Bulletin Daily Paper 07/10/10

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Teen’s Cost of moving earth donation secures 2 men a home By David Holley The Bulletin

Without Brittany Anderson, James Jenkins and Sabino Torres would likely still be homeless. Last week, Anderson gave the two men, who have lived at The Bethlehem Inn for the last three months and have been homeless longer, $700 to pay the first and last months’ rent for a two-bedroom apartment near Central Oregon Community College. They moved in Thursday. Without Anderson’s gift, it would have taken months to save enough money to pay the full amount, Jenkins said. One thing about Anderson makes the situation more exceptional: She’s 18. “That just blew me away,” said Jenkins, 45. “It’s totally awesome.” When she turned 18, Anderson, of Redmond, received a trust fund her parents had established when she was 5, after the family received a payout for a car accident. Anderson said her religious beliefs required her to tithe a portion of the fund, while the remainder will be used to pay for college.

Bethlehem Inn After hearing about The Bethlehem Inn, Anderson called the staff, who set her up with Jenkins and Torres. Anderson never met either man, but did talk to them over the phone. “I think it was God,” Anderson said about giving away the money. “It was good.” Jenkins and Torres say the money is helping them to turn their lives around. Both are veterans who have suffered from substance addictions for years. Jenkins has served jail time for multiple felony drug convictions related to methamphetamine. Torres, 59, has been arrested for driving drunk, a part of his yearslong battle with alcohol. Rehab has helped them stay clean, they said. Now Torres has found a part-time job at Habitat for Humanity and is looking for more work. Jenkins, using grants and loans, is set to attend COCC this fall. See Gift / A6

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Workers operating excavators, a bulldozer and a water truck work near the border of the new cell at Knott Landfill on Thursday in Bend. Deschutes County’s Department of Solid Waste is digging a larger section, after the excavation of the new cell did not yield enough of the type of soil needed to cover a closed section of the landfill.

Knott Landfill requires up to another $300K worth of work By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

A contractor for Deschutes County is working hard to open a new area of Knott Landfill ready by mid-September, but the project has expanded and the cost could rise by $300,000. At the county’s request, the contractor is taking soil excavated to open the new area, and using it to cover another area of the landfill that the county is closing. The new area did not yield as much of the required type of soil as expected, so the contractor is now digging a larger area to get more soil. Oregon’s environmental agency typically prescribes a compacted layer of clay to cap closed landfills, but many landfill operators east of the Cascades use local soil as a natural, cheaper alternative, according to the Department of Environmental

“As many holes as you drill and as many tests as you do, you’re really not sure what you’re going to get until you excavate.” — Timm Schimke, director of Deschutes Department of Solid Waster Quality. Operators must prove to the agency that the soil cover will work. At Knott Landfill, the good soil is deep underground and the contractor will have to do a lot of excavation to reach it, said Timm Schimke, director of the county’s Department of Solid Waste. The County Commission authorized a

In the article “For Wyden’s challenger, Merkley serves as a model,” which appeared Tuesday, July 6, on page A1, pollster Bob Moore’s relationship to Jim Huffman’s campaign was incorrect, due to incorrect information supplied to The Bulletin. Moore was paid $2,800 by the campaign in February, for including three to four questions on a longer questionnaire. The Bulletin regrets the error.

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The Bulletin

Vol. 107, No. 191, 62 pages, 6 sections

Wry and cranky, droll and cantankerous — that’s the Mark Twain we think we know, thanks to reading “Huck Finn” and “Tom Sawyer” in high school. But in his unexpurgated autobiography, whose first volume is about to be published a century after his death, a very different Twain emerges, more pointedly political and willing to play the role of the angry prophet. Whether anguishing over U.S. military interventions abroad or delivering jabs at Wall Street tycoons, this Twain is contemporary. Although the autobiography also contains its share of homespun tales, some of its observations about American life are so acerbic that his heirs and editors, as well as the writer himself, feared they would damage his reputation if not withheld. “From the first, second, third and fourth editions all sound and sane expressions of opinion must be left out,” Twain instructed them in 1906. “There may be a market for that kind of wares a century from now. There is no hurry. Wait and see.” See Twain / A7

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PORTLAND — The Oregon State Board of Higher Education on Friday unanimously approved most of the Central Oregon plan to increase Oregon State University-Cascades Campus enrollment, but couldn’t commit just yet to supporting the branch campus’s eventual conversion to a four-year standalone university. With the partial approval, the University of Oregon will stop offering its degree programs at OSU-Cascades in the coming years, while the branch campus will seek to increase its appeal with a closer relationship with Central Oregon Community College. The board also stopped short of approving another piece of the Higher Education Assessment Team’s plan: its goal of expanding university research opportunities in line with Central Oregon industry needs. The question of research programs and the creation of a four-year university will be discussed in the academic strategies committee before being brought to the board again in September.

HEAT suggestions Kirk Schueler, the president of Brooks Resources Corp. and a member of the state board, presented the Higher Education Assessment Team’s recommendations to the board Thursday, and the board voted on the plan Friday. Schueler worked with HEAT over the past year to come up with a list of recommendations to increase education offerings and opportunities for students in Central Oregon, and to increase enrollment at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus. See Colleges / A6

New York Times News Service

MANKATO, Minn. — More than eight years into fighting two wars, the U.S. military finds itself in an odd but enviable position: All four military branches and all six Reserve components reached their recruiting targets, both in quality and quantity, for the first time in the history of the all-volunteer force. Eschewing the cold call and hard sell for what it calls the “soft lead,” the military is employing the latest in marketing techniques to secure the newest generation of recruits, who are plucked from an increasingly select pool of applicants. In a turnaround from as little as five years ago, Armed Forces enlistment requirements have never been higher. “There’s an awful lot of good kids out there who are coming out of high school with no job prospects,” said William Strickland, a retired Air Force colonel who commanded recruiting on the West Coast. See Recruits / A7

Abby

By Sheila G. Miller

By Larry Rohter

By Mark Brunswick

An Independent Newspaper

UO programs out; more coordination between COCC, OSU

Twain’s anger revealed after century in hiding

Military employs new techniques in pursuing recruits (Minneapolis) Star Tribune

Correction

change order up to $305,000 for the work on June 30, but Schimke said the size and cost of the job could ultimately be smaller than that. The contractor, Washingtonbased M.A. DeAtley Construction, originally bid the project at $5.4 million, according to a February county staff report. The company has already begun excavating an additional area to get at the soil. The new cell will be large enough to hold five to eight years of garbage, depending upon the level of waste going into the landfill, according to a February county staff report. Waste could increase if the economy picks up and people begin building homes again, Schimke said. The top level of soil turned out to be unsuitable to cap a landfill, but a couple of lower layers are a type of soil that holds enough water to work, Schimke said. See Landfill / A6

Education board OKs some of area plan

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Chris Hardy / The New York Times News Service

Mark Twain’s personal copy of Theodore Roosevelt’s book, “A Square Deal,” on which Twain wrote the word “banalities” over the title, in the University of California, Berkeley, archive on Friday.

TOP NEWS INSIDE OAKLAND: Businesses clean up after shooting verdict protests turn violent, Page A2


A2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

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NATO accepts blame for killing 6 Afghan civilians By Kay Johnson The Associated Press

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KABUL, Afghanistan — NATO took the blame Friday for accidentally killing six civilians and wounding several others in eastern Afghanistan — just a day after five Afghan soldiers died in a botched coalition airstrike. The back-to-back incidents come as international troops are trying to gain the trust of the Afghan people and improve coordination with Afghan security forces in hopes of handing over more responsibility for security to them nearly nine years into the war. NATO said an assessment team, comprising both coalition and Afghan forces, determined that the civilians were killed when artillery fire fell short of its target Thursday in Paktia province’s Jani Khel district. A full investigation is under way. Initially, the coalition reported that eight Afghan civilians had been injured and taken to a nearby NATO outpost for treatment, and that one subsequently died. Later, it was determined

that the bodies of those killed had been removed before NATO units arrived on the scene following the errant rounds, NATO said in a statement.

NATO meets with community leaders During the past two days, Afghan and NATO leaders have had meetings with local elders and community leaders in Jani Khel to discuss the incident. NATO officials “offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the coalition said in a statement. The five Afghan soldiers were killed and two others were wounded Wednesday in an airstrike in the Andar district of Ghazni province. The Afghan soldiers were launching an ambush before dawn against insurgents reportedly on the move when NATO aircraft began firing on them without warning, Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Mohammad Zahir Azimi said.

Harsh government report deals blow to diabetes drug By Gardiner Harris New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — A federal drug official Friday dealt a severe blow to the popular diabetes drug Avandia, issuing a scathing review of a major clinical trial that its manufacturer has been using to argue that the drug was safe. The reviewer, Dr. Thomas Marciniak of the Food and Drug Administration, found a dozen instances in which patients taking Avandia appeared to suffer serious heart problems that were not counted in the study’s tally of adverse events. Such repeated mistakes “should not be found even as single occurrences” and “suggest serious flaws with trial conduct,” Marciniak wrote. The detailed report could prove crucial next week, when a panel of experts will meet to consider whether to recommend to the FDA that the manufacturer, GlaxoSmithKline, withdraw Avandia from the market or restrict its sale. The panel’s decision will have broad consequences for

the company, the FDA and perhaps even the entire process by which medical products are approved. The agency hardly ever does clinical trials on its own, instead depending on drug companies to conduct them appropriately. Avandia, which helps patients get better control of blood sugar levels, has already come under intense criticism. It has been shown to increase the risks of bone fractures and to cause swelling that can lead to heart failure and eye problems. And a number of studies, including some by GlaxoSmithKline, suggest that it could increase the risks of heart attacks, strokes and death. But the company has relied heavily on the major clinical trial, nicknamed Record, to demonstrate that those risks are exaggerated. Mary Anne Rhyne, a spokeswoman for GlaxoSmithKline, said the study demonstrated that Avandia is safe and added, “The Record study was conducted according to good clinical practices, and the data are reliable.”

N B Two bodies pulled from river after crash

‘Grim Sleeper’ may have killed more

A body believed to be that of the second of two missing Hungarian tourists was recovered Friday afternoon from the Delaware River in Philadelphia, where a barge plowed into a stalled sightseeing boat this week, dumping 37 people into the water. Early Friday morning, the authorities recovered the first body, that of a 16-year-old girl identified as a member of a Hungarian youth group visiting the area. The amphibious “duck boat,” which sank Wednesday afternoon after being hit by the barge, was lifted by crane Friday afternoon from the river bottom and loaded onto a salvage barge. After the boat was taken to the shore, divers found the body of a man beneath its moorings, said Officer Joe Curley, a Philadelphia Police diver. The Coast Guard said the missing man was Szablcs Prem, 20, but the body was being taken to the Philadelphia medical examiner’s office for official identification. The body of the 16-year-old girl was recovered around 4:30 a.m. She was identified as Dora Schwendtner of Mosonmagyarovar, Hungary, who was part of a 15-person youth group whose members were staying with suburban Methodist church families for a three-week cultural exchange.

LOS ANGELES — Police believe the suspect in the “Grim Sleeper” killing spree may be responsible for even more murders than initially thought. A team of detectives Thursday began combing through 30 cold-case homicide files with similarities to those already linked to Lonnie Franklin Jr., the man accused of serial killings spanning 25 years. The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office charged Franklin in court Thursday with 10 counts of murder, one count of attempted murder and a special circumstance of “multiple murders,” said District Attorney Stephen L. Cooley. If convicted, Franklin could be sentenced to death. Franklin’s arraignment was postponed until Aug. 9. — From wire reports

Oakland businesses clean up after protest By Angela Hill Oakland Tribune

OAKLAND, Calif. — Mike Issa couldn’t believe the “gift” Thursday night’s looters left behind in his ransacked Jitters & Shakes coffee shop in downtown Oakland. “You know what I say to the people who did this?” he said, slapping a cracked cell phone on his counter. “I say, ‘I have this phone here that you left when you smashed my store. That’s a gift you’ve given me. Thank you for doing that. I can’t wait to give this to the police.’ ” Issa was one of dozens of downtown business owners who arrived at work Friday to find shattered windows, stolen goods and spray-painted obscenities after Thursday night’s protests of the involuntary manslaughter verdict for former Bay Area Rapid Transit police officer Johannes Mehserle in the 2009 killing of Oscar Grant III. Demonstrations, which began with peaceful speeches near Oakland City Hall, turned into spates of violence after nightfall. Some 200 agitators broke off from the calm protests and got into scuffles with police officers from various agencies, including the California Highway Patrol, Hayward police, East Bay Regional Parks police and the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office.

Eric Risberg / The Associated Press

A worker with the Downtown Oakland Association sweeps the sidewalk near graffiti outside a drug store in Oakland, Calif., on Friday. Early Friday, Oakland police reported 83 arrests were made during the night. Authorities said it was too soon to estimate the damage to businesses. “There’s glass everywhere,” said Tyler Eklund, manager of the 24 Hour Fitness on Webster and 21st streets, where one plate glass window was gone and others had gaping holes. Maintenance people were putting up caution tape and sweeping up shards of glass. “We lost five big windows,” Eklund said. “They threw rocks,

and somebody said they used baseball bats. I have no idea how much that will cost. I’m keeping the gym closed probably all day, until I get more people in here to clean this up.” As people began coming to work in the financial district about 8 a.m., they walked along the sidewalks, pointing at the damage — a broken window here, a spray-painted “Kill the pigs!” there — much like tourists observing points of interest. “Unbelievable,” one woman uttered. “This is so stupid.”

What did the U.S. get out of spy swap? By Scott Shane and Ellen Barry New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — When Aleksandr Zaporozhsky, one of four Russians delivered to the West in this week’s spy swap, landed at Dulles International Airport on Friday to join his family, it was only the latest unexpected twist in a classic story of espionage and deception. For several years in the 1990s, Zaporozhsky, a colonel in Russian intelligence who became deputy chief of the American Department, was secretly working for the CIA, one of the highestranking American moles in history, Russian prosecutors say. After surprising his colleagues by retiring suddenly in 1997, he moved with his wife and three children to the United States and went into business. But in 2001, confident that his CIA link was unsuspected, Zaporozhsky was lured back to Moscow by his former colleagues for what they promised would be a festive KGB anniversary party. He was arrested at the airport, convicted of espionage and sentenced to 18 years in prison. On Friday, Zaporozhsky was flown to Vienna and then to the Washington area for the 10-for4 spy exchange that promises to bring to a swift conclusion the saga of the Russian spy ring exposed by the FBI early last week. His Moscow lawyer, Maria Veselova, said Friday that she “did not find any proof of his guilt” in her review. But circumstantial evidence suggests that he may well have provided valuable information to the United States and was well rewarded for doing so. One account by a Russian security official published in January in the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta claimed that Zaporozhsky, who it said was code-named “The Scythian” by his CIA contacts, was given an estimated $2 million in house purchases and other benefits by the Americans. Another of the four, Sergei Skripal, also seems to fit the classic Cold War model, though without quite the roller-coaster intrigue of the Zaporozhsky case. A retired colonel in Russia’s mili-

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tary intelligence service, Skripal was convicted in 2006 of having passed classified information to British intelligence, MI6, for a decade, in return for $100,000 wired to a bank account in Spain. But there is at least a little post-Communist ambiguity surrounding the two other men in the swap. Gennadi Vasilenko, a former KGB major, was arrested in 1998 for contacts with a CIA officer but soon released, only to be arrested again in 2005 and imprisoned not for spying, but for illegal trafficking in weapons and explosives. And Igor Sutyagin, working at a Moscow think tank, did contract research for a British company that may or may not have been a front for Western intelligence. He has maintained his innocence, and human rights activists have defended him.

Confessions While all four men signed written confessions to espionage as a condition for their release — and then were immediately pardoned — some of the cases show how the definition of spying has grown murkier since relations have warmed between the United States and Russia. For an arms control researcher like Sutyagin to supply information to a British company would have

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been unacceptable to the Kremlin in the 1970s. In more recent years, boundaries have not been so clear. But American officials demanded precisely these four Russians as soon as talks about a swap began and valued them enough to make the lopsided trade. That suggests indebtedness on the side of the United States, said David Wise, a Washington author and veteran chronicler of espionage. “We obviously feel some obligation to them,” Wise said in an interview on Friday. “You don’t leave your men behind on the battlefield.” The American willingness to quickly release 10 Russian agents operating inside the United States, after huge expenditures of money and manpower on a decade of surveillance, would have been hard to imagine a few decades ago. The stakes for American security seem far lower today, said Steven Aftergood, who studies government secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists. “Now it seems more comical than anything else,” he said.

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THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 A3

Venezuelans objecting to government takeovers By Juan Forero The Washington Post

By Henry Fountain New York Times News Service

Jimmy Buffett offering region ‘few hours of fun’ GULF SHORES, Ala. — As tar balls lap up on shore from the BP oil spill, Jimmy Buffett, 63, is going to headline “Live from the Gulf Coast,” a benefit concert (though the tickets are free) being televised nationally on CMT at 7 o’clock Sunday evening. He will play at a specially made 35,000-person outdoor setting only 100 feet from the ocean’s edge in Gulf Shores, about 45 miles southeast of Mobile. “There are always welcome breaks in every storm, but the unfortunate reality is that this disaster is not going away for a while,” Buffett said in a statement. “But a few hours of fun, void of the constant reminders of the situation, is a good thing, and that is basically what I do.” — New York Times News Service

Japan election hard to predict By Martin Fackler New York Times News Service

Conservative upstart Here in Matsue, in rural Shimane Prefecture, many voters said they wanted to give the Democrats more time to fulfill their vaguely left-leaning agenda of building a European-style social welfare state. Others already talk of switching back to the more familiar, though seemingly rudderless, Liberal Democrats. Still others, disgusted with both major parties, have fled to one of several small rightist parties that have

recently cropped up. Polls show the LDP has made only limited gains, at best. Political experts describe the party as stuck in its old ways, unable to find fresh faces. Indeed, the party that has benefited the most from the Democrats’ woes has been one of the small, new conservative parties, the Your Party, set up by defectors from the LDP It is still running a distant third in opinion polls, as its calls for small government have appealed to mainly urban, white-collar voters. “It is easy to be pessimistic about the future with the LDP and the Democrats,” said Masakazu Tanimoto, 43, an employee at a retirement home who said he had switched from the LDP to Your Party. “Japanese politics needs new blood.”

W B U.S. prisoner tries to kill self in N. Korea SEOUL, South Korea — An American serving an eight-year sentence in a labor camp in North Korea has been hospitalized after trying to kill himself, the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency reported Friday. The suicide attempt by the American, Aijalon Mahli Gomes, 30, from Boston, who was arrested in North Korea in January, was “driven by his strong guilty conscience” and “his frustration with the U.S. government’s failure to free him,” the news agency said. The Swedish Embassy in North Korea, which has had consular access to Gomes on behalf of Washington, was aware of his condition, the agency said. The United States and North Korea

do not have diplomatic relations.

China seizes 76 tons of tainted dairy goods BEIJING — Two years after a national health scare over melamine-tainted milk products rocked China’s dairy industry, inspectors in western China’s Qinghai province have seized 76 tons of dairy ingredients laced with the same industrial chemical, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported Friday. The seizure appeared to involve products that had escaped a nationwide recall of dairy foods after the 2008 scandal, in which at least six children died and 294,000 others were sickened. Inspectors in Gansu province first discovered contaminated samples of milk powder brought to them for testing by a worker at the Dongyuan Dairy Factory in

adjacent Qinghai province. Qinghai officials later found that 64 tons of raw dairy products and 12 tons of finished goods were tainted with melamine, some at up to 559 times the legal maximum.

Gadhafi son plans Gaza aid voyage LONDON — An aid organization led by a son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said Friday it is sending a ship loaded with food and medicine to the Gaza Strip in an effort to break Israel’s blockade of the Palestinian enclave. The vessel will left Friday from the Greek port of Lavrio, about 37 miles southeast of Athens, the Gadhafi International Charity and Development Association said in a statement on its website. — From wire reports

Blast aimed at elders kills more than 60 in Pakistan By Jane Perlez and Ismail Khan New York Times News Service

ISLAMABAD — A suicide bomber attacked a group of tribal elders gathered near the headquarters of the civilian government in Mohmand on Friday, killing more than 60 people and wounding more than 100, a senior Pakistani security official said. The bomber detonated a car laden with explosives in the bazaar at Yakaghund, the administrative center of Mohmand, a tribal area, where elders had gathered over tea before a scheduled meeting with the assistant political agent, the security official said. The blast blew a crater nearly 5 feet deep, and victims were trapped in the rubble of scores of destroyed shops, the official said. The attack was aimed directly at the civilian authorities who are supposed to be helping people resist the Taliban. The Pakistani army has been involved in a battle against the militants in Mohmand for nearly two years but has been

unable to defeat them. The assistant political agent, Rasul Khan, the second-ranking civilian official in Mohmand, said children were among the dead and that rescuers were still searching for bodies in the rubble hours after the blast. Many of the injured were taken for treatment to Peshawar, the nearby capital of Khyber-Pakhtunkwa province, formerly known as North-West Frontier province, Khan said. More than 70 shops in the small township of Yakaghund were destroyed in the blast, further discouraging civilians, who had fled Mohmand because of the two years of fighting, from returning. The strike demonstrated the resilience of the Taliban in the tribal region, even in an area like Mohmand that is adjacent to the bustling city of Peshawar.

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BEST SELECTION IN CENTRAL OREGON!

MATSUE, Japan — For decades, political views in this small city in rural western Japan were as predictable as the waters in the medieval moats that crisscross its downtown. Most residents supported the Liberal Democrats, who governed Japan for most of the past half-century. But as Japan prepares for midterm parliamentary elections Sunday that will be its first national vote since the Liberal Democratic Party, or LDP, was unseated in an election last year, the political landscape seems uncertain. Sunday’s elections cannot directly cause a change in government because they involve seats only in the Upper House and not the more powerful Lower House,

which elects the prime minister. Still, the ballot is widely seen here as a crucial referendum on the nine-month-old government of the Democrats, who have formed only the second non-LDP government since 1955.

companies. “The president arrives and it occurs to him to say, ‘This has to be expropriated,’ without taking into account the technical or legal criteria,” Falcon said in an interview last week. “We oppose this because it does not make sense. It is more an impulse of the president.” The government has characterized the struggle with Polar as one between good and evil, with Chávez giving several speeches in which he has mocked Polar’s owner, Lorenzo Mendoza, who is one of Latin America’s richest men. “We will see who can last longer, Mendoza, you with your millions or me with my morals,” Chávez said in a nationally televised speech in June. “Because you are rich one. You are going to hell, to heaven you will not go.”

OVER

BP will begin replacing the cap on its runaway well in the Gulf of Mexico with a new one that has a tighter seal and could funnel all the oil spewing from the well to surface ships, the leader of the federal response effort said Friday. The leader, Thad Allen, a retired Coast Guard admiral, said at a briefing in New Orleans that, perhaps as early as today, technicians would remove the containment cap at the top of the failed blowout preventer, the giant stack of safety devices on the seabed. It will then take three to four days to install the tighter cap, during which time oil will gush unabated from the top of the well, he said. If all goes as planned, the new cap could effectively contain the leaking well by sometime next week. But like other engineering efforts in the 11 weeks since oil began pouring into the gulf after the Deepwater Horizon rig explosion, there is no guarantee that technicians, using remotely operated submersibles 5,000 feet underwater, will succeed in installing the cap. If the procedure fails, the old cap would have to be reinstalled.

That cap is now diverting about 15,000 barrels of oil a day to a surface ship, the Discoverer Enterprise. This amount “will have to be released while we’re putting the new cap on,” Allen said. The work should not affect a second system that is collecting 8,000 to 9,000 barrels a day from a pipe lower on the blowout preventer. Allen said that after consulting with officials from BP and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, he had directed BP to provide a timeline to “accelerate the replacement of the current containment cap,” to take advantage of a spell of good weather expected to last seven to 10 days. In a letter Friday responding to Allen’s request for a timeline, BP’s chief managing director, Robert Dudley, said the company had originally planned to install the tighter cap after a third system involving another surface ship, the Helix Producer, was up and running. But because of the weather window, he wrote, BP, “in conjunction with government experts,” had proposed that the new cap “be implemented in parallel with the startup of the Helix Producer.”

— Henri Falcon, governor of Barquisimeto

SOFAS AS LOW AS

Installation of new well cap could start today, BP says

“The president arrives and it occurs to him to say, ‘This has to be expropriated,’ without taking into account the technical or legal criteria.”

QUALITY FOR LESS!

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The Associated Press

This image from video provided by BP early Thursday shows oil continuing to leak from the broken wellhead, at the site of the Deepwater Horizon oil well in the Gulf of Mexico.

BARQUISIMETO, Venezuela — As in all major government takeovers of private companies in Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez declared that seizing beer-and-food giant Polar’s facilities here would mark another victory for the poor in the country’s march toward socialism. “Why is it that Polar has so much money?” Chávez asked in a February speech made in this city in northwest Venezuela. “I say to the owner of Polar: Start making plans, because you are going to be out of here.” Except this time, the president’s plans went awry, exposing a mounting national opposition to a policy that has seen oil companies, supermarkets and factories taken over by the state, only to founder under the control of government functionaries. Not only did Polar fight back by taking its case to the Supreme Court, but its employees have risen up, too, rallying in opposition to Chávez’s edict and holding all-night vigils here to prevent a takeover. Among those who joined the uprising was Henri Falcon, the popular governor of Barquisimeto, a former ally of Chávez who says the president has not considered the long-term consequences when nationalizing

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A4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

R Principals may appeal religious gift ruling

PRESBYTERIAN ASSEMBLY BACKS PARTNERED GAY CLERGY

By Anna M. Tinsley McClatchy-Tribune News Service

FORT WORTH, Texas — Two Plano, Texas, principals remain in the middle of a court case over whether they should have confiscated religious-themed gifts — including candy-cane pens and a description of their Christian origin — from students during holiday parties years ago. This week, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled that the principals can be liable for not letting students in 2001 and 2003 hand out their candy-cane pens with descriptions as well as pencils that read, “Jesus is the reason for the season.” “This is a big win for the First Amendment and for millions of students nationwide,” said Kelly Shackelford, president of the Plano-based conservative Liberty Institute, which represents the families in the lawsuit.

‘The court is wrong’ Josh Skinner of Dallas, attorney for Principals Lynn Swanson of Thomas Elementary School and Jackie Bomchill of Rasor Elementary, said he and his clients will now decide whether to appeal to the full appeals court, the U.S. Supreme Court or both. “We think the court is wrong,” he said, adding that keeping the principals involved in the lawsuit personally opens them up to punitive damages of tens of thousands of dollars that someday might be awarded. “The court fails to recognize the confusion that exists in the law.” One case involved pencils that a girl tried to distribute in 2001. Another involved a thirdgrade boy who tried to pass out candy-cane pens and attached cards in 2003. The lawsuit also cited other cases of students not being allowed to hand out items with religious themes. In 2005, the Plano school district updated rules about when students can hand out religious-themed items.

Jim Mone / The Associated Press

Gay marriage supporter Steven Webster of Madison, Wis., listens during a debate at the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) on Friday in Minneapolis. Delegates to the convention of the PCUSA, the nation’s largest Presbyterian denomination, voted Thursday for a more liberal policy on gay clergy, lifting a ban on partnered gay clergy. The measure must by ratified by the denomination’s 173 regional governing bodies, called presbyteries.

Pontiff appoints new leader of order beset by scandal By Elisabetta Povoledo New York Times News Service

MILAN — Pope Benedict XVI appointed a senior Vatican official Friday to take control of the Legionaries of Christ, the powerful worldwide religious order rocked by scandal after it emerged that its charismatic founder had molested underage seminarians and secretly fathered several children. At the end of an eight-month investigation, the pope named Archbishop Velasio De Paolis, president of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, as pontifical delegate for the Legionaries. Benedict’s measures aim to assist “in the demanding path of purification and renewal that awaits the congregation,” the Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said Friday on Vatican radio. The decision to take over the order has been the most direct response on the part of the pope to the growing sexual abuse scandal that has embroiled the Roman Catholic Church in recent months. Changes to the rules that administer

“I think it’s safe to say that the current leadership will soon be out.” — Marco Tosatti, La Stampa journalist ecclesiastical discipline against priests who sexually abuse minors are also expected to be made public in the next few days. De Paolis, 74, is an expert in canon law. Because the order is quite wealthy, Vatican observers said it was no accident that the pope chose someone with both financial expertise and a strong legal background.

‘Particular understanding’ “Clearly, both issues are very important to the changes that have to be made within the Legionaries,” said Marco Tosatti, a journalist with the Italian newspaper La Stampa. De Paolis is also a member of the

Congregation of the Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo, “so he has a particular understanding of the organization of religious orders,” Tosatti added. In March, the Legionaries acknowledged that the order’s founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel Degollado, a close ally of Pope John Paul II, was responsible for many “grave acts.” Degollado, who died in 2008, was found to have molested seminarians for decades and fathered at least one child. But he was also a prodigious and popular fundraiser and an important source of new priests. The Vatican announced its decision to overhaul the order in May. Lombardi said Friday in an interview that De Paolis was expected to meet soon with the Legionaries to “explain to them his mandate, and set out the methods and timing that that mandate will take.” Likening the Legionaries to a company that has gone bankrupt, Tosatti said that a great deal of restructuring would go on. “I think it’s safe to say that the current leadership will soon be out,” he said.

How can faith in religious leaders be restored? McClatchy-Tribune News Service What can be done so people can gain more confidence in religious leaders?

Find faith in God, not solely in leaders Our immediate spiritual leader — our pastor, priest, rabbi — is often the weather vane for our dealings with our faith tradition. Even if there is controversy in the larger body — in the conference or synod or diocese — we reference the one who guides us regularly in worship. If our pastor demonstrates integrity, we find sol-

ace and thank God. But what if our religious leader is the one who disappointed us? Few abandon their faith because of a concern over doctrine, but many flee because their pastor caused scandal. In short, if there is evidence of a religious leader’s mercy, compassion and integrity — even in the midst of disappointment — it should evince God’s presence through that minister. Our confidence is then found in God’s power to redeem both the situation and a wounded religious leader. — The Rev. Justin Hoye, St. Mary Parish Catholic Church, Nevada, Mo.

Police: Priest used parish money for hotels, escorts The Hartford (Conn.) Courant WATERBURY, Conn. — A Roman Catholic priest who stole $1.3 million from the Sacred Heart parish over seven years said he “had grown to hate being a priest” because the archdiocese had given him the “worst church assignments” where he would “have to fix problems made by the previous priests,” according to a police affidavit. The Rev. Kevin Gray, 64, was charged with first-degree larceny. Police said he used church funds to pay for hotels, restaurant meals, clothing and male escorts. Gray turned himself in to authorities Tuesday morning and was to be arraigned in Wa-

terbury Superior Court. Waterbury police launched an investigation after the archdiocese came to them May 27 and said it had uncovered unauthorized payments from church funds to accounts held by Gray and other suspicious transactions, according to the affidavit. Gray wrote checks to himself, paid off his American Express bills, allowed two men to have credit cards in their names on his account and paid for various other expenses — including tuition to Harvard and rent in New York City for a man he met in Central Park — using the church’s Webster Bank account, the document states.

Leaders should embody principles of integrity Religious leaders either “win” the confidence of the people they serve or they “lose” it based on their thoughts and actions. The most important characteristic for religious leaders is integrity, which holds to three principles. First, religious leaders must be truthful and express themselves as they truly are, not what they want people to think they are. An uncovered lie is the quickest way to shatter trust in a relationship, and without trust, the relationship has no value. The second principle of integrity is

for religious leaders to drop the pomposity and self-righteousness that come from thinking they are better or more “saintly” than the people they serve. Religious leaders are ordinary people and face similar problems and challenges that other people do. The third principle of integrity is for a religious leader to practice what he or she preaches. If they dogmatically impose overly strict doctrines, creeds, rules and regulations on people that they themselves don’t live up to, they are little more than hypocrites. — The Rev. Duke Tufty, Unity Temple on the Plaza

A DANGEROUS PILGRIMAGE

Karim Kadim / The Associated Press

Shiite pilgrims walk across a bridge between Sunni and Shiite neighborhoods after concluding their visit to the Kazimiyah shrine, to mark the date of Imam Moussa al- Kadim’s death in Baghdad, Iraq, on Thursday. Iraqi officials say several pilgrims were killed by bombs targeting those taking part in the final day of the Shiite religious observance. Nearly 70 pilgrims were killed in attacks this week. .

