worth up to $1.5 million believed to have been transported to Oregon from Arizona. Police said Monday the seizure last week resulted from an investigation that began with a tip about two months ago. Three men facing various drug charges following the bust were identified as 33year-old Sergio Aguilar Sahagun, 38-year-old Roman Aguilar Rocha, and 29-yearold Edgar Curiel Guzman. Police said they believe the heroin came from Phoenix and could have been used to make more than 72,000

KNAPPA — Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife concerns over fish passage at Warren Slough near Knappa may delay federally approved plans to repair a railroad dike breach. The National Marine Fisheries Service and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers have issued permits to the Portland & Western Railroad to do the repair work. But the state claims the repair plans, which include installing a culvert and tidegate in the dike, don’t meet 2009 state requirements. The plans have already taken five years to work their way through the federal permitting process but state officials say they may require modification. A delay could affect a Clatsop County road and bridge, two property owners who suffer serious water damage, and Port of Astoria plans for marketing its industrial facility at North Tongue Point.

Caustic soda spills at Albany I-5 accident ALBANY — The Oregon Transportation Department says about 20 gallons of sodium hydroxide — caustic soda — spilled when a vehicle overturned on northbound Interstate 5 in Albany. Traffic was restricted early Monday for a hazmat cleanup. There were no injuries. — From wire reports

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C4 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

E

The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

BETSY MCCOOL GORDON BLACK JOHN COSTA ERIK LUKENS

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-chief Editor of Editorials

Get ready for parks vs. schools

I

t’s no secret that tough budget decisions loom for Oregon’s elected lawmakers. But they loom, too, for the state’s citizen lawmakers, who may be asked in November to choose between the

environment and education. Talk about a statewide identity crisis. Twelve years ago, an overwhelming majority of voters approved a constitutional amendment dedicating 15 percent of lottery revenue to state parks and watershed enhancement efforts. But the funding provision isn’t permanent. It will disappear in 2015 unless voters renew it. The Legislature is obligated to put the question on the ballot in November 2014. One group doesn’t want to wait that long. Oregonians for Water, Parks and Wildlife is trying to collect enough valid signatures — about 110,000 — to place a constitutional amendment on November’s ballot that would, among other things, make that 15 percent lottery set-aside permanent. The Nature Conservancy has donated about $900,000 to the cause so far, according to Willamette Week. Spending a chunk of the lottery pie on the state’s parks and watersheds has enormous appeal, which is why we endorsed Measure 66 back in 1998. But the outcome of an election this time won’t be a 2-to-1 blowout, as it was then. In fact, assuming it ends up on November’s ballot, the Son of Measure 66 could have a hard time winning a simple majority. Every dollar that Measure 66 steers to parks and watersheds comes from somewhere else. Lottery money currently has three destinations. The first — and the reason the lottery was established — is economic development and job creation, which gets roughly 17 percent of revenues every biennium, according Mary Loftin, a spokeswoman with the state lottery. This is the category that pays for lottery-backed bonds, which have been used to build rail and airport infra-

structure through the Connect Oregon program. Another 1 percent of lottery revenue is used to treat problem gamblers, and at least 18 percent goes to public education. Because much of the lottery fund isn’t locked up, lawmakers are able to steer money to lottery beneficiaries with the greatest need. That’s why public education, which has a firm claim on only 18 percent of lottery funds, received 64 percent of the pie last biennium, says Loftin. It doesn’t take an advanced math degree to figure out where most of the liberated lottery money will go if the parks and salmon set-aside expires in 2015. The sums at stake are significant, by the way. During the 2007-2009 biennium, Measure 66 steered $197 million into parks and watershed restoration. Numbers for the current biennium are unavailable. The current initiative’s backers couldn’t have picked a more difficult time to plead their case. The state doesn’t have enough money to pay for the services it provides. Lawmakers have exhausted the public’s tolerance for significant tax and fee hikes. And by asking voters to make the constitution’s parks and salmon provision permanent, Oregonians for Water Parks and Wildlife have unwittingly publicized a potential future source of education funding. Will voters, given the chance, support schools of fish or schools of kids? Our money’s on the kids, and such an outcome wouldn’t be a bad thing. After all, voters are guaranteed another chance in November 2014, by which time the state’s economic outlook may have improved significantly. There’s nothing wrong with keeping your options open.

U.S. food safety bill walking a fine line N

o one is against food safety, it’s fair to say. At the same time, assuring a generally safe food supply without putting small and organic farmers out of business is no slam dunk. Just ask the U.S. Senate, which currently is working on a bill to do just that. The U.S. House passed new food safety legislation last year. Here are some of the dilemmas that face the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee — of which Oregon’s junior senator, Jeff Merkley, is a member — which is working on the legislation. Merkley proposes ensuring organic producers are allowed to farm

in a way that fits with recognized organic practices. Other proposals would exempt small farmers who generally sell directly to consumers. The House measure, meanwhile, calls for a $500 inspection fee for food processing facilities. Small farmers would be exempted. We don’t envy the Senate committee working on the bill. It’s being asked to walk a fine line between imposing so many rules that only major corporate farms will be left to produce food and a system so lax that unwitting consumers face a real health threat at the supermarket. Creating law that walks this line successfully won’t be easy.

My Nickel’s Worth Congress has failed Members of the United States Senate and the House of Representatives have: 1. Corrupted our form of government with bribes. 2. Approved legislation behind closed doors, in secret and eliminated other members of the Senate in debate. 3. Not released the final legislative bills in a timely manner, so that we the people can read and understand the legislation that is proposed to be law. 4. Voted salary increases for themselves while over 15 million of our people are unemployed. 5. Exempted themselves from the same health plan that they voted on for the people. Why are members of Congress not to be included? Please, some answers. 6. Eliminated $500 billion from our health plan. That’s right, $500 billion. Why? 7. I believe that most members of Congress lack critical thinking. Where did these people come from? How do they survive doing the people’s business this way? There are more than 100 days left until “D” day, a day all incumbents in office fear, a day of reckoning and rejoicing. It is our day to remember how the executive branch and the legislative branch corrupted our government. The people will never forget — never — how elected officials had so little respect for the American people’s wishes

that they voted on legislation on Christmas Eve. The House that they work in is not theirs. It belongs to us, the American people, and we will take it back. Alexander Sahonchik Bend

La Pine fight Visiting from out of town, I accompanied my sister to a “special session” of the La Pine Council. I just want to make sure I understand what happened: City employee has grievance. She is directed to follow the policy written by the city attorney for such issues. Employee does so, but is given incorrect information by said attorney. While following policy directions, she is verbally accosted by Councilor Doug Ward, who has been sent to interfere with the process by Mayor Kitty Shields. Councilor Adele McAfee gets called by employee, who is very upset. McAfee reassures confused employee, then calls Councilors Ward and Shields to voice her objections to the “interference” and express concern over their “unsupportable” (and probably illegal!) actions (putting the city in jeopardy). She follows up with a written objection to their “interference.” City attorney gets lots of action at $185 an hour, over confusion and the policy he wrote being “misinterpreted.” McAfee and Councilor Barbara Hedges object to all of this being done to the employee, and the ensuing legal bill, which is a direct

result of the policy not being followed. Councilor McAfee then gets “called on the carpet” by the very councilors whose own actions, according to most of the public speakers, have put the city at risk of a suit. Better to flog McAfee than to apologize to the employee? And the winner is … cha-ching: the attorney! Did I get it right? Candace Robertson Bend

Too negative How disappointing to open a recent edition of The Bulletin and read the front page’s top and largest headline proclaiming “Bend girl out of spelling bee.” Why such negativism? To just qualify for the national spelling bee is a huge accomplishment. To advance through two oral rounds at the national bee is affirmation of the contestant’s skill and poise. Hannah Allison deserves the praise and support of our entire community. How much more appropriate it would have been for The Bulletin to headline the accomplishments of this young student, rather than emphasize the fact that she is “out of the bee!” Shame on you, Bulletin, for turning this fine young student’s positive experience and wonderful accomplishment into a negative headline. Surely, you can do better! Kathy Kuhl Redmond

Letters policy

In My View policy

Submissions

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

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

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

Obama administration is failing to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions WASHINGTON — n announcing the passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution imposing sanctions on Iran, President Barack Obama stressed not once but twice Iran’s increasing “isolation” from the world. This claim is not surprising considering that after 16 months of an “extended hand” policy, in response to which Iran actually accelerated its nuclear program — more centrifuges, more enrichment sites, higher enrichment levels — Iranian “isolation” is about the only achievement to which the administration can plausibly lay claim. “Isolation” may have failed to deflect Iran’s nuclear ambitions, but it does enjoy incessant repetition by the administration. For example, in his State of the Union address, President Obama declared that “the Islamic Republic of Iran is more isolated.” Two months later, Vice President Biden asserted that “since our administration has come to power, I would point out that Iran is more isolated — internally, externally — has fewer friends in the world.” At the signing of the START treaty in April, Obama de-

I

clared that “those nations that refuse to meet their obligations (to the NonProliferation Treaty, i.e., Iran) will be isolated.” Really? Last Tuesday, one day before the president touted passage of a surpassingly weak U.N. resolution and declared Iran yet more isolated, the leaders of Russia, Turkey and Iran gathered at a security summit in Istanbul “in a display of regional power that appeared to be calculated to test the United States,” as The New York Times put it. I would add: And calculated to demonstrate the hollowness of U.S. claims of Iranian isolation, to flaunt Iran’s growing ties with Russia and quasi-alliance with Turkey, a NATO member no less. Apart from the fact that isolation is hardly an end in itself and is pointless if, regardless, Iran rushes headlong to become a nuclear power, the very claim of Iran’s increasing isolation is increasingly implausible. Just last month, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hosted an ostentatious love fest in Tehran with the leaders of Turkey and Brazil. The three raised hands together and

CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER announced a uranium transfer deal that was designed to torpedo U.S. attempts to impose U.N. sanctions. Six weeks ago, Iran was elected to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women, a grotesque choice that mocked Obama’s attempt to isolate and delegitimize Iran in the very international institutions he treasures. Increasing isolation? In the last year alone, Ahmadinejad has been welcomed in Kabul, Istanbul, Copenhagen, Caracas, Brasilia, La Paz, Senegal and Gambia. Today, he is in China. Three Iran sanctions resolutions passed in the Bush years. They were all passed without a single “no” vote. But after 16 months of laboring to produce a mouse, Obama garnered only 12 votes

for his sorry sanctions, with Lebanon abstaining and Turkey and Brazil voting no. From the beginning, the Obama strategy toward Iran and other rogue states had been to offer good will and concessions on the premise that this would lead to one of two outcomes: (a) the other side changes policy, or (b) if they don’t, the world isolates the offending state and rallies around us — now that we have demonstrated last-mile good intentions. Hence, nearly a year and a half of peace overtures, negotiation, concessions, two New Year’s messages to the Iranian people, a bit of groveling about U.S. involvement in the 1953 coup and a disgraceful silence when the regime’s very stability was threatened by peaceful demonstrators. Iran’s response? Defiance, contempt and an acceleration of its nuclear program. And the world’s response? Did it rally behind us? The Russians and Chinese bargained furiously and successfully to hollow out the sanctions resolution.

Turkey is openly choosing sides with the region’s “strong horse” — Iran and its clients (Syria, Hezbollah, Hamas) — as it watches the United States try to placate Syria and appease Iran while it pressures Israel, neglects Lebanon and draws down its power in the region. To say nothing of Brazil. Et tu, Lula? This comes after 16 months of assiduously courting these powers with one conciliatory gesture after another: “resetting” relations with Russia, kowtowing to China, lavishing a two-day visit on Turkey highlighted by a speech to the Turkish parliament in Ankara, and elevating Brazil by supplanting the G8 with the G-20. All this has been read as American weakness, evidence that Obama can be rolled. The result is succinctly, if understatedly, captured in Wednesday’s Washington Post headline “U.S. alliance against Iran is showing new signs of vulnerability.” You think? Charles Krauthammer is a member of The Washington Post Writers Group.


THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 C5

O D N Bernita ‘Nita’ E. Green, of Bend Oct. 20, 1923 - June 9, 2010 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, 541-382-0903, www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Committal Service will be held at Rose Hill Memorial Park in Whittier, CA on Thursday, June 17, 2010, at 11:00 a.m. Located in the Twilight Terrace Lawn Section, enter through Gate 17. Contributions may be made to:

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

Bobby Franklin Kennedy, of Prineville May 5, 1937 - June 13, 2010 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home-Prineville 541-416-9733. Services: A memorial service will be held June 17, 2010 at 1:00 P.M. at East Side Church, Prineville. Contributions may be made to:

Humane Society of The Ochocos, 1280 S.W. Tom McCall Rd., Prineville, OR 97754. 541-447-7178.

Edward ‘Ed’ Count Dark, of Bend Sept. 24, 1963 - June 10, 2010 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No formal services will be held, per Ed’s request.

James Richard Barnes, of Bend July 20, 1947 - June 3, 2010 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 Services: At his request no service will be held. Contributions may be made to:

American Lung Association

W. David McConnell, of Tucson, AZ (also, La Pine, OR) April 13, 1930 - Feb. 12, 2010 Services: Memorial Service will be held June 19, 2010, 1:30 p.m. at Discovery Christian Church on Newport Ave. All are welcome to come celebrate his life.

Obituary Policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, e-mail or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541617-7825. DEADLINES: Death notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and noon on Saturday. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details. PHONE: 541-617-7825 FAX: 541-322-7254 MAIL: Obituaries E-MAIL: obits@bendbulletin.com P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Robert Dean Kennedy

Marian Louise Robertson

November 29, 1936 - June 8, 2010

Sept. 22, 1921 - June 9, 2010

Robert Dean Kennedy went to be with his Lord on June 8, 2010, attended by his loved ones. Robert was born on November 29, 1936, in McCook, Nebraska to Harvey and Clara Kennedy. Robert Dean They later Kennedy moved to Oregon, along with his brothers, Kenneth, Jerry, Pat, and his sister, Susan. He married the love of his life, Charolett (Woodward) Kennedy on November 9, 1959. Robert and Charolett had four children; Kim, married to Jack Spurgeon of Prineville, Michael, married to Kimberly Kennedy of Bend, Tim Kennedy of Prineville, and Cindy, married to Mark Meredith of Bend. He is also survived by his 13 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Robert owned and operated the Truax gas stations in Bend for more than 30 years. He was a long time attendee of the First Baptist church in Bend. His quick wit and disarming sense of humor will be remembered and greatly missed by his family and friends. A Celebration of Robert's life will take place on Saturday, June 19th, at 11:00 a.m. at First Baptist Church, 60 NW Oregon Avenue in Bend. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the First Baptist Church of Bend, Youth Ministries. Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471. Please visit and sign guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Marian Robertson, of Bend, died June 9, 2010, at the age of 88, at the Sparkling "R" Foster Care Home, where she resided for 10 years. She was born September 22, 1921, to Harold and Madeline (Johnson) Hubbard of Rockford, Iowa. She graduated from Iowa State College in 1944, with a B.S. Degree in Home Economics Education. Marian married Larry Robertson from Eugene, Oregon, in 1949, in Beverly Hills, California. He preceded her in death in 2000. The Robertsons lived in Michigan for over 20 years where Larry was an engineer with General Motors before retiring to Bend in 1974. Marian was a lifetime homemaker who spent many hours sharing her extraordinary homemaking skills with family and friends. She was an active member of the First Presbyterian Church and PEO Chapter AI. Through her volunteer work, Marian demonstrated her love for children and her commitment to education. Marian and Larry loved the outdoors, spending many years skiing, backpacking, and hiking. She is survived by her sister, Harriett Hallock of Daytona Beach, Florida and several nephews and nieces. A Memorial Service will be held later this summer. Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471. Please visit and sign guest book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Food guide publisher Ronay dies at 94 By William Grimes New York Times News Service

Egon Ronay, whose restaurant and hotel guides, first published in the late 1950s, alerted austerity-pinched Britons to the possibilities of fine dining and helped pave the way for Britain’s current culinary renaissance, died on Saturday at his home in Yattendon, Berkshire. He was 94. His death was confirmed by his granddaughter, Shebah Ronay. Ronay, a Hungarian who fled Budapest for London in 1946, made a novel proposition when he published “Egon Ronay’s Guide to British Eateries” in 1957. Restaurant food did not have to be bad, he said, and good food could be found in Britain. To invigorate British food culture, such as it was, he adopted the Michelin model, sending out full-time inspectors to visit restaurants and hotels all over Britain and file reports that led to a score of one to three stars. Ronay visited some 200 restaurants each year. The first edition ran to 96 pages, written entirely by Ronay, and sold about 30,000 copies. The guide took off from there, quickly becoming an indispensable resource for hungry diners, who found assurance in Ronay’s

The Associated Press file photo

Hungarian-born food critic Egon Ronay poses for a photo in 2006. policy of accepting no advertising or hospitality from hotels or restaurants. He later began publishing annual pub and budgetrestaurant guides. The Ronay guide, published for nearly 30 years, could make or break a restaurant. Ronay boosted the careers of chefs like Raymond Blanc, Marco Pierre White and Gordon Ramsay, although he could turn on a dime. In 2008, he complained to The Daily Mail that Ramsay and the celebrity chef Jamie Oliver “are not chefs anymore, they are

businesspeople.” “There’s no doubt that he had a huge, huge influence and he helped British chefs to believe in themselves,” Blanc told The Daily Telegraph, pointing out that his life changed forever when his restaurant, Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons in Oxford, was named restaurant of the year by the Ronay guide in 1978. In an interview with the BBC in 2009, Ronay said: “I really wanted to see better food. That really was my purpose.” Egon Ronay was born in Bu-

dapest, where his enormously wealthy father ran five of the city’s finest restaurants. He earned a law degree from the University of Budapest but entered the family business. He was conscripted by the Hungarian Army during World War II and, he said, deserted in 1943 and spent the rest of the war living underground in Budapest. After the family’s restaurants were taken over by the Communist government, he left for London and found work managing a restaurant in Piccadilly owned by a friend of his father’s. In 1952 he opened a 39-seat restaurant, the Marquee, near Harrods, which shocked and delighted Londoners by serving French food. Its French chef, flown in from the Riviera, prepared country pates, eel stew and bouillabaisse. Fanny Cradock, a famous television chef and newspaper columnist, praised the restaurant lavishly, and within a few years Ronay succeeded her at The Daily Telegraph. In his columns and in his guidebooks, Ronay waged a campaign for higher standards of cooking, even at such unpromising locations as airport restaurants, hospitals and highway service stops.