R B Lead Pastor Ken Wytsma will share a sermon titled “Above the Storm” at 9:30 a.m. and will lead the follow-up Q & A Redux service at 11:15 Sunday at Antioch Church, held at Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend. • Pastor Dave Miller will share the message “God Can Speak to Your Problem” at 10 a.m. Sunday at Bend Christian Fellowship, 19831 Rocking Horse Road. The 4twelve youth group meets Wednesdays at 7 p.m. • Pastor Virgil Askren will share a sermon titled “Get Real” at 10:15 a.m. Sunday at Bend Church of the Nazarene, 1270 N.E. 27th St. • Pastor Dave Drullinger will share the message “Clash of Powers,” based on Matthew 14:1-12, at 10 a.m. Sunday at Discovery Christian Church, 334 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend. • Pastor John Lodwick will share the message “Heaven and Hell” as the part of the series “Q & A: Your Questions. God’s Answers” at 6 p.m. today and at 9 and 10:30 a.m. Sunday at Eastmont Church, 62425 Eagle Road, Bend. • Pastor Mike Johnson will share the message “A World-Changing Revelation,” based on John 5:1947, as part of the series “The Jesus Story: Twenty Days that Changed the World” at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at Faith Christian Center, 1049 N.E. 11th St., Bend. Fuel youth services are held Wednesdays at 7 p.m. • Pastor Randy Wills will share the message “God’s Boot Camp” at 10 a.m. Sunday at Father’s House Church of God, 61690 Pettigrew Road, Bend. • Pastor Syd Brestel will share the message “Many Are Called; Few Are Chosen” as part of the series “Hard Truths” at 10:15 a.m. Sunday at First Baptist Church, 60 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend. • The Rev. Dr. Steven Koski will speak on the topic “Living Beyond Guilt” at the 9 a.m. contemporary and 10:45 a.m. traditional services Sunday at First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend. • Pastor Thom Larson will share the message “Don’t Speak of Love, Show Me,” based on Luke 10:25-37 and Amos 7:7-17, at the 9 a.m. contemporary and 10:30 a.m. traditional services Sunday at First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. Bond St., Bend. • Pastor Joel LiaBraaten will share the messages “Who Deserves Your Love?” and “Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood” at 10 a.m. Sunday at Grace First Lutheran Church, 2265 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. • Pastor Keith Kirkpatrick will continue the series “I Want a Movie Life” at 9:30 a.m. Sunday at Journey Church, held at Regal Old Mill 16 Cinemas, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Dr., Bend. • Brad Ward will share the message “Epic Lesson #3: Moses” as part of the series “EPIC — Life Stories of the Bible” at 6 p.m. today and 9 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday at New Hope Church, 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend. • Beth Patterson will share the message “A Crisis Is A Terrible Thing to Waste” at 9 a.m. Sunday at Spiritual Awareness Community of the Cascades, held at Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. • Pastor Robert Luinstra will share the message “Prayers For Fellow Believers,” based on Colossians 1:1-14, at 10 a.m. Sunday at Trinity Lutheran Church & School, 2550 N.E. Butler Market Road, Bend. • Lay Leader Nancy Stevens will speak on the topic “And I’ll Sing Every Day of My Life” at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, held at Old Stone Church, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. • Pastor Bo Stern will speak on “Ugly Betty” as part one of the series “Summer Sweeps” at 6:30 p.m. today and at 8, 9 and 10:45 a.m. Sunday at Westside Church, 2051 N.W. Shevlin Park Road, Bend. and at 11 a.m. Sunday at the Westside South Campus, held at Elk Meadow Elementary School, 60880 Brookswood Blvd., Bend. • Pastor Myron Wells will share the message “The Mess,” based on the book of Nehemiah, at the 9 and 10:30 a.m. services Sunday at Christian Church of Redmond, 536 S.W. 10th St. • Pastor Rob Anderson will share the message “Why Did the Christian Cross the Road?,” based on Luke 10:25-37, at the 8:30 a.m. contemporary and 11 a.m. traditional services Sunday at Community Presbyterian Church, 529 N.W. 19th Street, Redmond. • Pastor Glen Schaumloeffel will share the message “The Great Pilgrimage,” based on Genesis 46:1-47:26, as part of the series “Joseph — The Hand of Providence” at 9:30 a.m. Sunday at Community Bible Church at Sunriver, 1 Theater Drive. • The Rev. Willis Jenson will share the message “Christians Live Forever Because Christ Fulfilled the Commandments for Them and Gives that Fulfillment to Them Through the Gospel,” based on Luke 10:28, at 11 a.m. Sunday at Concordia Lutheran Mission held at Terrebonne Grange Hall, 8286 11th St., Terrebonne. • Workshop topic will be “Forgiveness and Compassion” at 1:30 Friday at Christian Science Reading Room, 115 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend. • Liberty Quartet, a men’s Gospel group from Meriden, Idaho, will perform at 1 p.m. July 17 at Eastmont Church, 62425 Eagle Road, Bend.


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 A5 “The Wheel of Dharma” Buddhism

“Celtic Cross” Christianity

“Star of David” Judaism

You Are The Most Important Part of Our Services

Christian

Foursquare

\Lutheran

Presbyterian

REAL LIFE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Like Hymns? We've Got 'em! at the RLCC Church, 2880 NE 27th Sunday Services 8 am Traditional Service (No child care for 8 am service) 9:30 am Contemporary Service with full child care plus Teen Ministry 11 am Service (Full child care) For information, please call ... Minister - Mike Yunker - 541-312-8844 Richard Belding, Associate Pastor “Loving people one at a time.” www.real-lifecc.org

DAYSPRING CHRISTIAN CENTER

TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH AND SCHOOL Missouri Synod • 541-382-1832 2550 NE Butler Market Road A Stephen Ministry Congregation

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 230 NE Ninth, Bend (Across Ninth St. from Bend High) All Are Welcome, Always!

Summer Schedule of Services June 20 – September 5 9:00 AM Sunday School / Bible Study 10:00 AM Worship Nursery provided on Sundays

Rev. Dr. Steven H. Koski Senior Pastor “Living Beyond Guilt”

Christian Schools “Omkar” (Aum) Hinduism

“Yin/Yang” Taoist/Confucianism

“Star & Crescent” Islam

DO WE HAVE YOUR SUMMER SCHEDULE?

Assembly of God

Bible Church

FAITH CHRISTIAN CENTER 1049 NE 11th St . • 541-382-8274 SUNDAYS: 9:30 am Sunday Educational Classes 10:30 am Morning Worship Our theme for 2010 is “Expectancy” Pastor Mike Johnson will share his message titled, The Jesus Story: Twenty Days That Changed the World “A World Changing Revelation,” Part 2 John 5:19-47. 10:30 am Children’s Church “Faithtown” WEDNESDAYS 7:00 PM: Fuel Youth Group Adult small groups weekly Child care provided during Sunday morning service. Pastor Michael Johnson www.bendfcc.com

COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH AND CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL 541-593-8341 Beaver at Theater Drive, PO Box 4278, Sunriver OR 97707 “Transforming Lives Through the Truth of the Word” All are Welcome! SUNDAY WORSHIP AND THE WORD - 9:30 AM. Coffee Fellowship - 10:45 am Bible Education Hour - 11:15 am Nursery Care available • Women’s Bible Study - Tuesdays, 10 am. • Awana Kids Club (4 yrs -6th gr.) • Youth Ministry (gr. 7-12) Wednesdays 6:15 pm • Men’s Bible Study - Thursdays 9 am. • Home Bible Studies are also available. Preschool for 3 & 4 year olds Call for information Senior Pastor: Glen Schaumloeffel Associate Pastor: Jake Schwarze visit our Web site www.cbchurchsr.org

REDMOND ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1865 W Antler • Redmond • 541-548-4555 SUNDAYS Morning Worship 8:30 am and 10:30 am Life groups 9 am Kidz LIVE ages 3-11 10:30 am Evening Worship 6 pm WEDNESDAYS FAMILY NIGHT 7PM Adult Classes Celebrate Recovery Wednesday NITE Live Kids Youth Group Pastor Duane Pippitt www.redmondag.com

Baptist EASTMONT CHURCH NE Neff Rd., 1/2 mi. E. of St. Charles Medical Center Saturdays 6:00 pm (Contemporary) Sundays 9:00 am (Blended worship style) 10:30 am (Contemporary) Sundays 6:00 pm Hispanic Worship Service Weekly Bible Studies and Ministries for all ages Contact: 541-382-5822 Pastor John Lodwick www.eastmontchurch.com FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH CBA “A Heart for Bend in the Heart of Bend” 60 NW Oregon, 541-382-3862 Pastor Syd Brestel SUNDAY 9:00 AM Sunday School for everyone This Sunday at First Baptist, Pastor Syd will consider Jesus’ statement, “Many are called, few are chosen” as part of his Hard Truths series. For Kidztown, Middle School and High School activities Call 541-382-3862 www.bendchurch.org FIRST MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Sundays Morning Worship 10:50 am Bible Study 6:00 pm Evening Worship 7:00 pm Wednesdays Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm Tom Counts, Senior Pastor Ernest Johnson, Pastor 21129 Reed Market Rd, Bend, OR 541-382-6081 HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH, SBC 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond • 541-548-4161 SUNDAYS: Worship Services: 9:00 am & 6:00 pm Traditional 10:30 am Contemporary Sunday Bible fellowship groups 9:00 am & 10:30 am For other activities for children, youth & adults, call or go to website: www.hbcredmond.org Dr. Barry Campbell, Lead Pastor PARA LA COMUNIDAD LATINA Domingos: Servicio de Adoración y Escuela Dominical - 12:30 pm Miércoles: Estudios biblicos por edades - 6:30 pm

Listen to KNLR 97.5 FM at 9:00 am. each Sunday to hear “Transforming Truth” with Pastor Glen.

Calvary Chapel CALVARY CHAPEL BEND 20225 Cooley Rd. Bend Phone: (541) 383-5097 Web site: ccbend.org Sundays: 8:30 & 10:30 am Wednesday Night Study: 7 pm Youth Group: Wednesday 7 pm Child Care provided Women’s Ministry, Youth Ministry are available, call for days and times. “Teaching the Word of God, Book by Book”

Catholic HOLY REDEEMER CATHOLIC PARISH Fr. Jose Thomas Mudakodiyil, Pastor www.holyredeemerparish.net Parish Office: 541-536-3571 HOLY REDEEMER, La Pine 16137 Burgess Rd Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday Mass 9:00AM Sunday Mass — 10:00AM Confessions: Saturdays — 3:00–4:00PM HOLY TRINITY, Sunriver 18143 Cottonwood Rd Thursday Mass — 9:30AM Saturday Vigil Mass — 5:30PM Sunday Mass — 8:00AM Confessions: Thursdays 9:00–9:15AM OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS, Gilchrist 120 Mississippi Dr Sunday Mass — 12:30PM Confessions: Sundays 12:00–12:15PM HOLY FAMILY, near Christmas Valley 57255 Fort Rock Rd Sunday Mass — 3:30PM Confessions: Sundays 3:00–3:15PM ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI 541-382-3631 Pastors: Fr. Joe Reinig Fr. Daniel Maxwell Deacon Joseph Levine Masses NEW CHURCH – CATHOLIC CENTER 2450 NE 27th Street Saturday - Vigil 5:00 PM Sunday - 7:30, 10:00 AM 12:30 PM Spanish & 5:00 PM Mon., Wed., Fri. - 7:00 AM & 12:15 PM St. Clare Chapel - Spanish Mass 1st, 3rd, 5th Thursdays 8:00 PM Masses HISTORIC DOWNTOWN CHURCH Corner of NW Franklin & Lava Tues., Thurs., Sat. 7:00 AM Tues. & Thurs. 12:15 PM Exposition & Benediction Tuesday 3:00 - 6:00 PM Reconciliation: New Church, 27th St: Sat. 3 - 5 PM* Mon., Fri. 6:45 - 7:00 AM* & 7:30 - 8:00 AM Wednesday 6:00 - 8:00 PM Historic Church Downtown: Saturday 7:30 - 10:00 AM Tues. & Thurs. 6:45 - 7:00 AM* & 7:30 - 8:00 AM

CENTRAL CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Pre K - 12th Grade Christ Centered Academic Excellence Fully Accredited with ACSI & NAAS Comprehensive High School Educating Since 1992 15 minutes north of Target 2234 SE 6th St. Redmond, 541-548-7803 www.centralchristianschools.com EASTMONT COMMUNITY SCHOOL “Educating and Developing the Whole Child for the Glory of God” Pre K - 5th Grade 62425 Eagle Road, Bend • 541-382-2049 Principal Mary Dennis www.eastmontcommunityschool.com MORNING STAR CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Pre K - 12th Grade Serving Christian Families and local churches to develop Godly leaders by providing quality Christ centered education. Fully Accredited NAAS. Member A.C .S.I. Small Classes Emphasizing: Christian Values A-Beka Curriculum, High Academics. An interdenominational ministry located on our new 18 acre campus at 19741 Baker Rd. and S. Hwy 97 (2 miles south of Wal-Mart). Phone 541-382-5091 Bus Service: from Bend, La Pine & Sunriver. www.morningstarchristianschool.org SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI SCHOOL Preschool through Grade 8 “Experience academic excellence and Christian values every day.” Limited openings in all grades. 2450 NE 27th St. Bend •541-382-4701 www.stfrancisschool.net TRINITY LUTHERAN SCHOOL 2550 NE Butler Market Rd. 541-382-1850 Preschool ages 3 and 4 - 10th grade High Quality Education In A Loving Christian Environment Openings Still Available www.saints.org

Christian Science FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1551 NW First St. • 541-382-6100 (South of Portland Ave.) Church Service & Sunday School: 10 am Wed. Testimony Meeting: 7:30 pm Reading Room: 115 NW Minnesota Ave. Mon. through Fri.: 11 am - 4 pm Sat. 12 noon - 2 pm

Episcopal TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH 469 NW Wall St. • 541-382-5542 www.trinitybend.org Sunday Schedule 8 am Holy Eucharist 9:30 am Christian Education for all ages 10:30 am Holy Eucharist (w/nursery care) 5 pm Holy Eucharist The Rev. Christy Close Erskine, Pastor

Latin sung Mass at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, July 18, at the downtown church.

Evangelical

*No confessions will be heard during Mass. The priest will leave the confessional at least 10 minutes prior to Mass.

THE SALVATION ARMY 755 NE 2nd Street, Bend 541-389-8888 SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP Sunday School 9:45 am Children & Adult Classes Worship Service – 11:00 am Captains John and Sabrina Tumey

ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH 1720 NW 19th Street Redmond, Oregon 97756 541-923-3390 Father Todd Unger, Pastor Mass Schedule: Weekdays 8:00 a.m. (except Wednesday) Wednesday 6:00 p.m. Saturday Vigil 5:30 p.m. First Saturday 8:00 a.m. (English) Sunday 8:00 a.m., 10:00 a.m. (English) 12:00 noon (Spanish) Confessions on Wednesdays from 5:00 to 5:45 p.m. and on Saturdays from 4:30 to 5:15 p.m.

Christian CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF REDMOND 536 SW 10th Redmond, OR 97756 541-548-2974 Fax: 541-548-5818 2 Worship Services 9:00 A.M. and 10:30 A.M. Sunday School-all ages Junior Church Kidmo

NEW HOPE EVANGELICAL 20080 Pinebrook Blvd.• 541-389-3436 Celebrate New Life at New Hope Church! Saturday 6:00 pm Sunday 9:00, 10:45 am, Pastor Randy Myers www.newhopebend.com

Foursquare CITY CENTER A Foursquare Fellowship Senior Pastors Steve & Ginny McPherson 549 SW 8th St., P.O. Box 475, Redmond, OR 97756 • 541-548-7128

Friday Night Service at 6:30 P.M.

Bible Church BEREAN BIBLE CHURCH In Partnership with American Missionary Fellowship Near Highland and 23rd Ave. 2378 SW Glacier Pl. Redmond, OR 97756 We preach the good news of Jesus Christ, sing great hymns of faith, and search the Scriptures together. Sunday Worship Service - 10:30 a.m. Bible Study - Thursday, 10:30 a.m. Pastor Ed Nelson 541-777-0784 www.berean-bible-church.org

Pastors Myron Wells Greg Strubhar Darin Hollingsworth July 11, 2010 A Look at “The Mess” The Book of Nehemiah Overview Speaker: Myron Wells POWELL BUTTE CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cowboy Fellowship Saturdays Potluck 6 pm Music and the Word 7 pm Sunday Worship Services 8:30 am - 10 am - 11 am Nursery & Children’s Church Pastors: Chris Blair & Glenn Bartnik 13720 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte 541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com

Sunday Worship Services: Daybreak Café Service 7:30 am Celebration Services 9:00 am and 10:45 am Wednesday Services High Definition (Adult) 7:00 pm UTurn - Middle School 7:00 pm Children’s Ministries 7:00 pm Thursdays High School (Connection) 6:30 pm Home Bible Studies throughout the week City Care Clinic also available. Kidz Center School, Preschool www.citycenterchurch.org “Livin’ the Incredible Mission”

Terrebonne Foursquare Church Located in the quiet community of Terrebonne. Overlooking the impressive Cascade Range and Smith Rock. Be inspired. Enjoy encouragement. Find friends. Encounter God. Get away, every Sunday. Adult Bible Study, Sunday 9:30 AM Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 AM DYG (High School & Trek (Middle School)) Monday 6:30 PM 7801 N. 7th St. Terrebonne West on “B” Avenue off of Hwy. 97; South on 7th St. at the end of the road 541-548-1232 dayspringchristiancenter.org WESTSIDE CHURCH Summer Sweeps – Part 1 Ugly Betty Pastor Bo Stern The high cost of cheap labels – letting go of old identities MAIN CAMPUS 2051 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 97701

Saturday at 6:30pm Sunday at 8:00, 9:00 and 10:45am Kurios - 1st Wednesday of each month at 6:30pm

Children’s Ministries for Infants thru 3rd grade Saturday at 6:30pm and Sunday at 9:00 and 10:45am Kurios - 1st Wednesday of each month at 6:30pm 4th and 5th Grades Meet: Saturday 6:30pm and Sunday 9:00 and 10:45am 6th thru 8th Grades Meet: Wednesday at 6:30pm Saturday at 6:30pm and Sunday at 9:00am 9th thru 12th Grades Meet: Wednesday at 6:30pm and Sunday at 10:45am SOUTH CAMPUS Elk Meadow Elementary School 60880 Brookswood Blvd, Bend 97701 Sunday at 11:00am

Children’s Ministries for Infants thru 5th grade Sunday at 11:00am www.westsidechurch.org 541-382-7504

Jewish Synagogues JEWISH COMMUNITY OF CENTRAL OREGON Serving Central Oregon for 20 Years, We Are a Non-Denominational Egalitarian Jewish Community Our Synagogue is located at 21555 Modoc Lane, Bend, Oregon 541-385-6421 • www.jccobend.com Rabbi Jay Shupack Rebbetzin Judy Shupack Shabbat and High Holiday Services Religious Education Program Bar/Bat Mitzvah Training Weekly Torah Study • Adult Education Call 541-385-6421 for information. We welcome everyone to our services. TEMPLE BETH TIKVAH Temple Beth Tikvah is a member of the Union for Reform Judaism. Our members represent a wide range of Jewish backgrounds. We welcome interfaith families and Jews by choice. We offer a wide range of monthly activities including social functions, services, children’s education, Torah study, and adult education Rabbi Alan Berg All services are held at the First United Methodist Church 680 NW Bond Street For more information go online to www.bethtikvahbend.org or call 541-388-8826 \Lutheran CONCORDIA LUTHERAN MISSION (LCMS) The mission of the Church is to forgive sins through the Gospel and thereby grant eternal life. (St. John 20:22-23, Augsburg Confession XXVIII.8, 10) 10 am Sunday School 11 am Divine Service The Rev. Willis C . Jenson, Pastor. 8286 11th St (Grange Hall), Terrebonne, OR www.lutheransonline.com/ condordialutheranmission Phone: 541-325-6773 GRACE FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH 2265 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend 541-382-6862 Sunday Worship 10:00 a.m. (Child Care Available) Education Hour 11:15 a.m.

Vacation Bible School at Trinity August 23–27 from 9:00 AM–12:00 PM “You’ll be zip, zap, zoomin’ for Jesus on Planet Zoom” www.trinitylutheranbend.org church e-mail: church@saints.org Pastor Robert Luinstra • Pastor David Carnahan All Ages Welcome School: 2550 NE Butler Mkt. Rd. 541-382-1850 • www.saints.org school e-mail: infor@saints.org

Sunday Worship 9:00 am Contemporary 10:45 am Traditional Wednesday 5:30 pm The Fold (9th-12th grades) Movie Night 6:00 pm Contemplative Worship Through the Week: Bible study, musical groups Study groups, fellowship All are Welcome, Always!

ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH ELCA Worship in the Heart of Redmond

www.bendfp.org 382 4401

SUMMER SCHEDULE Sunday Worship Service at 10:00 am

Unitarian Universalist

Children’s Room available during services Come Experience a warm, friendly family of worshipers. Everyone Welcome - Always. A vibrant, inclusive community. A rich and diverse music program for all ages Coffee, snacks and fellowship after each service M-W-F Women’s Exercise 9:30 am Wed. Bible Study at noon 3rd Th. Women’s Circle/Bible Study 2:00 pm 4th Tues. Men’s Club 6:00 pm, dinner Youth and Family Programs Active Social Outreach 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd. Redmond, OR 97756 ~ 541-923-7466 Pastor Katherine Hellier, Interim Pastor www.zionrdm.com

Mennonite THE RIVER MENNONITE CHURCH Sam Adams, Pastor Sunday, 3 pm at the Old Stone Church, 157 NW Franklin Ave., Bend Sunday School 2 years - 5th grade Nursery 0-2 years Visitors welcome

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTS OF CENTRAL OREGON “Diverse Beliefs, One Fellowship” We are a Welcoming Congregation UUFCO LAY LEADER NANCY STEVENS: “And I’ll Sing Every Day of My Life”: All of us have had the experience of having a special song or soaring piece of music touch an emotional chord within our being. How often have you said something like: “I still get goose bumps when I hear...” During this service, Nancy will share excerpts from her musical life journey that evoke the sense of humor, contemplation, and—yes, even songs—that still give her goose bumps when she sings them.

Childcare and is provided! Everyone is Welcome! See our website for more information Meeting place: OLD STONE CHURCH 157 NW FRANKLIN AVE., BEND Mail: PO Box 428, Bend OR 97709 www.uufco.org (541) 385-3908

Unity Community UNITY COMMUNITY

Church Office: 541-389-8787 E-mail: theriver@mailshack.com Send to: PO Box 808, Bend OR 97709 www.therivermennonite.org

Nazarene BEND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1270 NE 27 St. • 541-382-5496 Senior Pastor Virgil Askren SUNDAY 9:00 am Sunday School for all ages 10:15 am Worship Service 5 pm Hispanic Worship Service Nursery Care & Children’s Church ages 4 yrs–4th grade during all Worship Services “Courageous Living” on KNLR 97.5 FM 8:30am Sunday WEDNESDAY 6:30 pm Ladies Bible Study THURSDAY 10:00 am 50+ Bible Study WEEKLY Life Groups Please visit our website for a complete listing of activities for all ages. www.bendnaz.org

Non-Denominational ALFALFA COMMUNITY CHURCH Alfalfa Community Hall 541-330-0593, Alfalfa, Oregon Sunday School 9:30, Worship 10:30 We sing hymns, pray for individual needs, and examine the Bible verse by verse. You can be certain of an eternity with Jesus (Eph. 2:8,9) and you can discover His plan and purpose for your life (Eph. 2:10). We welcome your fellowship with us. CASCADE PRAISE CHRISTIAN CENTER For People Like You! NE Corner of Hwy 20 W. and Cooley Service Times: Sunday, 10 am Wednesday, 7 pm Youth: Wednesday, 7 pm Nursery and children's ministries Home fellowship groups Spirit Filled Changing lives through the Word of God 541-389-4462 • www.cascadepraise.org REDMOND BIBLE FELLOWSHIP Big Sky Conference Center 3732 SW 21st Street, Suite 103 (Next to Color Tile) Expositional, verse by verse teaching with emphasis on Paul’s Epistles. Great fellowship beginning at 10 am, ending at 11:30 every Sunday morning. For more information call Dave at 541-923-5314 or Mark at 541-923-6349 SOVEREIGN GRACE CHURCH Meeting at the Golden Age Club 40 SE 5th St., Bend Just 2 blocks SW of Bend High School Sunday Worship 10:00 am Sovereign Grace Church is dedicated to worshipping God and teaching the Bible truths recovered through the Reformation. Call for information about other meetings 541-385-1342 or 541-420-1667 http://www.sovereigngracebend.com/

Open Bible Standard CHRISTIAN LIFE CENTER 21720 E. Hwy. 20 · 541-389-8241 Sunday Morning Worship 8:45 AM, 10:45 AM Wednesday Mid-Week Service & Youth Programs 7:00 PM Nursery Care Provided

OF CENTRAL OREGON Join the Unity Community Sunday 10:00 am with Rev. Teri Hawkins Youth Program Provided The Unity Community meets at the Eastern Star Grange 62855 Powell Butte Hwy (near Bend Airport) Learn more about the Unity Community of Central Oregon at www.unitycentraloregon.com or by calling 541-388-1569United Church of God

United Church of God UNITED CHURCH OF GOD Saturday Services 1:30 pm Suite 204, Southgate Center (behind Butler Market Store South) 61396 S. Hwy. 97 at Powers Rd. 541-318-8329 We celebrate the Sabbath and Holy Days of the Bible as “a shadow of things to come” (Col. 2:16-17) and are committed to preaching the gospel of the Kingdom of God (re. Christ’s coming 1000-year rule on earth). Larry J. Walker, Pastor P.O. Box 36, La Pine, OR 97739, 541-536-5227 email: Larry_Walker@ucg.org Web site: www.ucgbend.org Free sermon downloads & literature including The Good News magazine & Bible course

United Methodist FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH (In the Heart of Down Town Bend) 680 NW Bond St. / 541-382-1672 Pastor Thom Larson 9:00am Contemporary Service 10:30am Traditional Service Sermon title “**Don’t Speak Of Love, Show Me*” Scripture: Luke 10:25-37 & Amos 7:7-17 Jubilee Service for Children *During the Week:* Womens Groups, Mens Groups, Youth Groups, Quilting, Crafting, Music & Fellowship. Open Hearts, Open Minds, Open Doors Rev. Thom Larson firstchurch@bendumc.org

CHURCH DIRECTORY LISTING 4 Saturdays and TMC:

$100 5 Saturdays and TMC:

$120

Men’s Bible Study, Wednesday 7:15 a.m. Pastor Joel LiaBraaten Evangelical Lutheran Church in America www.gflcbend.org NATIVITY LUTHERAN CHURCH 60850 Brosterhous Road at Knott, 541-388-0765 SUMMER SERVICE TIMES Temporary Meeting Location St. Helens Hall at Trinity Episcopal Church 231 NW Idaho Sunday Service 9:30 AM Choir meets at 8:30 AM Please tell your friends. Sermon by Pastor David C . Nagler “The Simple Truth” Come worship with us. (Child care provided on Sundays.) www.nativityinbend.com Evangelical Lutheran Church in America

Pastor Daniel N. LeLaCheur www.clcbend.com

Presbyterian COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 529 NW 19th Street (3/4 mile north of High School) Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 548-3367 Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor Rev. Heidi Bolt, Associate Pastor 8:30 am - Contemporary Music & Worship 8:30 am - Church School for Children 10:00 am - Adult Christian Education 11:00 am - Traditional Music & Worship 1:00 pm - Middle School Youth Wednesday: 4:30 pm - Elementary School Program 7:00 pm - Senior High Youth Small Groups Meet Regularly (Handicapped Accessible) www.redmondchurch.org

The Bulletin: Every Saturday on the church page. $20 Copy Changes: by 5 PM Tuesday

CO Marketplace: The First Tuesday of each month. $20 Copy Changes: by Monday 1 week prior to publication

Call Pat Lynch

383-0396 plynch@bendbulletin.com

Directory of Central Oregon Churches and Temples


COV ER S T OR I ES

A6 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Obama defends economic policies while touting Reid By Sheryl Gay Stolberg New York Times News Service

LAS VEGAS — President Barack Obama wrapped up a two-day campaign swing Friday with a full-throated defense of his economic policies and a warm-hearted embrace for the Senate Democratic leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, a one-time boxer who is counting on the president to help him fight his way through a tough re-election race. “When he first told me he was a boxer, he said, ‘Barack, I wasn’t the fastest, I wasn’t the hardest-hitting, but I knew how to take a punch,’” Obama said. “He knew how to take a punch, and Harry Reid became a pretty good boxer because he would simply outlast his opponents — he had a stronger will, and I think that tells you something about the kind of person he is.” Reid is running for his fifth

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Sabino Torres, left, and roommate James Jenkins joke on Friday about who is going to do the chores in their apartment. Torres and Jenkins, who have both been homeless for more than a year, moved into an apartment after receiving a $700 donation from Brittany Anderson, 18, of Redmond.

Colleges

Approval does not provide, promise funds The result is board approval of the plan’s most immediate pieces. The approval, however, does not provide any funding, nor does it serve as a promise for any future funding for an expanded campus. Those pieces include OSUCascades’ plan to create a university college setting in which OSU-Cascades and COCC partner to offer a four-year experience to students interested in attending the university. Students dually enrolled in COCC and OSU-Cascades for those first years will take classes together in a cohort and participate together in programs to give them the feeling of a four-year university. That could get under way as early as fall 2011. The other approved pieces are a hub-and-spoke model allowing students from other parts of Central Oregon to access OSUCascades programs on COCC’s current and future satellite campuses in Redmond, Prineville and Madras; increasing path-

Landfill Continued from A1 County staff bored holes into the area to get an idea how thick the layers of good soil are, and to estimate how much might be available, Schimke said, and they sized the new waste cell so that excavating it would produce enough of the good soil to cover the closed area of the landfill. To produce the necessary 290,000 cubic yards of soil, county staff believed they would have to remove a total of 790,000 cubic yards of material. But there proved to be approximately 20,000 cubic yards less good soil than needed in that area, so county officials decided to have the contractor dig into a larger area to find more of the material. Variations in the thickness of layers of good soil could be one reason the area did not produce as much as expected, Schimke said, although he added that is just speculation.

David Holley can be reached at 541-383-0323 or at dholley@bendbulletin.com.

— Chris Clouart, managing director The Bethlehem Inn

“We were very close to adopting a motion (on Thursday), but in the interest of being clear on what we were adopting and the direction we would be giving, we asked (a group of board members) to put their heads together (and) refine the recommendation.” — Paul Kelly, chairman, Oregon State Board of Higher Education

ways between K-12 education and post-secondary education; and removing the University of Oregon from the campus in the coming two years. OSU-Cascades will take over all University of Oregon programs currently offered at the campus to make the campus operate more efficiently. Currently, both OSU and University of Oregon operate degree programs on the campus. Under the recommended plan, OSU would become the only entity on campus. UO faculty can apply for OSU faculty positions, and students currently enrolled in UO programs on the Cascades campus will be able to complete their degrees.

UO attitude lauded “I want to give a commendation to U of O, to the gracefulness to which this new approach is being pursued,” Board member Rosemary Powers said. “It’s a good example of that focus on student success that we all need to share.” But other pieces of the HEAT plan will undergo further review.

“As many holes as you drill and as many tests as you do, you’re really not sure what you’re going to get until you excavate,” Schimke said.

How landfill cap works Deschutes County is using four feet of soil to cap the closed portion of Knott Landfill, and the county had to hire consultants to investigate the soil’s properties and determine whether it would work. Federal law calls for landfill covers to keep water out of the landfill, minimize erosion and prevent waste from escaping into the groundwater, surface water or atmosphere, according to a Knott Landfill closure plan prepared for the county. The success of a soil landfill cap rests in part on how well it holds water, said John Straughan, an engineer with the Department of Environmental Quality’s Solid Waste Program. “Generally the concept is that

HEAT’s recommendation that it strengthen the regional economy by expanding research opportunities and creating signature research programs at OSUCascades will be tabled for now and sent to the academic strategies committee. It’s expected to come back for a vote before the full board in September. The long-term vision of converting OSU-Cascades into a four-year standalone university will also go to the committee and come back for discussion and a vote in September. Schueler said he understood the board’s desire to discuss further Central Oregon’s plan to someday have its own university independent of Oregon State University and other existing universities.

‘Not necessarily committing’ “The idea that the long-term vision statement should be looked at in-depth and reviewed is a good idea,” he said. “The recommendations in motion are to accept the recommendations that can be implemented to improve access and program availability in Central Oregon while not necessarily committing to the long-term vision.” Board member Jim Francesconi applauded Schueler’s work. “You did a terrific job marshalling forces and exciting people,” Francesconi said. Schueler pointed to the Central Oregon community’s help in creating the long-term plan. “This energized the Central Oregon community a little bit,” he said. “It’s a good step in the right direction. It will give a little bit of help for (Vice President Becky Johnson) to execute her plans and make OSU-Cascades an asset to the community.” Sheila G. Miller can be reached at 541-617-7831 or at smiller@bendbulletin.com.

you have a deep enough soil layer that will store the water from the rainfall and that the plants during the spring, summer and fall will grow and pull that moisture out of the cap,” Straughan said. “Therefore, there’s no moisture getting through to the waste.” Landfills east of the Cascades often have less precipitation to absorb, compared to their counterparts in the Willamette Valley. Knott Landfill is located in a semi-arid climate with an average of 11.5 inches of precipitation a year, consultants noted in the landfill closure plan. At some point in the future, the closed area of the landfill will likely open as a park. Schimke said he could not speculate as to when, because the county and Bend Park & Recreation District need to work together to determine the type of park needed in the area. Hillary Borrud can be reached at 541-617-7829 or at hborrud@bendbulletin.com.

Calls out opponent There, the president took aim at Reid’s Republican opponent, Sharron Angle, calling her out (though not by name) for referring to the $20 billion fund set aside by BP to reimburse victims of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico as a slush fund. Earlier Thursday, Angle’s campaign had issued a statement calling the remark incorrect and saying there was “some confusion”

White House weighs on gay marriage ruling By Denise Lavoie The Associated Press

BOSTON — A key part of a law denying married gay couples federal benefits has been thrown out the window in Massachusetts, the first state to legalize gay marriage. The ball now lies in the White House’s court, which must carefully calculate the next move by an administration that has faced accusations it has not vigorously defended the law of the land. President Barack Obama has said repeatedly that he would like to see the federal Defense of Marriage Act, known as DOMA, repealed. But the Justice Department has defended the constitutionality of the law, which it is required to do.

The administration was silent Friday on whether it would appeal rulings by U.S. District Judge Joseph Tauro. DOMA defines marriage as between a man and a woman, prevents the federal government from recognizing gay marriages and allows states to deny recognition of same-sex unions performed elsewhere. Since the law passed in 1996, many states have instituted their own bans on gay marriage, and a handful have allowed the practice. Tauro ruled Thursday in two separate cases that DOMA is unconstitutional because it interferes with the right of a state to define marriage and denies married gay couples an

array of federal benefits given to heterosexual married couples, including health insurance and the benefits of filing joint tax returns. The rulings apply only to Massachusetts, where same-sex marriage has been legal since 2004. But gay marriage supporters are hoping the rulings could prompt other states to file their own challenges to DOMA and could also give momentum to a bill pending in Congress that would repeal the law.

Why pay retail? 541-385-5950 New Bend Location:

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Continued from A1 The committee was composed of 22 people, including representatives from Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties. On Thursday, board members expressed some concern that the plan’s more ambitious pieces needed more attention from the board’s academic strategies committee. By Friday, they were ready for a vote. “We were very close to adopting a motion (on Thursday), but in the interest of being clear on what we were adopting and the direction we would be giving, we asked (a group of board members) to put their heads together (and) refine the recommendation,” board Chairman Paul Kelly said.

“This is really good. This is what we consider to be a big success story.”

1860 – 2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860 – 2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860 – 2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860 – 2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860 – 2010 — THE

Continued from A1 Anderson is headed off to school, too. At the end of this month she leaves for Colorado State University, where she’ll study equine sciences. She hopes to someday own a business that works with horses.

Chris Clouart, the managing director of The Bethlehem Inn, said the donation gives Torres and Jenkins firm footing. “This is really good,” he said. “This is what we consider to be a big success story.”

about it, but Obama made it clear he was not buying it. “Her campaign puts out a memo saying, ‘Well, she didn’t mean that,’” he said, a tinge of sarcasm in his voice. “They say there was some confusion. And I’m sure she meant ‘slush fund’ in the nicest possible way.” The event at the university Friday morning was far more subdued, as the president addressed a polite crowd of about 600 business leaders, teachers and students in a clean, welllighted auditorium. He used the speech to defend what he called “those tough steps that we took” — steps that the administration knows are unpopular, like bailing out banks and auto companies — and to make the case that his policies are turning the economy around. “The question is, No. 1, ‘Are we on the right track?’ The answer is yes,” Obama said.

LAST ROUNDUP 1860 –2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860 –2010 — THE LAST ROUNDUP 1860–2010

Gift

term, and this was Obama’s second trip to Las Vegas to stump for him this year. Friday’s speech at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas was the second side-by-side appearance for the two men this week. On Thursday night, Obama delivered a fiery endorsement for Reid at a packed fundraiser that drew 3,000 people and raised $800,000.


C OV ER S T OR I ES

Recruits

MODERN WARFARE

Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times

A pilot in a remote site at Kandahar Air Field uses a camera pod to remotely steer a Reaper aircraft back into base after a mission. Thirty-eight Predator and Reaper drones have crashed during combat missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, and nine more during training on bases in the U.S., with each crash costing between $3.7 million and $5 million.

Military’s drones beset by problems By David Zucchino Los Angeles Times

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan — The U.S. military often portrays its drone aircraft as hightech marvels that can be operated seamlessly from thousands of miles away. But Pentagon accident reports reveal that the pilotless aircraft suffer from frequent system failures, computer glitches and human error. Design and system problems were never fully addressed in the haste to push the fragile plane into combat over Afghanistan shortly after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks more than eight years ago. Air Force investigators continue to cite pilot mistakes, coordination snafus, software failures, outdated technology and inadequate flight manuals. Thirty-eight Predator and Reaper drones have crashed during combat missions in Afghanistan and Iraq, and nine more during training on bases in the U.S. — with each crash costing between $3.7 million and $5 million. Altogether, the Air Force says there have been 79 drone accidents costing at least $1 million each. Accident rates are dropping, but the raw numbers of mishaps are increasing as use of the aircraft skyrockets, according to Air Force safety experts. But no lives are lost, and for some experts that’s the most important point: For them, drones are the vanguard of a new type of remote warfare that minimizes the risk to U.S. personnel. The number of crashes, however, illustrates how quickly the unmanned aircraft have become an essential part of U.S. combat operations. At least 38 drones are in flight over Afghanistan and Iraq at any given time. Flight hours over Afghanistan and Iraq more than tripled between 2006 and 2009. However, ground commanders in Afghanistan say only about a third of their requests for drone missions are met because of shortages of aircraft and pilots. The loss of aircraft to crashes and other accidents can hamper combat operations — and risk the lives of troops who depend on them for reconnaissance and air cover.

THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 A7

Drone crashes Crashes of Predator and Reaper unmanned aircraft flown by the U.S. Air Force in Afghanistan and Iraq: By fiscal year, Oct. 1 to Sept. 30 10 8

6*

6 4 2 0 * Partial-year results for fiscal 2010 (through July 1) Note: Includes nine crashes during training on bases in the U.S.

© 2010 MCT Source: Air Force Accident Investigation Board Graphic: David Zucchino, Los Angeles Times

The Air Force acknowledges that armed drones were not ready when first deployed as the U.S. military geared up for the campaign to oust the Taliban and al-Qaida from Afghanistan. Most weapons systems are tested and refined for years. Unarmed drones had been in use since the mid-1990s, but the first armed version went to war just nine months after it was retrofitted. It was pushed into use after a Predator successfully launched Hellfire antitank missiles at the Naval Air Weapons testing range at China Lake in January 2001.

‘Didn’t have the luxury’ to fix errors “It was never designed to go to war when it did,” said Lt. Col. Travis Burdine, a manager for the Air Force Unmanned Aircraft Systems Task Force. “We didn’t have the luxury of ironing out some of the problems.” Technicians bought off-theshelf equipment at Radio Shack and Best Buy to build a system to allow ground forces to see the drones’ video feeds. At least one drone crashed because it had no fuel gauge, and the aircraft ran out of fuel. In another crash, investigators cited a design flaw: The “kill engine” switch was located next to the switch to lower

the landing gear, and a groundbased pilot confused the two. Even now, the planes are not designed for the amount of use they’re getting, their defenders say. The 27-foot Predators and 36-foot Reapers operate under conditions that put enormous stress on the light drones — and the humans who operate them. “These airplanes are flying 20,000 hours a month, OK?” said retired Rear Adm. Thomas J. Cassidy Jr., president of the aircraft systems group at General Atomics Aeronautical Systems in San Diego, which makes Predators and Reapers. “That’s a lot of flying,” Cassidy said. “Some get shot down. Some run into bad weather. Some, people do stupid things with them. Sometimes they just run them out of gas.” The drones flew 185,000 hours over Afghanistan and Iraq in 2009, more than triple the number of hours flown in 2006. The Air Force expects that number to grow to 300,000 hours this year. “The Air Force needs as many as they can get,” said Col. Jeff Kappenman, director of the Center of Excellence for UAS Research, Education and Training at the University of North Dakota. “There has been exponential growth in need and demand.” Air Force officials say design and training improvements have lowered the Predator’s accident rate. They say lessons learned from that plane’s problems have solved some issues for the larger and more potent Reaper, in use in combat since 2007. Accident rates per 100,000 hours dropped to 7.5 for the Predator and 16.4 for the Reaper last year, according to the Air Force. The Predator rate is comparable to that of the F-16 fighter at the same stage, Air Force officers say, and just under the 8.2 rate for small, single-engine private airplanes flown in the U.S. The crash figures do not include drones flown over Pakistan by the CIA, which does not acknowledge the covert program. But independent experts said Predators flown over Pakistan probably experience problems similar to those flown by the Air Force in Afghanistan and Iraq.

JULY 10 & 11 Downtown Bend

GOSPEL ’N’ BRUNCH Sunday July 11 • Main Stage

SONOS Sunday July 11 Sonos Booher Brothers Contemporary Gospel Choir of the Cascades Gourmet brunch will be served from 11am-1pm. Tickets for the brunch will be available at Saxon’s Fine Jewelers, 541-389-6655 and on-site.

BOOHER BROTHERS

THE GOSPEL CHOIR OF THE CASCADES

For accommodations, please contact C3 Events, 541-389-0995

PRESENTED BY THE BULLETIN • HOSTED BY THE DOWNTOWN BEND BUSINESS ASSOCIATION

Continued from A1 Strickland was part of a committee for the National Research Council that studied military recruitment and marketing in 2002. For a glimpse at prime recruiting territory for this new military, take a look at Mankato. In the past two years, the Mankato area has had 143 recruits sign on the dotted line to join the various branches of the military, with the Minnesota National Guard by far the leader. Last year, the Guard boasted a 60 percent share of the military recruitment market. In Mankato, the recruiting effort has included things such as trucking in climbing walls at high schools after proms to sponsoring tournaments when the latest version of the combat video game “Call of Duty” comes out. Knocking down conventional wisdom, it is also in places such as Mankato where potential recruits are more likely to meet the increasingly demanding standards the military puts on its enlistees. “It’s been a lot of long hours to

Twain Continued from A1 Twain’s decree will be put to the test when the University of California Press publishes the first of three volumes of the 500,000-word “Autobiography of Mark Twain” in November. Twain dictated most of it to a stenographer in the four years before his death at 74 on April 21, 1910. In popular culture today, Twain is “Colonel Sanders without the chicken, the avuncular man who told stories,” Ron Powers, the author of “Mark Twain: A Life,” said in a phone interview. “He’s been

learn what the area is like and what the area needed, plus what the units needed,” said Staff Sgt. Lawrence Eustice, one of three Guard recruiters stationed in Mankato. Guard recruiters are all volunteers and receive no commission or extra benefits for the number of recruits they sign. “They get paid the same whether the applicant says yes or no,” said Maj. Jess Ulrick, commander of the southern Minnesota Guard recruiting team.

Sense of community, desire to serve Recruiters such as Eustice, who grew up in nearby Janesville, say a sense of community and a desire to serve are motivating the high number of military recruits in the Mankato area. Detractors say a stifling economy and few choices are the motivation, reflecting national recruitment trends. Rural and semi-rural communities have always been outstanding recruiting markets, experts say, because kids want to get out of town. Blue-collar and middle-class areas are heavily represented in the all-volun-

scrubbed and sanitized, and his passion has been kind of forgotten in all these long decades. But here he is talking to us, without any filtering at all, and what comes through that we have lost is precisely this fierce, unceasing passion.” Versions of the autobiography have been published in 1924, 1940 and 1959. But the original editor, Albert Bigelow Paine, was a stickler for propriety, cutting entire sections he thought offensive. “Paine was a Victorian editor,” said Robert Hirst, curator and general editor of the Mark Twain Papers and Project at the Bancroft Library at the University of California,

teer force because, on average, potential recruits from poorer communities may have criminal backgrounds, lower test scores, or have difficulty meeting the physical requirements. Recruits from higher-income areas are likely to go through Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) in college or enter the service academies. Despite the high numbers of enlistees, the atmosphere in Mankato is not always conducive to recruitment. In April, members of the Mankato Area Activist Collective set up a counter recruiting table outside a recruitment station at a local mall, protesting what they said where lies perpetrated by recruiters about military service. “The college and the community draw people in, and once they are in and they can’t succeed either educationally or professionally, they are sitting with that one option left and it’s military service,” said James Dimock, an assistant professor of communication studies at Minnesota State University, Mankato, and a faculty adviser to the group. “People with financial options almost never choose the military.”

Berkeley, where Twain’s papers are housed. “He has an exaggerated sense of how dangerous some of Twain’s statements are going to be, which can extend to anything: politics, sexuality, the Bible, anything that’s just a little too radical. This goes on for a good long time, a protective attitude that is very harmful.” By the time all three volumes are available, Hirst said, “about half will not have ever been in print before.”

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Private colleges Many Indians call ‘honor killings’ a disgrace outspend public ones on teaching By Jim Yardley

New York Times News Service

By Janet Lorin Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — Private research universities spent twice as much as their public counterparts to teach each student in the 2007-2008 school year, widening a cost gap that can make private colleges unaffordable to students without financial aid. The private institutions, on average, laid out $19,520 for each student for instruction that year, a 22 percent increase from a decade earlier, the Delta Project on Postsecondary Education Costs, Productivity & Accountability, a Washington-based nonprofit research group, said Friday. Public universities spent $9,732 for each student, up 10 percent in the decade, according to the report. The spending rate in 2008 “may turn out to be a high point in funding for higher education,” the Delta Project said in its report. The recession that began in December 2007 forced colleges to cut budgets, beginning in the second half of 2008, as endowment income fell and states cut subsidies.

Reduction in revenue likely to be permanent “I expect we’re going to see revenues are not going to continue to grow and institutions are going to be having to pay much more attention to permanent changes in how they spend their resources,” Jane Wellman, an author of the report and the Delta Project’s executive director, said in an interview. Higher education “has seen a

“I expect we’re going to see revenues are not going to continue to grow and institutions are going to be having to pay much more attention to permanent changes in how they spend their resources.” — Jane Wellman, Delta Project’s executive director permanent reduction of roughly 10 percent of its revenue base — more in some areas of the country, less in others — money that won’t be coming back, and can’t realistically be made up in tuition increases,” the authors wrote. College tuitions have risen faster than inflation and family incomes, according to the report. “The steadiest source of new revenue in all sectors was from tuition,” the authors wrote. The Delta Project report doesn’t name any colleges. The biggest private research universities by enrollment are New York University and the University of Southern California, according to a ranking published last August by the Chronicle of Higher Education. The largest public research universities in the nation are Ohio State, the University of Florida and the University of Texas at Austin, according to the Chronicle listing.

COOLING OFF IN THE EAST

KODERMA, India — When Nirupama Pathak left this remote mining region for graduate school in New Delhi, she seemed to be leaving the old India for the new. Her parents paid her tuition and did not resist when she wanted to choose her own career. But choosing a husband was another matter. Her family was Brahmin, the highest Hindu caste, and when Pathak, 22, announced she was secretly engaged to a young man from a caste lower than hers, her family began pressing her to change her mind. They warned of social ostracism and accused her of defiling their religion. Days after Pathak returned home in late April, she was found dead in her bedroom. The police have arrested her mother, Sudha Pathak, on suspicion of murder. The family contends that the death was a suicide. The postmortem report revealed another unexpected element to the case: Pathak was pregnant. “One thing is absolutely clear,” said Prashant Bhushan, a social activist and lawyer now advising Pathak’s fiance. “Her family was trying their level best to prevent her from marrying that boy. The pressure was such that either she was driven to suicide or she was killed.” In India, where the tension between traditional and modern mores reverberates throughout society, Pathak’s death comes amid an apparent resurgence of so-called honor killings against couples who breach Hindu marriage traditions.

Penalties examined This week, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh ordered a cabinet-level commission to consider tougher penalties in honor killings. In June, India’s Supreme Court sent notices to seven Indian states, as well as to the national government, seeking responses about what was being done to address the problem. The phenomenon of honor killings is most prevalent in some northern states, especially Haryana, where village caste councils, or khap panchayats, often operate as an extralegal morals police force, issuing edicts against couples who marry outside their caste or who marry within the same village — regarded as a religious violation since villages

Keith Bedford / The New York Times News Service

Friends and supporters of journalist Nirupama Pathak, whose death is suspected to be an honor killing, hold a candlelight vigil to protest her death in New Delhi. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh ordered a cabinet-level commission to consider tougher penalties for honor killings as new cases of killings or harassment continue to make the news in India almost every week.

“One thing is absolutely clear. Her family was trying their level best to prevent her from marrying that boy. The pressure was such that either she was driven to suicide or she was killed.” — Prashant Bhushan, social activist and lawyer

are often regarded as extended families. Even as the court system has sought to curb these councils, politicians have hesitated, since the councils often control significant vote blocs in local elections. New cases of killings or harassment appear in the Indian news media almost every week. Last month, police arrested three men for the honor killings of a couple in New Delhi who had married outside their castes, as well as the murder of a woman who eloped with a man from another caste. Two of the suspects are accused of murdering their sisters, and an uncle of the slain couple spoke of their murders as justifiable. “What is wrong in it?” the uncle, Dharmaveer Nagar, told the Indian news media. “Murder is wrong, but this is socially the best thing that has been done.” Inter-caste marriages are protected under Indian law, yet

social attitudes remain largely resistant. In a 2006 survey cited in a U.N. report, 76 percent of respondents deemed the practice unacceptable. An overwhelming majority of Hindu couples continue to marry within their castes, and newspapers are filled with marital advertisements in which parents, seeking to arrange a marriage for a son or daughter, specify caste among lists of desired attributes like profession and educational achievement.

Opinions polarized “This is part and parcel of our culture, that you marry into your own caste,” said Dharmendra Pathak, the father of Pathak, during an interview in his home. “Every society has its own culture. Every society has its own traditions.” Pathak’s death remains under investigation. Her body was discovered in her upstairs bedroom on the morning of April 29, while

her mother was the only person at home. Neighbors and family members said she been electrocuted, but changed their story to say she had hanged herself. The police arrested the mother after the postmortem report concluded that Pathak had been suffocated. But Pathak’s father and her two brothers have argued that the postmortem was flawed and claimed that her death had been a suicide. The family produced a suicide note and persuaded a local magistrate to order an investigation into the boyfriend. For now, the case has polarized opinion. In Koderma, supporters of the Pathak family have rallied for the release of the mother from jail. In New Delhi, former classmates of Pathak and other supporters have held candlelight vigils, calling for the case to be prosecuted as an honor killing. “This kind of the thing is increasing everywhere,” said Girija Vyas, a member of Parliament and the president of the National Commission of Women. “There should not be these things in the 21st century. These things must be stopped.”

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Governors convention will be last hurrah for many By Michael A. Memoli McClatchy-Tribune News Service

BOSTON — As the nation’s governors gather for a convention here this weekend, the challenge facing state leaders is familiar: balancing budgets as revenues decline and the demand for government resources rises. But for a sizable number of those in attendance at the National Governors Association’s summer meeting, the task of navigating those challenges will not be theirs much longer. By next year, no fewer than 24 states will have new governors. Most openings are a result of term limits, but at least a halfdozen more governors chose not to seek re-election in a turbulent political environment. In addition, one incumbent already has been defeated in a primary election, and many more face difficult races this November.

Chairman may bail Even the man who is to take over as the NGA’s new chairman, West Virginia’s Democratic Gov. Joe Manchin, could leave his seat early to run for the state’s vacant Senate seat. As a result, the final turnover rate could surpass 30 governorships, believed to be a historic high. “It’s quite significant at a challenging time to the states,” said Republican Jim Douglas, outgoing chairman of the group and the soon-to-be former governor

of Vermont. The turnover could be significant on a political level as well. Democrats now have a 26-24 majority of statehouses. But 37 states are holding gubernatorial elections this fall. The non-partisan Cook Political Report rates 12 of those races as potential Republican victories. Of seven states seen as potential Democratic wins, only one would represent a pickup from Republicans.

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Financial challenges The financial challenges faced by governors are a focal point of the conference. A study by the National Conference of State Legislatures found that states were forced to grapple with combined budget deficits of nearly $150 billion in 2009. The budget picture is growing worse, as stopgap federal aid is due to expire and an anticipated recovery has been slow to materialize. “This downturn is deeper than I think we could have anticipated, and that’s why you’re seeing such tremendous responses in terms of budget cuts at this point,” Douglas said. The reality that many governors are attending their final NGA meeting is not lost on the attendees, who express concern about what new governors will inherit, not just with state finances but in implementing the new federal health care law, a major topic of discussion on the agenda.

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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JULY 10, 2010

SPOTLIGHT Talk of the Town on ‘locavore’ movement COTV will host a Talk of the Town televised town hall from 5 to 6 p.m. July 21 at Riverfront Plaza, 875 N.W. Brooks St., Bend. The event, titled “Our Food Revolution: The Increasing Appetite for Local Options,” will address issues of the “local food movement.” Topics will include farmers markets, community gardens, community-supported agriculture and more. There is no cost to attend, but an RSVP is requested. Contact: 541-388-5814, talk@ bendbroadband.com or www. talkofthetownco.com.

Music school offers low-cost band camp Bend’s Cascade Community School of Music will offer a lowcost band camp for middle-school students in August. The camp, scheduled for the week of Aug. 23 to get kids primed for school, features specialists who will give beginning and intermediate students plenty of individual attention. Tuition for the entire week is $45, thanks to underwriting by a grant from the Roundhouse Foundation. For more details, call CCSM at 541-382-6866, and to register for the camp, visit www.ccschoolofmusic.org.

Double your theater donation dollars If you’ve been considering supporting Innovation Theatre Works and its new Bend Performing Arts Center, now’s the time. Two anonymous patrons have pledged $10,000 in matching donations to the professional theater company, meaning that through Aug. 1, community donations will be doubled up to a total of $20,000. The theater company is seeking funds to pay for theatrical lighting, sound, seating and upgrades to its building. The nonprofit also is trying to raise money for the first production in its new location, “Bonnie & Clyde, the Musical.” To make a donation, click the “Donate” button at www.innovationtw.org or mail a check to Innovation Theatre Works, 1900 N.E. Third St., Suite 106-138, Bend, OR 97701. Contact: 541-504-6721.

Century West ’hood welcoming members The Century West Neighborhood Association will hold its General Membership Festival on July 17 at William E. Miller Elementary School, 300 N.W. Crosby Drive, Bend. The event will take place from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and will feature music, food, raffles, a meeting and elections. Organizations exhibiting at the festival include Bend Police, Bend Area Transit, Bend Fire Department, Central Oregon Community College, and others. Membership in the Century West Neighborhood Association is open to anyone who lives, owns property or operates a business within the boundaries, roughly the areas along Mt. Washington and Century drives from Skyliner Road southwest to the city limits. Contact: bendneighborhoods. org/centurywest or bobdellie@ bendbroadband.com.

Booklet available on building bird boxes If you’re a backyard birder without a bird nest box, rest easy: There’s a way to build your own. Sisters-based naturalist Jim Anderson has completed a 31-page booklet that details how to build and place a bird nest box in your yard to cater to feathered friends. To receive a copy of the booklet, send a note with a 5-by-7 inch selfaddressed, stamped envelope to P.O. Box 1513, Sisters, OR 97759. Anderson will send a free, autographed copy of the booklet to you. Contact: 541-388-1659 or naturalselection@uci.net. — From staff reports

Photo by Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

Starbucks barista Max Wegerbauer tells a joke to customers Chrissy Lazzerini, 32, from Redmond, and her son Alex, 5, at Fred Meyer in Redmond on Monday.

Heard the one about the Redmond barista?

Max Wegerbauer’s jokes cured his own depression, and he’s sharing the medicine

Back then, he endured a rotten six-week period during which he lost his job of 18 years, went through a move, and, already divorced, saw the demise of the relationship he was in. “Now, Psychology Today will tell you those are the three most stressful things you can do, and I knew that,” says Wegerbauer, who sounds remarkably similar to the late comedian George Carlin when he speaks. “I said, ‘That’s all right, I’ll go through them all at once; get over it, then I don’t have to go through it three

town radio station in Porterville, Calif. He feared listeners would pick up on his state of mind. “Along with all the other things, I was broke. I mean, really. I was flat busted, which had never happened before in my life. So I said, ‘I gotta do something.’ I had no money to go to a psychiatrist or a doctor or a counselor or anything.” What he did was venture inside a used bookstore, where he bought three joke books for a dollar each. See Jokes / B6

By David Jasper The Bulletin

hen he was 55, Max Wegerbauer struggled with depression. “It was a big turning point in my life. It’s why I tell jokes,” he said Monday, sitting on a stool at Starbucks, where he works inside the Redmond Fred Meyer. We’ll get to the jokes. First the bad news. Back when he became depressed, Wegerbauer was not the popular Starbucks barista he is today, at 74, married, quick with a laugh and quicker with the wit.

W

separate times.’ “But that didn’t work very well. I got severely depressed,” he says. “I mean, going from the point where you’re driving a sports car and can donate to a charity to having $400 in your pocket and no car, and that’s it? That was brutal. It was not a fun situation.”

The best medicine Later, the disheartened Wegerbauer landed a job as a disc jockey at a small-

Vanity in the age of the camera phone Study shows we prefer photos that look self-made

flagrantly — ever since they signed up for AOL more than a decade ago: taking a good picture of themselves. Finally, the iGeneration has a good head shot.

By David Colman New York Times News Service

Self-presentation

Smile. At least that was the conclusion of a recent study by OkCupid.com, the popular dating site for twentysomethings. To determine which factors made a photo more attractive, the staff tabulated the number of interested responses to thousands of pictures, then broke down their characteristics. The findings were intriguing, to say the least. Women responded more often to pictures in which the man is looking off-camera, not into it. Men were more likely to respond to pictures in which the woman is at home (and looking a little come-hither), rather than out with friends or on a trip. But for both sexes, pictures in which the subjects are smiling uniformly trounced the stone-faced ones. “For pictures of men, especially,” said Sam Yagan, a founder of the site, “the smile is critical.” Good to know. But what was most striking to Yagan about the OkCupid pictures was how much thought and effort went into even the most casual snap-

The fine art of self-presentation used to be something mastered only by models and movie stars. Mere mortals did their best for special occasions, like family outings, with what was, one hoped, a single, pleasant expression. Then having a camera phone aimed your way became as much a part of life’s pleasure and pain as ordering coffee at Starbucks. “People are so much more attuned to adjusting how they look in front of a camera,” said Keith Gould, the creator of Daily Mugshot, a free website that allows users to automatically upload a picture of themselves every day. (The results can be embedded, like any picture, on your own Web page, and they can be played in rapid sequence, like an animation.) “Now they make precise decisions about every part of their face and angle of their head.” As a result, the self-snap is fast becoming as vital a facet of how we present ourselves as our clothes, figures or voices. See Self / B6

ABOVE LEFT: An undated self-portrait by Rachel Chandler. ABOVE: An undated self-portrait by Dean Isidro. LEFT: An undated portrait by Rachel Chandler with Purple Editor Olivier Zahm. shots. “People are really putting their best foot forward, for complete strangers,” he said. “It’s pretty remarkable.” Remarkable indeed. Human vanity has been jolted by any number of power surges over

the years: the late-Neolithic-era development of the mirror, the late-19th-century popularization of makeup, the late reign of Tom Ford at Gucci. With the debut last week of Apple’s newest iPhone, the latest show

of vanity has kicked into high gear. With a second camera lens that faces the viewer (instead of the view), the iPhone has simplified something people have been struggling with — some covertly, some


T EL EV ISION

B2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Boy upset by talk of family finances Dear Abby: I’m a boy in eighth grade with a big problem. My parents constantly talk about their finances in front of me. We are not poor, but we’re far from rich. It bothers me when they talk about how much money they owe or if they’re in debt or not. I have asked my parents several times not to talk about money in front of me. However, they insist that I’m old enough to hear about it. I’m a natural worrier, and when they talk about financial issues it makes me think something terrible is going to happen to us. What should I do? — Still A Kid In Linwood, N.J. Dear Still A Kid: One of the hardest things for many people to talk about is money — or lack of it. And yet, not talking about it can cause more problems than airing the subject. Your parents may be trying to educate you about finances because many schools don’t do it. But if it becomes too stressful for you, then leave the room. Dear Abby: Although I don’t think my last name is a particularly difficult one, people often struggle with it when they go to write it after I say it. I understand this and it does not bother me. As a matter of habit, I routinely spell my name immediately after I say it, to assist the person who is writing it down. A security guard who works at a client’s building I visit a few times a year has reacted in a hostile manner because I spell my name when she asks for it. She may be under the impression that I think my name is beyond her capabilities — which isn’t true. Abby, is spelling my name condescending or disrespectful to someone in a business setting? Is my routine practice annoying or is the guard overly sensitive? — Bill “X” In Georgetown, Del. Dear Bill “X”: She may be overly sensitive or, because you have

DEAR ABBY already spelled your name for her several times, she may be under the impression that you think she’s not very bright. Perhaps in the future you should modify your delivery: “My name is Bill ‘Xybleniwicz.’ I’ll spell it for you if you’d like me to. ...” Dear Abby: For the past several years I have worked in a medical office. I see patients every three months or as little as once a year. Two years ago, my mother was diagnosed with cancer. She passed away last spring. Because of the stress of my dear mother’s illness and death, my weight has fluctuated. Some of my patients don’t hesitate to point out how “chunky” I have become. One woman even went so far as to ask if I was “happy with the way I have let myself go.” Abby, how do I defend my weight gain without getting into my personal life? — Impatient With My Patients In Rhode Island Dear Impatient: Please accept my sympathy for the loss of your mother. I’m sure the last two years have been painful. I see no reason why, if someone is so insensitive as to mention your weight, you shouldn’t let the person have the truth with both barrels. If that doesn’t shame him or her into an apology, nothing will. However, because you prefer to conceal it, try this response: “You know, I gained this weight the old-fashioned way — one bite at a time, and that’s the way it’ll have to come off.” Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby. com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Actor brings longer life to ‘Blood’ role By David Hiltbrand

Brilliantly played by Nelsan Ellis, Lafayette has a tongue saltier than the gumbo he serves up as the grill cook at Merlotte’s on HBO’s “True Blood.”