Former manager of L.A. Philharmonic dies at 85 By Claudia Luther Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Ernest Fleischmann, the willful impresario who dominated the Los Angeles Philharmonic for nearly 30 years and helped transform it into one of the nation’s top orchestras through the force of his exacting personality, has died. He was 85. Fleischmann died Sunday after a long illness at his Los Angeles home surrounded by family, the Philharmonic announced. As the Philharmonic’s visionary manager, he was a famed talent scout who had a hand in vir-

tually every decision, large and small, concerning the orchestra during his tenure. His accomplishments left a lasting imprint on the city’s cultural landscape: He brought a young Esa-Pekka Salonen to Los Angeles as the Philharmonic’s music director, championed the building of Walt Disney Concert Hall, revived and refurbished the Hollywood Bowl, and, as early as 2004, recognized the abilities of Gustavo Dudamel, who became the orchestra’s director last year. Deborah Borda, the Philharmonic’s current president and

chief executive, said in a statement Monday: “The unique and blessed musical landscape we inhabit in 21st century Los Angeles was made possible by a cultural giant of the 20th — Ernest Fleischmann. ... To say that we stand upon his shoulders is a proven fact. He will be terribly missed.” From 1969 to 1998, Fleischmann brought to bear his love of the classics, his devotion to new music and his adopted city’s rich show-business history in developing an orchestra that drew in concertgoers and increasingly demanded respect.

Loved and hated — sometimes by the same people — Fleischmann imposed his will by cajoling, shouting at, persuading, charming and intimidating those around him. Even those who questioned or chafed at Fleischmann’s stratagems generally conceded that they always were in the service of making the Philharmonic better. “He transformed a provincial second-rank orchestra into one of the world’s best,” Times music critic Mark Swed wrote when Fleischmann retired from his post.

Wilson Continued from C1 One of the investors is Sandy Garner of the Garner Realty Group in Bend, McMahon said. Garner could not be reached for comment on Monday. The new group is seeking to convert 6.2 acres to limited commercial, 17.7 acres to medium-density residential, and about 8.8 acres to high-density residential. The land is currently zoned “standard residential,” which means it is intended for single-family homes and other low-density uses. The changes would allow denser housing such as town houses, condominiums, and apartments, and commercial buildings such as grocery stores, office buildings and cafes. The area is empty except for trees, homeless camps and trash that’s been dumped, neighbors said.

PRG Continued from C1 “It appears that all of the victims lost their security deposit and April’s rent,” Gregory said. “There are also a few we’re investigating where there seems to be some maintenance expenses.”

Money transfers According to the Real Estate Agency’s report, Rose told investigators she transferred money back and forth between four accounts, including the clients’ trust account and PRG’s maintenance account. She said she’d transfer money at different times of the month and then reconcile the accounts before moving the money again. Rose could not be reached for comment. Detectives are now waiting for financial paperwork from several financial institutions, which Gregory said could take some time. In some cases, he said it can take 30 to 60 days to get documents after a bank is served with a subpoena. “That slows us up,” he said.

DEQ Continued from C1 In November, DEQ received complaints from at least three people who worked at the district about workers breaking up floor tiles in the school’s kitchen, said Bryan Smith, environmental law specialist with the agency. “A few complaints came into our office that they observed broken-up tiles, metal scrapers, tile just being demolished with metal tools,” Smith said. Schools are required to have a list of what materials could have asbestos in it, he said. And for Metolius Elementary, workers are supposed to assume that all of the flooring contains asbestos, which is fine while it’s in the floor but can be harmful if the material is broken up, releasing fibers into the air. For that reason, workers can remove whole tiles if the material remains intact, but can’t break tiles, Smith said. One of the fined workers had been certified to work with asbestos, but not licensed to remove it, and so should have known that there was asbestos in the tile and that it was illegal to crush tiles, he said. Employees also reported that pieces of tile were thrown in the cafeteria trash bins instead of being disposed of properly, he said. DEQ did not have any sam-

Neighbors feel development is inevitable and don’t necessarily object to it, but there is no consensus on what should be built there, said Matt Olsen, chair of the Larkspur Neighborhood Association, which represents residents from neighborhoods near the proposed development. He won’t know where the association stands until the developers propose something more specific, he said. A new traffic study will be completed in the next few weeks, and the developers will submit a zoning change application to the city, which will review the proposal and hold a public hearing. The application could be approved in six to nine months, McMahon said, but the investors haven’t decided what their next move will be. Adrianne Jeffries can be reached at 541-633-2117 or at ajeffries@bendbulletin.com.

“We can get a case to the point where we’re ready to interview a suspect, serve a search warrant, but we’re waiting (for the records).” Gregory said the case is a priority, but detectives are have also been busy tackling several other large cases, including other embezzlement cases, a recent officer-involved shooting and the disappearance of a Bend man whose body was recovered last week in the Deschutes River. As a result, he estimated it could take four or five months before the case is sent to a grand jury, which could make a decision on an indictment. If Rose is charged with a crime, Gregory said it would likely be aggravated theft, because the amount involved in the alleged embezzlement is over $10,000. District Attorney Mike Dugan said his office is also sorting through all of the documents from the police and has asked for assistance from specialists with the Oregon Attorney General’s Office. Erin Golden can be reached at 541-617-7837 or at egolden@bendbulletin.com.

ples of the kitchen tile that was removed, Smith said, but four samples taken from the tiles around the removed areas all had asbestos in them. “It’s more likely than not that this flooring (that was removed), right in the middle of the other flooring, also had asbestos,” Smith said. Molitor, the school district superintendent, said the tile in question was only several years old, and so did not pose an asbestos hazard. “We believe the tiles they’re referring too were not asbestos-containing material.... They were newer, previously replaced tile that were not the old asbestos-containing tile,” he said, adding the district and DEQ are currently setting up a meeting to talk about the situation. However, Messina with DEQ said that while about 100 square feet of removed tile was new, another 260 square feet was older and probably contained asbestos. There are disagreements between the district and DEQ about what happened with the Metolius Elementary projects, said Smith. “It’s a difficult case,” he said. “We’re obviously saying to the school district and the workers that we don’t believe your version.” Kate Ramsayer can be reached at 541-617-7811 or kramsayer@bendbulletin.com.

Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home “Caring People, Caring For You”

Serving Central Oregon Families Since 1911

Visit our website to view obituaries and leave condolence messages www.niswonger-reynolds.com

541-382-2471 Brett E. Edgerly Funeral Director

105 NW Irving Ave, Bend Locally Owned & Operated by the Daniel Family


W E AT H ER

C6 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

THE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST

Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LLC ©2010.

TODAY, JUNE 15

WEDNESDAY

Today: Partly cloudy.

Ben Burkel

Bob Shaw

FORECASTS: LOCAL

LOW

68

36

Western Ruggs

Condon

66/43

63/40

70/43

46/32

60s Willowdale

Warm Springs

Marion Forks

69/43

62/43

Mitchell

Madras

69/38

67/41

Camp Sherman 61/33 Redmond Prineville 66/36 Cascadia 68/37 65/47 Sisters 64/35 Bend Post 68/36

Oakridge Elk Lake 63/45

63/33

63/32

64/34

57/26

61/33

Fort Rock

Missoula 69/46

70s Helena

Bend

Boise

68/36

73/51

77/52

89/56

Elko

63/35

83/50

San Francisco Isolated thunderstorms 66/53 today. Chance of showers tonight.

60s

50/32

70s

83/47

Reno

Crater Lake

63/44

Idaho Falls

65/35

Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:22 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:50 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:22 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:51 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 9:02 a.m. Moonset today . . . 11:30 p.m.

80s Salt Lake City 83/62

90s

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

Partly cloudy, slight chance of showers. HIGH

Full

Last

New

June 18 June 26 July 4

July 11

LOW

HIGH

TEMPERATURE

WATER REPORT

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

To report a wildfire, call 911

Astoria . . . . . . . . 60/53/0.00 . . . . . 59/49/sh. . . . . . . 58/49/c Baker City . . . . . . 73/45/0.00 . . . . . 65/42/pc. . . . . . 54/39/sn Brookings . . . . . . 68/50/0.00 . . . . . 64/52/pc. . . . . . 60/50/pc Burns. . . . . . . . . . 77/41/0.00 . . . . . 65/39/pc. . . . . . 55/37/pc Eugene . . . . . . . .68/40/trace . . . . . . 64/46/c. . . . . . 64/47/pc Klamath Falls . . . 77/43/0.00 . . . . . 66/38/pc. . . . . . 61/39/pc Lakeview. . . . . . . 79/45/0.00 . . . . . 65/41/pc. . . . . . 58/39/pc La Pine . . . . . . . . 73/37/0.00 . . . . . 64/32/pc. . . . . . 55/36/pc Medford . . . . . . . 77/57/0.00 . . . . . 69/47/pc. . . . . . 68/47/pc Newport . . . . . . . 59/48/0.00 . . . . . 59/49/sh. . . . . . 58/49/pc North Bend . . . . . 55/48/0.00 . . . . . 58/48/sh. . . . . . 57/47/pc Ontario . . . . . . . . 86/58/0.00 . . . . . 73/52/pc. . . . . . 62/47/sh Pendleton . . . . . . 74/51/0.00 . . . . . 72/44/pc. . . . . . 67/48/pc Portland . . . . . . . 65/46/0.00 . . . . . 63/50/sh. . . . . . 65/52/sh Prineville . . . . . . . 66/45/0.00 . . . . . 68/37/pc. . . . . . 60/41/pc Redmond. . . . . . . 73/39/0.00 . . . . . 66/35/pc. . . . . . 60/36/pc Roseburg. . . . . . . 72/51/0.00 . . . . . . 65/48/c. . . . . . 65/49/pc Salem . . . . . . . . . 66/44/0.00 . . . . . 65/48/sh. . . . . . 65/50/pc Sisters . . . . . . . . . 69/39/0.00 . . . . . 64/35/pc. . . . . . 58/39/pc The Dalles . . . . . . 72/51/0.00 . . . . . 69/48/pc. . . . . . 68/52/pc

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

0

MEDIUM 2

4

7

HIGH 6

V.HIGH 8

10

POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.com

LOW

MEDIUM

The following was compiled today by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44,031 . . . . .55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145,990 . . . .200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 74,823 . . . . .91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . . 42,799 . . . . .47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148,935 . . . .153,777 River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . 414 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,178 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 250 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,583 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 376 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 656 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 39.8 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 783 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

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

LOW

PRECIPITATION

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70/43 24 hours ending 4 p.m.. . . . . . . . 0.00” Record high . . . . . . . . . . . . .94 in 1987 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.23” Record low. . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 in 1945 Average month to date. . . . . . . . 0.42” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.19” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41 Average year to date. . . . . . . . . . 5.83” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.. . . 30.06 Record 24 hours . . . . . . . 0.72 in 1931 *Melted liquid equivalent

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

Wed. Hi/Lo/W

LOW

74 42

FIRE INDEX

Tuesday Hi/Lo/W

Partly cloudy.

74 42

PLANET WATCH

Moon phases First

SATURDAY

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . . . .4:34 a.m. . . . . . .7:43 p.m. Venus . . . . . . . .8:14 a.m. . . . . .11:21 p.m. Mars. . . . . . . .11:09 a.m. . . . . .12:42 a.m. Jupiter. . . . . . . .1:33 a.m. . . . . . .1:33 p.m. Saturn. . . . . . . .1:07 p.m. . . . . . .1:38 a.m. Uranus . . . . . . .1:29 a.m. . . . . . .1:29 p.m.

OREGON CITIES City

Redding

Silver Lake

62/30

54/45 63/50

Christmas Valley

Chemult

Calgary

Seattle

65/34

50s

63/50

50s

Eugene Slight chance of showers 64/46 today. Chance of showers Grants Pass tonight. 67/45 Eastern

Hampton

62/31

Vancouver

63/50

Burns

64/32

Crescent

Crescent Lake

Yesterday’s regional extremes • 86° Ontario • 37° Florence

LOW

68 38

BEND ALMANAC

64/33

La Pine

HIGH

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Portland

Brothers

LOW

60 36

NORTHWEST

Paulina

64/34

Sunriver

54/24

Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers today. Showers possible tonight. Central

68/42

HIGH

FRIDAY Partly cloudy, slight chance of showers.

A trough of low pressure will bring showers to western Washington and Oregon today.

STATE

Maupin

Government Camp

Partly cloudy.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy.

HIGH

THURSDAY

HIGH

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

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

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

S

S

S

S

S

Vancouver 63/50

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

S

S

S

Calgary Saskatoon 70/50 54/45

Seattle 63/50

Winnipeg 73/57

Portland 63/50

Boise 73/51

Billings 83/55

Indio, Calif.

Cheyenne 76/50 San Francisco 66/53

Angel Fire, N.M.

• 6.29” Oklahoma City, Okla.

Las Vegas 100/76

Salt Lake City 83/62

Los Angeles 68/59

Denver 80/55 Albuquerque 88/60

Phoenix 104/76

Honolulu 88/75

Tijuana 77/59 Chihuahua 96/68

La Paz 96/64 Anchorage 54/46

S

S

S

S

S

S S

Quebec 72/50

Thunder Bay 55/50

Halifax 64/48 Portland To ronto 72/50 70/63 St. Paul Green Bay Boston 69/59 67/57 77/57 Buffalo Rapid City Detroit 73/60 New York 74/54 Chicago 76/62 80/62 Des Moines 78/63 Philadelphia 77/60 81/63 Omaha Columbus Washington, D. C. 80/62 83/69 83/66 Louisville Kansas City 88/73 83/66 St. Louis Charlotte 86/68 96/73 Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 85/69 93/73 92/74 Atlanta 92/73 Birmingham Dallas 94/74 96/75 New Orleans 91/76 Orlando Houston 96/76 93/77 Bismarck 78/55

• 108° • 28°

S

Juneau 56/46

Mazatlan 87/73

Miami 93/81 Monterrey 93/69

FRONTS

KEEPING COOL IN WASHINGTON

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . .95/77/0.00 . 93/73/pc . . 94/73/pc Akron . . . . . . . . .78/62/0.00 . . .81/67/t . . . .82/59/t Albany. . . . . . . . .76/60/0.00 . . .77/53/s . . 66/58/sh Albuquerque. . . .84/57/0.00 . . .88/60/s . . . 92/61/s Anchorage . . . . .64/49/0.00 . .54/46/sh . . 56/47/sh Atlanta . . . . . . . .95/77/0.00 . . .92/73/t . . . .92/72/t Atlantic City . . . .79/66/0.00 . 75/64/pc . . . .75/68/t Austin . . . . . . . . .94/78/0.00 . 94/73/pc . . 95/73/pc Baltimore . . . . . .90/73/0.00 . 82/63/pc . . . .81/68/t Billings. . . . . . . . .73/46/0.00 . 83/55/pc . . . .77/51/t Birmingham . . . .93/75/1.05 . . .94/74/t . . . .92/72/t Bismarck . . . . . . .71/39/0.00 . . .78/55/s . . . .83/65/t Boise . . . . . . . . . .87/56/0.00 . . .73/51/t . . 59/45/sh Boston. . . . . . . . .72/59/0.00 . . .77/57/s . . 69/59/sh Bridgeport, CT. . .73/64/0.00 . . .78/57/s . . 70/62/sh Buffalo . . . . . . . .72/64/0.06 . . .73/60/s . . . .70/58/t Burlington, VT. . .70/55/0.00 . . .73/53/s . . . 67/55/c Caribou, ME . . . .72/55/0.00 . . .67/44/s . . 79/52/pc Charleston, SC . .99/79/0.00 . . .96/76/t . . . .93/77/t Charlotte. . . . . . 95/68/trace . . .96/73/t . . . .90/69/t Chattanooga. . . .95/75/0.00 . . .94/71/t . . . .91/70/t Cheyenne . . . . . .62/39/0.66 . . .76/50/s . . 80/51/pc Chicago. . . . . . . .70/63/0.00 . . .78/63/t . . . 83/62/s Cincinnati . . . . . .88/68/0.06 . . .86/70/t . . 85/66/pc Cleveland . . . . . .80/68/0.17 . . .79/65/t . . 81/61/sh Colorado Springs 65/44/0.00 . 76/52/pc . . 83/56/pc Columbia, MO . .79/70/0.13 . . .83/65/t . . 86/68/pc Columbia, SC . .100/73/0.00 . . .99/76/t . . . .96/73/t Columbus, GA. . .97/76/0.04 . . .94/74/t . . 95/73/pc Columbus, OH. . .86/67/0.00 . . .83/69/t . . 83/64/pc Concord, NH . . . .78/59/0.00 . . .77/48/s . . 66/55/sh Corpus Christi. . .91/78/0.00 . 92/78/pc . . . .92/77/t Dallas Ft Worth. .97/78/0.00 . 96/75/pc . . 95/75/pc Dayton . . . . . . . .84/68/0.18 . . .84/68/t . . 83/64/pc Denver. . . . . . . . .67/47/0.04 . 80/55/pc . . 87/57/pc Des Moines. . . . .83/66/0.43 . 77/60/pc . . . 84/67/s Detroit. . . . . . . . .78/68/0.00 . . .76/62/t . . 79/60/sh Duluth . . . . . . . . 60/53/trace . .59/52/sh . . 68/56/pc El Paso. . . . . . . . .93/63/0.00 . 97/68/pc . . . 99/70/s Fairbanks. . . . . . .72/46/0.00 . . .68/43/c . . 67/50/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . .76/49/0.00 . .73/56/sh . . 80/67/pc Flagstaff . . . . . . .73/36/0.00 . . .79/43/s . . . 77/46/s

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . .76/65/0.01 . . .76/60/t . . 79/59/pc Green Bay. . . . . .66/61/0.00 . .67/57/sh . . 74/57/pc Greensboro. . . . .92/70/0.17 . . .92/71/t . . . .88/68/t Harrisburg. . . . . .82/67/0.00 . 80/64/pc . . . .81/67/t Hartford, CT . . . .81/64/0.00 . . .81/57/s . . 70/60/sh Helena. . . . . . . . .79/44/0.00 . . .63/44/t . . 55/44/sh Honolulu . . . . . . .85/73/0.00 . 88/75/pc . . 88/74/sh Houston . . . . . . .96/79/0.00 . 93/77/pc . . . .92/77/t Huntsville . . . . . .96/77/0.00 . . .93/70/t . . . .90/71/t Indianapolis . . . .85/70/0.18 . . .88/69/t . . . 85/67/s Jackson, MS . . . .97/74/0.00 . . .94/73/t . . . .93/74/t Madison, WI . . . .70/63/0.12 . .75/58/sh . . . 79/58/s Jacksonville. . . .100/73/0.00 . . .96/75/t . . . .95/74/t Juneau. . . . . . . . .57/45/0.00 . .56/46/sh . . 55/46/sh Kansas City. . . . .79/67/1.12 . 83/66/pc . . 88/72/pc Lansing . . . . . . . .75/66/0.00 . . .75/59/t . . 78/57/pc Las Vegas . . . . . .93/72/0.00 . .100/76/s . . . 96/70/s Lexington . . . . . .90/68/1.19 . . .88/72/t . . 87/70/pc Lincoln. . . . . . . . .78/66/0.04 . 81/63/pc . . 87/71/pc Little Rock. . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .92/74/t . . . .93/72/t Los Angeles. . . . .69/59/0.00 . . .68/59/s . . . 67/58/s Louisville . . . . . . .94/73/0.07 . . .88/73/t . . 89/72/pc Memphis. . . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .95/76/t . . . .94/75/t Miami . . . . . . . . .92/80/0.00 . . .93/81/t . . . .92/79/t Milwaukee . . . . .67/60/0.03 . .69/60/sh . . 77/61/pc Minneapolis . . . .69/61/0.25 . .69/59/sh . . . 79/66/s Nashville . . . . . . .94/74/0.03 . . .93/73/t . . . .92/69/t New Orleans. . . .94/79/0.00 . . .91/76/t . . . .90/75/t New York . . . . . .79/64/0.01 . . .80/62/s . . 75/65/sh Newark, NJ . . . . .83/66/0.00 . . .82/61/s . . . .76/67/t Norfolk, VA . . . . .89/76/0.13 . 80/68/pc . . . .86/72/t Oklahoma City . .71/65/6.30 . . .85/69/t . . 91/72/pc Omaha . . . . . . . .78/66/0.27 . 80/62/pc . . 87/70/pc Orlando. . . . . . . .99/74/0.00 . . .96/76/t . . . .96/75/t Palm Springs. . .106/75/0.00 . .103/68/s . . . 97/67/s Peoria . . . . . . . . .83/68/0.27 . . .79/63/t . . 84/65/pc Philadelphia . . . .87/68/0.00 . 81/63/pc . . . .79/69/t Phoenix. . . . . . .101/73/0.00 . .104/76/s . . 104/77/s Pittsburgh . . . . . .78/64/0.00 . . .80/67/t . . . .82/62/t Portland, ME. . . .71/57/0.10 . . .72/50/s . . 67/52/pc Providence . . . . .73/61/0.00 . . .79/56/s . . 71/60/sh Raleigh . . . . . . . .93/71/0.00 . . .94/71/t . . . .90/70/t

Yesterday Tuesday Wed. Yesterday Tuesday Wed. City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . .58/48/0.13 . . .74/54/s . . . .86/60/t Savannah . . . . .102/76/0.00 . . .97/76/t . . . .94/75/t Reno . . . . . . . . . .88/54/0.00 . . .83/50/s . . . 67/45/s Seattle. . . . . . . . .65/50/0.00 . .63/50/sh . . 67/51/sh Richmond . . . . . .96/76/0.00 . . .84/67/c . . . .88/71/t Sioux Falls. . . . . .66/57/0.17 . . .74/55/c . . . .82/68/t Rochester, NY . . .77/59/0.00 . . .74/59/s . . . .74/57/t Spokane . . . . . . .70/51/0.00 . 66/45/pc . . 63/47/pc Sacramento. . . . .93/63/0.00 . . .87/54/s . . . 80/54/s Springfield, MO. .87/69/0.04 . . .82/65/t . . 87/70/pc St. Louis. . . . . . . .90/74/0.25 . . .86/68/t . . . 88/69/s Tampa . . . . . . . . .93/81/0.01 . . .93/78/t . . . .93/78/t Salt Lake City . . .75/50/0.00 . 83/62/pc . . 79/50/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . .93/63/0.00 . . .99/68/s . . 100/68/s San Antonio . . . .93/78/0.00 . 94/75/pc . . 94/76/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .73/67/2.64 . . .85/69/t . . . .91/74/t San Diego . . . . . .70/63/0.00 . . .70/59/s . . . 66/60/s Washington, DC .91/78/0.09 . . .83/66/c . . . .86/70/t San Francisco . . .60/52/0.00 . . .66/53/s . . . 69/53/s Wichita . . . . . . . .78/66/0.16 . 82/67/pc . . . .90/71/t San Jose . . . . . . .72/57/0.00 . . .76/53/s . . . 79/55/s Yakima . . . . . . . .79/53/0.00 . 71/42/pc . . 70/49/pc Santa Fe . . . . . . .82/49/0.00 . 83/42/pc . . 87/54/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . .105/71/0.00 . .104/72/s . . 101/71/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . .68/54/0.00 . . .63/44/s . . . 65/46/s Athens. . . . . . . . .95/69/0.00 . 90/75/pc . . 92/77/pc Auckland. . . . . . .57/50/0.00 . . .58/41/s . . . 57/40/s Baghdad . . . . . .118/89/0.00 . .110/85/s . . 117/86/s Bangkok . . . . . . .97/82/0.00 . . .93/78/t . . 92/76/pc Beijing. . . . . . . . .88/63/0.00 . 91/65/pc . . 94/66/pc Beirut. . . . . . . . . .81/72/0.00 . . .82/65/s . . . 84/67/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . .68/50/0.00 . 67/45/pc . . . 66/49/s Bogota . . . . . . . .66/48/0.04 . . .68/46/t . . . .69/50/t Budapest. . . . . . .79/59/1.72 . 83/64/pc . . . .81/63/t Buenos Aires. . . .63/59/0.00 . 64/51/pc . . 57/46/sh Cabo San Lucas .82/70/0.00 . 87/71/pc . . 87/71/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . .91/73/0.00 . . .86/70/s . . . 92/71/s Calgary . . . . . . . .68/50/0.00 . .54/45/sh . . . .59/46/r Cancun . . . . . . . .90/79/0.00 . 89/76/pc . . 87/77/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . .61/45/0.04 . . .69/50/c . . 68/51/pc Edinburgh . . . . . .59/48/0.00 . . .61/46/c . . . 63/49/c Geneva . . . . . . . .70/59/0.00 . .76/52/sh . . 74/50/sh Harare . . . . . . . . .73/52/0.00 . . .72/48/s . . . 71/50/s Hong Kong . . . . .91/84/0.03 . . .87/78/t . . . .88/78/t Istanbul. . . . . . . .90/70/0.00 . . .83/68/s . . . 88/69/s Jerusalem . . . . . .82/62/0.00 . . .91/67/s . . . 94/69/s Johannesburg . . .64/43/0.00 . 54/32/pc . . . 53/35/s Lima . . . . . . . . . .66/63/0.00 . 68/60/pc . . 69/60/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . .75/63/0.00 . . .71/56/s . . . 73/58/s London . . . . . . . .70/52/0.00 . 69/50/pc . . . 70/53/s Madrid . . . . . . . .75/55/0.00 . 72/50/pc . . 70/49/pc Manila. . . . . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .93/77/t . . . .94/78/t

Mecca . . . . . . . .109/86/0.00 . .108/77/s . . 111/79/s Mexico City. . . . .81/57/0.00 . . .77/51/t . . . .73/55/t Montreal. . . . . . .68/55/0.00 . . .73/59/s . . . .70/59/r Moscow . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . . .73/54/c . . 71/55/pc Nairobi . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . 76/55/pc . . . .73/58/t Nassau . . . . . . . .93/81/0.00 . 95/80/pc . . 95/78/pc New Delhi. . . . .100/78/0.00 103/84/pc . 104/85/pc Osaka . . . . . . . . .81/66/0.00 . .79/62/sh . . . 78/67/s Oslo. . . . . . . . . . .59/45/0.00 . 65/40/pc . . . 63/41/c Ottawa . . . . . . . .66/55/0.00 . . .75/54/s . . 68/55/sh Paris. . . . . . . . . . .68/54/0.00 . 66/51/pc . . 69/53/pc Rio de Janeiro. . .77/61/0.00 . . .78/57/s . . . 80/59/s Rome. . . . . . . . . .81/64/0.00 . 87/63/pc . . 84/61/pc Santiago . . . . . . .57/45/0.14 . .55/33/sh . . 57/41/pc Sao Paulo . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . . .73/51/s . . . 73/53/s Sapporo. . . . . . . .81/60/0.00 . .72/56/sh . . 74/55/pc Seoul . . . . . . . . . .79/68/0.00 . . .80/63/t . . 83/65/pc Shanghai. . . . . . .81/72/0.00 . 86/74/pc . . . 88/75/s Singapore . . . . . .88/79/0.05 . . .89/76/t . . . .90/77/t Stockholm. . . . . .59/46/0.00 . 57/41/pc . . . 55/40/c Sydney. . . . . . . . .63/43/0.00 . .63/45/sh . . 65/48/pc Taipei. . . . . . . . . .82/75/0.00 . . .80/70/t . . . .81/69/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . .82/70/0.00 . . .85/68/s . . . 86/70/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . .70/63/0.00 . .76/59/sh . . . 77/60/s Toronto . . . . . . . .75/63/0.00 . 70/63/pc . . 77/57/sh Vancouver. . . . . .63/52/0.00 . .63/50/sh . . 68/54/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . .70/54/0.18 . .79/55/sh . . 77/55/sh Warsaw. . . . . . . .55/50/0.14 . 71/54/pc . . 68/52/sh

Nearly 29,000 acres added to Portland UGB Each county is now responsible for signing ordinances approving the rural reserves as land that cannot be developed over the next 50 years. The decision came with the last-minute addition of a 129acre piece of property in Washington County just north of the Portland Community College Rock Creek Campus. Washington County commissioners say the addition of the

The Associated Press PORTLAND — Nearly 29,000 acres have been added for designation as urban reserves in the Portland metro area. The regional Metro Council officially approved the designation last week for areas of Washington, Multnomah and Clackamas counties to be considered for expansion into the urban growth boundaries over the next 50 years.

parcel known as the Peterkort property will save taxpayers $2 million and a lengthy eminent domain process.

Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inside

Every Friday

THE BEST VALUE IN RVS. Elaine Thompson / The Associated Press

A group of hikers begins a training trek to Camp Muir on Mount Rainier, Wash., on Sunday. After a weekend of sunny skies and warm temperatures, forecasters say it will be a while before those conditions return to Western Washington. The National Weather Service says cloudy skies and a chance of showers will keep temperatures no higher than the 60s through the week.

Man sues hospital over wire left in chest The Associated Press CORVALLIS — A Waldport man has sued Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center over a 10-inch length of wire he claims was left in his chest following heart surgery. The lawsuit filed by 76-year-old

Ben Sebastiani also names Dr. Mark Taylor, a cardiac surgeon with Samaritan Heart and Vascular Institute, and physician’s assistant Charla LeAnn Pickett as defendants. Sebastiani says he didn’t know the wire was there until a year af-

ter the December 2007 operation. Sebastiani sought treatment for an abscess that appeared on his torso and wouldn’t heal. The lawsuit seeks $20,000 in economic damages and $250,000 for pain and suffering, plus legal fees.

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PORTLAND — About 600 Umatilla Chemical Depot workers are getting more than $4.2 million in back pay after an investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division. The agency’s Portland District Office determined that 603 employees of EG&G Technical Services in Hermiston involved in various operations at the depot were underpaid. Investigators said some workers were not relieved for their lunch time, resulting in inappropriate pay deductions for lunch

breaks that could not be taken. The pay deficiencies are a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act and other federal labor laws. Civil penalties have been assessed.

Portland police arrest stabbing suspect PORTLAND — Portland police have arrested a suspect in a stabbing at an apartment building. Police said 33-year old Lawrence Broadus was charged with assault after responding to a call Sunday about a 37-year-old man with two stab wounds to his abdomen.

Vale Senior Center gets $1M grant

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VALE — A new Vale Senior Center is planned after a decade of fundraising efforts finally landed a $1 million grant. Vale City Manager Brent Barton said groundbreaking is still about a year away for the new center, which will be funded by a community development block grant through the Oregon Infrastructure Finance Authority Department. The grant will require seniors to raise $80,000 to help pay for utilities and maintenance. — From wire reports

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Umatilla workers get $4.2M in back wages

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World Cup Inside Italy, Paraguay start tournament with 1-1 tie, see Page D4.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 15, 2010

LOCAL GOLF

Juniper ready for Oregon Open By Zack Hall The Bulletin

St. Louis Cardinals’ Adam Wainwright got the win after throwing eight innings of an interleague game against Seattle on Monday in St. Louis.

This time last week it looked like the golfers at this week’s Oregon Open Invitational might be playing in soggy conditions more familiar to the Willamette Valley. Wet fairways are not exactly the norm at Redmond’s Juniper Golf Course, the desert links course

that is playing host to one of the PGA’s Pacific Northwest Section’s major tournaments, which begins today. Thankfully for Juniper, a dry spell over the last week has the course playing at near peak condition, according to Bruce Wattenburger, head pro at Juniper. And that comes just in time for

the 2010 Oregon Open. “The golf course is coming along nicely,” Wattenburger, who is not scheduled to play in the tournament, said Monday. “We are still catching up from the cold winter weather that we’ve had in the spring. It’s been a little slow … to get some growth growing. See Open / D5

Brandon Kearney

INSIDE

Blue Jays .......6 Padres ...........3

Brewers........ 12 Angels ...........2

Giants .......... 10 Orioles ...........2

M’s fall to Cardinals Albert Pujols has three hits as St. Louis takes a 9-3 interleague win over Seattle, see Page D3

WORLD CUP T O D AY Results GROUP E Netherlands 2, Denmark 0 Japan 1, Cameroon 0 GROUP F Italy 1, Paraguay 1

Highlights Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

The Netherlands, which didn’t lose a game in qualifying, kept its undefeated run going despite struggling on offense with a 2-0 victory over Denmark. Dirk Kuyt clinched the Group E win after an own goal made it 1-0. Defending champion Italy salvaged a 1-1 tie with Paraguay on a second-half goal by Daniele De Rossi, but also lost star goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon for the second half with an a back injury.

Breaking new ground

Star of the day

By Katie Brauns

Keisuke Honda of Japan scored the only goal in a 1-0 upset of Cameroon. After a sloppy first 30 minutes, Honda broke the tie in the 39th when Daisuke Matsui’s curling cross from the right drifted over the heads of Cameroon defenders Nicolas Nkoulou and Stephane Mbia. The ball fell to Honda at the back post and the striker neatly controlled it and sent it past goalkeeper Hamidou Souleymanou.

MaryKatie Wang, center, stands with children of her host family, from left, Nick St. Clair, 15, his sister, Elle, 6, and twin brother, Ryan, in front of their families Bend home Wednesday afternoon.

Chinese exchange teacher joins the pack and goes from walking a mile to running a half marathon from Bend. Wang, 33, came to Central OrTo Chinese exchange teacher egon in August. As part of an exMaryKatie Wang, Central Orchange program, she has spent egon culture IS exercise. the past school year teaching “I love the athletic and enthusiChinese at Bend’s Summit High COMMUNITY School. astic atmosphere in Bend,” says Wang her accent obvious but her And she has absorbed the loSPORTS pronunciation near perfect. “Evcal lifestyle, in part by becoming eryone looks so athletic.” a runner. Wang (Wang Yan is her Chinese name), “It (running) is the best way for me to is in Central Oregon from Yangzhou, a experience the special culture of Bend,” city of well more than 1 million residents says Wang. “Because people here love located in the Chinese province of Jiangsu outdoor sports.” — and nearly halfway around the world Until Wang set foot on American soil,

The Bulletin

she says she couldn’t run. “At the very beginning (of training in February), I could not run,” notes Wang. “I could only walk — like walk kind of fast for only two miles.” Wang recalls a physical education running test when she was younger: “When I was in college, I even failed the examination of half a mile,” she says. “I didn’t finish it and I failed the examination.” Inspired by her host family in Bend, Sara Studt and the St. Clairs (Studt is the wife of Brad St. Clair and the mother of their adopted Chinese daughter, Elle, and twin teenage sons, Nick and Ryan) Wang started running — step by step, mile by mile — in an attempt to complete the 13.1mile Dirty Half Marathon, which was held this past Sunday. See Ground / D6

Lookahead SOCCER

Whenever Brazil sambas into a tournament, heads turn, even if it no longer truly plays the beautiful game of Pele and other great Brazilian teams. The highly anticipated debut of the five-time World Cup champions comes today (11:30 a.m. in Johannesburg) in Group G when they play North Korea. Ranked No. 1 by FIFA, the Brazilians should have little trouble with North Korea, which is ranked 105th, lowest in the tournament. Coach Dunga has turned Brazil into a more defense-minded team, a style that helped it win the 1994 title when he was captain. Defenders Lucio and Maicon are among the world’s best, as is goalkeeper Julio Cesar, who missed some training because of a back injury. — The Associated Press

Goalkeeper Howard is cornerstone of the U.S. World Cup team By Nancy Armour The Associated Press

INDEX Scoreboard ................................D2 Golf ............................................D2 MLB ...........................................D3 World Cup ................................ D4 NBA .......................................... D4 Community Sports ................... D6

Cycling season is about to shift into high gear

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MLB Cardinals .......9 Mariners ........3

HEATHER CLARK

Bernat Armangue / The Associated Press

United States goalkeeper Tim Howard holds the ball during the World Cup Group C soccer match between England and the United States in Rustenburg, South Africa, Saturday.