The Philadelphia Inquirer

It scarcely seems plausible that an ordinary human could be the most vivid character on HBO’s ghoulish “True Blood,” a show teeming with supernatural, largerthan-death freaks. Then again, “ordinary” is probably not the best way to describe Lafayette Reynolds, an emphatically gay man in a small Southern town. Brilliantly played by Nelsan Ellis, Lafayette is a redneck-thumping, drug-dealing diva with a tongue saltier than the gumbo he serves up as the grill cook at Merlotte’s honky-tonk. Amid “True Blood’s” menagerie of vampires, shapeshifters and werewolves, Lafayette’s bayou bohemian was the hardest role to cast, according to creator Allan Ball, who adapted the show from Charlaine Harris’ Sookie Stackhouse novels. “Whenever you have a character in which one of his defining qualities is his sexuality, it’s always challenging,” says Ball via e-mail, “because you don’t want to bring in someone who’s going to play that in a phony way.” That Ellis has fashioned Lafayette into one of the most incandescent homosexuals in the annals of television is all the more impressive when you learn that the actor is straight. A former Marine, no less. From Camp Lejeune to Camp Camp. How do you pull that off? “I think I’ve been in every gay club from New York to California,” says Ellis, 32. “I would be in clubs with my recorders in my pocket, taping people talking. But at the end of the day, I drew more from my (four) sisters and my mother. I’ve been mimicking them my whole life. They’re in my bones.”

Courtesy HBO

The transformation isn’t all interior. “I have more makeup on than any of the females in the cast,” Ellis says. “Once they get me with the fake eyelashes and the eye makeup, I listen to some Rihanna and I’m there.” Lafayette had an abbreviated shelf life in the books and wasn’t expected to last long on the TV series, either. But Ellis’ supercharged presence changed all that. “My contract was for one season as a recurring character,” he says. “All of a sudden, Lafayette was in every episode. After six, Rutina (Wesley, who plays his troubled cousin Tara) started telling me, ‘I don’t think they can get rid of you.’ ” Says Ball, “Nelsan’s performance definitely brought him to life in a way that made me realize we could never kill this character the way he dies in the books.” As the third season swings into high gear, Lafayette’s personality continues to gain substance. He’s acquired a spooky mother (Alfre Woodard) who is locked away in a loony bin. And he’s about to get a lover, mom’s attendant Jesus (Kevin Alejandro). Ellis had some initial qualms

about tackling the role. “My fear at first was that my family is going to hate this,” he says. “There are homophobic people in my family. They’re deeply religious.” But Lafayette has been a godsend, bringing Ellis critical acclaim, respect in the industry, and a steady paycheck. The world is his crawfish. But it’s been a long crooked road to success. Bookended by some years in Chicago, he spent his childhood in rural Alabama. “The nearest house was, like, 25 minutes away,” he says. “You had to get up really, really early to catch the school bus because it took so long to get there. No running water. Using an outhouse. Chopping wood for fire. Those things were particularly difficult, but I got used to it.” He enlisted in the Marine Corps right out of high school. He found the training far more fulfilling than active duty and quickly transferred over to

the Reserve. A couple of years later, pursuing a late-blooming passion for acting, he enrolled at the prestigious Juilliard School in Manhattan. He changed his first name to Nelsan (a phonetic approximation of the way most people pronounced his given name, Nelso’n) and moved to Hollywood. After scraping by with sporadic supporting roles in films such as “The Soloist” and “The Express,” he landed “True Blood.” That, in turn, has led to other opportunities. He spent the most recent hiatus from the show filming the upcoming “Secretariat,” in which he plays the groom to the legendary racehorse. Coincidentally, the movie was shot in Louisiana. In the town of Lafayette, no less. Afterward, it took him a while to get back in full-on Creole queen mode for “True Blood.” “When I have months of being myself, I have to refind Lafayette and his mannerisms or else it’s not natural.” He’s certainly locked in now. Says Ball, “Nelsan channels from a completely unique place. He has access to Planet Lafayette.” And sugar, the air up there is sweet. Hospice Home Health Hospice House Transitions

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America’s Funniest Home Videos Scoundrels ’ ‘14’ Å “Secrets of the Mountain” (2010, Adventure) Barry Bostwick. ’ ‘PG’ Å The Bridge Red Door; Paint It Black Frank organizes a walkout strike. ‘14’ America’s Funniest Home Videos Scoundrels ’ ‘14’ Å Cops (N) ‘14’ Cops ‘PG’ Å America’s Most Wanted PDXposed ‘G’ Paid Program Cold Case Files ’ ‘14’ Å Globe Trekker ’ ‘G’ Å (DVS) As Time Goes By My Family ‘PG’ “Secrets of the Mountain” (2010, Adventure) Barry Bostwick. ’ ‘PG’ Å Reba ‘PG’ Å Reba Switch ‘PG’ King of Queens King of Queens Passport-Palett Passport-Palett Passport-Palett Passport-Palett Globe Trekker ’ ‘G’ Å (DVS) As Time Goes By My Family ‘PG’

10:00

10:30

The Gates What Lies Beneath ‘14’ Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ ‘14’ 48 Hours Mystery (N) ’ Å The Gates What Lies Beneath ‘14’ News Channel 21 Two/Half Men CSI: Miami Big Brother ’ ‘14’ Å New Tricks Meat Is Murder ’ Å Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ ‘14’ Married... With Married... With Passport-Palett Passport-Palett New Tricks Meat Is Murder ’ Å

11:00

11:30

KATU News at 11 Comedy.TV ‘14’ News Sat. Night Live News (11:35) Cold Case Deadliest Catch Good Fishing ‘PG’ The Wanda Sykes Show ‘14’ Å CSI: Miami Bait ’ ‘14’ Å Masterpiece Mystery! ’ ‘PG’ News Sat. Night Live ››› “Deep Cover” (1992) Å Passport-Palett Passport-Palett Song of the Mountains ’ ‘G’ Å

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

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

The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 ‘14’ Å The First 48 Gone ‘14’ Å 130 28 8 32 The First 48 ‘14’ Å ›› “Heartbreak Ridge” (1986, War) Clint Eastwood, Marsha Mason, Everett McGill. Marine sergeant sees ex-wife, readies recruits ›› “Blood Work” (2002, Suspense) Clint Eastwood, Jeff Daniels, Anjelica Huston. Premiere. A former FBI ›››› “Million Dollar Baby” (2004) Clint Eastwood. A cantanker102 40 39 for Grenada. Å agent searches for a murderer. ous trainer bonds with a female boxer. Å Monsters Inside Me Lurkers ’ ‘PG’ Cats 101 ’ ‘PG’ Å Last Chance Highway (N) ‘PG’ Å America’s Cutest Dog ’ ‘PG’ Å World’s Ugliest Dog Competition ‘G’ Last Chance Highway ’ ‘PG’ Å 68 50 12 38 Monsters Inside Me ’ ‘PG’ Å Top Chef Room Service ‘14’ Å House Acceptance ’ ‘14’ Å House Autopsy ’ ‘14’ Å House Cuddy’s handyman falls. ‘14’ House TB or Not TB ’ ‘14’ Å House Daddy’s Boy ’ ‘14’ Å House Spin ’ ‘14’ Å 137 44 (6:45) CMT Music World’s Strictest Parents Robinson World’s Strictest Parents Wilcox (N) 16 and Pregnant Nikkole ‘14’ Å ›› “Footloose” (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon, Lori Singer. ’ 190 32 42 53 (4:00) ›› “Footloose” (1984, Drama) Kevin Bacon. ’ The Suze Orman Show (N) Å Til Debt-Part Til Debt-Part American Greed Martin Frankel. The Suze Orman Show Å Til Debt-Part Til Debt-Part Fast Cash ‘G’ Baby Can Read 51 36 40 52 American Greed Jewel thief. Larry King Live ‘PG’ Newsroom Campbell Brown Larry King Live ‘PG’ Newsroom Newsroom 52 38 35 48 Campbell Brown ›› “Mr. Woodcock” (2007) Billy Bob Thornton, Seann William Scott. Å ›› “Scary Movie 3” (2003, Comedy) Anna Faris, Anthony Anderson. Å ››› “Scary Movie” (2000) Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans. Å 135 53 135 47 (4:00) ›› “The Man” (2005) Å Ride Guide Å Untracked Get Outdoors Visions of NW Inside Golf ‘G’ Outside Presents RSN Movie Night Outside Presents Outside Film Festival City Edition 11 American Perspectives C-SPAN Weekend 58 20 98 11 American Perspectives Wizards-Place Hannah Montana Hannah Montana ›› “High School Musical 3: Senior Year” (2008) Zac Efron. Jonas L.A. ‘G’ Jonas L.A. ‘G’ Hannah Montana Hannah Montana Jonas L.A. ‘G’ Jonas L.A. ‘G’ 87 43 14 39 Wizards-Place Dirty Jobs Texas snake farm. ’ ‘14’ Dirty Jobs Gourd Maker ‘PG’ Å Dirty Jobs Camel Rancher ’ ‘PG’ Dirty Jobs ’ ‘PG’ Å Dirty Jobs Marble Maker ‘PG’ Å Dirty Jobs Camel Rancher ’ ‘PG’ 156 21 16 37 Dirty Jobs Ice Salvage Crew ’ ‘14’ Baseball Tonight (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å Baseball Tonight (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å SportsCenter (Live) Å 21 23 22 23 (4:00) World Cup Primetime (N) Winners Bracket From Bristol, Conn. Drag Racing NHRA Northwest Nationals, Qualifying From Seattle. Å World Cup Primetime (N) World Cup Live 22 24 21 24 2009 World Series of Poker Å Boxing: 2005 Castillo vs. Corrales Boxing: 2002 Campas vs. Santos 2007 World Series of Poker Å 2007 World Series of Poker Å 2007 World Series of Poker Å 2007 World Series of Poker Å 23 25 123 25 Boxing: 2005 Marquez vs. Polo ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS ESPNEWS 24 63 124 ››› “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire” (2005) Daniel Radcliffe. Voldemort lays a trap for Harry at the Triwizard Tournament. ›› “Van Helsing” (2004) Å 67 29 19 41 (4:30) ››› “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban” (2004) Daniel Radcliffe. Å Glenn Beck Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Å Jrnl Edit. Rpt Fox News Watch Red Eye Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Å Glenn Beck 54 61 36 50 Huckabee Challenge Food stylists compete. Bobby Flay Bobby Flay Challenge Ice cream. ’ Å Challenge Chocolate Wonders Challenge Iron Chef America Symon vs. Okuwa 177 62 46 44 Iron Chef America Symon vs. Okuwa Mariners Batting Practice MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. (Live) ‘PG’ Mariners Post. MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners 20 45 28* 26 World Poker Tour: Season 8 The Good Guys The Dim Knight ‘14’ ››› “Coach Carter” (2005) Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Ri’chard. A high-school basketball coach pushes his team to excel. ›› “21” (2008, Drama) Jim Sturgess. Crafty college students beat the odds in Las Vegas. 131 Color Splash: Mi Designed to Sell Designed to Sell House Hunters House Hunters Divine Design ‘G’ Sarah’s House Dear Genevieve Curb/Block Color Splash: Mi House Hunters House Hunters House Hunters 176 49 33 43 Dear Genevieve Modern Marvels Ice ‘PG’ Å The Lost Pyramid ‘PG’ Å Egypt: Engineering an Empire The engineering feats of ancient Egypt. ‘PG’ 155 42 41 36 Underwater Universe ‘PG’ Å ›› “Legally Blonde” (2001) Reese Witherspoon, Luke Wilson. Å ›› “Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde” (2003) Reese Witherspoon. Army Wives Collateral Damage ‘PG’ 138 39 20 31 › “What a Girl Wants” (2003) Amanda Bynes, Colin Firth. Å Lockup Lockup (N) Lockup Lockup Inside Holman Lockup Inside Brushy Mountain Catch Him if You Can 56 59 128 51 Lockup Inside Indiana St. Prison The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills: From the Beginning ’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ The Hills ’ ‘PG’ 192 22 38 57 The Hills ’ ‘PG’ SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob iCarly iPsycho ’ ‘G’ Å Big Time Rush Victorious ’ ‘G’ True Jackson, VP George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ Malcolm-Mid. Malcolm-Mid. 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Knockout Sport UFC Unleashed ’ ‘PG’ UFC Unleashed ’ ‘PG’ UFC Unleashed ’ ‘14’ The Hooters 2010 International Swimsuit Pageant (N) ’ Best of PRIDE Fighting 132 31 34 46 Knockout Sport ›› “The Hulk” (2003) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly. Scientist Bruce Banner transforms into a powerful brute. ››› “Jurassic Park” (1993) Sam Neill. Cloned dinosaurs run amok at an island-jungle theme park. Å 133 35 133 45 (4:00) “The Land That Time Forgot” In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Hour of Power ‘G’ Å Billy Graham Classic Crusades Thru History Travel the Road Last Flight Out Conquerors Virtual Memory Michael English 205 60 130 Loves Raymond King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ’ ‘G’ Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ ››› “Men in Black” (1997) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith. Å ›› “Scary Movie 4” (2006) Anna Faris, Craig Bierko. Final Destin. 3 16 27 11 28 Loves Raymond ››› “My Darling Clementine” (1946, Western) Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell. Wyatt ››› “Sergeant Rutledge” (1960, Western) Jeffrey Hunter, Woody Strode. An innocent ›››› “The Searchers” (1956, Western) John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Natalie Wood. A (11:15) ››› “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon” 101 44 101 29 Earp and comrades face a showdown at the O.K. Corral. Å black soldier is charged with rape and murder. Å Civil War hero spends five years searching for his niece. (1949) John Wayne. Lottery Changed My Life ‘PG’ Å Lottery Changed My Life ‘PG’ Å Lottery Changed My Life ‘PG’ Å A Haunting Ghostly figures. ’ ‘PG’ A Haunting Stalked by Evil ’ ‘PG’ Lottery Changed My Life ‘PG’ Å 178 34 32 34 Lottery Changed My Life II ‘G’ Å Movie Å ››› “Catch Me if You Can” (2002) Leonardo DiCaprio. Å 17 26 15 27 (4:30) NASCAR Racing Sprint Cup: LifeLock.com 400 From Chicagoland Speedway in Joliet, Ill. (Live) Å Johnny Test ‘Y7’ Johnny Test ‘Y7’ Total Drama Adventure Time Unnatural History ‘PG’ “Scooby-Doo! Abracadabra-Doo” (2010) Premiere. Adventure Time King of the Hill King of the Hill The Boondocks The Boondocks 84 Haunted Lighthouses of America Most Terrifying Places in America Most Terrifying Places in America 2 The Bermuda Triangle: Waves Mysteries of the Smithsonian ‘PG’ Most Terrifying Places in America 179 51 45 42 World’s Creepiest Destinations ‘PG’ Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Andy Griffith Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Loves Raymond Loves Raymond 65 47 29 35 Andy Griffith Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Criminal Intent ’ ‘14’ 15 30 23 30 (3:31) ››› “3:10 to Yuma” (2007) The T.O. Show The T.O. Show The T.O. Show The T.O. Show The T.O. Show The T.O. Show ››› “Remember the Titans” (2000, Drama) Denzel Washington, Will Patton. ’ ›› Be Cool ’ 191 48 37 54 The T.O. Show ’ ‘PG’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(4:10) ››› “Cadillac Records” ‘R’ ››› “Speed” 1994, Action Keanu Reeves, Dennis Hopper. ’ ‘R’ Å ››› “My Cousin Vinny” 1992, Comedy Joe Pesci. ’ ‘R’ Å ››› “Jackie Brown” 1997, Crime Drama Pam Grier. ’ ‘R’ Å ››› “Night and the City” 1950 Richard Widmark. ‘NR’ Å ››› “Night and the City” 1950 Richard Widmark. ‘NR’ Å ››› “Night and the City” 1950 Richard Widmark. ‘NR’ Å ›› “Best of the Best II” 1993 ‘R’ Insane Cinema: On the Pipe 3 ‘14’ Insane Cinema: On the Pipe 4 Å Weekly Update Bubba’s World Insane Cinema: On the Pipe 3 ‘14’ Insane Cinema: On the Pipe 4 Å Moto: In Out American Misfits Bubba’s World Weekly Update European PGA Tour Golf Big Break Sandals Resorts Big Break Sandals Resorts Golf Central PGA Tour Golf Nationwide: Wayne Gretzky Classic, Third Round British Open Highlights (4:00) ›› “The Ugly Dachshund” ›› “101 Dalmatians” (1996, Adventure) Glenn Close, Jeff Daniels. Å 102 Dalmatians ‘G’ Å ›› “The Ugly Dachshund” (1966) Dean Jones, Suzanne Pleshette. Å ›› “The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor” 2008 Brendan Fraser. A young ››› “Public Enemies” 2009, Crime Drama Johnny Depp, Christian Bale, Marion Cotillard. Premiere. G-man True Blood It Hurts Me Too Sookie heads (11:35) ››› “Public (4:00) ›› “Get Smart” 2008, Comedy HBO 425 501 425 10 Steve Carell. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å archaeologist awakens a cursed Chinese emperor. ‘PG-13’ Å Melvin Purvis vows to nab notorious criminal John Dillinger. ’ ‘R’ Å to Jackson. ’ ‘MA’ Å Enemies” ››› “The Cooler” 2003 William H. Macy. ‘NR’ Å (6:45) ››› “Mad Max” 1979, Science Fiction Mel Gibson. ‘R’ Å ››› “American Psycho” 2000 Christian Bale. ‘NR’ (10:15) ››› “The Cooler” 2003, Drama William H. Macy. ‘NR’ Å IFC 105 105 (4:50) ›› “I Come in Peace” 1990, Action Dolph Lundgren, (8:15) ›› “I Spy” 2002, Comedy Eddie Murphy, Owen Wilson. A spy recruits a boxer › “I Love You, Beth Cooper” 2009, Comedy Hayden Panettiere, Co-Ed Confidential ›› “Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian” 2009, MAX 400 508 7 Brian Benben, Betsy Brantley. ’ ‘R’ Å Comedy Ben Stiller, Robin Williams. ’ ‘PG’ Å to help him retrieve a stolen plane. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å Paul Rust. Premiere. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å 4 PLAY ‘MA’ Hitler’s Hidden City ‘PG’ The Hunt for Hitler ‘PG’ Expedition Great White ‘PG’ Hitler’s Hidden City ‘PG’ The Hunt for Hitler ‘PG’ Expedition Great White ‘PG’ Break It Down Navy Tanker NGC 157 157 Back, Barnyard The Penguins The Mighty B! ’ Fanboy-Chum SpongeBob SpongeBob Tigre: Rivera Tigre: Rivera Avatar-Last Air Avatar-Last Air Glenn Martin Jimmy Neutron The Secret Show Tak and Power NTOON 89 115 189 Profess. The Season Raglin Outdoors Ultimate Hunting High Places Trophy Quest Realtree Rdtrps Jimmy Big Time Ted Nugent Craig Morgan Western Extreme High Places Buck Commander Jimmy Big Time OUTD 37 307 43 ››› “Save the Last Dance” 2001, Romance Julia Stiles. iTV. A white teen falls for a ››› “The Bank Job” 2008, Crime Drama Jason Statham, Saffron Burrows. iTV. Boxing Juan Manuel Lopez vs. Bernabe Concepcion (iTV) The WBO featherweight title, from Hato Rey, Inside NASCAR SHO 500 500 black student who also loves dance. ’ ‘PG-13’ Thieves tunnel into a bank vault in 1971 London. ’ ‘R’ Puerto Rico. (iTV) ‘PG’ Lucas Oil Off Road Racing ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing Iowa From Iowa Speedway in Newton. (Live) Formula One Racing British Grand Prix, Qualifying Formula 1 Debrief Mobil 1 The Grid ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing Iowa SPEED 35 303 125 (5:10) ›› “XXX” 2002 Vin Diesel. A spy tries to stop an anarchist with weapons. ’ ‘PG-13’ (7:20) ›› “Year One” 2009 Jack Black. ‘PG-13’ Å › “Law Abiding Citizen” 2009 Jamie Foxx. Premiere. ’ ‘R’ Å (10:50) “The Taking of Pelham 123” STARZ 300 408 300 (3:50) ›› “Charlie ››› “Color Me Kubrick” 2005, Comedy John Malkovich, Jim ››› “Adventureland” 2009, Comedy-Drama Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart. A col- › “The Rage: Carrie 2” 1999 Emily Bergl. Teen discovers teleki- (10:45) › “Stigmata” 1999 Patricia Arquette. A young woman is TMC 525 525 Bartlett” Davidson, Richard E. Grant. ’ ‘NR’ Å lege graduate takes a lowly job at an amusement park. ‘R’ netic powers after a friend’s death. ’ ‘R’ plagued by strange visions and wounds. ‘R’ Cycling Tour de France: Stage 7 From Tournus to Station des Rousses. Lance Armstrong: The Look Back Cycling Tour de France: Stage 7 From Tournus to Station des Rousses. VS. 27 58 30 (4:00) ›› “You’ve Got Mail” 1998 Tom Hanks. ‘PG’ ›› “You’ve Got Mail” 1998, Romance-Comedy Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan. ‘PG’ Å Sunset Daze ‘G’ Sunset Daze ‘G’ ››› “An Officer and a Gentleman” 1982, Drama Richard Gere. ‘R’ Å WE 143 41 174 ENCR 106 401 306 FMC 104 204 104 FUEL 34 GOLF 28 301 27 HALL 66 33 18 33


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 B3

CALENDAR TODAY SUNRISE SUMMER CLASSIC: 5K, 10K and half-marathon races, with a kids rock race; proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Redmond; registration required; $15-$45 to race, kids race free, spectators free; 6:15 a.m. half marathon, 7 a.m. 5K and 10K, 7:30 a.m. kids race; Smith Rock State Park, 9241 N.E. Crooked River Drive, Terrebonne; 541-3881860 or www.smithrockrace.com. GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the church’s building fund; free admission; 7:30 a.m.-3 p.m.; St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church & School, 2450 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-3170394, early evening only. CHURCH YARD SALE: Proceeds benefit church missions; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 S.W. State Highway 126; 541-548-3066. DIRT DIGGERS’ SCRAMBLE: Ninth annual golf tournament hosted by Camp Fire USA Central Oregon; proceeds benefit the programs and services provided by the Camp Fire USA Central Oregon Council; $140 includes 18 holes, cart, continental breakfast and barbecue lunch; 8 a.m. shotgun start, 7 a.m. registration; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-382-4682 or campfirechristine@ bendbroadband.com. FLAPJACK FRENZY: Eat pancakes as a benefit for Teen Challenge; RSVP requested; $5, $3 ages 10 and younger; 8-11 a.m.; Central Oregon Men’s Center, 435 N.E. Burnside Ave., Bend; 541-678-5272. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Approximately 10 vendors sell vegetables, meats, eggs and more; free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541280-4097. VFW BREAKFAST: Community breakfast with pancakes, sausage, ham, eggs, coffee and more; $7, $6 seniors and children; 8:30-10:30 a.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. GARAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: With a dunk tank; proceeds benefit Renegade Roller Derby; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Aspect Board Shop, 1009 N.W. Galveston Ave., Bend; 541-410-5633, renegade_sjane@hotmail.com or www.renegadesor.com. GIANT LIBRARY BOOK SALE: The Friends of the Jefferson County Library hosts a sale of thousands of books, audio books, videos and DVDs; with live music; free admission, $5 per bag of books; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets, Madras; 541-475-3351. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Approximately 30 vendors selling fresh produce, meats and crafts; with live music; free; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-489-3239 or annsnyder@ rconnects.com. SISTERS OUTDOOR QUILT SHOW: The 35th annual show features a display of about 1,300 quilts; free; 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown Sisters; 541-549-1400 or www. sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015. CLASSIC CAR SHOW: A show of cars from 1974 or earlier, with burgers, hot dogs and more, and a silent auction; free, $20 to enter a car; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Elks Lodge, 63120 N.E. Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-382-1371. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Vendors sell a selection of produce, meats, baked goods, flowers, lifestyle products and more; with live music; free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing center, NorthWest Crossing Drive and John Fremont Street, Bend; 541-389-0995. QUILT SHOW LUNCHEON: Featuring turkey roll-ups, salads and pie; proceeds benefit the church; $7; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, 386 N. Fir St., Sisters; 541-815-8858. BEND SUMMER FESTIVAL: Featuring artists, street performers, performing arts, children’s activities, live music, food, drink and more; free; 11 a.m.-11 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-3890995, inquiry@c3events.com or www.c3events.com. “THE ZOO STORY”: Volcanic Theatre presents the play by Edward Albee about a transient who confronts a book publisher; $10; 8 p.m.; The Wine Shop and Tasting Bar, 55 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-389-2884 or www.actorsrealm.com. RIMROCK RANCH STAR PARTY: Explore the night sky with telescopes and a celestial tour; dress warmly and bring binoculars; registration required; free; 8:30-11:30 p.m.; Rimrock Ranch, 69177 Butcher Block Blvd., Sisters; 541-330-0017 or events@deschuteslandtrust.org. NOT AN AIRPLANE: The Modesto, Calif.-based Americana act performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.

SUNDAY BEND SUMMER FESTIVAL: Featuring artists, street performers,

performing arts, children’s activities, live music, food, drink and more; free; 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-389-0995, inquiry@ c3events.com or www.c3events. com. SECOND SUNDAY: Suzanne Burns and Quinton Hallett read from their work; followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Public Library, Brooks Room, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121034 or www.dpls.us/calendar. SUMMER SUNDAY CONCERT: Funk group Mingo Fishtrap performs; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open 1 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3229383, info@bendconcerts.com or www.bendconcerts.com. CELTIC MUSIC SESSION: Celtic musicians play traditional Irish music; session players welcome; free; 3-6 p.m.; JC’s Bar & Grill, 642 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-647-4789. “LAMPPOST REUNION”: TWB Productions presents the play by Louis LaRusso, about five friends in a bar in New Jersey, as a pub theater production; adult themes; $11.50 in advance, $10 at the door; 6 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.bendticket. com. SUNSET SERENADES: Golf clinic followed by live music by Lindy Gravelle; free; 6 p.m. golf, 7 p.m. music; Brand 33, 16900 Aspen Lakes Drive, Sisters; 541-549-3663. “LAMPPOST REUNION”: TWB Productions presents the play by Louis LaRusso, about five friends in a bar in New Jersey, as a pub theater production; adult themes; $11.50 in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.bendticket.com.

MONDAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Vendors sell local produce, crafts and prepared foods; with live music and activities; noon-6 p.m.; Centennial Park, Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue; 541-504-7862 or www.redmondfarmersmarket.com. LET’S FIND NEMO!: One of Disney’s most-loved movies “Finding Nemo” will be shown for everyone to enjoy; 1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. THE SPEAKEASY: Guy J. Jackson hosts an open mic storytelling event; stories must be no longer than eight minutes; July’s theme is “NO SWEAT: Stories About Summer!”; $5; 7 p.m.; Bend Performing Arts Center, 1155 S.W. Division St.; 541-977-5677. WINDANCE HOUSE CONCERT: Sid Selvidge and Amy Speace perform folk music; call for Bend location; $15 in advance, $17 day of show7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; 541306-0048 or jherbgirl@yahoo.com. “LAMPPOST REUNION”: TWB Productions presents the play by Louis LaRusso, about five friends in a bar in New Jersey, as a pub theater production; adult themes; $11.50 in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. bendticket.com. “D TOUR”: A screening of BendFilm’s 2009 best documentary winner, about a struggling band and their drummer who needed a kidney transplant; the filmmaker will be in attendance; $8, $6 BendFilm members; 8:30 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. dtourmovie.com.

TUESDAY TUESDAY MARKET AT EAGLE CREST: Featuring a variety of vendors selling baked goods, produce, meats and more; free; 2-6 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-633-9637. FESTIVAL OF RUCKUS: Includes tricycle races, watermelon bowling and more; free; 4-8 p.m.; Play Outdoors, 840 S.E. Woodland Blvd., Suite 110, Bend; 866-6082423. ABBEY ROAD LIVE!: The Athens, Ga.based Beatles tribute band performs; $5-$10; 7 p.m.; Angeline’s Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main St., Sisters; 541-549-9122.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERS MARKET: Vendors selling agricultural and horticultural products, baked goods, cheese, meat and fish; free; 3-7 p.m.; Drake Park, eastern end; 541-408-4998 or http://bendfarmersmarket.com. GARDEN CENTER FARMERS MARKET: Local producers sell fruits, vegetables and farm-fresh products; free; 3:30-6:30 p.m.; CHS Garden Center, 60 N.W. Depot Road, Madras; 541-475-2222. MUSIC ON THE GREEN: Featuring a performance by Americana act CinderBlue; food vendors available; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest 15th Street, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or www. visitredmondoregon.com.

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

PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring a performance by The Konzelman Brothers; vendors available; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-447-6909. “THE METROPOLITAN OPERA, LA BOHEME”: Starring Angela Gheorghiu, Ramon Vargas, Ainhoa Arteta and Ludovic Tezier in an encore presentation of Puccini’s masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $15; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. CLEAR SUMMER NIGHTS: Featuring a performance by singer-songwriter Colin Hay; $16, $57 with dinner; 6:30 p.m., doors open 5:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; 541-385-3062 or www. c3events.com. FREAK MOUNTAIN RAMBLERS: The Portland-based Americana group performs; part of the Great Northwest Music Tour; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

THURSDAY “FINDING NEMO”: A screening of the 2003 Pixar film; part of Familypalooza; free; 3 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541617-7099. BARK-B-QUE DINNER: Barbecue with ribs, burgers, hot dogs, potato salad and more; proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Redmond; $15, $11 ages 12 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; The View Restaurant, Juniper Golf Course, 1938 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-923-0882. MUNCH & MUSIC: Event includes a performance by Jerri Jheto Reggae, food and arts and crafts booths, children’s area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30-9:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. munchandmusic.com. KELLY JOE PHELPS AND CORINNE WEST DUO: The delta blues act performs; $15-$20; 7 p.m.; Angeline’s Bakery & Cafe, 121 W. Main St., Sisters; 541-5499122. PIANO MONSTER CONCERT: Local piano students perform on multiple grand pianos; directed by Michael Gesme; $10 in advance, $12 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. POISON CONTROL CENTER: The Iowa-based indie rock band performs; $3; 9 p.m.; Mountain’s Edge Sports Bar and Grill, 61303 U.S. Highway 97, Unit 115, Bend; 541-388-8178. THE AGGROLITES: The Los Angelesbased reggae band performs, with Cub Scout; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. randompresents.com. THE WHITE BUFFALO: The acoustic rock act performs, with a full band; $10 in advance, $13 at the door; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. bendticket.com.

FRIDAY SAGEBRUSH CLASSIC GOLF TOURNAMENT: Limited to 52 teams; registration required to play; proceeds benefit the Deschutes Children’s Foundation; $650-$2,500 to play; ; Broken Top Club, 61999 Broken Top Drive, Bend; 503-3325000, sagebrushclassic@comcast. net or www.sagebrush.org. STUNT RIDING DEMONSTRATIONS: Chris “Tech” McNeil performs stunt riding at the BMW MOA International Rally; free; noon, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 314-608-0406. DOGLEG GOLF CLASSIC: 36 foursomes play golf; followed by a barbecue and a silent auction; proceeds benefit the Humane Society of Central Oregon; $125; 1 p.m., noon registration; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-3823537 or www.hsco. org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Vendors selling agricultural and horticultural products, baked goods, cheese, meat and fish; free; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-4084998 or http://bendfarmersmarket. com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Scott Cook presents a slide show and talks about his book “Bend, Overall”; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541526-1491. STEVE MILLER BAND: The classic rockers perform; $75 reserved or $39 plus service charges in advance, $78 reserved or $43 day of show; 6:30 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 800-7453000 or www.bendconcerts.com. SHOW US YOUR SPOKES: Featuring a performance by The Mostest and Shireen Amini; proceeds benefit Commute Options for Central Oregon; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635

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N.W. 14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. ORGANIK TIME MACHINE: The Ashland-based electronica jam band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3888331 or www.silvermoonbrewing. com. TRIAGE: Local improvisational comedy group will perform; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.bendimprov.com.