JOHANNESBURG — The lone fan in the blue U.S. Soccer T-shirt looked woefully out of place surrounded by dozens of England supporters — until he turned around. Of course. Tim Howard’s name was emblazoned across his shoulders. At home and abroad, Howard’s athleticism, unshakable confidence and leadership have won the Everton goalkeeper rave reviews. And despite being “in agony” from bruised — maybe broken — ribs, he made six saves to seal the Americans’ 1-1 draw with England on Saturday night at the World Cup. “He’s an outstanding success,” Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson, who brought Howard to the Eng-

lish Premier League in 2003, said recently. “We’re delighted, because I love the lad. Good lad.” U.S. coach Bob Bradley said Sunday that Howard would be re-evaluated after his fullspeed collision with Emile Heskey’s shoes. However, he expects him to play Friday against Slovenia, which took the lead in Group C by beating Algeria on Sunday. “He did a great job of taking a tough hit, and staying in it and playing really well,” Bradley said. “... When you see the way Timmy handled himself after the collision last night, you’d certainly expect he’ll be on the field again.” Goalkeeper has been a source of strength during the U.S. team’s resurgence in the last 25 years. See Howard / D4

ext week in Central Oregon will be a bike-lover’s paradise. And not just because we are entertaining hundreds of riders from across the country for the 2010 USA Cycling Elite, U23 & Junior Road National Championships. As I take note of the list of events taking place throughout the week there is, of course, national championship criterium, road and time trial racing lighting up the streets of Bend from next Tuesday through Sunday (June 22-27). But that’s not all, folks (as if THAT weren’t plenty). As part of NorthWest Crossing’s Hullabaloo event — which includes a street festival, an art stroll, live music and a “Fun Zone” for kids — an amateurfriendly criterium bike race will take place in the west Bend neighborhood on Friday, June 25. On Sunday, June 27, the annual Pickett’s Charge! Mountain Bike Race, which also serves as the Oregon Bicycle Racing Association’s mountain bike finals, hits the trails at its new home at Wanoga Sno-park on Century Drive southwest of Bend. Fans of the Tour de France won’t want to miss the road nationals premier of a recently launched bike film at Bend’s Tower Theatre on Saturday, June 26. To top it off, next week is Central Oregon’s celebration of traveling on two wheels: Commute Options reminds us that a trip to the grocery store, to work, or to the Tower Theatre to catch a film can be enjoyed on a bicycle. See Cycling / D5

COLLEGE AT H L E T I C S

Texas says no thanks to Pac-10, stays put By Jim Vertuno The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas — Staring at extinction, the Big 12 is once again in play. The beleaguered conference made a rousing comeback Monday, when Texas declined an invitation to join the Pac-10 and decided to stay in the Big 12. Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas A&M quickly followed the Longhorns by recommitting to the conference after commissioner Dan Beebe convinced his members they would make more money in television and media deals in a 10-team Big 12 then in a 16-team Pac-10. A person with direct knowledge of discussions among the Big 12’s remaining members said Texas is clear to set up its own TV network and keep all proceeds in exchange for remaining in the Big 12. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because final details had not been worked out. “Everybody is feeling much more confident the Big 12 is going to survive,” the person said. “Everybody’s going to be making more money.” All that talk about the Pac-16, the first super conference that would span from Seattle to the Lone Star state? Done. See Texas / D5


D2 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

O A

SCOREBOARD

TELEVISION TODAY SOCCER 4:30 a.m. — World Cup, New Zealand vs. Slovakia, ESPN. 7 a.m. — World Cup, Cote d’Ivoire vs. Portugal, ESPN. 11:30 a.m. — World Cup, Brazil vs. Korea Dpr, ESPN.

RUGBY Noon — Churchill Cup, England vs. United States, FSNW (taped).

CYCLING 1 p.m. — Tour de Suisse, VS. network (same-day tape).

BASEBALL 4 p.m. — MLB, Philadelphia Phillies at New York Yankees, MLB network. 5 p.m. — MLB, Seattle Mariners at St. Louis Cardinals, FSNW.

BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — NBA finals, Boston Celtics at Los Angeles Lakers, ABC.

AUTO RACING 11 p.m. — Drag racing, NHRA Lucas Oil Deep Clean Supernationals, final eliminations, ESPN2 (taped).

WEDNESDAY SOCCER 4:30 a.m. — World Cup, Chile vs. Honduras, ESPN. 7 a.m. — World Cup, Spain vs. Switzerland, ESPN. 11:30 a.m. — World Cup, South Africa vs. Uraguay, ESPN.

BASEBALL 12:30 p.m. — MLB, Baltimore Orioles at San Francisco Giants, MLB network. 4 p.m. — MLB, Philadelphia Phillies vs. New York Yankees, ESPN. 5 p.m. — MLB, Seattle Mariners at St. Louis Cardinals, FSNW.

RADIO TODAY BASKETBALL 6 p.m. — NBA finals, Boston Celtics at Los Angeles Lakers, KICE-AM 940. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

S B Basketball • Indiana State coach resigns, heading to Oregon: Indiana State basketball coach Kevin McKenna has resigned to take an assistant coaching job at Oregon. Indiana State athletic director Ron Prettyman made the announcement Monday. The athletic department has scheduled a news conference today to “discuss the future of the program.” McKenna was 43-52 in three seasons with the Sycamores. Last season, Indiana State was 17-15 overall and 9-9 in the Missouri Valley Conference. The team made its first postseason appearance since 2001 when it played in the College Basketball Invitational. McKenna will join Dana Altman, the new Oregon coach who left Creighton earlier this year. McKenna was an assistant to Altman at Creighton for nine years before joining Indiana State.

Auto racing • Dixon takes sixth Top Fuel title at Raceway Park: Larry Dixon raced to his sixth Top Fuel victory of the season at the rain-delayed NHRA SuperNationals on Monday. Bob Tasca, Mike Edwards and Michael Phillips also won their divisions in the NHRA Full Throttle Drag Racing Series event at Old Bridge Township Raceway Park. Dixon drove his dragster to a 3.824-second run at 320.05 mph for his 54th career victory, beating Antron Brown, who finished second for the second straight year after his dragster lost traction midway through the run.

Golf • Kerr wins rain-delayed State Farm Classic: Cristie Kerr has won the rain-delayed LPGA State Farm Classic by one shot over Anna Nordqvist and Na Yeon Choi. The final round of the event was played Monday due to weekend rains interrupting play. Kerr fought off flulike symptoms and late challenges from Nordqvist and Choi, shooting a 3-under 69 in the final round to finish at 22-under 266 at Panther Creek Country Club. Kerr had a two-shot lead heading to the final hole, so a bogey on the final hole gave her the one-shot victory. It’s her second State Farm Classic win, and she becomes the first American to win on the LPGA tour since Michelle Wie won the Lorena Ochoa Invitational last November.

Football • Canadian university suspends team over steroids: The University of Waterloo suspended its football team for a year Monday because of a steroids scandal called the “most significant doping issue” in the history of Canadian university sports. The school tested the entire team after receiver Nathan Zettler was arrested in the spring and charged with possession and trafficking of anabolic steroids. Nine potential doping infractions were found among the 62 urine samples collected, the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport said — four admissions of use, three positive tests, one refused test.

Cycling • Armstrong’s RadioShack unhappy at Vuelta snub: Lance Armstrong’s RadioShack team complained of unfair treatment Monday after being refused an invitation to take part in the Spanish Vuelta. The Vuelta organizers announced the 22 teams that will compete in this year’s race. Sixteen teams were preselected under an agreement between race organizers and the International Cycling Union (UCI), including Astana, Quick Step and Euskaltel-Euskadi. Another six received invitations: Andalucia-Cajasur, Xacobeo-Galicia, Cervelo TestTeam, Team Sky, Katusha and Garmin-Transitions. RadioShack was the most prominent absentee. • Schleck wins third stage of Tour of Switzerland: Frank Schleck, of Luxembourg, led a late breakaway Monday to win the third stage of the Tour of Switzerland, while Lance Armstrong gained ground in the standings. Germany’s Tony Martin of Team HTC-Columbia took the overall race lead from Swiss rider Fabian Cancellara in the 122.4mile trek from Sierre to Schwarzenburg featuring a climb up the Mosses Pass. Dutch rider Bauke Mollema was third, three seconds back, as was Martin — who began the stage one second behind Cancellara. The Swiss rider and Armstrong finished seven seconds back of Schleck. — From wire reports

GOLF LPGA Tour ——— STATE FARM CLASSIC Monday At Panther Creek Country Club Springfield, Ill. Purse: $1.7 million Yardage: 6,746; Par: 72 Final Cristie Kerr, $255,000 67-67-63-69—266 Na Yeon Choi, $135,115 65-69-68-65—267 Anna Nordqvist, $135,115 66-69-65-67—267 Hee Young Park, $79,315 67-69-69-63—268 Shanshan Feng, $79,315 64-72-65-67—268 Gwladys Nocera, $53,163 67-69-67-66—269 Jee Young Lee, $53,163 67-70-65-67—269 Katie Futcher, $38,443 72-65-69-65—271 Na On Min, $38,443 70-69-64-68—271 Song-Hee Kim, $38,443 66-70-66-69—271 Karrie Webb, $30,096 69-71-67-65—272 Yani Tseng, $30,096 68-71-66-67—272 Sun Young Yoo, $30,096 68-69-67-68—272 Alena Sharp, $25,637 66-68-71-68—273 Amy Yang, $25,637 68-65-72-68—273 Sophie Gustafson, $21,436 67-69-72-66—274 Moira Dunn, $21,436 68-71-68-67—274 Stacy Lewis, $21,436 70-67-69-68—274 Morgan Pressel, $21,436 68-70-65-71—274 M.J. Hur, $21,436 66-66-71-71—274 In-Kyung Kim, $18,693 69-71-68-67—275 Hee-Won Han, $18,693 69-67-70-69—275 Angela Stanford, $15,789 72-70-70-64—276 Brittany Lincicome, $15,789 71-68-69-68—276 Lindsey Wright, $15,789 68-70-70-68—276 Azahara Munoz, $15,789 71-68-68-69—276 Meena Lee, $15,789 66-71-70-69—276 Inbee Park, $15,789 67-67-72-70—276 Heather Bowie Young, $15,789 68-67-70-71—276 Tamie Durdin, $12,432 69-69-70-69—277 Eun-Hee Ji, $12,432 73-69-65-70—277 Mika Miyazato, $12,432 67-75-65-70—277 Jimin Kang, $12,432 68-69-70-70—277 Karine Icher, $12,432 70-68-68-71—277 Juli Inkster, $10,975 65-74-68-71—278 Jeong Jang, $9,903 70-70-71-68—279 Natalie Gulbis, $9,903 71-67-73-68—279 Diana D’Alessio, $9,903 69-70-70-70—279 Michele Redman, $9,903 69-67-72-71—279 Louise Friberg, $7,640 69-71-75-65—280 Seon Hwa Lee, $7,640 72-70-69-69—280 Brittany Lang, $7,640 73-68-70-69—280 Mariajo Uribe, $7,640 71-71-68-70—280 Samantha Richdale, $7,640 69-72-69-70—280 Helen Alfredsson, $7,640 71-70-68-71—280 Shi Hyun Ahn, $7,640 71-70-68-71—280 Mi Hyun Kim, $7,640 70-70-68-72—280 Kyeong Bae, $7,640 69-69-70-72—280 Lorie Kane, $6,030 71-68-75-67—281 Amanda Blumenherst, $6,030 72-70-70-69—281 Catriona Matthew, $6,030 71-71-68-71—281 Paige Mackenzie, $5,488 74-68-72-68—282 Ilmi Chung, $5,488 70-68-74-70—282 Michelle Wie, $5,488 69-69-73-71—282 Rachel Hetherington, $4,642 70-72-72-69—283 Nicole Castrale, $4,642 72-69-71-71—283 Lisa Meldrum, $4,642 69-71-72-71—283 Stephanie Louden, $4,642 70-72-69-72—283 Hye Jung Choi, $4,642 72-69-70-72—283 Sarah Jane Smith, $4,642 70-71-69-73—283 Mina Harigae, $4,642 71-69-68-75—283 Liz Janangelo, $4,030 71-71-73-69—284 Ashli Bunch, $4,030 71-69-72-72—284 Wendy Ward, $4,030 68-71-73-72—284 Karin Sjodin, $3,815 69-72-76-68—285 Meaghan Francella, $3,815 70-72-70-73—285 Haeji Kang, $3,558 71-70-76-69—286 Mikaela Parmlid, $3,558 68-74-74-70—286 Tanya Dergal, $3,558 68-73-73-72—286 Kris Tamulis, $3,558 71-70-71-74—286 Paola Moreno, $3,365 70-72-72-73—287 Allison Hanna, $3,365 70-68-72-77—287 Laura Diaz, $3,300 72-70-75-72—289 Brandie Burton, $3,258 72-70-76-75—293 Lisa Strom 71-68-74-DQ

TENNIS ATP Tour ASSOCIATION OF TENNIS PROFESSIONALS ——— AEGON INTERNATIONAL Monday Eastbourne, England Singles First Round Gilles Simon, France, def. Evgeny Korolev, Kazakhstan, 6-3, 6-7 (4), 6-4. Stephane Robert, France, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 7-6 (4), 6-4. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan, def. Eduardo Schwank, Argentina, 6-0, 6-3. Michael Llodra (8), France, def. Martin Emmrich, Germany, 6-0, 6-3. Andrey Kuznetsov, Russia, def. Kei Nishikori, Japan, 6-4, 3-1, retired. Horacio Zeballos (6), Argentina, def. Lukas Lacko, Slovakia, 6-4, 4-6, 7-5. Dudi Sela, Israel, def. Kevin Anderson, South Africa, 5-7, 6-3, retired. Julien Benneteau (4), France, def. James Blake, United States, 7-6 (3), 7-5. Fabio Fognini, Italy, def. Giovanni Lapentti, Ecuador, 7-6 (11), 6-7 (3), 6-3. UNICEF OPEN Monday Den Bosch, Netherlands Singles First Round Arnaud Clement, France, def. Simon Stadler, Germany, 6-1, 3-6, 6-1. Xavier Malisse, Belgium, def. Rajeev Ram, United States, 6-3, 6-2. Henri Kontinen, Finland, def. Dustin Brown, Jamaica, 7-5, 2-6, 7-6 (5). Daniel Brands, Germany, def. Rameez Junaid, Australia, 6-1, 6-3. Igor Sijsling, Netherlands, def. Thiemo de Bakker (6),

——— GROUP G GP W D L GF GA Pts Brazil 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ivory Coast 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 North Korea 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Portugal 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Today, June 15 Ivory Coast vs. Portugal, 7 a.m. Brazil vs. North Korea, 11:30 a.m. Sunday, June 20 Brazil vs. Ivory Coast, 11:30 a.m. Monday, June 21 North Korea vs. Portugal, 4:30 a.m. Friday, June 25 Portugal vs. Brazil, 7 a.m. North Korea vs. Ivory Coast, 7 a.m. ——— GROUP H GP W D L GF GA Pts Chile 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Honduras 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Spain 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Switzerland 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Wednesday, June 16 Honduras vs. Chile, 4:30 a.m. Spain vs. Switzerland, 7 a.m. Monday, June 21 Switzerland vs. Chile, 7 a.m. Spain vs. Honduras, 2:30 p.m. Friday, June 25 Chile vs. Spain, 11:30 a.m. Switzerland vs. Honduras, 11:30 a.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

BASKETBALL WNBA

Netherlands, 4-6, 6-2, 7-6 (4). GERRY WEBER OPEN Sunday Halle, Germany Singles Championship Lleyton Hewitt (8), Australia, def. Roger Federer (1), Switzerland, 3-6, 7-6 (4), 6-4.

WTA Tour WOMEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION ——— AEGON CLASSIC Monday Eastbourne, England Singles Women First Round Daniela Hantuchova, Slovakia, def. Anne Keothavong, Britain, 6-4, 6-2. Sam Stosur (3), Australia, def. Melanie Oudin, United States, 6-4, 6-4. Marion Bartoli (8), France, def. Vera Dushevina, Russia, 6-4, 7-5. Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez, Spain, def. Vera Zvonareva, Russia, 6-3, 3-6, 7-5. Lucie Safarova, Czech Republic, def. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, 6-4, 3-6, 6-4. Agnes Szavay, Hungary, def. Olga Govortsova, Belarus, 3-6, 6-2, 7-6 (2). UNICEF OPEN Monday Den Bosch, Netherlands Singles First Round Roberta Vinci, Italy, def. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, Czech Republic, 6-4, 7-6 (5). Kristina Barrois, Germany, def. Melinda Czink, Hungary, 7-5, 6-2. Sybille Bammer, Austria, def. Sara Errani (6), Italy, 6-1, 6-3. Maria Kirilenko (3), Russia, def. Ioana Raluca Olaru, Romania, 6-4, 6-1. Sandra Zahlavova, Czech Republic, def. Elena Vesnina, Russia, 7-5, 6-2. Ana Ivanovic, Serbia, def. Sofia Arvidsson, Sweden, 4-6, 6-0, 6-1. Anastasia Rodionova, Australia, def. Tamarine Tanasugarn, Thailand, 1-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3. Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, def. Alberta Brianti, Italy, 3-6, 6-4, 6-4. Alexandra Dulgheru (5), Romania, def. Julie Coin, France, 4-6, 7-6 (4), 7-6 (4). Arantxa Rus, Netherlands, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues (8), Spain, 4-6, 6-2, 6-3. Kirsten Flipkens, Belgium, def. Vania King, United States, 6-1, 6-2. Justine Henin (1), Belgium, def. Angelique Kerber, Germany, 6-4, 6-2.