SATURDAY July 17 TOUR DES CHUTES: Bicycling routes of seven, 25, 48, 70 and 90 miles; live music, food and vendors after the ride; registration required; proceeds benefit the Lance Armstrong Foundation and the St. Charles Cancer Survivorship Program; $45 before July 12, $55 late registration; 7 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Lakes Elementary School, 2500 N.W. High Lakes Loop, Bend; 541-385-6502 or www. tourdeschutes.org. DESCHUTES DASH: The weekend sports festival features triathlons, duathlons, 10K and 5K runs, and youth races, including a kids Splash ‘N Dash to benefit The Center Foundation; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-318-7388, deschutesdash@ freshairsports.com or www. freshairsports.com. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Approximately 10 vendors sell vegetables, meats, eggs and more; free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 541280-4097. HIGH DESERT GARDEN TOUR: View six Bend-area gardens in a selfguided tour; $10, free ages 16 and younger; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; throughout Bend; 541-548-6088, ext. 7951. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: Approximately 30 vendors selling fresh produce, meats and crafts; with live music; free; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, B and Seventh streets; 541-4893239 or annsnyder@ rconnects.com. NEWBERRY’S ANNUAL GARDEN SHOW: Flowers that can be grown in Central Oregon will be on display; free; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Newberry home, 1968 N.E. Hollowtree Lane, Bend; 541-3827786. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015. CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL: Featuring more than 40 activity booths, jump houses, dance and karate demonstrations, food and more; proceeds benefit Saving Grace; free admission, 50 cents per activity ticket, $20 all-day pass; 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; 541-385-7988 or www. saving-grace.org. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Vendors sell a selection of produce, meats, baked goods, flowers, lifestyle products and more; with live music; free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing center, NorthWest Crossing Drive and John Fremont Street, Bend; 541-3890995. WAKEBOARD AND WATER-SKI CONTEST: With wakeboarding, an awards ceremony and barbecue for contestants; spectators welcome; proceeds benefit the Sundance WaterSports Club; $25 or $30, free for spectators; 7 a.m. registration, 10 a.m. start; Lake Billy Chinook, Crooked River Bridge and Jordan Road, Culver; 541-480-0410. STUNT RIDING DEMONSTRATIONS: Chris “Tech” McNeil performs stunt riding at the BMW MOA International Rally; free; noon, 2 p.m. and 4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 314-608-0406. LIBERTY QUARTET: The Boise, Idaho-based gospel ensemble performs; free; 1 p.m.; Eastmont Church, 62425 Eagle Road, Bend; 541-382-5822. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Mary Lou Dobbs talks about her book “Repotting Yourself”; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Scott Cook talks about and presents a slide show on his book “Bend Overall”; free; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525. SAGEBRUSH CLASSIC FEAST: Culinary event includes a sampling of gourmet cuisine, Deschutes Brewery beer and live music; proceeds benefit nonprofit organizations serving children and families in Central Oregon; $195; 5-10 p.m.; Broken Top Golf Club, 62000 Broken Top Drive, Bend; 503-332-5000 or www. sagebrush.org. BARENAKED LADIES: The Grammynominated rock band performs, with Angel Taylor; $34 in advance, $38 day of show, plus service charges; 6:30 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3185457 or www.bendconcerts.com.

M T For Saturday, July 10

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THE CITY OF YOUR FINAL DESTINATION (PG-13) 12:45, 3:25, 6:20, 9:05 IRON MAN 2 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:20, 6:10, 9 LETTERS TO JULIET (PG) 12:50, 3:45, 6:15, 8:55 PLEASE GIVE (R) 1:10, 3:55, 6:35, 9:20 THE SECRET IN THEIR EYES (R) 12:35, 3:35, 6:30, 9:10 SOLITARY MAN (R) 1, 3:15, 6:40, 9:15

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

THE A-TEAM (PG-13) 12:15, 4, 6:55, 10:10 DESPICABLE ME (PG) 11:40 a.m., 12:10, 2:20, 2:50, 4:45, 5:15, 7:10, 7:40, 9:35, 10:05 GET HIM TO THE GREEK (R) 8:05, 10:40 GROWN UPS (PG-13) Noon, 2:30, 5:25, 8:10, 10:35 THE KARATE KID (PG) 11:10 a.m., 2:55, 6:40, 9:45 KNIGHT AND DAY (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:25, 5, 7:35, 10:15 THE LAST AIRBENDER 3-D (PG) 11 a.m., 1:25, 3:55, 6:45, 9:15 THE LAST AIRBENDER (PG) 11:25 a.m., 1:55, 4:25, 7:15, 9:55 PREDATORS (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:55, 7:50, 10:25 TOY STORY 3 (G) 11:05 a.m., 12:05 a.m., 1:35, 2:45, 4:15, 5:20, 6:50, 9:30 TOY STORY 3 3-D (G) 11:35 a.m., 2:05, 4:40, 7:20, 10 THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m., 11:50 a.m., 12:20, 1:40, 2:10, 2:40, 4:05, 4:35, 5:05, 6:30, 7, 7:30, 8, 9:20, 9:50, 10:20, 10:45 EDITOR’S NOTE: Movie Times in bold are open-captioned showtimes. EDITOR’S NOTE: There is an additional $3.50 fee for 3-D movies.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

(After 7 p.m. shows 21 and over only. Under 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.) HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON (PG) 4 MACGRUBER (R) 9:45 MARMADUKE (PG) 1:30 ROBIN HOOD (PG-13) 6:40

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

DESPICABLE ME (PG) 10:15 a.m., 12:15, 2:15, 4:15, 6:45, 8:45 THE LAST AIRBENDER (PG) 11 a.m., 1:15, 4, 6:45, 9:30 TOY STORY 3 (PG) 10:15 a.m., 12:45, 3:15, 5:45, 8:15 THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE (PG-13) 10 a.m., 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9:15

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

BABIES (G) 3:30 DESPICABLE ME (PG) 3, 5:15, 7:30 GROWN UPS (PG-13) 5:30, 8 KNIGHT & DAY (PG-13) 5:30, 8 TOY STORY 3 (G) 3 THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE (PG-13) 2:30, 5, 7:45

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

THE TWILIGHT SAGA: ECLIPSE (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:30


B4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN CATHY

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HEART OF THE CITY

SALLY FORTH

FRAZZ

ROSE IS ROSE

STONE SOUP

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

DOONESBURY

PICKLES

ADAM

WIZARD OF ID

B.C.

SHOE

GARFIELD

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PEANUTS

MARY WORTH


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 B5 BIZARRO

DENNIS THE MENACE

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

CANDORVILLE

H BY JACQUELINE BIGAR

GET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR

SAFE HAVENS

SIX CHIX

ZITS

HERMAN

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Saturday, July 10, 2010: This year, people want to work with you. They want to make a difference. A special style of communicating evolves, and you manage to draw people in and keep their interest. Your high energy helps you get one project after the other accomplished. If you are single, your magnetism remains unusually high this year, drawing many. The real issue will be how to handle this influx and who to date. If you are attached, the two of you start enjoying each other more and more. A fellow CANCER sometimes irritates you. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Keep plans easy. Get into a home project that’s been on the back burner. This effort will prove to be relaxing and most rewarding. A child or loved one wants to pitch in. Tonight: Where it’s the coolest. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Go off and do exactly what you want to do. No hemming or hawing is allowed. Pick up the phone and call someone you have been thinking about a lot. Whether you visit after a movie over a hamburger or simply jabber on the phone barely makes a difference. Tonight: Your imagination leads. GEMINI (May 22-June 20) HHH Sometimes you simply don’t want to hold yourself back. Not everyone is as passionate or as dynamic as you when

you let go. Your personality warms up the more austere in your crowd. Tonight: Friends could test your mettle. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH You radiate, and others don’t even think about it -- they are with you. Nevertheless, a key person in your life could become difficult and/or controlling. Enjoy yourself with those who are more easygoing. Tonight: You are no wallflower! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Be a lazy Lion, and make it OK to do nothing. Sometimes, in order to recycle, you need that leisure time. News from a distance energizes you. Don’t take what you hear at face value. Tonight: Maintain a low profile. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHHH You are one of the cuties of the Zodiac or, put another way, everyone wants to be around you. Your style of interacting has changed considerably. Try to see what you are doing differently so you don’t lose this newfound talent. Tonight: In the center of the crowd, where the action is. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You might prefer not to be as visual or as instrumental. Whether you are doing some extra work, organizing a party or visiting a needy older friend, you scarcely have time for yourself. Tonight: A force to be reckoned with. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH The instinct to take off and indulge a heavy case of wanderlust can barely be ignored. If you cannot take the hot days,

check in for a day at a hotel with a pool. Why not? Tonight: Walk away from the tried and true. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHHH You could be pushed to your limit. You don’t always have to make the first overture or handle a problem. Let another person sit in the mess he or she might have created. You’ll gain a surprising perspective. Tonight: A discussion evolves naturally. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH Note all the glances in your direction. Others seem to know that you are someone who can handle life and problems. You radiate a stability not frequently found in others. Nevertheless, a partner could challenge the living daylights out of you. Don’t trigger; move away. Tonight: Allow another person to make the first move, suggest plans, etc. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Plans to complete a project or go to the gym could explode. You could get uptight, but why not look at it as an adventure? Once more, you are on the roller coaster of life. Strap on your seat belt. Tonight: Get into the swing of all the excitement. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Make this day about being more of a child. Whether on the swingset with your kids or simply being more spontaneous, you are liberating a closed part of yourself. Everyone, including you, will have a better time. Tonight: Season the night with some romance. © 2010 by King Features Syndicate


C OV ER S T OR I ES

B6 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Self

holding it in the wrong direction,” she said. “So I went over to take it and show him, but he clutched at it and said, ‘No, Mama — Me!’ And he held it up to show me: He was taking a picture of himself.”

Continued from B1 Photographing oneself easily and well is a talent that, like being able to download music via mind control or reduce whole paragraphs to acronyms at warp speed, is now a given for young people. And it is a skill that, if you are single or younger than 50, you cannot afford to neglect — especially if you are both.

Photographic shift The practice is so common that it is changing photography itself. “This really represents the shift of the photograph serving as a memorial function to a communication device,” said Geoffrey Batchen, formerly of the City University of New York and now a professor of art history at Victoria University of Wellington, in New Zealand, who has written extensively on historical and contemporary photography. “The camera was used to record something that happened so it could be remembered. Now it’s used immediately. It’s uploaded to Facebook to say, ‘Here I am in Istanbul’ or whatever, so it also goes back and forth between personal and promotional use. It really represents the refashioning

Jokes Continued from B1 “I’d go to the radio station early, and I’d read those joke books till I started to laugh. Then I’d get on the air, and I did fine,” he says. “Whoever said laughter is the best medicine was right.” After pulling himself up from the depths in this manner, Wegerbauer told himself, “‘I have to pay back. … I’d always told stories and told jokes, but then I got serious. “I said, ‘All right, the way I’m going to pay back, I’m going to, at every opportunity, try and bring a smile to people’s faces. So waiting in an elevator, waiting in line at the post office, at the bank, here at Starbucks, walking down the street — I’ll stop and I’ll tell somebody a joke.” It’s true. After the interview, he called this reporter’s voice mail and left a joke about what happened to the cat who ate a bowl of yarn. “It had mittens.” Instead of having an all-time favorite joke, he cycles through them. His current favorite is “What do you call a sleepwalking nun?” Give up? “A roamin’ Catholic.” Like a true pun master, he likes it when people groan. He prefers clean jokes, the cuter and cornier the better, he says. He has seven grandchildren, three of whom live in Redmond, and he gets some of the jokes he tells from them. “Once a month they get a newsletter, and they have a page of jokes in there written by kids. So they’re one of my sources of material. One I got from them

Tech advances

Rachel Chandler / New York Times News Service

An undated self-portrait by Rachel Chandler. OkCupid. com, the popular dating site for twentysomethings, recently conducted a study to determine which factors made a photo more attractive. It found that people respond more favorably to straightforward photos that clearly are taken by the subjects themselves. of the self for a semipublic view.” And it starts early. This came as quite a surprise to Amber Ward, a largely technophobic mother of two who lives in Lower Manhattan. Two weeks ago, she found her 3-year-old son, Beckett, playing with her iPhone, as usual. “He was holding it up like he was taking a picture, but he was

was, ‘When did cave people invent hockey?’ “ ‘During the Ice Age.’ ” Another: “Why did Humpty Dumpty have such a great fall? “He was making up for a lousy summer.”

Joke delivery Wegerbauer says he continued telling jokes and working as a DJ for about a year and a half. Then a chance trip to Las Vegas turned out to be another watershed moment. He called up some friends in Vegas, a couple who had invited them to stay at their place. Another friend lent him the use of his car, which he took to see yet another friend, who owned a computer company. That friend offered Wegerbauer a job as a shipping and receiving clerk. “I said, ‘You know, I didn’t think I’d get to Vegas, and I got to Vegas. I didn’t have any money, so I got a free ride. I didn’t have a place to stay; I got a free place to stay. I didn’t have any way to get around, and I got a free ride. I think God wants me here.’ I said, ‘I’m gonna go back, give two weeks’ notice, and I’m coming to Vegas.’ ” Once situated at the computer company, he continued his joketelling ways. “Nonstop. The delivery driver, everybody on the floor. I’d be at the craps table and I’d start telling jokes.”

A stand-up guy It evolved to the point where he did stand-up comedy for two years while living in Las Vegas. “I wasn’t very good. I went from terrible to not-so-terrible. I like to say that one of the rea-

Apple had already had huge success with its Photo Booth software, which allows you to use a MacBook’s built-in Web cam to take a self-portrait. And recently, Canon and Samsung introduced cameras that facilitate the process. The Canon PowerShot G11, which came out last summer, has a hinged LCD screen that pivots to the side so you can see it when the lens is pointed at you. Samsung’s DualView cameras, which were introduced in 2009, were such an immediate hit that the company brought out more models, promoted in an ad campaign with the eerily appropriate Alicia Keys song “Wait Til You See My Smile.” And innovative photo accessories, notably the Gumbylegged Gorillapod tripods that can mold to any terrain or even wrap around a pipe or tree limb, are a boon to the self-shooter. That’s not all. Even as aesthetic watchdogs wage campaign to persuade glossy magazines to stop the digital retouching of models and actresses, the word

sons I wasn’t very successful in Las Vegas is I had the only clean act in town. But that’s not entirely true,” he says, chuckling. “I just wasn’t that good.” Wegerbauer loved the people and the pay, opening for a hypnotist at the Bourbon Street Casino. He likes to talk and be in front of a crowd, and he likes being the center of attention, he says. After working for his friend for six months, Wegerbauer decided to start his own business, selling printers and cartridges. By age 66, he began thinking about retiring, but first had to pay off his debts. For one period of time, he worked straight through on weekends, sometimes sleeping in his office, until one Monday when he realized he’d worked 49 days in a row. He decided to take the day off and do something “to remind me that life is good.” He’d given up cigarette smoking when he was 32, but, 34 years later, went out and bought himself a cigar, “strictly to make myself feel good … because lighting up a cigar always made me feel like a million bucks,” he says.

Leaving Las Vegas He eventually settled his debts and, five years ago, moved with his wife, Lorna, to Eugene, a place he’d visited as a young man and had always wanted to return to. “But I’d never been there in the wintertime, so I didn’t know about the rain,” he says, laughing. They lasted a year, during which Wegerbauer mostly relaxed. When they decided to move to Crooked River Ranch, he wanted to keep busy. He bought

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over at Adobe, whose Photoshop is by far the most widely used photo-retouching software on the market, is that more consumers are joining (not beating) ‘em. Adobe has for several years made a cheaper, simplified version of Photoshop for nonprofessionals, but the new, easier-to-navigate version of Photoshop’s premier program, CS5, reflects the fact that a growing number of consumers can handle the full suite of tools, including two, named Pucker and Bulge, that are perfect for a little body-sculpting. You can bet people aren’t shelling out to make photos of someone else look better. “We understood we needed to make it easier to use, in terms of image retouching and manipulation,” Bryan O’Neil Hughes, the product manager for Photoshop, said. “Everybody is suddenly representing themselves to the world this way, and you see people doing different things, just to make themselves look better or stand out — anything from mild retouching to putting themselves in pictures and making themselves look like paintings, and all that ‘Avatar’-y sort of stuff.” The artist Cindy Sherman, who uses herself as a model for her intense tableaus, has recently become proficient at Photoshop. “I actually love it,” she said. “In-

stead of doing real makeup for the shoot, I’m adding it digitally. Of course, I’m adding wrinkles while most people are taking them away.” Sherman does share one characteristic with the self-shooting masses: She feels far less comfortable as a subject when she is not the photographer. “I’m still very self-conscious when someone takes my portrait,” she said. “A lot of pictures, I just cringe when I see them.”

a chain saw and began cutting wood as a hobby and, along with Starbucks, has held down a number of part-time jobs, including one delivering pizzas. Last October, he underwent bypass surgery, he says. He’d exercised some before his surgery, mostly walking. “After the operation, I said, ‘If God is good enough to give me another 20 or 30 years, I better take care of this body.’ So I decided to jog instead of walk.” He’s managed to lose 33 pounds, and in June, eight months to the day after his surgery, he ran a 5K race, coming in second in his age bracket. “One of the things that happened when I was 55 was I figured out that you have to decide what your role in life is,” he says. “You have to figure out your purpose.” Buying those joke books helped him find his. “I finally decided that one of my reasons for being here — and there might be more than one — is to try and

make the world a better place at the level that I’m at. “That’s why I did stand-up,” he says. However, he figures that if he were truly supposed to be funny in front of crowds, he would have had more success. “Maybe I’m just meant to do it on a one-to-one basis.”

Faithful rendition With yourself as photographer, though, self-consciousness fades fast, as Gould of Daily Mugshot noticed when he began capturing himself daily for his own program. “When I started doing it, I was pretty self-conscious,” he said. “You want to make sure you look good and the lighting’s good. But as it becomes part of your life, you just embrace your crazy hair. Or you notice that you’re still wearing the same shirt from yesterday and you don’t care.” Basically, he said, what starts off as an exercise in narcissism and image control eventually devolves into something more routine and candid, a chronicle of the same face we present to the world, despite our best efforts at

Cup of jokes Deborah Stubbs, who also works at Starbucks, says customers miss getting their joke fix when he’s not there to supply it. Does she like his jokes? “Until I’ve heard them a 50th time. Then I’m ready for a new one,” she says. Rhonda Etnire, manager at Fred Meyer, says patrons eat up Wegerbauer’s corny sense of humor: “They love Max. He’s great with the customers. “Even (for) us, it’s a pickup. We go over there to get our coffee, and Max tells us a joke. Even though we’re like, ‘Oh, Max,’ it

airbrushing our flaws. As mundane as that sounds, one of the findings of the OkCupid research was that people respond more favorably to straightforward photos that clearly are taken by the subjects themselves — with, say, the telltale curve of the arm snaking up the side of the picture — than to pictures that are better composed and show them in a more flattering light. Sam Gosling, an associate professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin and the author of “Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You,” has done studies on the assumptions we make about strangers in photographs. He reasons that people are drawn to candid snapshots because they seem more trustworthy than a lovely picture that may not be a faithful rendition. “What we’ve found is that this stuff is harder to manipulate than you think,” he said. “We’ve done studies with Facebook where we take down people’s impressions of someone’s Facebook photos, then compared those impressions to how that person wants to be seen, and how they actually see themselves.” The result: They see you like you see you, not as you want to be seen The camera doesn’t lie after all — not when it really gets to know you.

makes our day.” Etnire says she’s not as good at telling jokes as Wegerbauer. She tells one anyway. “What did the hot dog say after it won the race?” Pause. “I’m a wiener!” The joke, needless to say, is right up Wegerbauer’s alley, and he laughs heartily. About his own humor, he says, “I just feel like what I’m doing is, I don’t know, making the world a little bit of a better place in a small, insignificant way.” He’s not kidding around — at least not about that. David Jasper can be reached at 541-383-0349 or djasper@ bendbulletin.com.

Lose A Pound A Day! (541) 317 - 4894 enhancementcenterspa.com


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Inside

BUSINESS Who’s hiring? Find out in new feature, see Page C3. BUSINESS The days of dial-up are limited, see Page C3. OBITUARIES Tretyakov, a Russian spy who defected to the U.S., see Page C7.

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www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JULY 10, 2010

Reopening of Crescent Lake post office is denied 2 killed But town sees hope in postal regulator’s recommendation for a new ZIP code in east Bend crash By Keith Chu

firm whether their office was permanently closed or could be reopened in the future. That left them without a post office, but unable to appeal the closure. Their case drew new attention late last year, when the Postal Regulatory Commission opened an investigation into the emergency suspension of nearly 100 rural post offices. While the decision ended hopes that residents of the tiny northwest Klamath County community would be spared a 17mile drive to the nearest post office, it also boosted the prospect that the area could

The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — Five years after a fire destroyed the Crescent Lake post office, residents learned it’s not coming back, in a Postal Regulatory Commission ruling this week dismissing the tiny community’s appeal of a U.S. Postal Service’s decision to close the branch. Residents of Crescent Lake had been in postal limbo since the December 2005 fire destroyed their last post office. The office never reopened, but residents couldn’t con-

get another request granted. The PRC recommended that the Postal Service consider restoring the area’s ZIP code, which was combined with the code for the town of Crescent after the post office closed. Crescent Lake Community Action Team President Carol Goevelinger, who led the appeal campaign, focused on the possibility that the area could still solve one of its problems. “As I reread the decision, I see that they danced a compromise,” Goevelinger said. “A unique ZIP code would help a lot to solve many of the problems

created by the Postal Service.” Goevelinger and other Crescent Lake residents said sharing a ZIP code with Crescent, located 15 miles away, has led to a rash of misplaced mail, and at least one instance where emergency responders went to the wrong place. During the 2008 Royce Butte wildfire, “federal resources and personnel, as well as regional and national news agencies, ended up in the wrong community,” because of the ZIP code confusion, wrote Tim Cramblit, chief of Central Cascades Fire & EMS, which is based in Crescent Lake, in a letter to the regulatory commission. See Mail / C7

Sightseeing of the quilt variety

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Two people were killed in a two-vehicle crash at the intersection of Neff and Hamby roads on the east side of Bend Friday morning. Gregory T. Coursey, 52, of Prineville, was pronounced dead at the scene, while Mavis D. Coursey, 77, was transported to St. Charles Bend with injuries and died at the hospital. The two victims were passengers in a Toyota Camry driven by Robert L. Coursey, 78, of Prineville. The Toyota was traveling west on Hamby Road when a southbound Dodge Ram 2500 pickup driven by Judy A. Swift, 52, of Redmond, went through a stop sign and struck the Toyota on the passenger side at around 8:25 a.m. The Toyota sustained major damage to the passenger side and roof, and rescuers from the Bend Fire Department used the Jaws of Life to remove the occupants. Robert Coursey was transported to St. Charles Bend with undisclosed injuries, while Swift was not reported injured. The intersection of Neff and Hamby roads was closed for four hours while the crash scene was investigated. Alcohol or drugs do not appear to be factors in the crash, which is still under investigation by the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office, the Oregon Sate Police and the Deschutes County District Attorney’s Office. Scott Hammers can be reached at 541-383-0387 or shammers@ bendbulletin.com.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

J

ean Stone, of Hood River, takes a photo of the quilt “Timeless” Friday afternoon at the Stitchin’ Post in Sisters.

Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show road detour Cascade Avenue in downtown Sisters will be closed to through traffic from 6 a.m. until 5 p.m. today. For detour, follow signs to Locust Street and Barclay Drive.

Created by members of East of the Cascades Quilters, “Timeless”

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will be raffled off today at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show as a fundraiser

To Eugene, Salem Barclay Drive

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for the quilt show and the Kiwanis Club of Sisters. and 5 p.m. today at the quilt show, now in its 35th year.

Pine St.

outdoorquiltshow.org. The show will close Cascade Avenue through downtown for the day.

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The Bulletin

SISTERS

Fir St.

The show is free to attend. For more information, visit www.sisters

By Megan Kehoe Locust St.

Close to 1,500 quilts are expected to be on display between 9:30 a.m.

Sisters Parkway

Drivers planning on passing through Sisters today should be prepared for delays.

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The Bulletin

Nativity Lutheran Church Pastor David Nagler was getting ready for a workout Thursday afternoon when he received a phone call from a colleague about a water leak at his sanctuary, at the corner of Knott and Brosterhous roads in southeast Bend. At first he thought it might be from an outdoor sprinkler, but when he arrived at his church, he saw what he described as waves rushing toward the building, leaving its interior and exterior inundated under two feet of

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Bend Summer Festival venues and road closures

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Town hall meetings being held to address homelessness

Nativity Lutheran Church

Site of water main leak Anders Ramberg / The Bulletin

water. “I’ve never seen that much water outside of a river,” Nagler said Friday as he surveyed the damage inside his sanctuary. Flooding occurred in the

church’s sanctuary, fellowship room and kitchen, destroying the carpeting and drywall. The current also caused extensive damage to an outside garden and orchard that were recently planted with 70 fruit-bearing trees that were eventually going to be used by the church to provide food for the needy. “It’ll come back,” Nagler said. “(But) there’s some sadness and loss because some of the trees were dedicated to the memory of dead relatives.” See Flooding / C7

Several town hall meetings to discuss ways to prevent and address homelessness will be held across Central Oregon on July 22 as part of a larger effort to end homelessness in Oregon. “It’s exceptionally important for people to attend,” said Cindy Pasko, director of community development with Partnership to End Poverty, an organization dedicated to helping poverty-striken people in Central Oregon. “They need to learn what’s happening in their communities.” Meetings will be held at Bend’s Community Center, The Grange in Redmond, Sisters Fire Hall, Little Deschutes Lodge in La Pine, Madras Senior Center and the Clover Building in Prineville. Held as part of a 10-year plan to end homelessness in Central Oregon, the meetings will provide a platform to better understand poverty in the region and to give community members a chance to discuss strategies for change. “The meetings will help educate people on the realities of homelessness,” said Pasko. “Public feedback from the meetings will help us form a solution and help us figure out what works and what doesn’t” The 10-year plan to end homelessness is a state-wide initiative started in 2008 to help combat homelessness by providing prevention services, permanent housing and general system improvement to those in need. See Homeless / C7


C2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

Plane makes emergency landing in Klamath Falls The Associated Press KLAMATH FALLS — An Alaska Airlines flight from Las Vegas to Portland made an emergency landing at Klamath Falls Airport after the crew noticed a hot electrical smell in the cabin. Alaska Airlines spokeswoman Bobbie Egan says the pilot declared an emergency and landed safely before noon Thursday and the 136 passengers were put on a replacement plane flown in from Seattle and were on their way in about five hours. Passenger Brian Lien of Vancouver, Wash., told the Herald and News newspaper he saw flight attendants investigating the smell in the back of the plane’s passenger cabin. Egan says maintenance crews inspected the plane and found no problems. It was flown back to Portland.

87-year-old woman dies after being hit by stun gun By Tim Fought The Associated Press

BORING — Phyllis Owens apparently didn’t know day from night when she died at 87, an hour after sheriff’s deputies closed in on her as she reached for a handgun, an officer said Friday. “We had to respond,� said Detective Jim Strovink of the Clackamas County sheriff’s office. An officer hiding in the shrubbery around her rural home jolted the frail woman with a stun gun Thursday afternoon, and she collapsed unconscious. She died soon after in the hospital. The autopsy report said her heart disease was the cause of death. Two Clackamas sheriff’s deputies had gone to her wooded housing development near Boring after a man using a backhoe to replace her water line reported that she had threatened him with a handgun, Strovink said. It was about 2:30 p.m.

“She came out waving the gun and had him up against the backhoe,� Strovink said. “She yelled at him, ‘What are you doing here at this time of night?’� The worker called for help, and deputies arrived to find the woman on her porch, Strovink said. Approaching her, they talked her into putting down the weapon, he said, but she quickly picked it up again. The probes of the officer’s Taser hit her left arm and hip, said Dr. Larry Lewman of the state medical examiner’s office. Owens had a history of heart disease and that was the cause of death, Lewman said Friday. He said he would do more research to determine what effect the electrical shock had on her pacemaker. “A healthy person would not have died this way,� Lewman said. Strovink said Owens had recently gotten out of the hospital and was reportedly suffering from dementia. He said

it wasn’t clear how she came by the weapon. Since her husband died some years ago, Strovink said, Owens had lived alone in Big Valley Woods, a community about 20 miles southeast of Portland that bills itself as a private development for manufactured housing. Journalists who visited Friday were ordered to leave. The two deputies, who were not identified, are on administrative leave. That would be the practice if the death was considered the result of lethal force, although Strovink said it wasn’t. “But we’re handling it as if we had actually shot her,� he said. That includes an investigation involving outside officers. Strovink said that when the woman grabbed her handgun off the porch railing, officers would have been justified in using their firearms, but they didn’t. “They did a commendable job in using a minimal amount of force,� he said.

Wyoming becomes 44th state in 1890 The Associated Press Today is Saturday, July 10, the 191st day of 2010. There are 174 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On July 10, 1940, during World War II, the Battle of Britain began as Nazi forces began attacking southern England by air. (The Royal Air Force was ultimately victorious.) ON THIS DATE In 1509, theologian John Calvin, a key figure of the Protestant Reformation, was born in Noyon, Picardy, France. In 1890, Wyoming became the 44th state. In 1919, President Woodrow Wilson personally delivered the Treaty of Versailles (vehr-SY’) to the Senate, and urged its ratification. (However, the Senate rejected it.) In 1929, American paper currency was reduced in size as the government began issuing bills that were approximately 25 percent smaller. In 1951, armistice talks aimed at ending the Korean War began at Kaesong. In 1962, the Telstar 1 communications satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral. In 1973, the Bahamas became fully independent after three centuries of British colonial rule. In 1985, the Greenpeace protest ship Rainbow Warrior was sunk with explosives in Auckland, New Zealand by French intelligence agents; one activist was killed. Bowing to pressure

T O D AY IN HISTORY from irate customers, the CocaCola Co. said it would resume selling old-formula Coke, while continuing to sell New Coke. In 1991, Boris N. Yeltsin took the oath of office as the first elected president of the Russian republic. In 1999, the United States women’s soccer team won the World Cup, beating China 5-4 on penalty kicks after 120 minutes of scoreless play at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. TEN YEARS AGO Texas Governor George W. Bush, facing a skeptical audience, told the NAACP convention in Baltimore that “the party of Lincoln has not always carried the mantle of Lincoln,� and promised to work to improve relations. Israeli President Ezer Weizman resigned, effectively ending a seven-year term that turned sour when he was found to have acted improperly by accepting gifts while in office. FIVE YEARS AGO A search-and-rescue team found the body of a missing U.S. commando in eastern Afghanistan, bringing an end to the desperate search for the last member of an ill-fated, four-man special forces unit that had disappeared the previous month. Nineteenmonth-old Suzie Marie Pena (PAYN’-yah) was struck and killed by a SWAT team bullet during a shootout between Los

Angeles police and her father, who was using the toddler as a shield; Jose Raul Pena also died. Hurricane Dennis roared quickly through the Florida Panhandle and Alabama coast with blinding squalls and crashing waves. ONE YEAR AGO General Motors completed an unusually quick exit from bankruptcy protection with promises of making money and building cars people would be eager to buy. Pope Benedict XVI stressed the Catholic church’s opposition to abortion and embryonic stem cell research in his first meeting with President Barack Obama at the Vatican. Embattled Illinois Sen. Roland Burris announced he would not run for a full term in 2010. Jonathan Sanchez pitched the majors’ first no-hitter of the season in San Francisco’s 8-0 win over the San Diego Padres. British conductor Sir Edward Downes, 85, and his wife, Joan, 74, ended their lives together at an assisted suicide clinic in Zurich, Switzerland.

Glass is 65. Actress Sue Lyon is 64. Folk singer Arlo Guthrie is 63. Rock musician Dave Smalley is 61. Country-folk singersongwriter Cheryl Wheeler is 59. Rock singer Neil Tennant (Pet Shop Boys) is 56. Banjo player Bela Fleck is 52. Country musician Shaw Wilson (BR549) is 50. Country singer-songwriter Ken Mellons is 45. Rock musician Peter DiStefano (Porno for Pyros) is 45. Country singer Gary LeVox (leh-VOH’) (Rascal Flatts) is 40. Actress Sofia Vergara is 38. Actor Adrian Grenier (grehn-YAY’) is 34. Actor Thomas Ian Nicholas is 30. Singer-actress Jessica Simpson is 30. Rock musician John Spiker is 29.

L B Compiled from Bulletin staff reports

Construction to limit access in Tumalo Construction by the Oregon Department of Transportation in the Tumalo area will temporarily prohibit left-hand turns from U.S. Highway 20 to Seventh Street and Bailey Road. On Monday, crews will begin

excavation and earthwork to allow for the widening of the east shoulder of the highway where it intersects with Seventh Street. Left-hand turns to Seventh Street are expected to reopen in about two weeks, while left-hand turns to Bailey Road will be eliminated permanently.

O B Orangutan, zebra die at Oregon zoo

Teen arrested in rape, death of 5-year-old girl

PORTLAND — The Oregon Zoo announced the death of Batik, a 22-year-old Sumatran orangutan. She died Thursday afternoon after a monthlong illness that included problems with her gall bladder and right kidney. Veterinarians removed both organs but she suffered complications. Veterinarian Mitch Finnegan says Batik had a kind and gentle spirit and will be greatly missed. The zoo reported more bad news Friday, saying a 28year-od Damara zebra had to be euthanized. Veterinarians believe the zebra named Frack had congestive heart failure.

ROSEBURG — Police have arrested a 16-year-old boy in Roseburg on charges alleging he raped and murdered a 5-year-old girl who shared the home where he sometimes lived with his father. Police say the teenager was taken to jail Friday on aggravated murder and rape charges after the girls’ mother called 911 reporting her daughter was unconscious and not breathing. Sgt. Aaron Dunbar said the District Attorney’s office plans to go to a grand jury next week to seek an adult indictment on the charges.

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THOUGHT FOR TODAY “One can pay back the loan of gold, but one dies forever in debt to those who are kind.� — Malayan proverb

TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Former boxer Jake LaMotta is 89. Writer-producer Earl Hamner Jr. is 87. Former New York City Mayor David N. Dinkins is 83. Actor William Smithers is 83. Broadway composer Jerry Herman is 79. Director Ivan Passer is 77. Actor Lawrence Pressman is 71. Singer Mavis Staples is 71. Actor Mills Watson is 70. Actor Robert Pine is 69. Rock musician Jerry Miller (Moby Grape) is 67. International Tennis Hall of Famer Virginia Wade is 65. Actor Ron

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

DUII — Jeanette Ann Jania, 60, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2 p.m. July 8, in the area of Northwest Wall Street and Northwest Louisiana Avenue. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 4:40 p.m. July 8, in the 800 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:10 p.m. July 8, in the 200 block of Southeast Cessna Drive. Theft — A purse was reported stolen at 8 p.m. July 8, in the 800 block of Northeast Sixth Street. Criminal mischief — Damage to a vehicle was reported at 7:14 a.m. July 9, in the 2600 block of Northeast Forum Drive. Redmond Police Department

DUII — William Conor McKechney, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:46 p.m. July 8, in the 2400 block of South U.S. Highway 97. Theft — A cell phone was reported stolen at 7:01 p.m. July 8, in the 600 block of Southwest 12th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:54 p.m. July 8, in the 400 block of Southwest Sixth Street. Theft — Items were reported stolen from a vehicle at 5:01 p.m. July 8, in the area of Southwest 27th Street and Southwest Pumice Avenue. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 10:12

a.m. July 8, in the 900 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 9:32 a.m. July 8, in the 600 block of Northeast Larch Avenue. DUII — Edward Leon Vesci, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:31 a.m. July 8, in the 1500 block of Southwest Highland Avenue. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 2:03 a.m. July 8, in the area of Southwest Sixth Street and Southwest Black Butte Boulevard. Prineville Police Department

Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 3:41 p.m. July 8, in the area of South Main Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 6:41 p.m. July 8, in the area of Northeast Third Street. Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office

Theft — A scanner was reported stolen at 12:08 p.m. July 8, in the 51600 block of Huntington Road in La Pine. Theft — Bicycles were reported stolen at 12:07 p.m. July 8, in the 1500 block of Southwest Cline Falls Road in Redmond. Theft — A propane tank was reported stolen at 11:36 a.m. July 8, in the 53300 block of Woodstock Drive in La Pine. DUII — Harold Julius Smith, 57, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at midnight July 8, in the 800 block of East U.S. Highway 20 in Sisters.

BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 6:06 a.m. — Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, in the area of

S.E. 15th St. and Knott Road. 9:32 a.m. — Brush or brushand-grass mixture fire, in the area of N.E. 18th St. 10:18 a.m. — Natural vegetation fire, 61545 S. U.S. Highway 97. 5:38 p.m. — Passenger vehicle fire, 60820 Nugget Ave. 6:03 p.m. — Natural vegetation fire, 1300 N.W. Wall St. 7:54 p.m. — Passenger vehicle fire, 320 S.W. Powerhouse Drive. 20 — Medical aid calls.

PETS The following animals have been turned in to the Humane Society of the Ochocos in Prineville or the Humane Society of Redmond animal shelters. You may call the Humane Society of the Ochocos — 541-447-7178 — or check the Website at www. humanesocietyochocos.com for pets being held at the shelter and presumed lost. The Redmond shelter’s telephone number is 541923-0882 — or refer to the Website at www.redmondhumane.org. The Bend shelter’s Website is www.hsco.org. Redmond

Domestic medium-haired cat — Young female, black; found near Northwest Birch Street. Domestic medium-haired cat — Adult female, tortoiseshell; found near Golden Mantel Road in Terrebonne. Domestic short-haired cat — Adult male, black; found near Cliffside Way. Boxer — Adult male, red and white, black cloth collar; found near Northwest Coyner Avenue and Northwest Way. Akita and Labrador Retriever mix — Adult male, gold; found near Terrebonne.

1865 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 541-389-1177 SUZUKI


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THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JULY 10, 2010

MARKET REPORT

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2,196.45 NASDAQ CLOSE CHANGE +21.05 +.97%

STOC K S R E P O R T For a complete listing of stocks, including mutual funds, see Pages B4-5

B U S I N E SS IN BRIEF

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10,198.03 DOW JONES CLOSE CHANGE +59.04 +.58%

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1,077.96 S&P 500 CLOSE CHANGE +7.71 +.72%

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BONDS

By David Barboza and Miguel Helft New York Times News Service

Federal prosecutors are ramping up their criminal investigation into HSBC concerning its sale of offshore tax services to wealthy Americans suspected of evading taxes, according to two people briefed on the matter and to court papers. At least two American clients of HSBC, which is based in London, are aiding federal prosecutors by turning over account details, names of bankers and internal memorandums and other confidential documents regarding HSBC’s offshore private bank, according to one person briefed on the matter. He spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the continuing investigation. HSBC, however, has not received a target letter from prosecutors indicating that a grand jury has been convened to investigate it, according to another person briefed on the matter. That would be the first step toward an indictment.

SEC chairman mulls new rules

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$1209.60 GOLD CLOSE CHANGE +$13.80

Compromise allows China, Google to claim victories Chinese site will link to uncensored Hong Kong page

U.S. widens HSBC tax investigation

Ten-year CLOSE 3.05 treasury CHANGE +1.33%

SHANGHAI — The tense standoff that began in January with Google’s unprecedented rebuke of China’s Internet censorship rules appeared to ease Friday with a compromise that may allow both sides to claim a partial victory. Google said that Beijing agreed to renew the company’s license to operate a website in mainland China, months after Google said it would stop censoring search results in China. Google’s challenge of Beijing’s authority, which followed a series of so-

phisticated online attacks which Google said originated in China, put into question Google’s ability to do any business in the world’s largest Internet market. The license, which China could revoke at any time, allows Google to keep its website, Google.cn, in China and continue operating some Internet services there. It also allows Google to continue referring users in China to its uncensored Hong Kongbased Chinese language search engine, at google.com.hk. Hong Kong, a former British colony that is now a special administrative re-

gion of China, is governed separately from the mainland. Under the current setup in mainland China, users can conduct a Google search and see the results, but often they cannot open the links because they are blocked by the Chinese government. The renewal of Google’s license came two weeks after the company was forced to change its approach of automatically sending Chinese search users to its Hong Kong-based site. Under threat from Beijing that its license would be denied, Google instead began displaying on Google.cn a link to the Hong Kong site that users could click to conduct searches. See Google / C5

Finally ditching the

DIAL-UP

Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said Friday that the agency might overhaul how shareholders obtain information and make decisions about the management of companies they invest in. Schapiro said at a conference in Chicago that the agency may require companies to include more information in periodic disclosures to investors. It may also reform the process by which investors vote for who sits on corporate boards. “We believe investors’ interests are served when they can participate productively in the governance of the companies they own,” Schapiro said.

Wholesale inventories Total estimates of monthly sales and inventories held by wholesalers:

Inventories: Seasonally adjusted

$450 billion

Total inventory $399B 400

350

Sales: Total sales $351B

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Photos by Matthew Staver / New York Times News Service

Cynthia Wegener posts an ad for a mare from the basement of her home in Norton County, Kan. Uploading a photo to the Internet takes 20 to 30 minutes with her dial-up connection.

Rural Americans revel in broadband access provided by $7.2B in stimulus spending By Susanna G. Kim New York Times News Service

Government stimulus spending is a contentious issue right now in Washington. But the $7.2 billion in the last stimulus package for extending high-speed Internet access is just beginning to be spent, and the beneficiaries could not be happier. Cynthia Wegener and her husband, owners of a farm and horse-breeding business in western Kansas, will be able

to upload a photograph of a horse to show a potential buyer in seconds, not the 20 to 30 minutes they now need with dial-up service. “I just cannot begin to tell you how frustrating it is to do anything with it,” she said. And in remote Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in Alaska, with limited Internet access, the program will bring more fundamental changes, expanding the health care options, for example, to allow doc-

tors in Anchorage, 400 miles to the east, to see patients via videoconference. “This is the first time in my 25 years in health care where technology has a direct impact,” said David Hodges, the chief information officer for the YukonKuskokwim Health Corp. “It sure gives you a new perspective on what you do for a living.” The types of Internet activities that most Americans take for granted — watching videos, downloading songs, social networking — are out of reach for millions of homes across the United States. These people — many in poor, rural pockets — either have outmoded dial-up Internet service or have no affordable high-speed service. Sometimes the nearest high-speed connection is at the local library, 10 miles away. The $7.2 billion plan in the last stimulus package was approved without significant debate. The program is intended to extend broadband service to what is known as the “middle mile,” which can connect to institutions like schools and hospitals, and the “last mile” — homes and businesses — that big Internet providers have bypassed because the expected revenue was too small to justify the big investments needed. See Internet / C5

Cynthia Wegener, who relies on dialup to send photographs of horses to prospective customers, checks on her herd. More than $7 billion from the federal stimulus package will help extend high-speed Internet access to more poor and rural areas.

320 300 2009

Three-horse race begins for disputed Air Force contract By W.J. Hennigan Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — The Pentagon entered the home stretch to replace its fleet of 1950s-era Air Force refueling tankers, with three bids turned in by Friday’s deadline. The bids for the $35 billion program to build the planes used to refuel U.S. fighter jets and bombers in midflight included expected ones from Boeing Co. and Airbus parent European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co., or EADS, two of the world’s largest aerospace giants. But they also included a lastminute surprise entry from a dark-horse team: small, cashstrapped U.S. Aerospace Inc. of Santa Fe Springs, Calif., and former Soviet Union plane manufacturer Antonov of Ukraine. It was the latest twist in the Pentagon’s decade-long attempt to hand out one of the largest military contracts in U.S. history. The Pentagon has been trying to replace its fleet of 415 refueling tankers since 2001. The contract has twice been awarded — and twice canceled amid accusations of backroom politics and discriminatory rule-making. See Tanker / C5

Who’s hiring

For the recovery to gain steam, most economists believe small businesses need to be strong enough to hire new workers. But according to one measure, the employment picture in this sector is weakening. Intuit Inc., which provides payroll services for small employers, says the nation’s tiniest companies had fewer new hires last month than any time since October. The data are further evidence of a trend that has had many economists worried for months and intensifies concerns that smaller firms may not be robust enough to help lead the country out of its financial slump. — From wire reports

$360 billion

$18.053 SILVER CLOSE CHANGE +$0.201

Editor’s note: With Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties having the first-, third- and fifthhighest unemployment rates, respectively, among Oregon’s 36 counties in May, The Bulletin will publish occasional articles on Saturdays featuring local businesses that are hiring. This is the first article.

Small-business hiring weakens

Seasonally adjusted

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2010

Source: Department of Commerce AP

Who: Gavin McMichael What: Bourbon Street Sea and Soul Food; The Blacksmith Restaurant Where: 5 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend (Bourbon Street); 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend (Blacksmith) Positions: Servers and cocktail, host and kitchen staff Total jobs: 55 to 65 at Bourbon Street; six at The Blacksmith When to apply: As soon as possible. McMichael is hoping to hire by the end of next week How to apply: Drop off résumé at 5 N.W. Minnesota Ave., or e-mail foh@bourbonstreetbend.com Tip from the owner: Everything is about sales, even applying for a job, so make sure your résumé is professional. McMichael said some people will scratch out old information with a pen, and write in the new information by hand. “You’ve told me everything I need to know to avoid you in that one single action,” McMichael said. Details: Bourbon Street Sea and Soul Food is set to open July 21. A New Orleans-themed restaurant, Bourbon Street is replacing Staccato at the Firehall, which closed in June. McMichael, who is the majority partner in the restaurant, said he has hired staff for some of the 55 to 65 open positions, but is still accepting résumés. He also is hiring for his other business endeavors, including The Blacksmith, where six positions are open. Additionally, McMichael said he has preliminary plans to open another restaurant, as well as an event center, in coming months. That means he may be hiring again soon. — David Holley, The Bulletin


B USI N ESS

C4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

The weekly market review New York Stock Exchange Name

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Chg Wkly

A-B-C ABB Ltd 18.86 ACE Ltd u54.69 AES Corp d10.23 AFLAC 48.08 AGCO 29.13 AK Steel 13.38 AMB Pr 24.56 AMR 6.91 AOL n 20.28 AT&T Inc 24.83 AU Optron 9.69 Aarons s 17.55 AbtLab 48.03 AberFitc 36.06 AcadiaRlt 16.61 Accenture 39.42 Actuant 18.79 Acuity 38.85 AdvAmer d3.83 AdvAuto u51.27 AMD 7.34 AecomTch 23.74 Aegon 5.89 Aeropostl s 28.62 Aetna 27.63 AffilMgrs 65.68 Agilent 28.65 Agnico g 57.91 Agrium g 58.17 AirProd 69.74 Airgas 64.90 AirTran 4.99 Albemarle 41.53 AlbertoC n 28.83 AlcatelLuc 2.72 Alcoa 10.94 Alcon 152.95 AllgEngy 22.07 AllegTch 48.77 Allergan 65.49 AlliData 58.20 AlliancOne 3.84 AlliBInco 8.18 AlliantEgy 33.53 AldIrish 2.45 Allstate 29.44 AlphaNRs 37.75 AlpTotDiv 5.49 Altria 21.30 AlumChina 19.69 AmBev 106.80 AmbacF h .67 Amdocs 28.11 Ameren 24.90 AMovilL 49.39 AmAxle 7.74 AmCampus 27.59 AEagleOut 12.07 AEP 34.84 AmExp 42.58 AmIntlGrp 35.90 AmOriBio d2.38 AmTower u46.01 AmWtrWks 21.23 Americdt 19.77 Ameriprise 39.00 AmeriBrgn 31.84 Ametek 42.48 Amphenol 40.64 Anadarko 45.41 AnalogDev 29.30 AnglogldA 40.96 AnnTaylr 17.80 Annaly 18.15 Anworth 7.23 Aon Corp 38.34 Apache 87.88 AptInv 20.29 AquaAm u18.76 ArcelorMit 30.26 ArchCoal 22.06 ArchDan 26.72 ArenaRes 34.16 ArrowEl 23.25 ArvMerit 14.12 Ashland 48.07 Assurant 35.88 AssuredG 15.68 AstoriaF 14.51 AstraZen 49.00 AtwoodOcn 26.95 AutoNatn 19.37 Autoliv 50.36 AutoZone u200.12 AvalonBay 98.98 AveryD 34.62 AvisBudg 10.68 Avnet 25.13 Avon 28.27 AXIS Cap 31.68 BB&T Cp 28.18 BCE g 30.12 BHP BillLt 67.84 BHPBil plc 56.38 BJs Whls u44.41 BP PLC 34.05 BPZ Res d3.85 BRE 37.86 BRFBrasil s 13.69 BakrHu 46.26 BallCp 54.31 BallyTech 33.17 BanColum u54.55 BcBilVArg 12.21 BcoBrades 18.98 BcoSantand 12.74 BcSBrasil n 12.27 BkofAm 15.11 BkIrelnd 3.85 BkMont g 57.83 BkNYMel 26.23 Barclay 18.40 BarVixShT 25.55 Bard 79.10 BarnesNob d13.28 BarrickG 43.57 Baxter 43.91 BeazerHm 3.58 BeckCoult 62.14 BectDck 69.46 Belo 6.13 Bemis 27.93 Berkley 27.13 BerkH B s 79.75 BerryPet 27.77 BestBuy 34.37 BigLots 33.28 BBarrett 32.01 BioMedR 16.47 Biovail 19.34 BlkIntlG&I 9.97 Blackstone 10.50 BlockHR d14.60 Boeing 64.66 Boise Inc 5.43 Borders 1.44 BorgWarn 39.93 BostProp 75.23

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Name

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BostonSci 6.46 Bowne 11.28 BoydGm 8.58 Brandyw 10.53 Brinker 15.26 Brinks d19.43 BrMySq 25.60 BroadrdgF 20.34 Brookdale 14.78 BrkfldAs g 23.22 BrkfldPrp 14.16 BrwnBrn 19.47 Brunswick 13.48 Buckle 28.43 Buenavent 39.18 BungeLt 53.94 BurgerKing 17.47 CB REllis 13.90 CBL Asc 12.25 CBS B 14.04 CF Inds 74.24 CIGNA 31.29 CIT Grp n 36.99 CKE Rst 12.55 CMS Eng 15.67 CNO Fincl 5.28 CSX 51.76 CVS Care 29.80 CablvsnNY 25.34 CabotO&G 33.49 CalDive 6.15 Calgon 13.64 CallGolf 6.21 CallonP h 6.64 Calpine 13.48 CamdnP 43.39 Cameco g 22.84 Cameron 35.20 CampSp 36.30 CdnNRy g 58.64 CdnNRs gs 35.56 CapOne 43.68 CapitlSrce 5.29 CapsteadM 11.33 CardnlHlt s 34.61 CareFusn n 22.61 CarMax 19.35 Carnival 32.12 Carters 26.98 Caterpillar 64.72 Celanese 26.35 Cemex 9.62 Cemig pf 15.12 CenovusE n 28.36 CenterPnt 14.05 CnElBrasil 13.24 CntryLink 34.45 ChesEng 21.48 Chevron 71.84 ChicB&I 19.78 Chicos 10.28 Chimera 3.78 ChinaLife 67.70 ChinaMble 50.94 ChinaSecur 5.07 ChinaUni 13.19 Chipotle 140.41 Chiquita 12.53 Chubb 52.13 Cimarex 74.68 CinciBell 3.03 Cinemark 14.04 Citigp pfJ 25.60 Citigrp 4.04 ClayGSol 7.70 CliffsNRs 51.07 Clorox 64.12 Coach 36.50 CobaltIEn n 7.23 CocaCE 27.68 CocaCl 52.40 Coeur 15.66 ColgPal 82.15 CollctvBrd 16.26 ColonPT 14.88 Comerica 39.15 CmclMtls d13.68 CmwReit rs 24.87 ComScop 24.77 CmtyHlt 32.72 CompPrdS 15.35 CompSci 45.67 ComstkRs d27.03 Con-Way 31.41 ConAgra 23.91 ConchoRes 54.64 ConocPhil 52.30 ConsolEngy 37.09 ConEd 45.27 ConstellA 16.07 ConstellEn 33.51 CtlAir B 22.92 ContlRes 43.57 Cnvrgys 10.14 Cooper Ind 45.81 CooperTire 20.03 Copel 21.44 CornPdts 31.01 Corning 17.51 CorpOffP 37.76 CorrectnCp 18.85 Cosan Ltd 10.46 Cott Cp 5.84 CousPrp d6.30 CovantaH 15.84 CoventryH 18.77 Covidien 40.76 CredSuiss 42.33 CrwnCstle 38.02 CrownHold 25.35 Cummins 71.53 CurEuro 126.00 Cytec 42.47

+.08 +.32 -.02 +.06 +.48 +.52 +.39 +.03 +.30 +1.02 +.26 +.72 +.02 +.91 +.03 +1.11 +.18 +.49 +.42 +1.19 +.33 +.74 +.10 +.57 +.51 +1.04 -.18 -3.49 +.93 +2.15 +.76 +4.16 +.30 +.81 +.15 +.62 +.21 +.48 +.09 +1.22 +.72 +5.82 +.28 +1.52 +.94 +2.59 ... +.02 +.23 +.99 +.11 +.46 +1.00 +4.06 +.37 +.72 +.24 +1.41 -.12 +2.56 +.10 +.59 +.08 +.59 +.07 +.15 -.06 +.54 +.23 +.81 +1.19 +3.29 +.26 +1.84 +.18 +2.67 -.18 +.72 +.22 +1.78 +.38 +2.76 +.90 +4.25 +.31 +.61 +.15 +.39 +.12 +.60 -.14 +.19 +.06 -.41 +.54 +1.50 +.29 +.28 +1.55 +5.54 +.37 +2.09 +.07 +.33 +.18 +.10 +.60 +2.56 +.08 +1.02 +.27 +.22 +.11 +1.30 +.04 +.97 +1.43 +4.53 +.41 +1.42 +.19 +.13 +.05 +.19 +.55 +1.60 +.45 +.96 +.29 +.55 +.19 -.34 +.84 +3.17 +.14 +.64 +1.05 +2.76 -.11 +4.51 +.11 +.18 +.10 +1.09 +.45 +.61 +.07 +.25 +.13 +.96 +1.65 +4.18 +.16 +2.38 +.38 +.73 -.07 -.17 +.18 +1.65 -.02 +2.35 +.61 +.83 +.19 +3.43 +.28 +.01 +.38 +.99 +.97 +3.87 +.42 +1.06 +.27 -.32 +.29 +1.83 -.29 +1.26 +.34 +1.30 +.32 +1.57 -.18 +.02 +.03 +1.76 -.13 +.75 -.46 +.74 +.75 +3.48 +.63 +3.66 -.05 +2.08 +.02 +.68 +.57 +2.30 +.82 +2.82 -1.00 +.08 -.08 +.47 +.38 +2.03 +.10 +.16 +.19 +.28 -.18 +2.07 +.11 +1.18 +.55 +1.36 +.21 +.14 +.19 +.61 -.09 +.17 +.08 +.04 -.04 +.86 +.34 +1.27 -.02 +1.09 +.04 +4.23 -.53 +1.22 -.15 +.83 +2.59 +7.29 -.50 +.92 +.23 +4.09

Name

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Dillards 21.45 DrxTcBll s 28.73 DrTcBear rs 43.60 DrxEMBll s 25.78 DirEMBr rs 40.22 DirFnBear 14.79 DrxFBull s 22.05 DREBear rs 35.00 DrxREBll s 37.48 DrSCBear rs 36.61 DirxSCBull 39.84 DirxLCBear 15.81 DirxLCBull 44.65 DrxEBear rs 56.39 DirxEnBull 27.82 Discover 14.85 Disney 33.75 DoleFood n 10.72 DollarGn n 28.14 DollarTh 45.78 DomRescs 40.90 Dominos 12.21 Domtar grs 49.41 DEmmett 14.56 Dover 44.17 DowChm 25.95 DrPepSnap 38.54 DresserR 32.98 DuPont 36.90 DuPFabros 24.47 DukeEngy 16.79 DukeRlty 10.69 Dynegy rs d3.79 EMC Cp 19.45 EMCOR 24.03 ENI 39.66 EOG Res 105.57

+.34 +.48 +.46 +4.18 -.60 -8.10 +.89 +4.03 -1.67 -7.87 -.74 -3.52 +1.01 +3.87 -1.52 -6.65 +1.38 +4.76 -1.74 -6.54 +1.72 +5.30 -.38 -2.90 +1.04 +6.53 -.84-12.11 +.48 +4.57 +.22 +1.01 +.41 +2.37 -.25 +.03 +.51 +.13 +1.42 +4.08 +.15 +2.23 +.34 +.71 +1.43 +1.15 +.43 +.89 +.58 +3.06 +.96 +2.98 +.34 +1.26 +.29 +1.72 +.61 +2.84 +.20 +.77 +.07 +.73 +.04 -.14 +.07 +.17 +.08 +1.41 +.31 +.91 +.01 +2.44 -.65 +7.23

Name Fluor FEMSA FootLockr FordM FordM wt ForestCA ForestLab ForestOil Fortress FortuneBr FranceTel FrankRes FMCG FrontierCm FrontierOil Frontline

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45.41 +.21 +3.65 45.41 +.72 +1.82 13.29 +.32 +.67 10.85 +.23 +.57 3.48 +.15 +.24 11.39 -.01 +.12 28.39 +.07 +1.28 29.11 +.46 +2.88 3.57 +.24 +.50 40.70 +.54 +1.99 18.95 -.24 +1.15 92.24 +1.53 +7.27 65.98 +2.82 +7.44 7.39 -.11 +.04 12.88 +.22 +.27 29.97 -.05 +1.54

Name

How to Read the Market in Review Here are the 1,133 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 830 most active on the Nasdaq National Market and 255 most active on American Stock Exchange. Stocks in bold changed 10 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letter’s list. Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. Chg: Loss or gain for last day of week. No change indicated by “…” mark. Wkly: Loss or gain for the week. No change indicated by … Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold, for last day of the week. Wkly: Weekly net change in the NAV.

G-H-I GLG Ptrs GMX Rs Gafisa s GameStop GamGld g Gannett Gap Gartner GencoShip GnCable GenDynam GenElec vjGnGrthP GenMarit GenMills s Genpact GenuPrt Genworth Gerdau g

4.44 7.14 13.69 19.03 5.42 14.84 18.53 24.67 15.78 27.10 60.84 14.95 13.75 d5.66 36.15 15.52 41.12 14.59 10.98

+.04 +.07 +.57 +.23 +.09 +1.45 +.18 +.76 +.15 +.15 +.35 +1.71 +.31 -.95 +.76 +1.43 +.28 +1.23 +.50 +1.02 -.13 +2.14 +.12 +1.07 +.33 +1.00 -.02 +.21 -.57 +1.01 +.21 +.01 +.24 +1.57 +.64 +1.93 -.01 +.04

Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. cld - Issue has been called for redemption by company. d - New 52week low. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. ec - Company formerly listed on the American Exchange's Emerging Company Marketplace. g - Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h - temporary exmpt from Nasdaq capital and surplus listing qualification. n - Stock was a new issue in the last year. The 52-week high and low figures date only from the beginning of trading. pf - Preferred stock issue. pr - Preferences. pp - Holder owes installments of purchase price. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. rt - Right to buy security at a specified price. s - Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. wi - Trades will be settled when the stock is issued. wd - When distributed. wt - Warrant, allowing a purchase of a stock. u - New 52-week high. un - Unit,, including more than one security. vj - Company in bankruptcy or receivership, or being reorganized under the bankruptcy law. Appears in front of the name. Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Previous day’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.

Source: The Associated Press and Lipper, Inc. Sales figures are unofficial.

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Chg Wkly

The Bulletin as their primary source for local sales and shopping information. (More than all other sources combined.)