SOCCER World Cup All Times PDT ——— FIRST ROUND GROUP A GP W D L GF GA Pts South Africa 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Mexico 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Uruguay 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 France 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 Friday, June 11 South Africa 1, Mexico 1 At Cape Town, South Africa Uruguay 0, France 0 Wednesday, June 16 South Africa vs. Uruguay, 11:30 a.m. Thursday, June 17 Mexico vs. France, 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, June 22

Mexico vs. Uruguay, 7 a.m. France vs. South Africa, 7 a.m. ——— GROUP B GP W D L GF GA Pts South Korea 1 1 0 0 2 0 3 Argentina 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 Nigeria 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 Greece 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 Saturday, June 12 South Korea 2, Greece 0 Argentina 1, Nigeria 0 Thursday, June 17 Argentina vs. South Korea, 4:30 a.m. Nigeria vs. Greece, 7 a.m. Tuesday, June 22 Nigeria vs. South Korea, 11:30 a.m. Greece vs. Argentina, 11:30 a.m. GROUP C GP W D L GF GA Pts Slovenia 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 England 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 United States 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Algeria 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 Saturday, June 12 England 1, United States 1 Sunday, June 13 Slovenia 1, Algeria 0 Friday, June 18 United States vs. Slovenia, 7 a.m. England vs. Algeria, 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, June 23 Slovenia vs. England, 7 a.m. United States vs. Algeria, 7 a.m. ——— GROUP D GP W D L GF GA Pts Germany 1 1 0 0 4 0 3 Ghana 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 Serbia 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 Australia 1 0 0 1 0 4 0 Sunday, June 13 Ghana 1, Serbia 0 Germany 4, Australia 0 Friday, June 18 Germany vs. Serbia, 4:30 a.m. Saturday, June 19 Australia vs. Ghana, 7 a.m. Wednesday, June 23 Ghana vs. Germany, 11:30 a.m. Australia vs. Serbia, 11:30 a.m. ——— GROUP E GP W D L GF GA Pts Netherlands 1 1 0 0 2 0 3 Japan 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 Cameroon 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 Denmark 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 Monday, June 14 At Johannesburg Netherlands 2, Denmark 0 Japan 1, Cameroon 0 Saturday, June 19 Netherlands vs. Japan, 4:30 a.m. Denmark vs. Cameroon, 11:30 a.m. Thursday, June 24 Denmark vs. Japan, 11:30 a.m. Cameroon vs. Netherlands, 11:30 a.m. ——— GROUP F GP W D L GF GA Pts Italy 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Paraguay 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 New Zealand 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Slovakia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Monday, June 14 Italy 1, Paraguay 1 Tuesday, June 15 New Zealand vs. Slovakia, 4:30 a.m. Sunday, June 20 Paraguay vs. Slovakia, 4:30 a.m. Italy vs. New Zealand, 7 a.m. Thursday, June 24 Slovakia vs. Italy, 7 a.m. Paraguay vs. New Zealand, 7 a.m.

WOMEN‘S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct Atlanta 8 3 .727 Connecticut 6 3 .667 Indiana 6 4 .600 Washington 6 4 .600 New York 4 5 .444 Chicago 4 6 .400 Western Conference W L Pct Seattle 9 1 .900 Phoenix 5 5 .500 San Antonio 3 6 .333 Tulsa 3 6 .333 Los Angeles 3 7 .300 Minnesota 2 9 .182 ——— Monday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Game Atlanta at Chicago, 5 p.m.

GB — 1 1½ 1½ 3 3½ GB — 4 5½ 5½ 6 7½

BASEBALL WCL WEST COAST LEAGUE Standings (through Monday’s results) West Division W L Kitsap BlueJackets 5 3 Bend Elks 3 2 Bellingham Bells 4 3 Corvallis Knights 3 4 Cowlitz Black Bears 0 2 East Division W L Moses Lake Pirates 2 1 Wenatchee AppleSox 3 2 Walla Walla Sweets 3 3 Kelowna Falcons 3 6 Sunday’s Late Game Kitsap 14, Wenatchee 6 Monday’s Game Kitsap 17, Kelowna 7 Today’s Games Bend at Corvallis, 6:35 p.m. Bellingham at Cowlitz, 6:35 p.m. Kitsap at Kelowna, 7:05 p.m. Wenatchee at Moses Lake, 7:35 p.m.

Pct. .635 .600 .571 .428 .000 Pct. .667 .600 .500 .333

College NCAA DIVISION I BASEBALL SUPER REGIONALS All Times PDT ——— (Best-of-3) The visiting team plays as home team for Game 2 a coin flip determines home team for Game 3 ——— At Dick Howser Stadium Tallahassee, Fla. Friday, June 11: Florida State 9, Vanderbilt 8 Saturday, June 12: Vanderbilt 6, Florida State 2 Sunday, June 13: Florida State 7, Vanderbilt 6, Florida St. wins series 2-1 At McKethan Stadium Gainesville, Fla. Friday, June 11: Florida 7, Miami 2 Saturday, June 12: Florida 4, Miami 3, 10 innings, Florida wins series 2-0 At UFCU Disch-Falk Field Austin, Texas Friday, June 11: TCU 3, Texas 1 Saturday, June 12: Texas 14, TCU 1 Sunday, June 13: TCU 4, Texas 1, TCU wins series 2-1 At Jackie Robinson Stadium Los Angeles Friday, June 11: Cal State-Fullerton 4, UCLA 3 Saturday, June 12: UCLA 11, Cal State-Fullerton 7, 10 innings Sunday, June 13: UCLA 8, Cal State-Fullerton 1, UCLA wins series 2-1 At Davenport Field Charlottesville, Va. Saturday, June 12: Virginia 3, Oklahoma 2 Sunday, June 13: Oklahoma 10, Virginia 7

Monday, June 14: Oklahoma 11, Virginia 0, Oklahoma wins series 2-1 At Doug Kingsmore Stadium Clemson, S.C. Saturday, June 12: Alabama 5, Clemson 4 Sunday, June 13: Clemson 19, Alabama 5 Monday, June 14: Clemson 8, Alabama 6, Clemson wins series 2-1 At BB&T Coastal Field Myrtle Beach, S.C. Saturday, June 12: South Carolina 4, Coastal Carolina 3 Sunday, June 13: South Carolina 10, Coastal Carolina 9, South Carolina wins series 2-0 At Packard Stadium Tempe, Ariz. Saturday, June 12: Arizona State 7, Arkansas 6, 12 innings Sunday, June 13: Arizona State 7, Arkansas 5, 12 innings, Arizona St. wins series 2-0

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Activated RHP Alfredo Simon from the 15-day DL. SEATTLE MARINERS—Agreed to terms with RHP Stephen Pryor, INF Daniel Lopez, RHP Wily Kesler, OF Franklin Christian, RHP Matt Bischoff, OF Robert Anston, RHP Tim Griffin, INF Derek Poppert, INF Jake Schlander, LHP Tyler Whitney, RHP Forrest Snow, LHP Ryan Kiel, LHP Nathan Reed, RHP Mike Aviles, INF Matt Browning, OF James Woods and INF Patrick Brady. National League HOUSTON ASTROS—Agreed to terms with 3B Michael Kvasnicka, C Roberto Pena, OF Adam Bailey and SS Jacke Healey. NEW YORK METS—Agreed to terms with RHP Jeffrey Walters, RHP Kenny McDowall, RHP Jacob deGrom, LHP Adam Kolarek, RHP Bret Mitchell, 3B Brian Harrison, 2B James Brown, OF Tillman Pugh, RHP Ryan Fraser, RHP Chad Sheppard, RHP Alexander Pinera, RHP Jonathan Koutis, 1B Lucas Stewart, SS Brand Brown, RHP Peter Birdwell, SS James Butler, RHP Michael Weldon, LHP Jeremy Gould, LHP Hamilton Bennett, LHP Joshua Edgin, C Patrick Farrell, RHP Hunter Carnevale, SS Jordan Schafer and OF Dylan Brown. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Promoted INF Cody Overbeck from Clearwater (FSL) to Reading (EL). ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Agreed to terms with RHP Jeff Suppan. Optioned RHP Adam Ottavino to Memphis (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Agreed to terms with SS Jason Martinson, C Cole Leonida, RHP Aaron Barrett, SS Blake Kelso, RHP Neil Holland, RHP Christopher McKenzie, C David Freitas, RHP Mark Herrera, RHP Tyler Hanks, 2B Justin Miller, OF Wade Moore, OF Chad Mozingo, RHP Cameron Selik, RHP Colin Bates, LHP Christian Meza, LHP Christopher Manno, C Jeremy Mayo, LHP Ryan Sherriff, 1B Robert Oliver, LHP Nicholas Serino, RHP Kevin Cahill, OF Dimetrius Hatcher, SS Mille Rogers, RHP Tim Dupuis, RHP Mike Gallo, RHP Zach Gerler and RHP Ben Graham. BASKETBALL Women’s National Basketball Association NEW YORK LIBERTY—Traded F Tiffany Jackson to Tulsa for F Plenette Pierson. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed G Deuce Lutui to a one-year contract. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed RB Jerome Harrison, LB D’Qwell Jackson, LB Matt Roth, S Abram Elam and FB Lawrence Vickers to one-year contracts. MINNESOTA VIKINGS—Signed DE Ray Edwards to a one-year contract and LB Nate Triplett. Waived C Eddie Adamski, OT Matt Hanson, RB James Johnson, WR Aaron Rhea, CB Angelo Williams and OT Marlon Winn. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS—Signed RB Pierre Thomas to a one-year tender. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed RB Anthony Dixon to a four-year contract. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Signed LB Rocky McIntosh to a one-year contract. Released G Paul Fanaika and PK Justin Medlock. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Named Mike Stapleton assistant coach of Syracuse (AHL). ST. LOUIS BLUES—Signed D Nikita Nikitin. COLLEGE BALDWIN-WALLACE—Named Brian Harrison baseball coach. CAL STATE EAST BAY—Named Suzy Barcomb women’s basketball coach. CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT—Named John Krikorian men’s basketball coach. HARDING—Named Luke Cullins and Scott Symons assistant football coaches. INDIANA STATE—Announced the resignation of men’s basketball coach Kevin McKenna so he can become an assistant coach at Oregon. LAFAYETTE—Named Kim Foley Shireyll Moore and Kim Benton women’s assistant basketball coaches. LAMAR—Announced the resignation of athletic director Billy Tubbs who will remain at the school as a special assistant and consultant to the school president. Named women’s basketball coach Larry Tidwell interim athletic director. NEW MEXICO—Named Brandon Moss men’s assistant soccer coach. WESTERN CAROLINA—Promoted assistant athletic directors Dr. Jennifer Brown and Brian Frerking to associate athletic directors.

FISH COUNT Fish Report Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams on Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,960 286 403 111 The Dalles 2,065 206 116 32 John Day 1,017 96 82 28 McNary 1,740 135 27 3 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 273,187 15,764 12,882 3,536 The Dalles 209,764 13,491 3,423 1,408 John Day 193,103 13,021 3,215 1,634 McNary 162,265 9,920 2,692 1,316

GOLF

Teenager gets 1-day caddie gig at U.S. Open By Janie Mccauley The Asso cia ted Press

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Teenager Jeffrey Aronson lucked into a thrilling opportunity at the U.S. Open: caddie for a practice round. Aronson, a 13-year-old junior golfer who just finished seventh grade back home in Los Angeles, was with his mother, Shelly, watching players on the putting green Sunday when amateur Russell Henley approached him to see if he would carry his bag for Monday’s round at Pebble Beach. “It’s a great way to kick off the summer,” Aronson said. “I’ll do whatever he needs, get range balls and carry his bags. It’s perfect.” That was a no-brainer for a kid who picked up his first clubs at age 2. Now, he’s a first-time caddie. About a half-hour before Henley was set to tee off Monday, Aronson stood at the driving range soaking it all in when Davis Love III struck up a conversation. “I did not imagine it at all,” said Aronson, who is at the Open only Monday and Tuesday. “I’m so happy right now, living in the moment.” Henley made a quick call to the USGA to make sure it was OK to use Aronson, then it was a go. Henley’s few requests for Aronson

Eric Risberg / The Associated Press

Russell Henley, left, of Macon, Ga., poses with his 13-year-old caddie, Jeffrey Aronson, right, of Los Angeles, before playing a practice round of the U.S. Open golf tournament in Pebble Beach, Calif., Monday. included enjoying the scenery and experience just as he will while playing Pebble Beach for the first time. The University of Georgia star was named Southeastern Conference Golfer of the Year in his junior season this year. The 21-year-old Henley was a Ben Hogan Award finalist and won

his Open sectional qualifying site in Roswell, Ga. Henley’s older brother, Adam, was set to arrive from their home in Macon, Ga., on Monday night to caddie the rest of the week on the spectacular oceanside course. “I just figured I would grab somebody to carry my bag like

my brother does,” Henley said. “Why not? I saw him at the putting green. If I was 13 again and at the U.S. Open, it would be a good opportunity to get on the course. I’ll just tell him to carry my bag, keep up, hang out and enjoy the scenery.” Henley’s father, Chapin, had fun observing Aronson’s joy at the unique chance — and appreciated his son’s gesture to the young golfer. “He told his mama last night, ‘I’m going to find me a young guy to caddie,’” Chapin Henley said. “He said, ‘If I’d gotten asked to caddie for somebody I would have died and gone to heaven.’” Aronson slung Henley’s Georgia golf bag, nearly as big as Aronson himself, over his shoulders and was ready to catch the shuttle to the 10th tee where they would start. Aronson figures he’s the youngest caddie out here. Cory Guzzo, the caddie this week for Henley’s Georgia teammate Hudson Swafford, was excited for the teen. “Too bad it won’t be the whole week,” Guzzo said. “When you’re that age, you’ll get an experience you’ll never forget. It’s great of Russ to do it for him. If I was his age, I would have loved to do that.”


THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 D3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SAFE AT HOME

STANDINGS All Times PDT ——— AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB New York 40 23 .635 — Tampa Bay 40 23 .635 — Boston 37 28 .569 4 Toronto 35 30 .538 6 Baltimore 17 47 .266 23½ Central Division W L Pct GB Minnesota 36 27 .571 — Detroit 33 29 .532 2½ Chicago 28 34 .452 7½ Kansas City 27 37 .422 9½ Cleveland 25 37 .403 10½ West Division W L Pct GB Texas 35 28 .556 — Los Angeles 36 31 .537 1 Oakland 32 33 .492 4 Seattle 24 40 .375 11½ ——— Monday’s Games St. Louis 9, Seattle 3 Milwaukee 12, L.A. Angels 2 Toronto 6, San Diego 3 San Francisco 10, Baltimore 2 Today’s Games Chicago White Sox (F.Garcia 6-3) at Pittsburgh (B.Lincoln 0-0), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (J.Santana 4-3) at Cleveland (Masterson 2-5), 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia (Halladay 8-4) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 6-3), 4:05 p.m. Washington (Lannan 2-3) at Detroit (Scherzer 2-6), 4:05 p.m. Arizona (I.Kennedy 3-3) at Boston (Buchholz 8-4), 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Price 9-2) at Atlanta (Kawakami 0-8), 4:10 p.m. Texas (C.Wilson 5-3) at Florida (Jo.Johnson 7-2), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (Cahill 5-2) at Chicago Cubs (Zambrano 2-4), 5:05 p.m. Colorado (Cook 2-3) at Minnesota (Pavano 6-6), 5:10 p.m. Houston (F.Paulino 1-7) at Kansas City (Davies 4-5), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Rowland-Smith 0-5) at St. Louis (Suppan 0-2), 5:15 p.m. Milwaukee (Bush 1-5) at L.A. Angels (E.Santana 6-4), 7:05 p.m. Toronto (Cecil 7-2) at San Diego (Latos 6-4), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (Arrieta 1-0) at San Francisco (J.Martinez 0-0), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Baltimore at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m. Toronto at San Diego, 3:35 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee at L.A. Angels, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Washington at Detroit, 4:05 p.m. Arizona at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Texas at Florida, 4:10 p.m. Oakland at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. Colorado at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Houston at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 37 27 .578 — New York 35 28 .556 1½ Philadelphia 32 29 .525 3½ Florida 31 32 .492 5½ Washington 31 33 .484 6 Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 36 28 .563 — St. Louis 35 29 .547 1 Chicago 28 35 .444 7½ Milwaukee 27 37 .422 9 Houston 25 39 .391 11 Pittsburgh 23 40 .365 12½ West Division W L Pct GB San Diego 37 27 .578 — Los Angeles 36 27 .571 ½ San Francisco 36 27 .571 ½ Colorado 33 30 .524 3½ Arizona 26 38 .406 11 ——— Monday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Kuroda 5-4) at Cincinnati (Harang 5-5), 4:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games

Mujica p b-Salazar ph Gallagher p Thatcher p Totals

0 1 0 0 33

0 0 0 0 3

0 0 0 0 6

0 0 0 0 3

0 0 0 0 1

0 --0 .233 0 .000 0 --5

Toronto 040 001 010 — 6 12 1 San Diego 001 100 100 — 3 6 0 a-grounded out for Garland in the 5th. b-ied out for Mujica in the 7th. c-struck out for Marcum in the 8th. E—Ale.Gonzalez (10). LOB—Toronto 9, San Diego 4. 2B—Wise (1), A.Hill 3 (9). HR—J.Buck (10), off Garland; J.Buck (11), off Gallagher; Hairston Jr. (4), off Marcum; Ad.Gonzalez (15), off Marcum. RBIs—A.Hill 3 (24), J.Buck 3 (33), Ad.Gonzalez (44), Hairston Jr. (22), Gwynn (14). CS—Venable (3). S—Marcum. Runners left in scoring position—Toronto 5 (J.Bautista 2, Encarnacion, J.Buck, Overbay); San Diego 2 (Salazar 2). Runners moved up—Gwynn. GIDP—Overbay. DP—San Diego 1 (Eckstein, Ad.Gonzalez, Hairston Jr.). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO Marcum W, 6-3 7 6 3 2 0 2 S.Downs H, 16 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gregg S, 16-19 1 0 0 0 1 2 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO Garland L, 6-5 5 6 4 4 4 7 Mujica 2 3 1 1 0 1 Gallagher 1 2-3 3 1 1 0 2 Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Inherited runners-scored—Thatcher 2-0. T—2:48. A—16,542 (42,691).

NP 91 11 21 NP 114 18 39 6

ERA 3.31 3.58 4.33 ERA 3.07 3.27 5.21 2.03

Giants 10, Orioles 2

Bill Boyce 5IF "TTPDJBUFE 1SFTT

St. Louis Cardinals’ Matt Holliday TDPSFT QBTU UIF UBH PG 4FBUUMF .BSJOFST 3PC +PIOTPO PO B GMZ CBMM CZ 3ZBO -VEXJDL JO UIF UIJSE JOOJOH PG .POEBZ T JOUFSMFBHVF CBTFCBMM HBNF JO 4U -PVJT 5IF $BSEJOBMT XPO L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m.