Drive results for your advertising dollars call 541-382-1811 AMERICAN OPINION RESEARCH 2006

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Hospira u58.17 -.47 +1.05 HospPT 19.83 +.07 +.02 HostHotls 14.21 +.28 +1.14 HovnanE 3.89 +.16 +.30 Humana 46.20 +.26 +1.86 Huntsmn 9.01 +.08 +.57 IAMGld g 17.02 +.61 +.36 ICICI Bk 37.85 +.70 +2.08 IDT Corp u16.02 +1.02 +1.59 ING 8.79 +.06 +1.17 ION Geoph 4.38 +.16 +.44 iShCmxG s 11.84 +.10 -.01 iSAstla 20.50 +.15 +1.52 iShBelg 11.71 -.03 +.70 iShBraz 67.34 +.73 +3.47 iSCan 26.21 +.56 +1.60 iShEMU 31.28 -.02 +2.17 iShGer 19.87 +.02 +.99 iSh HK 15.38 +.17 +.50 iShJapn 9.60 -.06 +.33 iSh Kor 47.45 +.95 +3.20 iSMalas 11.95 +.05 +.43 iShMex 49.96 +.20 +2.40 iShSing 11.85 +.08 +.42 iSPacxJpn 38.32 +.35 +2.45 iSSpain 37.40 -.07 +4.05 iSTaiwn 12.00 +.04 +.71 iSh UK 14.46 +.01 +.80 iShSilver 17.73 +.12 +.27 iShS&P100 48.95 +.25 +2.55 iShChina25 40.68 +.73 +1.66 iShDJTr 75.16 +.87 +4.21 iSSP500 108.31 +.78 +5.71 iShBAgB 106.74 -.16 +.01 iShEMkts 39.98 +.49 +2.23 iShiBxB u107.95 -.13 +.12 iSSPGth 55.45 +.33 +2.84 iShSPLatA 44.91 +.59 +2.66 iShB20 T 99.22 -.57 -1.57 iShB1-3T 83.99 -.03 -.03 iS Eafe 50.06 +.05 +2.97 iSRusMCV 38.05 +.40 +2.25 iSRusMCG 45.41 +.42 +2.22 iShiBxHYB 86.60 -.20 +1.90 iShC&SRl 56.78 +.67 +3.12 iSR1KV 56.46 +.51 +3.13 iSR1KG 47.73 +.33 +2.37 iSRus1K 59.50 +.46 +3.17 iSR2KV 58.65 +.92 +2.97 iSR2KG 68.63 +.97 +3.34 iShR2K 62.94 +.96 +3.12 iShBShtT 110.23 ... +.03

AresCap 13.75 +.14 +1.22 ArgonSt u34.44 -.01 +.17 AriadP 2.89 +.13 +.21 Ariba Inc 17.68 +.78 +1.84 ArkBest d21.53 +.38 +2.15 ArmHld u13.60 +.37 +1.22 ArrayBio 2.99 -.03 -.09 Arris 10.63 +.05 +.55 ArtTech d3.75 +.11 +.39 ArubaNet 15.50 +.08 +1.26 AsiaInfo 24.53 +.46 +2.87 AspenTech 11.04 ... -.16 AsscdBanc 13.17 +.21 +1.14 athenahlth 24.77 +.15 +.86 Atheros 28.76 +.11 +1.60 AtlasAir 51.10 +.89 +4.29 AtlasEngy 29.51 +.27 +3.64 Atmel 4.99 +.14 +.39 Autodesk 24.93 +.32 +.62 AutoData 40.72 +.35 +1.29 Auxilium d21.55 +.18 +.09 AvagoT n 22.01 +.22 +.44 AvanirPhm 3.32 +.05 +.19 AviatNetw d4.04 +.26 +.54 Axcelis 1.74 +.16 +.16 BE Aero 27.27 +.44 +2.56 BGC Ptrs 5.16 +.14 +.18 BJsRest 23.19 +.58 +.49 BMC Sft 36.46 +.20 +1.70 BannerCp 2.20 +.06 +.23 BeacnRfg 17.66 ... +.78 BebeStrs 6.90 +.32 +.57 BedBath 37.45 +.41 +1.26 Big 5Sprt 11.66 -.35 -1.25 BigBand 3.17 +.04 +.15 Biocryst 5.93 +.08 +.24 Biodel 3.79 +.09 -.01 BiogenIdc 51.71 +.86 +2.29 BioMarin 19.05 -.01 +.68 BioSante 1.64 -.08 +.03 BioScrip 6.01 +.15 +.58 BlkRKelso 10.33 +.08 +.75 Blkboard 37.71 +.65 +.65 BlueCoat 22.37 +1.11 +2.21 BlueNile 48.75 +.18 +3.58 BobEvans d24.22 +.23 +.02 BonTon 9.22 +.24 +.12 BostPrv 6.95 +.06 +.62 BrigExp 16.07 -.03 +1.28 Brightpnt 7.33 +.12 +.37 Broadcom 36.30 +.10 +2.80 Broadwind 3.32 +.07 +.53 BrcdeCm d5.05 -.09 +.08 BrklneB 9.34 +.11 +.50 BrooksAuto 8.17 +.07 +.41 BrukerCp h 11.29 +.13 -.55 Bucyrus 53.87 +1.29 +4.95 BuffaloWW 37.93 +.80 +1.01 CA Inc 18.77 +.21 +.81 CBOE n d28.97 -.04 -1.89 CDC Cp A 2.17 +.01 +.07 CH Robins 57.06 +.27 +2.01 CME Grp 277.19 -4.44 +2.33 CNinsure 24.73 -.82 -1.43 CSG Sys 18.67 +.11 +.69 CTC Media 16.79 +.58 +1.87 CVB Fncl 10.41 +.41 +.95 CadencePh 7.20 ... +.17 Cadence 6.05 +.11 +.25 CalifPizza 14.73 +.75 +.51 CaliperLSc 4.49 -.01 +.24

CdnSolar 11.45 +.14 +1.31 CapFedF 34.10 +.45 +1.21 CpstnTrb 1.01 +.01 +.06 CardioNet d4.93 +.17 -.06 CareerEd 24.90 +.79 +3.31 Carmike d7.24 -.03 +1.17 Carrizo 18.04 +.25 +1.27 Caseys 35.84 -.05 +.39 CasualMal 3.59 +.32 +.38 CatalystH 35.88 -.21 +1.94 CathayGen 11.40 +.80 +1.50 CaviumNet 27.57 +.27 +1.68 CeleraGrp 6.68 -.08 +.19 Celgene 51.18 +1.13 +.44 CelldexTh 4.80 +.24 +.26 CenterFncl 5.26 +.24 +.19 CentEuro 24.45 -.52 +2.72 CEurMed 22.81 +.80 +2.68 CenGrdA lf 9.64 +.29 +.39 CentAl 9.77 +.30 +1.17 Cephln 58.39 +.55 +2.44 Cepheid 14.96 +.01 -.49 Cerner 80.23 +.40 +4.13 ChrmSh d4.38 +.31 +1.00 ChartInds d15.64 +.79 +.62 ChkPoint 30.69 +.36 +1.48 Cheesecake 24.76 +1.11 +2.60 ChildPlace 45.25 +.82 +1.68 ChinAgri s 11.48 +.29 +.74 ChinaBAK d1.52 +.02 -.09 ChinaBiot 12.66 +.36 +.26 ChinaInfo 5.45 +.17 +.26 ChinaMda 9.57 +.54 +.67 ChinaRE n 8.86 +.55 +1.37 ChinaSky d10.42 +.43 -.28 ChinaSun 4.01 +.05 +.25 ChinaCEd d6.00 +.17 +.39 CienaCorp 12.72 -.13 +.23 CinnFin 27.08 +.26 +1.55 Cintas 24.98 +.26 +1.32 Cirrus 17.64 +.23 +2.06 Cisco 22.70 +.15 +1.57 CitrixSys 44.62 -.08 +2.51 CleanEngy 15.50 +.77 +1.03 Clearwire 7.00 -.11 -.23 Codexis n d7.40 +.16 -.47 CogentC d7.64 +.07 +.61 Cogent 8.92 +.01 -.02 CognizTech 53.46 +.72 +4.08 Coinstar 46.96 +.43 +3.85 ColdwtrCrk 3.66 +.06 +.36 ColBnkg 17.50 +.06 +.08 CombinRx 1.58 ... +.20 Comcast 18.07 +.23 +.61 Comc spcl 17.04 +.23 +.56 CmcBMO 37.60 +.43 +2.22 CmclVehcl 10.57 +.27 +.73 CommVlt 23.39 +.30 +.68 CompDivHd 14.11 +.39 +.51 Compuwre 8.35 +.12 +.39 Concepts d12.67 -3.12 -3.07 ConcurTch 43.93 +.49 +2.03 Conexant 2.26 +.08 +.20 ConsolCm 18.07 +.27 +1.14 CopanoEn u28.02 +.17 +.58 Copart 35.85 +.17 +.91 CorinthC d10.11 +.66 +.95 Costco 56.19 +.48 +1.96 CrackerB 47.97 +.47 +1.66 Cree Inc 66.12 +.40 +5.28 Crocs 10.82 +.20 +.22

CrosstexE 6.34 +.12 +.36 Ctrip.com s 36.73 +1.48 -1.34 CubistPh 21.44 +.33 +.73 Curis 1.51 +.03 +.06 Cyberonics 23.31 -.39 -.08 CybrSrce u25.96 +.13 +.44 Cyclacel 1.59 -.01 -.12 Cymer 30.89 +.41 +1.29 CyprsBio d2.14 -.03 -.05 CypSemi 10.83 +.09 +.80 Cytori 3.74 -.02 +.27

ExtrmNet Ezcorp F5 Netwks FBR Cap FLIR Sys FSI Intl Fastenal FiberTw rs FifthThird Finisar rs FinLine FFnclOH FMidBc FstNiagara FstSolar FstMerit Fiserv Flextrn FocusMda FormFac Fortinet n Fossil Inc FosterWhl FredsInc FresKabi rt FuelSysSol FuelCell FultonFncl Fuqi Intl lf FushiCopp

4.45 25.33 10.25 47.73 10.60 37.73 39.43 60.13 51.51 11.01 58.01 14.85 11.65 14.91 62.97 31.75 11.28 10.16 63.35 64.40 8.79 12.40 25.78 60.53

Name

PepcoHold 16.68 +.01 +1.02 PepsiCo 63.50 -.50 +1.97 PerkElm 19.59 -.14 -.06 Petrohawk 17.62 -.08 +.46 PetrbrsA 31.61 +.15 +1.33 Petrobras 36.37 +.25 +2.25 PtroqstE 6.96 -.04 +.54 Pfizer 14.77 -.05 +.63 PhilipMor 48.59 +.05 +2.14 PhilipsEl 31.89 +.18 +1.86 PhlVH 47.95 +.29 +2.48 PhnxCos 2.07 +.14 +.05 Pier 1 6.72 +.32 +.61 PinnclEnt 9.86 +.38 +.83 PinWst 38.15 -.01 +1.91 PioNtrl 60.87 +.51 +3.61 PitnyBw 23.06 +.12 +1.09 PlainsEx 21.55 -.27 +1.07 PlumCrk 35.62 +.48 +1.61 Polo RL 77.16 -.06 +4.04 PolyOne 8.94 +.18 +1.13 PortGE 19.06 +.08 +.89 PostPrp 24.40 +.46 +2.07 Potash 93.00 +2.69 +7.59 PwshDB 21.98 +.04 +.78 PS Agri 24.54 -.08 +.43 PS USDBull 24.44 +.06 -.13 PwShHiYD 8.00 +.07 +.37 PwShPfd 13.83 +.04 +.07 Praxair 81.33 +.25 +4.45 PrecCastpt 110.08 +.73 +7.56 PrecDrill 7.20 +.15 +.66 PrideIntl 24.64 -.04 +2.04 PrinFncl 24.87 +.36 +1.86 ProShtDow 51.61 -.31 -2.87 ProShtS&P 52.45 -.36 -2.99 PrUShS&P 34.24 -.51 -4.09

of all Central Oregon adults cite

Gerdau 14.20 +.28 +.87 GlaxoSKln 34.84 -.07 +1.06 GlimchRt 5.99 +.18 +.46 GlobPay 37.60 +.51 +1.43 GolLinhas 13.27 +.43 +.87 GoldFLtd 13.12 +.18 +.29 Goldcrp g 41.59 +.98 +.19 GoldmanS 138.06 +2.60 +6.98 Goodrich 69.02 -.08 +3.66 GoodrPet 13.54 +.59 +1.69 Goodyear 10.89 +.15 +.88 vjGrace 22.61 +.94 +2.31 GrafTech 15.71 +.53 +1.47 Graingr 102.99 +1.42 +4.82 GrtAtlPac 4.74 +.14 +.32 GtPlainEn 17.70 +.03 +.75 Group1 d24.20 +.39 +.51 GpTelevisa 18.88 +.19 +1.01 Guess 33.90 +.38 +2.03 HCC Ins 25.59 +.27 +1.41 HCP Inc 33.51 +.68 +1.76 HSBC 47.57 +.08 +1.87 HSBC Cap2 u25.46 +.19 +.32 Hallibrtn 28.64 -.07 +2.90 Hanesbrds 25.01 +.47 +.71 HarleyD 23.79 +1.13 +1.93 Harman 32.12 +.42 +2.17 HarmonyG 10.58 +.08 +.27 HarrisCorp 42.90 -.16 +1.72 HartfdFn 23.53 +.86 +1.82 Hasbro 41.59 +.55 +1.14 HltCrREIT 43.18 +.33 +1.42 HltMgmt 7.55 -.10 +.23 HealthNet 24.80 +.03 +.57 HlthSouth 17.97 -.14 +.26 Heckmann 4.65 +.09 +.16 HeclaM 5.07 +.14 +.15 Heinz 44.91 -.07 +1.75 HelixEn 10.41 +.20 +.48 HelmPayne 40.45 +.42 +3.92 Hersha 4.66 +.14 +.26 Hershey 50.72 +.28 +2.51 Hertz 10.24 +.33 +1.17 Hess 53.23 -.87 +3.15 HewlettP 45.25 -.23 +2.44 Hexcel 16.83 +.37 +1.65 hhgregg 21.19 -.21 -1.38 HighwdPrp 28.55 +.24 +1.30 HollyCp 26.54 +.43 +1.33 HomeDp 28.26 +.11 +.50 HonwllIntl 41.27 +.54 +2.74 Hornbeck 16.46 -.08 +1.22

D-E-F

Chg Wkly

LO C AL ADVE RTI S I N G FACT #2

EQT Corp 37.07 -.27 +1.72 EastChm 56.32 +.08 +4.26 EKodak 4.55 +.12 +.25 Eaton 67.50 +.95 +3.80 EatnVan 30.25 +.94 +2.86 EVTxMGlo 10.16 +.24 +.71 Ecolab 47.86 +.23 +2.94 EdisonInt 33.06 +.09 +1.93 EdwLfSci s u56.14 +.54 +.73 ElPasoCp 12.17 +.13 +1.15 Elan 5.07 +.07 +.28 EldorGld g 17.15 +.76 +.26 EBrasAero 21.48 +.08 +.51 EmersonEl 46.42 +.49 +3.00 Emulex 9.61 +.01 +.44 EnCana g s 32.96 +.36 +2.40 EnergySol d5.13 +.12 +.23 EnerSys 22.68 +.59 +1.36 ENSCO 40.20 -.84 -.56 Entergy 76.11 +1.47 +5.41 EntPrPt 36.43 +.05 +1.58 Equifax 28.95 +.18 +.87 EqtyRsd 44.05 +.74 +3.38 EsteeLdr 62.19 +.69 +4.80 EvergrnEn d.07 -.01 -.03 ExcelM d5.08 +.20 +.13 ExcoRes 14.84 -.12 +.14 Exelon 40.62 +.13 +2.74 ExterranH 26.39 -.19 +1.11 ExtraSpce 14.13 +.20 +.66 ExxonMbl 58.78 -.03 +2.21 FMC Corp 59.44 +.76 +2.89 FMC Tech 61.62 -.05 +7.10 FNBCp PA 8.50 +.24 +.62 FTI Cnslt d32.86 +.92-10.01 FairchldS 9.11 +.27 +.67 FamilyDlr 36.00 -.30 -2.62 FedExCp 74.22 +.54 +2.81 FedRlty 73.41 +.33 +3.52 FedInvst d21.24 +.14 +.75 FelCor 5.04 +.14 +.43 Ferro 7.77 +.23 +.75 FibriaCelu 14.99 +.27 +.26 FidlNFin 13.65 +.24 +.83 FidNatInfo 27.70 +.05 +1.29 FstAFin n 13.88 +.30 +.90 FstBcpPR d.56 -.09 +.09 FstHorizon 12.05 +.29 +1.07 FstInRT 4.46 +.07 +.07 FirstEngy 37.01 +.60 +2.41 FlagstB rs d3.27 +.08 +.21 Flowserve 92.69 +1.23 +6.86

DCT Indl DPL DR Horton DTE DanaHldg Danaher s Darden DaVita DeVry DeanFds Deere DelMnte DeltaAir DenburyR DeutschBk DBGoldDL DBGoldDS DevelDiv DevonE DiaOffs DiamRk DianaShip DicksSptg DigitalRlt

Last

MonstrWw 12.33 +.47 +1.03 Moodys 22.04 +.74 +2.04 MorgStan 24.70 +.50 +1.87 Mosaic 46.13 +1.41 +6.70 Motorola 6.76 -.09 +.28 MuellerWat 3.91 -.01 +.11 MurphO d50.88 -.14 +2.44 NCR Corp 13.06 +.31 +1.03 NRG Egy 22.63 +.30 +1.63 NV Energy 12.60 +.34 +.81 NYSE Eur 28.24 +.11 +.90 Nabors 18.35 +.36 +1.03 NalcoHld 22.84 +.22 +1.54 NBkGreece 2.51 +.10 +.32 NatFnPrt 10.51 +.04 +.95 NatGrid 37.84 -.76 +.36 NOilVarco 35.51 -.12 +2.16 NatRetPrp 22.48 +.16 +1.02 NatSemi 14.13 +.06 +.57 NatwHP 36.50 +.55 +1.33 NavigCons d9.57 -.03 -.34 Navios 4.86 +.10 +.33 Navistar 49.57 -.60 +1.44 Netezza 14.26 +.17 +.79 NY CmtyB 16.17 +.27 +.94 NY Times 9.01 +.07 +.51 NewAlliBc 11.44 +.02 +.32 NewellRub 15.39 +.19 +1.11 NewfldExp 52.03 -.42 +4.70 NewmtM u61.93 +1.59 +3.17 NewpkRes 7.03 -.02 +.25 Nexen g 20.78 +.13 +1.22 NextEraEn 51.43 +.43 +2.47 NiSource 15.84 +.19 +1.15 NikeB 70.15 -.13 +2.29 99 Cents 15.70 +.49 +.76 NipponTT 21.24 -.06 +.65

iShUSPfd iShDJTel iShREst iShFnSc iShSPSm iShBasM iStar ITT Corp ITT Ed ITW IngerRd IngrmM InlandRE IntegrysE IntcntlEx IBM Intl Coal IntlGame IntPap Interpublic IntPotash Invernss Invesco InvTech IronMtn ItauUnibH IvanhM g

37.71 +.10 +.75 19.33 ... +.78 48.62 +.63 +2.40 52.14 +.85 +3.45 55.86 +.77 +2.65 57.49 +1.23 +4.64 4.31 +.08 +.13 46.95 -.14 +2.28 d85.16 +.86 +5.84 43.33 +.29 +2.20 34.04 -.21 +.72 d15.60 -.07 +.48 7.69 -.02 +.01 46.41 +.24 +2.80 106.64 -.67 +.41 127.96 -.01 +6.10 4.40 +.08 +.65 15.86 -.08 +.41 23.67 +.52 +1.08 7.72 +.09 +.79 22.10 +.73 +2.12 26.70 +.56 +.90 18.56 +.68 +1.93 d15.38 +.22 -.18 23.52 +.19 +1.51 21.52 +.36 +2.31 14.00 +.34 +.73

J-K-L JCrew 36.64 +.96 +.15 JPMorgCh 38.85 +.69 +3.02 Jabil 13.97 +.26 +.95 JacksnHew d1.01 -.02 -.02 JacobsEng 37.97 +.60 +2.54 Jaguar g 8.44 +.17 -.01 JanusCap 10.09 +.33 +1.22 Jarden 27.91 +.51 +1.99 Jefferies 23.13 +.71 +2.63 JohnJn 60.54 -.84 +1.46 JohnsnCtl 28.62 +.13 +1.74 JonesApp 15.48 +.07 +.31 JonesLL 67.71 +1.19 +4.35 JnprNtwk 25.77 +.34 +1.69 KB Home d11.37 +.40 +.78 KBR Inc 20.97 +.08 +1.23 KKR Fn 7.90 +.04 +.78 KT Corp 19.47 +.71 +.52 KV PhmA d.64 +.02 -.06 KC Southn 37.24 +.10 +2.30 Kellogg 51.77 -.17 +1.10 Kennamtl 26.53 +.38 +1.86 KeyEngy 9.23 -.07 +.10

Keycorp 8.35 +.22 +1.13 KilroyR 30.25 +.61 +1.75 KimbClk 61.70 -.21 +1.21 Kimco 13.60 +.15 +.57 KindME 66.91 +.45 +2.23 KineticC 37.22 -.28 +1.30 KingPhrm 8.13 +.12 +.71 Kinross g d16.16 +.33 -.14 KnghtCap d14.40 +.36 +.90 KnightTr 21.02 +.14 +1.11 Kohls 48.02 +.05 -.26 KoreaElc 13.41 +.44 +.55 Kraft 28.99 -.04 +1.17 Kroger 20.46 -.06 +.60 L-1 Ident 7.77 -.26 -.50 L-3 Com 73.22 -.78 +2.79 LDK Solar 6.15 +.24 +.60 LG Display 16.95 +.25 +1.07 LSI Corp 4.81 ... +.31 LaZBoy 8.10 +.61 +1.14 LabCp 74.33 -1.29 -.17 LVSands 23.32 +.36 +1.73 LaSalleH 20.74 +.38 +.82 Lazard 29.33 +1.00 +2.83 LeggMason 29.52 +.56 +2.08 LeggPlat 20.64 +.22 +1.13 LenderPS 32.94 +.33 +1.48 LennarA 14.57 +.39 +.92 LeucNatl 20.41 +.23 +1.52 LexRltyTr 5.94 +.14 +.12 Lexmark 34.33 +.08 +1.88 LibtProp 29.13 +.30 +.83 LillyEli 35.17 -.01 +1.50 Limited 24.42 +.21 +1.84 LincNat 25.58 +.65 +2.21 LionsGt g 6.84 +.08 -.10 LiveNatn 11.38 +.40 +1.12 LizClaib 4.88 +.10 +.66 LloydBkg 3.77 +.10 +.46 LockhdM 75.24 -.91 +.80 Loews 35.70 +.24 +2.13 Lorillard 74.42 +.23 +2.51 LaPac 7.56 +.42 +.65 Lowes 20.43 +.20 +.16 Lubrizol 84.34 +.20 +5.73

M-N-O M&T Bk MBIA MDC MDU Res MEMC

90.23 +1.61 +5.34 6.60 +.26 +.99 28.26 +.77 +1.67 19.28 +.16 +1.52 10.78 +.41 +1.11

MF Global 5.81 MFA Fncl 7.31 MGIC 7.96 MGM Rsts 9.97 MPG OffTr 2.94 MSCI Inc 30.66 Macerich 39.58 MackCali 29.75 Macys 18.53 MagnaI g 68.75 Manitowoc 9.64 ManpwI 47.02 Manulife g 15.31 MarathonO 32.08 MarinerEn 22.37 MktVGold 50.48 MktVRus 29.55 MktVJrGld 26.82 MarIntA 31.14 MarshM 23.11 MarshIls 7.97 MartMM 86.64 Masco 11.51 MasseyEn 30.25 Mastec 10.75 MasterCrd 215.52 McClatchy 3.56 McCorm 38.29 McDermInt 24.83 McDnlds 69.22 McGrwH 29.49 McKesson 67.43 McMoRn 12.00 McAfee 31.73 MeadJohn 53.88 MeadWvco 23.68 Mechel 19.89 MedcoHlth 56.53 MedProp 9.64 Medicis 23.75 Medtrnic 37.23 MensW 19.82 Merck 36.30 MetLife 40.10 MetroPCS 9.21 Millipore u106.93 Mirant 11.30 MitsuUFJ 4.83 MobileTel s 20.58 Mohawk 46.02 MolsCoorB 44.16 Monsanto d51.21

+.17 +.09 +.06 +.34 +.18 +.89 +.15 +.49 +.14 +.23 +.50 +2.89 +.66 +2.99 +.49 +1.14 +.09 +.68 +2.74 +4.86 +.18 +1.00 +.58 +4.26 +.18 +.76 ... +1.25 +.25 +1.01 +1.10 +.90 +.19 +1.42 +.85 +.61 +.46 +1.59 +.33 +.93 +.42 +1.13 +1.55 +.74 +.29 +.89 +.78 +3.94 +.31 +1.00 +5.85+12.75 +.12 +.13 +.06 +.76 +.84 +2.96 +.20 +3.08 -.05 +1.69 -.56 +.27 -.24 +1.22 +.17 +.98 +.09 +2.71 +.38 +1.51 +.67 +2.44 +.39 +2.10 +.15 +.29 +.15 +1.70 +.24 +1.43 +.83 +.97 +.44 +2.08 +.66 +2.90 +.20 +.91 -.02 +.30 +.16 +.66 -.04 +.27 +.19 +1.33 +.68 +1.83 +.21 +1.98 +3.49 +4.94

NobleCorp 31.67 -1.14 -.66 NobleEn 65.71 -.70 +3.83 NokiaCp 8.48 -.10 +.05 Nomura 5.56 -.04 +.16 Nordstrm 34.54 +.85 +2.37 NorflkSo 53.81 +1.85 +2.90 NoestUt 26.88 -.17 +1.23 NorthropG 55.45 -.72 +1.35 NStarRlt 2.92 +.11 +.20 Novartis 49.55 -.17 +1.70 NSTAR 36.09 +.01 +1.47 NuSkin 27.26 +.62 +2.45 Nucor d39.61 +.50 +2.29 OcciPet 81.11 +.20 +4.74 Oceaneer 48.09 +.54 +3.31 OcwenFn 10.18 +.23 +.14 OfficeDpt 4.25 +.10 +.16 OfficeMax 13.28 +.39 -.23 OilSvHT 102.96 -.36 +6.58 OldNBcp 10.31 +.34 +.51 OldRepub 12.85 +.20 +.81 OmegaHlt 21.06 +.26 +1.20 Omncre 24.49 +.40 +.98 Omnicom 34.61 +.10 +.70 ONEOK 45.36 +.48 +3.07 OrientEH 8.10 +.32 +1.05 OshkoshCp 32.35 +.74 +2.35 OvShip 38.10 -.08 +2.52 OwensCorn 29.69 +.54 +1.59 OwensIll 29.45 +.22 +2.43

P-Q-R PG&E Cp 42.63 PHH Corp 18.47 PMI Grp 3.22 PNC 61.89 PNM Res 11.89 PPG 64.62 PPL Corp 26.22 PackAmer 22.45 Pactiv 28.96 PallCorp 35.69 ParkDrl 4.01 ParkerHan 57.32 PatriotCoal 12.55 PeabdyE 43.29 Pengrth g 9.95 PennWst g 19.81 Penney d23.36 PenRE 11.72 Penske d11.61 PepBoy 9.27

+.08 +1.90 +.06 +.22 +.20 +.30 +.75 +6.22 +.40 +.95 +.37 +4.05 +.08 +.76 +.32 +.99 -.33 +.76 +.06 +2.15 +.12 +.50 +.05 +2.30 +.38 +1.25 +.57 +4.30 +.14 +.82 +.15 +.56 +.12 +2.40 +.26 +.07 +.24 +.38 +.30 +1.02

PDL Bio 5.98 PF Chng 40.55 PMA Cap 6.86 PMC Sra 7.99 PSS Wrld 21.00 PacWstBc 19.74 Paccar 41.84 PacerIntl 7.79 PacCapB .73 PacSunwr 3.51 PaetecHld 3.87 PanASlv 24.85 PaneraBrd 76.06 ParamTch 16.26 Parexel 22.25 Parkrvsn d.92 Patterson 28.62 PattUTI 14.39 Paychex 26.28 Pegasys lf 33.19 PnnNGm d23.43 PennantPk 9.88 PeopUtdF 13.88 PerfectWld 24.55 Perrigo 58.05 PetroDev u27.21 PetsMart 31.41 PharmPdt 26.37 Pharmasset 25.79 PhaseFwd 16.82 PhotrIn 4.66 Plexus 28.25 Polycom 30.25 Poniard h .58 Pool Corp 22.02 Popular 2.94 PwrInteg 34.24 Power-One 8.84 PwShs QQQ 44.62 Powrwav 1.63 Pozen 7.03 PriceTR 47.89 priceline 204.09 PrivateB 11.68 PrUPShQQQ 62.55 ProUltPQQQ 83.66 ProspctCap 9.83 ProspBcsh 35.24 PsychSol 32.99 QIAGEN 20.16 Qlogic 18.13 Qualcom 33.91 QltyDistr 5.71 QualitySys 58.92 QuantFu h d.52 QuestSft 18.51 Questcor 9.95 RCN 14.88 RF MicD 4.07 RadioOneD 1.31 RAM Engy 2.12 Rambus 18.40 Randgold 93.30 RealNwk 3.40 RedRobin 19.94 RegncyEn u24.61 Regenrn 23.22 RentACt 20.72 RepubAir 5.38 RepFBcp 2.21 RschMotn d53.33

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Last

Chg Wkly

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Chg Wkly

TempleInld 21.20 TempurP 32.16 Tenaris 38.66 TenetHlth 4.57 Tenneco 21.86 Teradata 31.15 Teradyn 10.23 Terex 18.69 Tesoro d11.45 TetraTech 9.58 TexInst 24.48 Textron 17.80 ThermoFis 49.28 ThomCrk g 9.90 ThomsonR 37.74 Thor Inds 28.00 3M Co 82.16 Tidwtr 41.17 Tiffany 39.02 Timberlnd 16.91 TW Cable 55.59 TimeWarn 30.19 Timken 27.32 TitanMet 19.67 TollBros 16.92 Trchmrk 51.89 TorDBk g 69.15 Total SA 48.78 TotalSys 14.45 Transocn 51.83 Travelers 51.15 TrinaSol s 21.11 Trinity 18.62 Tuppwre 41.48 Turkcell 13.20 TycoElec 25.08 TycoIntl 36.57 Tyson 17.54 U-Store-It 7.49 UBS AG 14.47 UDR 20.00 URS 39.70 US Airwy 9.54 USEC 5.25 USG 12.73 UltraPt g 45.53 UndrArmr 35.91 UnilevNV 28.86 Unilever 28.05 UnionPac 71.71 Unisys rs 20.04 UtdMicro 3.06 UPS B 60.06 UtdRentals 9.59 US Bancrp 23.91 US NGsFd 7.44 US OilFd 34.34 USSteel 42.88 UtdTech 67.51 UtdhlthGp 29.97 UnvHlth s 36.49 UnumGrp 22.66

Name

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Nasdaq National Market Name

Last

Chg Wkly

A-B-C A-Power 8.00 ADC Tel 8.83 ADPT 2.87 ARYxTh h .40 ASML Hld 30.31 ATP O&G 10.40 ATS Med 3.97 AVI Bio 1.64 AXT Inc 4.77 Abiomed 10.73 AcadiaPh 1.05 Accelrys 6.87 Accuray 6.18 AcmePkt 29.45 AcordaTh 33.46 ActivsBliz 11.09 Actuate 5.13 Acxiom 14.57 AdobeSy 27.20 AdolorCp d1.07 Adtran 28.55 AdvEnId 13.65 AeroViron 22.96 AEterna g 1.05 Affymax d6.08 Affymetrix d3.80 AgFeed 3.04 AirTrnsp 5.28 Aixtron 28.67 AkamaiT 43.47 Akorn 3.12 AlaskCom 8.98 Alexion 52.16 AlignTech 14.44 Alkerm 12.62 AllegiantT 44.98 AllosThera d6.01 AllscriptM 17.01 Alphatec 4.59 AlteraCp lf u27.59 AlterraCap 19.68 Alvarion d1.92 Amazon 117.26 Amedisys 35.14 ACapAgy 27.44 AmCapLtd 5.18 AmItPasta u52.95 AmerMed 23.11 AmPhysC s u40.73 AmSupr 28.59 AmCasino 15.06 Amgen 52.56 AmkorT lf 5.65 Amylin 19.25 Anadigc 4.40 Ansys 42.15 A123 Sys n 9.31 ApogeeE 11.19 ApolloGrp 44.44 ApolloInv 10.04 Apple Inc 259.62 ApldMatl 12.30 AMCC 10.76 ApldSig 20.00 ArQule 4.00 ArchCap 77.58 ArcSight 23.19 ArenaPhm 3.88

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D-E-F DG FastCh 33.89 +.35 +1.12 DealrTrk 16.30 +.35 +.38 DearbrnBc 2.65 +.45 +.81 DeerCon s 7.93 +.01 +.46 Dell Inc d12.85 +.07 +.82 DltaPtr d.82 +.06 -.00 DemandTc 6.72 +.22 +.15 Dndreon 32.89 +2.59 +4.17 Dentsply 30.22 +.04 +.83 DexCom 11.45 +.21 -.01 DigRiver 24.86 -.03 +.45 Diodes 18.21 +.63 +2.37 DirecTV A 35.62 +.06 +1.98 DiscCm A 36.29 -.04 +.90 DiscCm C 31.48 -.04 +.64 DishNetwk 18.91 +.13 +.97 DivX 7.26 +.02 ... DonlleyRR 16.68 +.28 +.53 DoublTake 10.52 ... +.01 DrmWksA 30.00 +.73 +1.69 DressBarn 24.61 +.33 +.39 drugstre 3.17 +.05 +.17 DryShips 3.91 +.19 +.49 DyaxCp d2.25 +.04 -.02 ETrade rs 12.20 +.20 +.59 eBay 20.29 +.40 +1.03 EFJohnson 1.45 ... +.03 EPIQ Sys 12.88 +.26 -.29 eResrch u8.74 +.10 +.42 EV Engy 34.00 +.78 +2.53 ev3 Inc u22.48 ... +.07 EagleBulk d4.24 +.10 +.22 ErthLink 8.08 +.04 +.07 EstWstBcp 17.38 +.23 +1.86 EchelonC 7.41 -.04 +.21 Eclipsys 19.43 +.19 +1.74 EducMgt n d15.40 +.22 +.27 ElectArts 14.84 +.08 +.24 Emcore d.83 +.04 +.03 EmmisCm 2.27 +.06 +.07 EmpireRst d1.42 -.14 -.09 EndoPhrm 23.47 +.07 +1.42 Ener1 3.12 -.15 -.14 EnerNOC 33.68 +.72 +3.42 EngyConv d4.81 +.17 +.93 EnrgyRec 4.00 -.14 +.10 Entegris 4.41 +.25 +.53 EntropCom u6.90 +.18 +.23 EnzonPhar 10.74 +.12 +.39 EpicorSft 7.83 +.43 -.23 Equinix 83.62 +1.13 +4.93 EricsnTel 10.96 -.02 +.16 Euronet 14.33 +.25 +1.49 EvrgrSlr .75 +.05 +.11 Exelixis 3.60 -.06 +.05 ExideTc 5.69 +.13 +.42 Expedia 18.88 -.10 +.55 ExpdIntl 35.91 +.54 +1.94

2.64 19.68 75.23 d3.50 30.51 4.08 52.07 4.48 13.48 15.55 14.70 15.18 12.49 12.94 132.13 18.07 46.26 6.07 17.06 d10.66 16.97 38.39 22.83 10.57 .13 26.71 1.15 10.25 6.75 8.45

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B USI N ESS

THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 C5

Google

PEOPLE ON THE MOVE South Valley Bank & Trust has announced the addition of Pete McCabe, vice president and senior commercial loan officer; Janice Marshall, branch manager; Shari Durgan, commercial loan officer; Tina Jorgenson, personal banker III; and Carla Burtis, ArristaBelle Duff and Tina Patton, customer service representatives, to its Madras branch. McCabe is a graduate of Oregon State University who started his banking career through the management training program at U.S. Bank. He comes to South Valley with more than 26 years of experience in the banking industry and is a member of the Oregon Bankers Association’s Agriculture Banking Committee. A.J. Losoya has accepted a position with Home Federal Bancorp Inc. as vice president and commercial branch manager. Losoya has nine years of Oregon banking experience, having served in commercial lending for eight of the nine years. Losoya holds a bachelor’s degree in business from Western Oregon University, is a graduate of the Columbia River Bank Management Training Program, and the Western School of Commercial Lending in Reno, Nev. He will be based out of the Redmond Home Federal Bank branch and will be serving all of Central Oregon. The Hasson Co.’s Bend branch welcomes Jim Cihak and Meredith Davis as realtors. Cihak has a background in sales and banking and Davis has 10 years of experience providing sales and marketing assistance to real estate brokers nationwide. Bend Research Inc. has announced that four of its scientists and researchers will present at the 37th annual meeting and exposition of the Controlled Release Society today through Wednesday in Portland. The 2010 CRS meeting and exposition is one of the world’s largest gatherings of industry experts in the field of controlled-release pharmaceuticals and medicines. Brett Caldwell, senior research chemist, will deliver a talk on the topic, “Spray-Dried Dispersions (SDDs) for Solubilization: Immediate and Controlled Release Applications.” David Vodak, director of research, will deliver a talk on the topic, “Novel Engineered Particle Formulation for Inhaled PYY (3-36) and Demonstration of Appetite Suppres-

Internet Continued from C3 For some of the beneficiaries, the program will mean the difference between isolation and being connected to the rest of the world. “If you don’t have a highspeed Internet connection, it’s almost impossible to get anything done anymore,” said Martin Cary, vice president for broadband services at GCI Communication Corporation of Alaska, the largest Internet provider in the state. Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, said the extension of Internet service was a significant moment in communications. “Extending broadband in rural America is as important to jobs and growth in the 21st century as extending electricity was in the 20th century,” he said. So far, more than 200 projects have been awarded about $3 billion in grants and loans from the program’s administrators — the Agriculture and the Commerce departments — mostly to small carriers. The stimulus law requires that all the money in the program be allocated by Sept. 30. Even so, many remote homes will still not get highspeed access.