INTERLEAGUE Cardinals 9, Mariners 3 45 -06*4 ‡ "MCFSU 1V KPMT UPPL POF PGG UIF OPHHJO GPS IJT UFBN PO B QFSGFDU EBZ BU UIF QMBUF BOE TUBOE JO DMFBOVQ IJUUFS 3ZBO -VEXJDL IPNFSFE UP IFMQ 4U -PVJT CFBU 4FBUUMF 1VKPMT TJOHMFE UISFF UJNFT BOE XBMLFE UXJDF BT UIF $BSEJOBMT CPVODFE CBDL BGUFS UPUBMJOH SVOT EVSJOH B 8FTU $PBTU TXJOH UIBU ESPQQFE UIFN PVU PG UIF /- $FOUSBM MFBE 1MVT IF TUBZFE JO UIF HBNF BGUFS B UISPX UP UIF QMBUF HMBODFE PGG IJT IFMNFU FBS GMBQ JO UIF GJGUI Seattle AB I.Suzuki rf 4 Figgins 2b 3 F.Gutierrez cf 4 White p 0 Jo.Lopez 3b 4 Bradley lf 4 Jo.Wilson ss 4 Carp 1b 3 Ro.Johnson c 4 French p 1 a-Langerhans ph 1 Snell p 0 C.Cordero p 0 b-M.Saunders ph-cf1 Totals 33

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

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

SO 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 7

Avg. .344 .233 .275 --.227 .224 .291 .182 .208 .000 .172 ----.229

St. Louis F.Lopez 2b Miles 2b Holliday lf Pujols 1b Ludwick rf Freese 3b Rasmus cf Y.Molina c Wainwright p Motte p

R 0 0 2 2 2 1 1 0 0 0

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

SO 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0

Avg. .250 .231 .292 .309 .289 .305 .293 .263 .132 .000

AB 5 0 4 3 4 5 3 4 3 0

Boggs p B.Ryan ss Totals

0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 35 9 12 8

0 0 5

0 .000 0 .211 3

Seattle 200 000 010 — 3 6 2 St. Louis 301 040 01x — 9 12 1 a-struck out for French in the 5th. b-singled for C.Cordero in the 8th. E—Jo.Wilson (7), Jo.Lopez (7), Freese (8). LOB— Seattle 5, St. Louis 8. 2B—I.Suzuki (15), Bradley (7), Ludwick (17), Wainwright (3). HR—I.Suzuki (2), off Wainwright; Ludwick (11), off French; Rasmus (12), off Snell. RBIs—I.Suzuki (19), Figgins (17), Jo.Lopez (27), Pujols (48), Ludwick 4 (39), Freese (33), Rasmus 2 (32). SF—Ludwick. Runners left in scoring position—Seattle 3 (Jo.Wilson, Bradley, Jo.Lopez); St. Louis 3 (F.Lopez, Holliday, Freese). Runners moved up—Figgins, F.Gutierrez, Jo.Lopez. GIDP—Jo.Lopez, Wainwright. DP—Seattle 1 (Figgins, Carp); St. Louis 1 (Freese, Pujols). Seattle IP H R ER BB SO French L, 0-1 4 6 4 4 2 0 Snell 2 3 4 4 2 3 C.Cordero 1 0 0 0 1 0 White 1 3 1 1 0 0 St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO Wnwrigt W, 9-4 7 6 3 3 1 6 Motte 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boggs 1 0 0 0 1 1 Wainwright pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Motte 2-1. T—2:42. A—36,113 (43,975).

NP 60 46 14 19 NP 108 12 17

ERA 7.45 6.41 2.25 7.56 ERA 2.41 2.33 3.00

Brewers 12, Angels 2 -04 "/(&-&4 ‡ 3ZBO #SBVO IJU B HSBOE TMBN BOE $BTFZ .D(FIFF BEEFE B TPMP TIPU PGG UIF HMPWF PG B MFBQJOH 5PSJJ )VOUFS MFBEJOH 3BOEZ 8PMG BOE .JMXBVLFF UP B XJO PWFS -PT "OHFMFT 8PMG BMMPXFE UISFF IJUT PWFS TFWFO JOOJOHT ‡ BMM PG UIFN JO UIF TFDPOE JODMVE JOH B UXP SVO EPVCMF CZ /P IJUUFS ,FWJO 'SBOETFO 5IF MFGU IBOEFS SFUJSFE IJT GJOBM CBUUFST BGUFS IJUUJOH )PX JF ,FOESJDL PO UIF MFGU BSN

UP MPBEFE UIF CBTFT XJUI UXP PVU JO UIF UIJSE 8PMG FTDBQFE UIBU KBN CZ SFUJSJOH +VBO 3JWFSB PO B GMZCBMM

(M.Izturis, H.Kendrick), by R.Rodriguez (Counsell), by T.Bell (McGehee). WP—Villanueva, T.Bell. PB—Napoli. T—3:03. A—39,289 (45,285).

Milwaukee Weeks 2b Hart rf Fielder 1b Braun lf Inglett lf McGehee dh Gomez cf Counsell 3b A.Escobar ss Kottaras c Totals

4"/ %*&(0 ‡ +PIO #VDL IPNFSFE UXJDF BOE "BSPO )JMM IBE UISFF EPVCMFT BOE UISFF 3#*T UP MFBE 5PSPOUP UP B XJO PWFS 4BO %JFHP BT +PO (BSMBOE TUSVHHMFE PO UISFF EBZT SFTU 1MBZ TUPQQFE NPNFO UBSJMZ JO UIF FJHIUI JOOJOH BT 1FUDP 1BSL TXBZFE EVSJOH BO FBSUIRVBLF %BWJE &DL TUFJO IBE KVTU HSPVOEFE PVU JO UIF CPUUPN PG UIF JOOJOH XIFO UIF TUBEJVN CFHBO TIBLJOH 5IF OFYU CBUUFS $IBTF )FBEMFZ TUBZFE PVU PG UIF CBUUFS T CPY GPS B GFX TFDPOET UIFO TUFQQFE JO

AB 4 5 4 4 1 3 5 3 5 4 38

R 1 2 1 2 1 1 1 0 1 2 12

Los Angeles AB R E.Aybar ss 3 0 Quinlan 1b 1 0 M.Izturis 3b-ss 3 0 B.Abreu rf 2 0 Willits cf 1 0 Tor.Hunter cf 2 0 M.Ryan lf 1 0 H.Matsui dh 4 0 H.Kendrick 2b 3 1 J.Rivera lf-rf 4 1 Napoli c 3 0 Frandsen 1b-3b 4 0 Totals 31 2

H 1 3 0 2 1 1 0 0 2 2 12

BI 0 2 0 5 0 1 0 0 1 1 10

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

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

Avg. .259 .265 .262 .300 .354 .275 .240 .271 .246 .206

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

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

Avg. .272 .129 .232 .262 .261 .284 .205 .264 .273 .242 .254 .360

Milwaukee 005 001 501 — 12 12 0 Los Angeles 020 000 000 — 2 4 2 E—J.Rivera (3), Quinlan (1). LOB—Milwaukee 6, Los Angeles 7. 2B—Hart (10), Inglett (5), Kottaras (8), H.Kendrick (17), Frandsen (4). HR—Braun (10), off J.Saunders; McGehee (11), off J.Saunders. RBIs—Hart 2 (44), Braun 5 (45), McGehee (47), A.Escobar (17), Kottaras (16), Frandsen 2 (5). SB—Counsell (1). Runners left in scoring position—Milwaukee 3 (Fielder, Kottaras 2); Los Angeles 5 (E.Aybar 2, J.Rivera 2, Frandsen). Runners moved up—Fielder, A.Escobar. GIDP— Fielder, B.Abreu. DP—Milwaukee 1 (A.Escobar, Weeks, Fielder); Los Angeles 1 (E.Aybar, Frandsen). Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wolf W, 5-6 7 3 2 2 3 2 97 5.08 Villanueva 1 0 0 0 0 2 19 3.48 C.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 5.40 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Saunders L, 5-75 2-3 6 6 6 3 3 111 4.70 T.Bell 1 1-3 5 5 4 0 0 39 6.06 R.Rodriguez 2 1 1 1 2 1 49 4.50 Inherited runners-scored—T.Bell 1-0. HBP—by Wolf

Blue Jays 6, Padres 3

Toronto AB R H Wise lf 5 1 2 A.Hill 2b 5 0 3 J.Bautista rf 5 0 1 V.Wells cf 5 0 0 Ale.Gonzalez ss 3 0 1 Overbay 1b 5 1 2 J.Buck c 3 2 2 Encarnacion 3b 4 1 1 Marcum p 1 1 0 c-F.Lewis ph 1 0 0 S.Downs p 0 0 0 Gregg p 0 0 0 Totals 37 6 12 San Diego AB Eckstein 2b 4 Headley 3b 4 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 4 Hairston lf 3 Torrealba c 4 Venable rf 4 Hairston Jr. ss 4 Gwynn cf 3 Garland p 1 a-Cunningham ph 1

R 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0

BI 0 3 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 6

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

SO 3 0 1 1 1 2 0 2 0 1 0 0 11

Avg. .333 .196 .231 .286 .270 .233 .266 .202 .250 .280 -----

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

SO 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0

Avg. .282 .274 .295 .224 .277 .227 .234 .221 .167 .000

4"/ '3"/$*4$0 ‡ 1BU #VSSFMM IPNFSFE GPS UIF TFDPOE UJNF JO GPVS EBZT 'SFEEZ 4BODIF[ ESPWF JO GPVS SVOT BOE 4BO 'SBODJTDP CFBU #BMUJNPSF +POBUIBO 4BODIF[ QJUDIFE c JOOJOHT GPS UIF (JBOUT BMMPXJOH UXP SVOT BOE FJHIU IJUT )F TUSVDL PVU GJWF BOE XBMLFE POF JO IJT UIJSE WJDUPSZ JO GPVS PVUJOHT BGUFS B TUBSU Baltimore AB R C.Patterson lf 4 1 M.Tejada 3b 4 0 Markakis rf 3 0 Wigginton 2b 4 0 Ad.Jones cf 4 0 Wieters c 4 1 G.Atkins 1b 3 0 C.Izturis ss 4 0 Tillman p 1 0 Berken p 0 0 a-Montanez ph 1 0 Albers p 0 0 b-Lugo ph 1 0 Mata p 0 0 Da.Hernandez p 0 0 d-S.Moore ph 1 0 Totals 34 2

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

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

Avg. .264 .262 .292 .276 .256 .236 .219 .221 .000 --.143 --.210 --.000 .265

San Francisco Torres cf F.Sanchez 2b A.Huff rf-lf Uribe ss Burrell lf Schierholtz rf Posey 1b Affeldt p Sandoval 3b Whiteside c J.Sanchez p Romo p c-Ishikawa ph-1b Totals

H BI BB 2 2 2 2 4 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 9 10 8

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

Avg. .302 .341 .300 .289 .407 .270 .361 .000 .282 .284 .095 .000 .250

AB 3 4 2 4 3 1 4 0 3 1 2 0 0 27

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

Baltimore 010 000 010 — 2 8 1 San Francisco 150 000 04x — 10 9 0 a-ied out for Berken in the 5th. b-ied out for Albers in the 7th. c-walked for Romo in the 8th. d-struck out for Da.Hernandez in the 9th. E—Wigginton (10). LOB—Baltimore 7, San Francisco 4. 2B—Wigginton 2 (10), Torres (20), Uribe (10), Sandoval (17). 3B—Torres (3). HR—Wieters (5), off J.Sanchez; Burrell (2), off Tillman. RBIs—Wigginton (36), Wieters (18), Torres 2 (19), F.Sanchez 4 (14), A.Huff (34), Burrell (5), Sandoval (25), Ishikawa (3). S—J.Sanchez. SF—F.Sanchez, A.Huff. Runners left in scoring position—Baltimore 4 (Wigginton, Ad.Jones 2, S.Moore); San Francisco 1 (F.Sanchez). Runners moved up—Markakis, C.Izturis. GIDP—

Rockies’ pitcher remains modest in light of huge success By Pat Graham The Associated Press

DENVER — Ubaldo Jimenez appreciates all the attention he’s receiving for his astounding season. He really does. As to whether the attention is warranted, the Colorado Rockies ace just shrugged his shoulders and flashed a shy smile. He’s as modest as he is masterful. Equipped with a 100 mph fastball and an assortment of other filthy pitches, Jimenez is in the midst of a season for the ages. At 12-1, the Dominican right-hander is just the sixth pitcher since 1920 with that quick a start, according to STATS LLC. His ERA is a minuscule 1.16 as he makes a run at Bob Gibson’s memorable season of 1968, when the St. Louis Cardinals great finished 22-9 with a 1.12 ERA, a performance so dominant that it led, in part, to the mound being lowered the following season. Dutch Leonard of the Boston Red Sox has the all-time low ERA for a starter in a season since 1900, turning in a 0.96 mark in 1914. Jimenez was hovering around Leonard’s figure until his last outing, when he surrendered three runs in a six-inning, rainshortened complete game win Friday over Toronto. Pitching through thick rain drops, Jimenez didn’t have his customary control. “Wasn’t easy to be out there,� Jimenez said. A small taste of how hitters must feel against him. Jimenez refuses to get too swept up in his burgeoning success, remaining down-to-earth even with each dazzling display. His response to all these accolades is a fast dismissive wave of the hand, a way to keep the hype from going to his head. That’s the way his mom and

David Zalubowski 5IF "TTPDJBUFE 1SFTT

Colorado Rockies starting pitcher Ubaldo Jimenez JT KVTU UIF TJYUI QJUDIFS TJODF UP TUBSU UIF TFBTPO BU dad raised him. “I am the same guy and try to credit people when they do things,� said Jimenez, who, despite his achievements, often has his first name (ooh-BALLdoh) mispronounced. “I haven’t changed.� With winning, though, comes more obligations, more responsibility. He understands that, accom-

modating everyone from fans seeking autographs to reporters who want an interview minutes before Jimenez is due on the field for stretching. “If you’re pitching well, you have to expect this kind of reaction,� said the 26-year-old Jimenez, who tossed the first no-hitter in franchise history on April 17 at Atlanta. “Everyone wants to talk to you.�

Given his dominance, there’s been plenty to talk about. He has turned in two different scoreless streaks that stretched to at least 25 innings. The last pitcher to do that in a season was Detroit’s Jack Morris in 1986, according to STATS LLC. He’s the early favorite for the NL Cy Young award, and arguably the best pitcher in both leagues. Just don’t mention that to him. He will simply shake his head at the assertion. “I don’t think anyone can say they’re the best,� said Jimenez, who’s scheduled to start Thursday in Minnesota. “You can say you’re one of the good pitchers — never the best.� The difference in Jimenez this season has been his ability to harness his fastball. No longer is he simply rearing back and zipping it past hitters. He’s getting the blazing pitch to dip, dive and cut, while also mixing in some nasty pitches such as a slider, splitter, curve and changeup. Any sign that catcher Miguel Olivo flashes seems to be the correct one. “He has a mature approach to the game,� Olivo said. “He has the right disposition for a pitcher. He won’t let anything bother him. He won’t let a bad situation get to him. He works through them.� As an ace, Jimenez’s job is to halt skids so they don’t blossom into demoralizing streaks, which he’s done quite well this season. Of his 12 wins, nine have come after Colorado losses. “He’s as good as I’ve ever been around,� Rockies manager Jim Tracy said. “There’s so much more to this man, just from his demeanor, his accountability, his character on and off the field. ... He’s a really, really special guy.� Hall of Fame reliever Dennis Eckersley saw a glimpse of

Jimenez’s talent in 2007, when the young fireballer pitched in the World Series against the Red Sox. “I was like, ‘Great arm. If this guy ever starts throwing strikes, he’s going to be incredible,’� Eckersley said in a telephone interview. “His command is so much better, his confidence is through the roof. He’s now always around the strike zone. That’s the thing with great pitchers like Roy Halladay and him — they have pitches that start in the strike zone and then leave. Please, we’re talking about the best stuff in the game.� The presence of his parents is playing a big part in his prosperity, too. To help dilute the distractions, he invited them to stay in his two-bedroom loft in downtown Denver. His mom and dad rotate the responsibility, staying for about two months on a tourist visa before heading back to the Dominican. Having family around this season means everything to him, provides the stability he craves. The other day, after his return home from a win in Arizona, his mom cooked up his favorite meal — rice, beans and goat. Goat? “It’s good,� he said, smiling. Often after starts, Jimenez will break down his performance with his dad, just to get another view. That’s become especially beneficial after a loss. Not that Jimenez has had many of those this season, a 20 defeat at Dodger Stadium on May 9 the only blemish on his record. “My dad is there to make sure I don’t lose my confidence — to keep going and never give up,� Jimenez said. “This season, I have learned to become a better pitcher. But I’ve stayed the same.�

M.Tejada, F.Sanchez, Uribe. DP—Baltimore 2 (C.Izturis, G.Atkins), (M.Tejada, Wigginton, G.Atkins); San Francisco 1 (Sandoval, F.Sanchez, Posey). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Tillman L, 0-3 2 6 6 6 1 1 44 8.40 Berken 2 0 0 0 2 3 29 2.14 Albers 2 1 0 0 1 0 27 4.99 Mata 1 2-3 1 4 4 4 2 46 5.19 Da.Hernandez 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 7 4.68 S. Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Sanchez W, 5-5 7 2-3 8 2 2 1 5 117 2.78 Romo 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 2.77 Affeldt 1 0 0 0 1 2 15 4.22 Inherited runners-scored—Da.Hernandez 3-2, Romo 1-0. IBB—off Mata (Sandoval). WP—J.Sanchez 2. T—2:38. A—33,822 (41,915).

LEADERS AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—Cano, New York, .371; Morneau, Minnesota, .350; ISuzuki, Seattle, .344; Guerrero, Texas, .338; Butler, Kansas City, .335; Beltre, Boston, .335; MiCabrera, Detroit, .330. RUNS—Youkilis, Boston, 54; Cano, New York, 50; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 47; MiCabrera, Detroit, 44; Gardner, New York, 44; Andrus, Texas, 43; MYoung, Texas, 43. RBI—MiCabrera, Detroit, 56; Guerrero, Texas, 54; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 48; Cano, New York, 47; Hamilton, Texas, 46; Konerko, Chicago, 46; JBautista, Toronto, 45; TorHunter, Los Angeles, 45. HITS—Cano, New York, 92; ISuzuki, Seattle, 90; MYoung, Texas, 84; Butler, Kansas City, 82; Beltre, Boston, 81; Jeter, New York, 80; Guerrero, Texas, 79. DOUBLES—VWells, Toronto, 23; Pedroia, Boston, 22; TorHunter, Los Angeles, 21; Longoria, Tampa Bay, 21; FLewis, Toronto, 20; Morneau, Minnesota, 20; MYoung, Texas, 20. TRIPLES—Crawford, Tampa Bay, 4; Span, Minnesota, 4; 11 tied at 3. HOME RUNS—MiCabrera, Detroit, 19; JBautista, Toronto, 18; Konerko, Chicago, 17; Hamilton, Texas, 15; CPena, Tampa Bay, 15; VWells, Toronto, 15; Guerrero, Texas, 14. STOLEN BASES—Pierre, Chicago, 25; RDavis, Oakland, 24; Gardner, New York, 22; Crawford, Tampa Bay, 21; BUpton, Tampa Bay, 20; Rios, Chicago, 19; Andrus, Texas, 18; Podsednik, Kansas City, 18; ISuzuki, Seattle, 18. PITCHING—PHughes, New York, 9-1; Price, Tampa Bay, 9-2; Pettitte, New York, 8-1; Buchholz, Boston, 8-4; 7 tied at 7. STRIKEOUTS—JerWeaver, Los Angeles, 96; RRomero, Toronto, 91; Lester, Boston, 89; FHernandez, Seattle, 88; Liriano, Minnesota, 87; JShields, Tampa Bay, 82; CLewis, Texas, 81. SAVES—Gregg, Toronto, 16; RSoriano, Tampa Bay, 16; Rauch, Minnesota, 16; NFeliz, Texas, 15; MRivera, New York, 15; Soria, Kansas City, 15; Valverde, Detroit, 13; Papelbon, Boston, 13; Aardsma, Seattle, 13. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—Ethier, Los Angeles, .343; Byrd, Chicago, .333; Prado, Atlanta, .332; Polanco, Philadelphia, .319; Rolen, Cincinnati, .313; BPhillips, Cincinnati, .311; Pujols, St. Louis, .309. RUNS—BPhillips, Cincinnati, 48; Kemp, Los Angeles, 47; Prado, Atlanta, 47; Uggla, Florida, 46; KJohnson, Arizona, 45; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 44; Braun, Milwaukee, 43. RBI—Glaus, Atlanta, 49; Pujols, St. Louis, 48; Gomes, Cincinnati, 47; McGehee, Milwaukee, 47; DWright, New York, 47; Cantu, Florida, 46; Braun, Milwaukee, 45; Reynolds, Arizona, 45; Rolen, Cincinnati, 45. HITS—Prado, Atlanta, 90; BPhillips, Cincinnati, 79; Byrd, Chicago, 78; Braun, Milwaukee, 76; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 73; Pujols, St. Louis, 72; Theriot, Chicago, 72. DOUBLES—Werth, Philadelphia, 24; Byrd, Chicago, 22; KJohnson, Arizona, 21; Torres, San Francisco, 20; Braun, Milwaukee, 19; Dunn, Washington, 19; BPhillips, Cincinnati, 19. TRIPLES—SDrew, Arizona, 6; Victorino, Philadelphia, 6; AEscobar, Milwaukee, 5; Morgan, Washington, 5; 8 tied at 4. HOME RUNS—Hart, Milwaukee, 17; AdGonzalez, San Diego, 15; Reynolds, Arizona, 15; Dunn, Washington, 14; Pujols, St. Louis, 14; Rolen, Cincinnati, 14; Uggla, Florida, 14. STOLEN BASES—Bourn, Houston, 21; JosReyes, New York, 16; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 14; Theriot, Chicago, 14; Victorino, Philadelphia, 14; Morgan, Washington, 12; Pagan, New York, 12; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 12; Venable, San Diego, 12. PITCHING—Jimenez, Colorado, 12-1; Pelfrey, New York, 9-1; Wainwright, St. Louis, 9-4; Silva, Chicago, 8-1; Clippard, Washington, 8-3; Halladay, Philadelphia, 8-4; DLowe, Atlanta, 8-5. STRIKEOUTS—Wainwright, St. Louis, 97; Haren, Arizona, 97; Lincecum, San Francisco, 96; Gallardo, Milwaukee, 94; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 90; Halladay, Philadelphia, 85; Jimenez, Colorado, 84. SAVES—Capps, Washington, 20; HBell, San Diego, 17; BrWilson, San Francisco, 17; FCordero, Cincinnati, 17; Broxton, Los Angeles, 16; Lindstrom, Houston, 14; FRodriguez, New York, 13; Nunez, Florida, 13; Marmol, Chicago, 13.

Cards sign Suppan, to start him today The Associated Press ST. LOUIS — Jeff Suppan is getting a second chance with the St. Louis Cardinals, a team that could really could use an arm right now. The Cardinals signed the 35year-old Suppan Monday and plan to start him Tuesday night against Seattle. Brad Penny (upper back) might not return from the 15-day disabled list until the All-Star break and Kyle Lohse (forearm) is on the 60-day DL. “It was a lot of emotions and I was just going to wait and see what happened, to be honest with you,� Suppan said. “But I’m glad it worked out and I’m very happy to be here.� Suppan was cut by Milwaukee last week after going 0-2 with a 7.84 ERA, making only two starts to start the season before moving to the bullpen. He was MVP of the 2006 NL championship series while with the Cardinals and also was a member of the rotation that got swept by the Red Sox in the ‘04 World Series, posting careerbest 16-win seasons in ’04 and ’05. Suppan’s first game in his return to the Cardinals, also his first start since Game 4 of the ’06 World Series, will be at home against the Mariners. He was issued uniform number 37, the same as he wore in his first stint with the team. Though he’s 135-137 for his career, the right-hander was 44-26 in three seasons with St. Louis. Manager Tony La Russa said Suppan got the thumbs-up from pitching coach Dave Duncan after a bullpen session during the weekend.


W OR L D C U P / N BA

D4 Tuesday, June 15, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

WORLD CUP

NBA FINALS: NOTEBOOK

Police take over security at Stadiums

Pierce shows football skills; Rivers may be done in Boston

The Associated Press CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Police took over responsibility for security at World Cup stadiums in Cape Town and Durban on Monday after a wage dispute escalated between stewards and a security contractor. World Cup organizers said they called in police after stadium staff left their posts in a wage dispute with Stallion Security Consortium. The match between Italy and Paraguay at Green Point Stadium in Cape Town kicked off on time, but police said fans were kept outside the stadium grounds for an extra hour until the area was deemed secure. “Gates have opened, the police are in control and the match will kick off as scheduled,” organizers said in a statement. Committee chief executive Danny Jordaan said the problem was an “employer-employee wage dispute.” “Although we have respect for workers’ rights, we find it unacceptable for them to disrupt match-day proceedings and will not hesitate to take action in such instances,” Jordaan said. Col. Billy Jones, a police spokesman for the Western Cape region, said about 500 security staffers congregated on the stadium’s second-level terrace. Employers attempted to negotiate a settlement, but failed. “We had to make a decision quickly because we didn’t have much time,” Jones told The Associated Press. “We told both sides to take their labor dispute out of the stadium.” Jones said the striking security staff left peacefully. About 1,500 trainees from the national police were called in to fill the shortfall in manpower at stadium entrances, he said. “We had contingency plans in place,” he said. Jones said the delays slowed fans as they entered the stadium, but that the gates were clear in time for everyone to be seated 15 minutes before kickoff. Officials in cities hosting matches today said they expected no security problems. In Rustenburg, where New Zealand and Slovakia kick off today, police already work alongside stewards who are expected to report for normal duty, North West Province deputy police commissioner William Mpembe said. Port Elizabeth hosts the match between Ivory Coast and Portugal today, and police are handling most security work at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium, local organizing committee media spokeswoman Michelle Brown said. In Durban, police used force late Sunday to break up a protest by stadium workers who said they had been underpaid. At least two protesters were hurt after police used tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse about 400 protesters. The disturbance occurred after Durban hosted its first World Cup match, when Germany beat Australia 4-0 in Group D. The protesters there said they had been turned away from the stadium after demanding payment under the terms of a wage agreement. The workers said their basic daily pay had been slashed by about a third without notice.

Howard Continued from D1 The hand-eye coordination American kids develop playing baseball, football and basketball make them naturals in goal, where cat-quick reflexes and sure hands are a must. But there’s a certain steeliness that sets great keepers apart from merely very good ones, and few are stronger than Howard, clearly the cornerstone of the U.S. team. Howard’s parents divorced when he was a child, though his father remained an active part of his life. He was still in grade school when he was diagnosed with Tourette’s syndrome, a neurological disorder that causes tics and abrupt, involuntary sounds and utterances. It was in sports that Howard found his comfort zone. He played basketball and soccer growing up, and excelled at both. His high school basketball team made the state finals, and he was later pursued by the Harlem Globetrotters. But it was soccer where he really shined. He was playing on U.S. youth teams before he could drive, and was 19

By Howard Ulman The Associated Press

Julie Jacobson / The Associated Press

Italy’s Vincenzo Iaquinta, left, walks away in dejection as Paraguay’s players celebrate after their teammate Antolin Alcaraz scored during the World Cup Group F soccer match in Cape Town, South Africa, Monday. The teams tied 1-1.

Paraguay gets 1-1 draw with Italy By Andrew Dampf The Associated Press

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Italy fell behind, then lost its star goalkeeper for the second half. So a 1-1 World Cup draw with Paraguay should not have been all that disturbing for the defending champions. Yet the Azzurri’s underwhelming, rain-soaked draw hardly was pleasing to coach Marcello Lippi, the same man who guided the Italians to their fourth championship in 2006. “We need to do more and do it better. Our opponent didn’t do anything, they just kept things in check,” Lippi said. The South Americans did enough for a tie. Defender Antolin Alcaraz scored on a header in the 39th minute of the Group F match. “I can’t describe what I feel. Playing a World Cup is something very special,” Alcaraz said. Italy midfielder Daniele De Rossi equalized from close range in the 63rd after a miscue by goalkeeper Justo Villar. Already without injured midfielder Andrea Pirlo, Italy’s fortunes took another hit when it lost perhaps its most valuable player, goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon, after the first half. The 32-year-old Buffon was removed due to a back injury, replaced by inexperienced backup Federico Marchetti. “He had a back problem. I hope he returns for the next game, but that will be up to the doctors,” Lippi said. Buffon said not to worry, he will be ready. He said the problem was with his sciatic nerve and that he “hopes to recover in two days.” De Rossi made up for the opening goal, sliding in to re-

direct a corner kick from Simone Pepe. It was a solid start for the midfielder who was suspended for four games during Italy’s victorious 2006 run after bloodying the face of U.S. forward Brian McBride with a sharp elbow. After a day of often intense rain, the match kicked off under a drizzle, leaving the field slippery. Temperatures stood at 46 degrees, but the swirling winds coming off the ocean made it feel colder. There were relatively few fans from Italy and Paraguay among the near-capacity crowd of 62,869 at Green Point Stadium, although the usual buzz of vuvuzelas made it difficult to determine exactly who was rooting for whom. “It was a good result, though we can’t say we played really well,” Paraguay coach Gerardo Martino said. “We have to take into account who is who. It’s not easy to play first against the last world champion.” Italy started with six holdovers from its 2006 squad, and with Riccardo Montolivo replacing Pirlo. Paraguay coach Gerardo Martino left Roque Santa Cruz on the bench and started a two-man forward line of Nelson Valdez and Lucas Barrios. Italy was organized from the start, pushing up the right flank with Gianluca Zambrotta and Pepe, but the Azzurri had trouble getting the ball in attacking position. Paraguay was content to sit back and wait for counterattacks and didn’t venture into Italy’s half until the 20-minute mark, when the South Americans won a couple corner kicks. With the rain picking up and fans blowing harder on their vuvuzelas — seemingly demanding more action — both teams stalled in midfield for a while before Paraguay took the lead.

WORLD CUP ROUNDUP

Honda leads Japan past Cameroon The Associated Press BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa — Japan can so win a World Cup game outside its borders. Coming off four straight exhibition losses in the buildup to the tournament, the Japanese earned their first World Cup victory on foreign soil Monday when Keisuke Honda scored in the first half for a 1-0 victory over uninspired Cameroon in Group E of the World Cup. “As a team we had very little good luck in our warmup games going into this match,” Honda said. “But as a team we were thinking: ‘Don’t be down. Be positive. Go for it.’ ” And they did against a favored Cameroon squad that was lifeless in the first half. After a sloppy first 30 minutes,

when he made his debut with Major League Soccer. In his third full season, he was voted MLS goalkeeper of the year, still the youngest player to win the honor. Two years later, Howard was on his way to England to play for Manchester United. “There’s challenges flying in everywhere. It’s nonstop action,” Howard said. “It’s end to end, and that’s what makes it different than other leagues. For me, it’s hardened me. I think I was criticized a lot when I was over there and I bounced back. I feel like I was able to take my lumps and get better, so I’ve definitely become hardened and more resolute.” He had little choice. After a spectacular debut season with the Red Devils — he was the Premier League’s goalkeeper of the year — he found himself stuck behind Edwin van der Sar at Manchester. He was loaned to Everton in 2006 and has blossomed there, developing into one of the league’s top goalkeepers. “To go to Everton and see how everybody loves Tim Howard and how they show him so much respect, it was pretty amazing. That was pretty cool,” said U.S. teammate Jozy Altidore, who spent last season on loan

Japan broke the tie in the 39th when Daisuke Matsui’s curling cross from the right drifted over the heads of Cameroon defenders Nicolas Nkoulou and Stephane Mbia. The ball fell to Honda at the back post and the striker neatly controlled it and sent it past goalkeeper Hamidou Souleymanou. “I found a good position and the ball was very good,” Honda said. “I just told myself to be calm to make it because recently we have missed good chances. So I wanted to make it absolute today.” Despite an attack led by Samuel Eto’o, Cameroon never really challenged Japan keeper Eiji Kawashima. The Africans struggled to possess the ball and generate any rhythm up front, and even when

they put a few passes together, the buildup usually was wasted by poor crosses. Also on Monday: Netherlands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Denmark. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 JOHANNESBURG — The Netherlands scored on an own goal and beat Denmark 2-0 at the World Cup even though its dangerous attack was stymied for much of the game. The Dutch took the lead in the 46th minute when Denmark defender Simon Poulsen headed a ball off the back of teammate Daniel Agger and into the net. Poulsen was trying to clear a cross from Robin van Persie. Dirk Kuyt doubled the lead in the 85th when he tapped in a rebound off the post from close range.

at Hull. Howard is a commanding presence in goal, and not simply because of his size (listed at 6-foot-3 and 210 pounds). With his shaved head and a ferocity that is palpable, the sight of him charging forward is enough to make any opponent hesitate. His teammates aren’t immune to his intensity, either. Howard is constantly shouting instructions at fellow Americans or screaming at them to make corrections. There is little time — or room — for niceties in the chaos of a game, and time and again Saturday night the cameras caught him in full-throated roar. Asked about Steven Gerrard’s goal just four minutes into the game, Howard was unsparing. “I was pretty annoyed because the marking was a little too lax,” he said. “Particularly for the beginning of a game when you’re supposed to be really up for it.” Such bluntness is easily forgiven by his teammates. Unlike some countries — England, this means you — the Americans know they’re in good hands whenever Howard is around. He doesn’t have bad games — “Tim’s just Mr. Consistent,” Clint Dempsey said — and has bailed them out more

times than they can count. The Americans have won 31 of his 52 appearances, including last year’s upset of top-ranked Spain in the Confederations Cup, and advanced to their first final at a FIFA event. Howard was so stellar that he was awarded the Golden Glove as the cup’s best keeper. “In these tournaments, you need a good goalkeeper,” Steve Cherundolo said. “So we’re very, very happy Tim’s on our side.” And he is as tough as any athlete, in any sport. In the 29th minute Saturday, the sprinting Heskey slammed into Howard, the studs of his shoes catching the American squarely in the chest. Simply watching the collision produced cringes, and Howard writhed in pain on the ground for several minutes. He grimaced several times when play finally resumed and needed a painkiller at halftime, yet time and again he saved the Americans in the second half, at one point leaping to punch a shot by Frank Lampard back and over the crossbar. “I’ll be even more sore the next couple days, but maybe it’ll get me out of training,” Howard said after the game.

BOSTON — With New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick in the stands, Paul Pierce showed off some of his football skills in the final minute of Game 5 of the NBA finals against the Los Angeles Lakers. Pierce ran a sideline pattern to catch Kevin Garnett’s inbounds pass with 39 seconds left and Boston leading 87-82. He caught the ball high above his head, avoided going out of bounds and then threw it crosscourt to Rajon Rondo as he streaked for the basket. Rondo made an over-thehead layup to help clinch the Paul Pierce victory. “I was just showing off my Randy Moss and my Tom Brady in one play, that’s all,” Pierce said. “Going up to catch it, then I went to my Brady mode when I was falling out of bounds to find Rondo for the receiving end.” Moss wasn’t in the crowd, but receiver Wes Welker was, along with safety Pat Chung, kicker Stephen Gostkowski and former Patriots linebackers Tedy Bruschi and Larry Izzo. “Paul looked like he was leaning out of bounds, so (I) tried to make a break for the play and he hit me in stride,” Rondo said. “I thought I had an easy layup. They thought it was difficult, but I thought I had an easy look at the rim.” Bye-bye, Boston The Boston Celtics played their last home game of the season Sunday night in Game 5. It may be Doc Rivers’ last home game as their coach. Rivers, an offseason resident of Orlando, Fla., has expressed a desire to see his children play for their high school and college teams and hasn’t said whether he’ll return next season. But he does know the Celtics’ season will end in Los Angeles in Game 6 on Tuesday night or in Game 7, if necessary, on Thursday night. “Our guys haven’t talked about that a lot,” Rivers said before the start of Game 5 with the series tied 2-2. “I’ve heard it a lot. I think fans realize that we don’t have Game 6 or 7 here, so this is our final home game. Our guys are really just focusing on the game tonight, and I like where our focus is, in this case, over the fans’ focus.” Rivers’ children all will be seniors next fall. Jeremiah will play basketball at Indiana, Callie will play volleyball at Florida and Austin will play basketball in high school. “One thing you can’t do is make a decision a week after a season” about his future, Rivers said. “Whether you win or lose, you can’t. You just can’t.” He said that after the Celtics team in the summer league finishes play, he’ll meet with team president Danny Ainge. “So far as work, I’m still here,” Rivers said. “But the kids are always — that’s the issue each year, do you want to see — I’ve got to see them play at some point.” Bynum starts Los Angeles Lakers center Andrew Bynum started Game 5 and had six points and one rebound in 10 minutes in the first quarter. A right knee injury had limited him to just 12 minutes in the Boston Celtics’ 96-89 win in Game 4 that tied the series at 2-2. Bynum had fluid drained from his right knee after Thursday night’s game and had an MRI on Friday. He said Saturday that the swelling had not returned and that he definitely would play Sunday. Lakers coach Phil Jackson said there was no change in Bynum’s condition since Sunday morning. He also said no consideration was given to sending Bynum to Los Angeles on Friday and having him miss Game 5 in hopes the extra rest would help him be ready for Game 6 and, if necessary, Game 7. Roster change Lakers forward Adam Morrison was active Sunday night for the first time in the NBA finals and third time in Los Angeles’ 20 playoff games. He replaced center DJ Mbenga, who has played in just two of those 20 games. Morrison has been a disappointment since being drafted by the Charlotte Bobcats in 2006 with the third pick out of Gonzaga. The Bobcats traded him to the Lakers on Feb. 7, 2009. This season, he played just 33 games with 82 points and 37 rebounds. His two playoff games came in the opening round against Oklahoma City in which he had nine points. Mbenga, a five-year veteran, has appeared in just two playoff games this year. He had three points and three rebounds against Oklahoma City and two points and one rebound in the Western Conference finals against Phoenix. Winning performers The Golden State Warriors and Toronto’s Chris Bosh have been honored by the Professional Basketball Writers Association for their cooperation with the media. The Warriors staff, led by executive director of public relations Raymond Ridder, was chosen for the Brian McIntyre Media Relations award. The award, previously unnamed, was selected for the NBA’s senior vice president of basketball communications. McIntyre has been with the league for more than 30 years. Previous winners were the staffs of the Phoenix Suns, Toronto Raptors and Portland Trail Blazers. This year’s winners were picked by balloting among more than 150 PBWA members.


THE BULLETIN • Tuesday, June 15, 2010 D5

Cycling Continued from D1 Here is a roundup of what promises to be a sensational week of cycling activities:

Northwest Crossing Criterium While many of the nation’s top-tier riders will take to the streets of downtown Bend on Friday, June 25, for national championship criteruim racing, the neighborhood streets of NorthWest Crossing will be turned over to crit riders on the same evening. The NorthWest Crossing Criterium, part of the festivities surrounding the NorthWest Crossing Hullabaloo, begins at 4:30 p.m. with a junior competition. Racing culminates at 8 p.m. with the start of the pro men’s contest. The NorthWest Crossing crit is likely to attract amateur racers from Bend and from around Oregon. For a complete race schedule and registration details, go to www.northwestcrossing.com.

Pickett’s Charge! Mountain Bike Race The third and final cross-country mountain bike race of 2010 in Central Oregon gets an exciting makeover this year as it moves to a new venue. Previously

held on the Phil’s Trail system in west Bend, Pickett’s Charge! this year will be run at Wanoga Sno-park on recently developed singletrack trails. The race also serves as the finals for the 10-race Oregon Cross-Country Mountain Bike Series, which began back in early March. The 2010 edition of Pickett’s Charge! will cover a 12.5-mile track on the Tiddlywinks and Funner trails. Fast descents, series of small jumps, rock features and technical climbing are all part of the terrain that riders will encounter. Beginners (Category 3 riders) will perform one loop of the course, while riders in other categories will perform two laps. “The trails are way more interesting,” says technical course director Don Leet when asked to describe the new Pickett’s course. “I like riding our old trails, but you don’t get the same feeling as riding the new trails.” Pickett’s Charge! riders will race in a counterclockwise loop, which includes about four miles of flat section, four miles of descent and four miles of climbing per lap, says Leet. Unique to Wanoga are “Y’s” — frequent sections where the trail divides into two options and can be used as passing lanes before merging again into a single trail. In some cases, the divided trails are equidistant, while in others a clear speed advantage can be gained by selecting the faster side of the Y. Leet says he will direct riders onto the same half of the Y in cases where the two options do not measure a similar

Texas

Briefs

Continued from D1 “University of Texas president Bill Powers has informed us that the 10 remaining schools in the Big 12 Conference intend to stay together,” Pac-10 commissioner Larry Scott said in a statement. “We are excited about the future of the Pac-10 Conference and we will continue to evaluate future expansion opportunities under the guidelines previously set forth by our presidents and chancellors.” Powers declined comment when asked by the AP about details of the deal that kept the Big 12 together. The conference, born in 1996 when the Big 8 merged with members of the Southwest Conference, seemed to be falling apart last week when Nebraska (Big Ten) and Colorado (Pac-10) decided to leave over the next two years. Now the Big 12 is back, though there are still questions about how it will conduct its business. Among those that still need to be answered by Beebe is how and why the Big 12 will be more lucrative now, especially when it cannot hold a conference title game with only 10 members. Beebe did not return phone messages Monday, but plans to hold a conference call with reporters on Tuesday. Last year, Big 12 schools divided between $7 million and $10 million each depending on how many appearances they made on regional and national TV. At Big 12 meetings earlier this month, Beebe said he expected huge increases in rights fees from both Fox and ESPN. The more lucrative contract with ESPN runs through the 2015-16 academic year, while the Fox deal is reportedly in its final two years. The Big 12 has increased the financial reward for every one of its members since it began play in 1996. The Big 12 distributed $139 million to its members this past fiscal year, more than ever. “We’re excited about the Big 12 Conference and for its continued growth,” Missouri athletic director Mike Alden said in a statement. “The University of Missouri has certainly prospered during its time in the Big 12, and we are looking forward to future opportunities in the years ahead.” The news about the Longhorns, Sooners and the rest of the Big 12 South powers staying put was especially good for Kansas, Kansas State, Baylor, Iowa State and Missouri — the five schools in danger of being left homeless if the conference dissolved. Baylor football coach Art Briles, a Texas native who has spent his entire career in the Long Star state, put it this way: “I got resuscitated. You can take your hands off my chest. ... I’m extremely excited, it’s like being given new life.”

Continued from D6 Registration forms are available at the Madras Pioneer and at Madras Medical Group. Day-of-race registration will also be available. Cost is $20 with a race T-shirt, $5 for raceonly entries. The event — honoring Todd Evans Beamer, a Madras scholar, athlete, teacher and coach who drowned in 1997 — is a fundraiser for Madras High School’s spirit scholarship award. For more information, contact Bud Beamer at 541-4756736 or 541-948-3321, Amber at Madras Medical Group at 541-475-3874 or 541-279-7100, or Mary at 541-475-3874 or 541-279-1578.

Baseball • 14U Redmond Panthers win league: The Redmond Panthers Baseball Club 14U team finished its season with

Calendar Continued from D6 BASIC FIRST AID: For ages 8-12 at Cascade Swim Center in Redmond; meets Saturday, June 19, 1-3 p.m.; $20; 541548-7275 or www.raprd.org. SENIOR YOGA: For ages 65 and older; Saturdays, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., June 19-Aug. 28 at Yoga Heart Studio in Redmond; $99; www.raprd.org; 541-548-7275. WEIGHT TRAINING & CONDITIONING FOR YOUR SPORT: For high school athletes; led by certified personal trainer; Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, June 21-25, 10:15-11:15 at RAPRD Activity Center; $30; 541-548-7275; www.raprd.org.

MULTISPORT LA PINE ROCKS GOING TO THE FLOS: Walk, run and/or bike; Saturday and Sunday, June 19-20, 9 a.m.; Finley Butte Park, La Pine; 2.5-mile walk or 5-mile run on Saturday through the BLM and U.S. Forest Service land; Sunday, 30-mile mountain bike ride to lava flow in La Pine; fundraising event for local nonprofits of La Pine; register by May 28 and save; walk/run $2530; bike $40-50; both days $6070; 541-536-1335; swendsens@ yahoo.com; www.lapine.org. YOUTH MULTISPORTS CAMP: For ages 7-14; basketball, baseball and soccer will be the focus; June 21-25, 12:30-2:30 p.m. at Elton Gregory Middle School; $60: 541-548-7275, www.raprd.org. TYKES MULTISPORTS CAMP: For ages 4-7; an introduction to a vary of sports in a noncompetitive atmosphere; basketball, baseball and soccer; June 21-25, 9-11 a.m.; $45; call 541-548-7275 for location; www.raprd.org.

PADDLING PRIVATE AND GROUP KAYAK ROLL

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE RECHARGE SYSTEM

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“Chasing Legends” at the Tower Theatre Bike racing moves indoors next week when “Chasing Legends,” a featurelength documentary film following Team HTC Columbia at the 2009 Tour de France, hits the big screen at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, June 26, in downtown Bend. The film, which premiered at the Tour of California last month, allows audiences to relive the action of the 2009 Tour de France through the eyes of some cycling’s biggest stars. Tickets to the film went on sale Monday and are available at www.webcyclery.com or by calling WebCyclery at

a perfect 30-0 record and was crowned champion of the Central Oregon Baseball League at this past weekend’s seasonending tournament. After a bye in the first round of the tournament, the Panthers defeated the Sisters Outlaws 6-2 to advance to the semifinals. The Panthers beat the Bend Lava Bears 18-0 in the semifinals. The championship game was a rematch between the Panthers and the Lava Bears in which the Panthers triumphed, 13-7. The Panther roster includes Troy Benton, Tyler Churchill, Jeremy Erisman, Kahl Malott, Chris Hawkins, Braedon Price, Sinjin Robinson, Mitchel Springer, Kyler Stevens and Daniel Thomas.

Swimming • Summer pool schedule starting Wednesday: Juniper Swim & Fitness Center in Bend will start its summer pool schedule on Wednesday. Weekday recreation swims will be offered from 1 to 4 p.m. and from 7:15 to 9 p.m. The

SESSIONS: Thursdays, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, Bend; instruction by Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe staff, gear is provided; $45; 541-317-9407. INTRO TO WHITEWATER CLASS: Ages 10 and older; available in a two-day weekend or three-day mid-week option; the class will cover the basics of whitewater kayaking and river safety; weekend session meets June 19-20; $190; mid-week session meets June 21-23; $250; includes gear and transportation; www.raprd.org; 541-548-7275.

RUNNING DRY CANYON RUN: A 5K and 10K running race in Redmond; Saturday, June 19 at 9 a.m.; starts in the American Legion Park across from Redmond High School; fundraiser for Redmond High track and field team; register at www.time2race. com; www.drycanyonrun.com.

541-318-6188. Ticket prices are $10, and $2 from every ticket sold will be donated to the Central Oregon Trail Alliance.

Wait, there’s more The jam-packed bicycle fun doesn’t stop next week. Just around the corner, cycling events on tap in Central Oregon include: • The 11th annual Firecracker Ride on July Fourth, an Independence Day tradition for Central Oregon cyclists. This supported, metric century ride begins and ends in Alfalfa and includes food and water stations along the course. Participants, who are encouraged to dress in patriotic clothing, can begin riding between 8 and 8:30 a.m. Cost is $15. Registration forms are available in Bend at the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, 563 S.W. 13th St., and at WebCyclery, 550 S.W. Industrial Way. Online registration is also available at www. mbsef.org. • The Tour des Chutes, a multidistance community bike ride supporting cancer research and survivorship, in Bend on July 17. This year’s ride is limited to 1,000 cyclists. Participants can choose to ride 7, 25, 48, 70, or 90 miles. Entry fee is $45 for adults and $20 for youth ages 15 and younger. Registration details are at www.tourdeschutes.org. In 2009, the event raised $87,000 for local and national cancer charities. Heather Clark can be reached at bulletinheather@gmail.com.

afternoon recreation swims will take place indoors and outdoors. Evening recreation swim will take place in the indoor pools only. Family-only swims are also available weekdays from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 4 to 7:15 p.m. in the outdoor activity pool. Weekend recreation swimming is scheduled from 10:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. For complete printable schedules, visit www.juniperswimandfitness.com or call 541-389-7665.

west Cup Downhill Champion. Tommy Ford, former MBSEF skier and current U.S. Ski Team member, received the Schwabe Award for Outstanding Alpine Competitor. Another former MBSEF skier, Charlie Smith of the University of Nevada, was awarded PNSA College Nordic Skier of the Year. Katie Brauns of The Bulletin received the PNSA Press Award for exceptional service to the sport of skiing.

Skiing

• La Pine Adult Softball League registration opens: The La Pine Park and Recreation District will be hosting an adult softball league this summer. League play will start the week of July 12 and will culminate with a tournament Aug. 28-29. The entry fee for each team is $150. For more information on how to register, call the park district office at 541-536-2223 or visit www.lapineparks.org. The complete rules and registration form are online. — Bulletin staff report

• MBSEF received honors for 2009-10 season at PNSA convention: Chuck Kenlan, executive director of the Bend-based Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, was elected on June 5 to the Pacific Northwest Ski Association board of directors and executive committee. Unsung Hero Awards were presented to MBSEF’s Kathy Kurtz, Carol Nelson and Dave Richer. MBSEF alpine skier Jordan Schweitzer received the Sally McNabb Award for North-

SKI CAMP: At Mt. Hood for athletes 13 and younger; June 21-24; 541-388-0002; mbsef@ mbsef.org; www.mbsef.org. BEND ENDURANCE NORDIC SUMMER CAMPS: Three Five-day camp sessions for ages 14-23; June 23-27; July 21-25; August 18-22; www.BendEnduranceAcademy. org; 541-678-3865.

SOCCER HAPPY FEET SOCCER: Ages 3 and 4; basics of soccer; parents are required to participate; tennis shoes required; Wednesday, June 23, 1-1:45 p.m. at RAPRD Activity Center in Redmond; $3; 541-548-7275; www.raprd.org. SOCCER OPEN PLAY (ADULT): Ages 14 and older; no cleats, but shinguards required; $5; every Friday night; Coed from 6-8 p.m.,

Softball

Men’s 8-10 p.m.; Cascade Indoor Soccer, Bend; 541-330-1183; callie@ cascadeindoorsoccer.com; www. cascadeindoorsports.com.

SWIMMING SWIM WITHOUT FEAR: Designed for adults who have never learned to swim; two sessions; June 19–July 24 and July 31-Aug. 28; class on Saturdays, 9:20-10 a.m.; register online at www.bendparksandrec. org; $33; 541-389-7665. WATER POLO INSTRUCTIONAL LEAGUE: At Juniper Swim & Fitness Center; for grades 6-8 and grades 9-12; learn individual skills, teamwork; Tuesday and Thursday evenings; grades 6-8 from 5:30-7 p.m. and grades 9-12 meet 6:45-8 p.m.; June 22-Aug. 12; $80-108; www. bendparksandrec.org to register.

SKIING BEND ENDURANCE NORDIC SUMMER TRAINING: Coaching for nordic skiers ages 14-23 including strength training, rollerskiing, hiking, running, and exploring all summer long; Tuesdays-Saturdays; June 1-Aug. 22; www.BendEnduranceAcademy. org; 541-678-3865. MBSEF FREERIDE SKI AND SNOWBOARD SUMMER CAMP: With High Cascade Snowboard Camp and Windell’s at Mt. Hood; June 17-22; 541-388-0002; mbsef@ mbsef.org, www.mbsef.org. MBSEF SUMMER NORDIC CAMP: June 18-22, for kids age 8-18, and for seniors and masters; led by Torin Koos, Lars Flora, Kristina Strandberg, Dan Simoneau, and Tim Gibbons; 541-388-0002; mbsef@mbsef; www.mbsef.org. MBSEF ALPINE HIGH SCHOOL SKI CAMP: At Mt. Hood will be held June 19-26; 541-388-0002; mbsef@ mbsef.org; www.mbsef.org. MBSEF ALPINE SUMMER

el t es alis i D ci e Sp

Local Service. Local Knowledge. 541-848-4444

Open Continued from D1 “But we’re finally catching up, and we’ve probably grown as much in the last 10 days as we’ve had in the last six weeks. The golf course is lushing up.” The Oregon Open field will consist of 86 club professionals and 86 amateurs playing in fourgolfer teams — two pros and two amateurs per foursome — in both team and individual competitions. The players represent all of the Pacific Northwest Section, which includes Oregon and Washington, along with Alaska and parts of Idaho and Montana. Twelve Central Oregon club pros and 10 amateurs will be in the field this year. Among the most notable is Brandon Kearney, a former Canadian Tour pro at Bend Golf and Country Club. The locals will have their hands full against some of the best club pros in the Pacific Northwest. Brian Nosler, a pro from Vanco Driving Range in Vancouver, Wash., set the Oregon Open scoring record last year when the tournament was held at the Club at Brasada Ranch. And he is just one of several returning Oregon Open champions who will be in this year’s field. Two-time Oregon Open champ Jeff Coston, a former PGA Tour pro based now at Semiahmoo Golf & Country Club in Blaine, Wash., will also be vying for this year’s title. Other past champions entered in the field include Corey Prugh (2008) of Manito Golf & Country Club in Spokane, Wash.; Josh Immordino (2007) of Riverbend Golf Club in Kent, Wash.; Scott Krieger (2006) of Broadmoor Golf Course in Portland; Darek Franklin (2002) of Willamette Valley Country Club in Canby; and Pat Fitzsimons (1990, 1968) of Salem Golf Club. Immordino won the 2007 Oregon Open hosted at Juniper with a three-round score of 12-under 204. Wattenburger thinks the top golfer this year could end up improving on Immordino’s mark. “I was talking to our superintendent (Patrick Reilly) this morning, and we are expecting the weather to be kind of like it was today,” Wattenburger said of the warm, sunny conditions on Monday. “I told him that (if that is the case) my guess was that (the winning score) would be somewhere around 202. “If the (winds) do approach 20 miles an hour, it would be worth a shot or two a day.” The Oregon Open’s 54-hole individual competition begins today at 7:30 a.m., with tee times until 2:30 p.m.; the schedule Wednesday will be the same. A 36-hole, best two of four-net team competition, a propro four-ball, and a pro-am fourball will also be part of the tournament. The second round will be followed by a cut and re-pairing of the low 70 scores and ties for Thursday’s final round. Spectators are welcome and admission is free. Zack Hall can be reached at 541-617-7868 or at zhall@ bendbulletin.com.

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distance. “The rest,” he says, “are riders choice.” Leet believes that riders with solid mountain-bike handling skills will have an advantage over the Wanoga terrain. “On the downhill you’ll be flying and your technical ability will help you,” he says. “I will say that I think it will be the funnest course in the series,” Leet continues. “There’s not a grueling climb, and the downhill is fun enough that people will have a kick.” Online registration and additional registration details are available at www. sunnysidesports.com. Entry fees are $26 for adult nonbeginners, $21 for beginners and $10 for juniors. Register before June 23 to avoid late fees. Racing begins at 10 a.m. on June 27.

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