A.J. Losoya

Jim Cihak

Meredith Davis

Dianna J. Hansen

Jim Petersen

Tom Penn

Layne Hood

Pat Lynch

Tange Taylor

Jamie Fox

Faye Phillips

Erik Murdock

Continued from C3 Forcing users to take that extra step could cost Google market share in the Chinese market, where it trails behind Baidu, the local search engine. But China experts said that the approach represents a pragmatic balancing of interests that lets both sides get some of what they want. While Google’s stand against Chinese government censorship — made after its computer systems were hacked, apparently from China — earned Google the goodwill of free speech and human rights advocates, it came at a cost. The compromise will allow

Tanker Courtney Linville

Chet Matwich

Layla McGlone

Andrea Norris

Brenda Matwich

Dirk Wall

sion in a Mouse Model.” Carey Bloom, senior research chemist and group leader, and Ron Beyerinck, senior research chemical engineer, each will present scientific posters at CRS 2010. Bloom’s poster is titled, “Mucoadhesive Nanoparticles and Global Modeling for Topical Ocular Drug Delivery.” Beyerinck’s poster is titled, “Melt-Spray-Congeal Microsphere Technology.” Dianna J. Hansen, co-president of Central Oregon Down Syndrome Network, has graduated from Partners in Policymaking, an intensive leadership training program based in Salem. The graduating members of the class of 2010 represent communities throughout Oregon and were selected through a competitive process in fall 2009. The program requires members to spend one weekend per month for six months in Salem learning from national, state and local leaders about communicating and advocating effectively. The Downtown Bend Business Association has announced the results of its recent board of directors election. New board members are Jim Petersen, owner of Mockingbird Gallery, who will be a business owner representative, and Tom Penn, manag-

er of the Phoenix Inn Suites, who will be representing property owners. Kelli Brooks and Scott Ratcliff were re-elected to their board positions. The association is a nonprofit organization representing approximately 350 businesses and 85 property owners working to keep downtown Bend vibrant. The OSU Alumni Association has expanded opportunities for alumni leadership and support by creating its own alumni advisory council. Davis Smith Jr., of Bend, has been included as one of the first appointees to the council, members of which will be ambassadors for OSU and will assist the association in engaging alumni in their communitites. Hadi Sale, with Columbia State Bank in Redmond, has been named the 2009 Habitat for Humanity Volunteer of the Year. Sale has volunteered as the president of Redmond’s Habitat for Humanity for the past year and was recognized for her dedication and contribution at the Redmond Habitat for Humanity’s annual fundraising event in May. The Bend Highnooners Toastmasters Club has elected new officers: president, Layne Hood, principal of Forward Motion Coaching; vice president-edu-

cation and training, Pat Lynch, account executive at The Bulletin; vice president-membership, Tange Taylor, conference speaker and vice president of Engine Trend Analysis; vice presidentpublic relations, Jamie Fox, account executive at Combined Communications Inc.; secretary/ treasurer, Faye Phillips, broker at Windermere Real Estate; and sergeant-at-arms, Erik Murdock, band leader for Blowin’ Smoke. Highnooners Toastmasters Club meets Tuesdays at noon at New Hope Church in Bend. The Bend Chamber Toastmasters Club newly elected officers are: president, Courtney Linville, communications coordinator for the Bend Chamber of Commerce; vice president-education, Chet Matwich, manager and co-owner of The Rental Connection LLC; vice president-membership, Layla McGlone, certified life coach; vice president-public relations, Andrea Norris, owner of K2northface LLC; secretary/treasurer, Brenda Matwich, manager and co-owner of The Rental Connection LLC; and sergeant-at-arms, Dirk Wall, mortage broker with Minute Mortage. Bend Chamber Toastmasters meets Wednesdays at noon at the Central Oregon Environmental Center.

For those who will be connected, there are some mixed feelings. While most seem impatient for the greater access and many businesses are eager to attract new customers, some are concerned about the unintended consequences of their new connections. James Rowh, for instance, who owns an organic farm and natural foods store not far from the Wegeners in Norton, Kan., is wary that the Internet will lure his customers away. “You can find pretty deep discounts online,” he said. “There are only 3,000 people in this town. When you start losing people to the Internet, it’s going to have an effect on your bottom line.” Even the small companies that have been awarded the grants and loans to extend the broadband fiber lines and build the microwave towers are aware that once they do all the work and sign up the customers, the big carriers may move in with lower rates and lure their business away. “Typically, when we go into a town, competition will come on our heels,” said H. Rusty Irvin, the chief executive of StratusWave Communications, a small carrier in Wheeling, W.Va. “The Verizons and Comcasts may target that area for deployment.” The company won a $1.5 million loan and a $1.4 mil-

lion grant to provide wireless service to three West Virginia counties in rural Appalachia. Since many of the new broadband recipients live in isolated, rural areas or are poor, the FCC is proposing that money from its Universal Service Fund, which subsidizes telephone services for high-cost areas, low-income consumers, schools, libraries and rural health care providers, be expanded to broadband services. The fund receives its revenue from a monthly fee of about $2.78 a household — the fee is part of the telephone bill — and is expected to disburse $8.7 billion this year. “The biggest challenge is

converting a fund that’s been focused for a very long time on telephones to one focused on broadband communications as quickly and as efficiently as possible to make sure we can extend broadband to rural America,” Genachowski of the FCC said. As for Wegener, she said she believed she was losing money by having to drive her horses to auctions as far away as North Dakota and Nebraska to be seen by potential buyers. The Internet could change that, she said. “We would love to sell them off the farm and not haul them anywhere,” she said.

Continued from C3 A final decision on the winning bidder to replace 179 of the 415 KC-135 aircraft currently in the Air Force’s fleet will come “sometime in the fall,” said Col. Debra Millett, an Air Force spokeswoman. Industry analysts expect the contract will be awarded in November. But it’s “not a calendardriven event,” Millett said. “We want to make sure we make the right decision.” Boeing won the first contract in 2004, but it fell apart because of an ethics scandal that resulted in prison terms for a former high-ranking Air Force official and a former senior Boeing executive. The competition was relaunched. EADS, then teamed with Northrop Grumman Corp., took home the contract in 2008. It was a major upset because Boeing had built all of the tankers in the current fleet. But that decision was later overturned after the Government Accountability Office found that the Air Force mishandled the competition by neglecting to credit Boeing for some of its plane’s capabilities. The Pentagon launched the latest competition in February, claiming that it was unbiased and less complicated than in the past. About a month later, Northrop pulled out of its partnership with EADS, claiming that the specifications for the plane favored Boeing.

Google to keep some of its business in China, but its position there may be weakened. Renewal is required annually for Google’s license, which officially expires in 2012. Even before the censorship issue came to the fore, Google was struggling in China to attain the same market dominance it has achieved in many other countries. The hottest Internet companies in China include Baidu, Tencent and Alibaba — fastgrowing local companies that are making huge profits. Google is not the only U.S. giant that has had trouble in China. Yahoo and eBay have failed to gain significant traction here. And Facebook, Twitter and YouTube are blocked by the government.

Boeing’s bid Friday was based on a modified 767 commercial passenger jet. The Chicago-based aerospace manufacturer said in a statement that its offering would come at the “lowest cost to the taxpayer.” Boeing said that if it won the contract, it would add 50,000 U.S. jobs, spread among more than 800 suppliers in at least 40 states. When Northrop left, EADS decided to go at it alone after getting a 60-day extension on a May 10 deadline. Its bid, through its EADS North America operation, was a variation of an Airbus A330 commercial jetliner. EADS North America said its bid would create about 48,000 U.S. jobs, including about 5,200 jobs for 41 companies in California. The latecomer, U.S. Aerospace and Antonov, asked the Pentagon on Wednesday for an extension on the deadline for submitting its bid but was denied. U.S. Aerospace said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Friday that its bid was based on an Antonov AN-112KC cargo jet.

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LAND MOWING FIRE SUPPRESSION

Meet Fire Code Standards and Weed Control for vacant lots, fields, and pastures

G.A. Mowing 541-923-5776 or 541-410-3833 (cell)

The weekly market review American Stock Exchange Name AbdAsPac AbdAustEq AbdnChile AbdnIndo AdeonaPh AdvPhot AdvanSrce Advntrx rs Aerosonic AlexcoR g AlldDefen AlldNevG AlmadnM g AlphaPro AmApparel AmDGEn n AmDefense AmLorain n AmO&G Anooraq g AntaresP AoxingP rs ArcadiaRs Argan ArmourRsd Augusta g Aurizon g BMB Munai Ballanty Banro g

Last 6.25 9.92 17.85 11.54 1.02 .51 .21 1.64 d2.89 3.11 3.51 19.23 .91 d1.74 1.61 2.85 d.22 3.08 6.41 .99 1.74 3.59 .42 d9.25 d6.38 1.36 5.01 d.58 8.06 2.05

Chg Wkly -.06 +.05 +.14 +.23 ... -.03 -.01 +.03 +.25 +.16 ... +.53 -.03 +.10 +.12 +.21 +.02 +.01 ... -.01 +.01 +.25 -.03 +.27 +.13 -.09 +.12 -.01 +.06 +.12

+.14 +.58 +.91 +.60 -.06 +.02 -.06 +.11 +.14 +.07 -.02 +.40 +.05 +.09 -.12 -.11 -.02 -.02 +.41 +.02 +.07 +.83 -.06 -1.20 +.13 -.13 +.28 -.01 +.56 +.14

BarcUBS36 38.23 +.11 +.88 BarcGSOil 22.37 +.08 +1.21 BrcIndiaTR 65.24 +.78 +2.03 BioTime n 5.46 +.13 -.16 BlkMuIT2 14.28 +.01 -.14 BlkMunvst u10.04 +.13 +.15 BootsCoots 2.98 +.01 +.02 BovieMed d2.27 -.19 -.28 Brigus grs 1.23 -.01 -.00 BritATob 66.93 -.21 +2.32 CAMAC n d3.58 ... ... CanoPet d.49 +.01 -.12 CapGold n 3.83 -.02 +.11 CaracoP 5.37 +.23 +.59 Cardero g 1.12 +.05 +.02 CardiumTh d.34 +.02 +.01 CastleBr .38 -.01 +.03 CelSci .49 +.01 +.01 CFCda g 14.93 +.29 +.31 CentGold g 48.15 +.62 +.84 CentSe 18.73 +.18 +.61 ChaseCorp 14.10 +2.20 +2.61 CheniereEn 2.79 +.09 +.11 CheniereE 17.28 +.20 +.30 ChiArmM 3.04 +.10 -.16 ChiGengM 1.38 +.06 +.10 ChIntLtg n d2.90 +.17 +.17 ChMarFd n 4.74 +.30 +.54 ChinaPhH n 2.75 +.04 -.06 ClaudeR g 1.06 +.02 +.02 ClayFront 19.35 -.02 +.76 CloughGEq 12.81 +.05 +.56

ClghGlbOp CompTch Contango Continucre CornstProg CornerstStr CrSuisInco CrSuiHiY Crossh glf Crystallx g CubicEngy Cytomed DejourE g DenisnM g DuneEn rs EV CAMu EV LtdDur EVMuniBd ElixirGam eMagin EmersnR h EndvrInt EndvSilv g EngyInco EntreeGold EvgIncAdv EverMultSc EvgUtilHi EvolPetrol ExeterR gs Express-1 FT WindEn

11.70 2.62 43.43 3.58 6.99 11.10 3.54 3.00 .14 .43 .81 .55 .31 d1.16 d.10 13.02 16.13 13.36 .24 3.23 1.65 1.10 3.57 24.25 1.84 9.55 14.94 10.89 5.30 6.25 1.34 10.73

-.06 +.21 -.05 +.09 +.07 +.13 +.04 +.02 +.02 +.03 -.02 +.00 ... -.01 +.00 ... +.01 +.06 +.01 -.04 +.01 +.04 +.12 +.15 +.03 -.01 +.05 +.15 +.16 +.18 +.10 +.03

+.36 +.61 +.08 +.01 +.18 +.74 +.06 +.02 +.03 +.03 -.03 -.07 +.02 +.03 +.00 +.18 +.46 +.08 -.01 -.12 -.04 +.06 +.40 +.60 +.07 +.06 +.29 +.50 +.38 +.21 +.08 +.74

FiveStar 3.12 FlexSolu 1.45 FrkStPrp 11.76 FrTmpLtd 12.33 Fronteer g 6.54 GSE Sy d3.68 GabGldNR 15.70 GascoEngy .35 Gastar grs 3.75 GenMoly 3.25 GenesisEn 20.01 GeoGloblR 1.04 Geokinetics 4.36 GerovaFn 5.59 Gerova wt .31 GlblScape 2.64 GoldRsv g .82 GoldenMin 7.67 GoldStr g 4.22 GormanR 26.64 GrahamCp 14.82 GranTrra g 5.22 GrtBasG g 1.80 GpoSimec 7.44 HQ SustM d4.51 HSBC CTI d7.72 HawkCorp u27.91 HearUSA 1.00 Hemisphrx .46 HooperH .71 Hyperdyn 1.04 IGI Labs 1.02

+.09 +.17 -.02 +.01 +.13 +.25 +.01 +.14 +.43 +.57 -.02 -.37 +.20 +.68 ... +.01 +.10 +.09 +.13 +.19 +.06 +.71 -.02 -.05 +.09 +.27 -.01 +.70 ... +.03 +.23 +.20 -.01 +.01 +.42 +.06 +.04 +.13 +.36 +2.09 +.29 +.64 +.02 +.08 +.04 +.14 +.17 +.54 -.05 -.40 -.02 -.17 +.33 +.66 ... +.02 +.00 -.01 +.04 +.13 ... -.03 +.01 +.02

ImpOil gs IndiaGC Innovaro InovioPhm Intellichk IntTower g InvVKAdv2 InvVKSelS IsoRay Iteris JesupLamt KeeganR g Kemet KimberR g KodiakO g LadThalFn Lannett Libbey LibertyAcq LucasEngy MAG Slv g MadCatz g MagHRes Metalico Metalline MetroHlth MdwGold g MincoG g Minefnd g MinesMgt NIVS IntT NeoStem

37.52 1.04 d2.09 .00 1.39 6.16 12.35 12.33 1.43 1.36 .02 5.04 2.41 .64 3.27 1.23 4.60 11.32 9.96 2.52 6.40 .44 4.55 3.97 .66 3.79 d.45 .84 8.88 1.80 d2.30 1.68

+.28 +.05 -.16 +.01 -.04 +.04 -.01 +.03 +.00 -.02 -.01 -.06 +.02 +.01 +.02 -.01 +.11 +.28 +.05 +.04 +.32 ... -.09 +.09 +.02 ... +.02 +.02 +.26 +.01 +.10 -.07

+.92 +.04 -1.40 -.08 -.13 -.09 +.11 +.10 -.02 +.04 -.02 +.01 +.13 -.12 +.16 +.03 +.16 -.21 +.03 +.47 +.37 +.00 +.38 +.21 +.03 +.07 -.01 -.01 +.34 -.06 +.11 -.12

NB IncOp 7.17 NBIntMu 14.29 NBRESec 3.49 Neuralstem 2.55 NevGCas .90 Nevsun g 3.60 NDragon d.07 NwGold g 5.21 NA Pall g 3.40 NthAsiaInv 9.96 NDynMn g 7.12 NthnO&G 13.56 NthgtM g 2.96 NovaGld g 6.49 NCADv3 u13.41 NuvDiv2 14.76 NuvDiv3 u14.55 NvInsDv u14.76 NuvInsTF u15.01 NMuHiOp 13.10 NuvREst 8.58 NvTxAdFlt 2.53 Oilsands g .68 Oilsnd wtA .13 OpkoHlth 2.40 OrchidsPP 13.37 OrienPap n 6.95 OrionEngy 2.98 OrsusXel .24 OverhillF 5.67 PacRim .17 Palatin .18

Biggest mutual funds +.02 +.09 +.02 -.00 +.07 +.18 -.02 +.05 +.01 ... +.11 +.27 ... -.01 +.28 -.85 +.17 +.27 +.02 +.02 +.46 +.79 +.57 +1.09 +.06 +.07 +.21 +.07 -.04 +.01 +.03 +.01 +.05 +.07 +.20 +.04 -.01 -.02 +.11 +.14 +.24 +.37 +.03 -.01 +.05 +.07 -.04 +.01 +.03 +.20 +.10 +.08 +.30 -.34 +.15 -.07 -.04 -.00 +.03 -.13 -.01 -.01 ... +.01

ParaG&S ParkNatl PhrmAth PionDvrsHi PionDrill PlatGpMet PolyMet g ProceraNt ProlorBio Protalix PudaCoal n PyramidOil Quaterra g QuestCap g RadientPh RaeSyst ReavesUtl RegeneRx Rentech RexahnPh Rubicon g SamsO&G ScolrPh SeabGld g SearchMed SearchM wt Senesco SondeR grs StreamGSv SulphCo TanzRy g Taseko

1.31 +.08 +.07 66.50 +.78 +3.14 1.64 -.02 -.01 19.72 +.22 +.46 6.07 +.08 +.33 1.81 +.08 +.08 1.48 +.07 +.01 .44 +.01 +.03 6.88 +.06 -.36 6.32 +.03 +.18 7.79 +.29 +.42 5.10 +.16 +.60 1.22 +.04 +.14 1.44 +.02 +.02 .98 +.01 +.01 .72 +.03 ... 19.27 +.18 +1.21 d.27 ... -.02 1.02 +.03 +.07 1.37 -.02 -.12 3.39 ... +.09 .85 -.01 +.06 .46 -.01 +.02 29.24 +1.32 +.40 d2.83 +.03 -.04 .45 ... -.13 .32 +.00 -.01 2.84 +.06 -.02 4.28 -.50 -1.36 d.23 -.03 -.03 4.87 +.10 -.13 4.05 +.25 +.13

Tengsco TianyinPh TimberlnR TrnsatlPt n TravelCtrs TriValley Tucows g TwoHrbInv UMH Prop UQM Tech US Geoth US Gold Uluru Univ Insur Ur-Energy Uranerz UraniumEn Uroplasty VangTotW VantageDrl VirnetX VistaGold WalterInv Westmrld WidePoint WT DrfChn WT Drf Bz WizzardSft Xenonics Xfone YM Bio g ZBB Engy

.45 2.76 .87 3.02 2.28 .91 .60 8.39 10.81 3.64 .79 4.90 .12 4.30 .76 d1.03 2.42 4.52 41.17 d1.28 5.86 d1.59 16.50 8.00 .83 25.01 u27.37 .20 .42 1.19 1.24 .57

-.01 +.01 +.10 +.09 +.05 +.02 -.15 -.10 +.13 +.04 -.03 ... +.00 +.01 ... +.10 +.29 +.50 -.01 +.12 +.03 -.01 +.11 +.27 +.00 -.01 +.05 +.26 +.03 -.01 +.12 +.01 +.15 +.19 +.05 -.16 +.28 +2.29 -.01 -.12 +.16 -.11 +.06 +.05 +.01 +.47 +.20 +.10 +.01 +.04 +.06 +.05 +.14 +.31 ... -.01 +.04 +.03 +.06 +.02 +.04 +.08 +.02 +.04

Name

Total AssetsTotal Return/Rank Obj ($Mins) 4-wk

PIMCO Instl PIMS: TotRet n Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStk n American Funds A: GwthFdA p American Funds A: CapInBldA p Fidelity Invest: Contra n American Funds A: CapWGrA p American Funds A: IncoFdA p Vanguard Idx Fds: 500 n Vanguard Instl Fds: InstIdx n American Funds A: InvCoAA p Dodge&Cox: Stock American Funds A: EupacA p American Funds A: WshMutA p PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRetAd n Dodge&Cox: Intl Stk Frank/Temp Frnk A: IncoSerA p American Funds A: NewPerA p American Funds A: BalA p American Funds A: FundInvA p PIMCO Funds A: TotRtA

IB XC LG BL LG GL BL SP SP LC LV IL LV IB IL BL GL BL LC IB

133,927 58,508 58,394 52,394 51,938 47,349 46,079 44,145 43,384 42,830 36,999 34,013 33,997 33,304 33,115 29,810 28,582 28,053 27,888 27,822

+1.6 -0.8 -0.1 +2.6 0.0 +3.5 +1.4 -0.7 -0.7 +0.6 -1.4 +3.8 +0.2 +1.6 +3.1 +2.6 +2.0 +0.3 +0.5 +1.6

12-mo

Min 5-year

Init Invt

Percent Load

+12.1/C +26.4/B +19.6/D +15.6/D +24.3/A +18.6/D +22.3/A +24.5/A +24.7/A +19.4/D +25.7/B +19.2/B +23.0/C +11.8/C +24.2/A +24.1/A +23.4/B +19.2/C +24.1/B +11.6/C

+43.8/A +1.0/C +6.8/B +16.1/B +18.0/A +23.6/A +12.3/C -1.6/A -1.0/A +3.0/B -8.9/D +33.9/A -2.7/B +42.1/A +22.2/B +18.6/A +27.2/A +9.1/C +15.0/A +40.6/A

1,000,000 3,000 250 250 2,500 250 250 3,000 5,000,000 250 2,500 250 250 1,000,000 2,500 1,000 250 250 250 1,000

NL NL 5.75 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 NL NL 5.75 NL 5.75 5.75 NL NL 4.25 5.75 5.75 5.75 3.75

NAV 11.24 26.74 26.27 45.86 57.43 31.24 15.09 99.32 98.67 24.62 91.84 35.96 23.75 11.24 30.12 2.03 24.46 16.03 31.54 11.24

G – Growth. GI – Growth & Income. SS – Single-state Muni. MP – Mixed Portfolio. GG – General US Govt. EI – Equity Income. SC – Small Co Growth. A – Cap Appreciation. IL – International. Total Return: Change in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Percent Load: Sales charge. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA – Not avail. NE – Data in question. NS – Fund not in existence.


C6 Saturday, July 10, 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

Portland schools pin hopes on a federal bailout

A

s budgeting strategies go, crossing your fingers and hoping that fate delivers you from catastrophe leaves a lot to be desired. Yet that’s the approach the Portland school

board adopted last week. Like every other school district in Oregon, Portland’s must rebalance its budget in response to declining state revenue. To do this, according to The Oregonian, both Superintendent Carole Smith and school board members agree that about 180 teaching jobs must be eliminated. Moreover, the decision to do so must be made quickly. Smith has said she needs to tell principals by July 19 how many positions they must cut. Rather than making a tough but necessary decision at its Wednesday meeting, however, Portland’s school board opted to do nothing and hope. What the board hopes for is Sen-

ate approval of a $10 billion education bailout recently approved by the House. Portland Public Schools would get about $7 million of that money, allowing officials to preserve more than 100 positions. Given Smith’s tight deadline, it makes sense to approve harsh spending cuts quickly, then rehire people when — and if — Congress ponies up the rescue money. We understand the reluctance of Portland’s school leaders to cut their budget, but isn’t the reluctance of government agencies to spend according to their means, coupled with a belief in a bottomless federal checkbook, how we got into such a mess?

FROM THE ARCHIVES Editor’s note: The following editorials, which do not necessarily reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board today, appeared on March 11, 1990.

ty persuading themselves the project is worthwhile. They should approve the change quickly, and allow Habitat for Humanity to get on with it.

Check it out

Where’s the service?

Ralph Nader, the self-styled savior of the American consumer, was making the rounds of the teevee morning news programs the other day, rapping the Postal Service for its proposed price increase. And while we certainly agree the post office seems to have forgotten the “service” part of its name, some of what Nader said was just plain wrong. Asked what he thought of suggestions that the post office’s duties be placed in private hands, Nader, as you might suspect, had little good to say. Look, he said, at other businesses that have gone private, citing the savings and loan industry. Trouble is, the savings and loan industry never was owned by the government. Its current problems stem, to some extent, from government pressure on otherwise healthy S&Ls to take over unhealthy kin. Too, lack of government enforcement of existing rules is responsible for much of the industry’s difficulties.

Well, the other shoe has dropped. The U.S. Postal Service has begun the complex process of adding a nickel to the price of mailing a letter. Entrepreneurs all over the country must be clapping their hands in glee. After all, the Postal Services’s record of poor service and high prices has created Federal Express, has made it possible for United Parcel Service to grow beyond its owners’ wildest dreams, and is the father almost each day of another new parcel or letter outfit, offering lower charges and faster services than the Postal Service provides. And you can be sure the companies which make FAX machines will be happy; the Postal Service has created most of their market, too.

It’s the country’s turn Bend city commissioners have taken one small step toward easing this community’s housing crunch. They’ve agreed to sell five lots on the northeast side of town to Habitat for Humanity, which will build houses for low-income families on them. Now the whole project moves to the Deschutes County Commission, which must approve the city’s proposal before the sale can be completed. The county gets into the act at this point because it gave the lots to the city for cemetery expansion. Any decision to use the land for something else — in this case, low-income housing — must be approved by the county commission as a result. County commissioners should have little difficul-

No other way The Oregon Supreme Court the other day refused to open what could have been a major hole in the state’s efforts to get drunken drivers off the road. It said persons charged with the crime could not defend themselves by arguing they didn’t know they were drunk, or that they were so drunk they didn’t know what they were doing. The decision runs contrary to the rules in most cases, in which prosecutors must prove not only that the crime was committed, but that the defendant knew what he was doing was wrong. The court based its decision on what the judges felt was clearly the intent of lawmakers who enacted the state’s drunken-driving legislation. Those lawmakers, the judges said, clearly wanted to make it easier to get drunks off the road. Given that desire, it makes no sense that a person could argue he was so drunk he didn’t know what he was doing.

My Nickel’s Worth Land-use board coercive Anyone harboring the belief that Oregon’s land use planning is a pristine, objective system that preserves some vestige of local self-determination should read Greg Macpherson’s guest column on Bend’s urban growth boundary expansion. The system has become just another grubby political exercise by which state officials enforce their personal preferences or arbitrary notions of social and environmental justice, all at the expense of local economies. Last year, Jefferson County had its economic plans gutted for the crime of crossing swords with a powerful state legislator. Bend must endure the elitist condescension of a suburban politician and panel of political appointees who will ensure that our community doesn’t stray from the sanctified path of carbonfree, high-density growth. Macpherson asserts a host of benefits that will derive from his preferred growth model, including housing affordability. The facts are not on his side. “Market forces” were not behind the lack of affordable housing in Bend in recent years. A constrained supply resulting from our UGB caused land prices to rise to $467,500 per acre in 2007 from $33,683 in 1997 as demand for housing soared. LCDC’s vision for Bend (“In 30 years, Bend should not look like a larger version of just what it is now”) will increase the cost of housing, force developers to build unpopular high-rise, high-density projects (Putnam Pointe, anyone?), upzone established low-density neighborhoods, and reduce our overall livability and desirability. This is what Macpherson means when he says we “should adapt to a changing economy and evolv-

ing lifestyles.” Bill Robie Government affairs director, Central Oregon Association of Realtors Bend

Excessive focus on Stiegler I want to congratulate Nick Budnick on his June 27 front-page article, “The cash race for District 54.” One of his major points was how Judy Stiegler (D) had only raised $13,038 compared with $56,716 raised by her contender, Jason Conger. Perhaps this made him feel sorry for Stiegler. Budnick’s article, covering the majority of the front page and continuing on a second page for 23 paragraphs, had two paragraphs on Conger, both on the inner page. Now why would Stiegler need to be concerned about fundraising when The Bulletin so generously gives her front-page coverage of this magnitude? We were even treated to the tear-jerking story about her mother’s death, the adversity of dealing with her husband’s failed campaign, and the underdog characterization of “my opponents are already counting me out.” Michelle Rosollo is quoted as saying, “ …run a race focused on Judy’s accomplishments.” Yet even with 90 percent of the article devoted to Stiegler, we heard nothing of her accomplishments. You know, like supporting Measures 66 and 67 even though the majority of her constituents did not. A fact not mentioned in this Judy Stiegler campaign fodder written by Nick Budnick. In a race, there is usually more than one competitor. Budnick would be wise to remember that in the future. Conger is a viable candidate for District 54. The voters deserve the courtesy of more fair

and balanced reporting over the months leading to the election. Toby Wilson La Pine

Giving goose meat to poor I am not a trained biologist, which is good, as my conscience would not allow such behavior. I am a trained anthropologist, and this story serves to reinforce my view that humans are not always as advanced in intelligence as we believe. These animals’ only affront was that they chose to inhabit parts of the environment we also desired, and then had the nerve to not follow proper elimination habits. When we were not smart enough to get them out of our way, we just chose to round them up and quickly and humanely dispose of them. I am not sure being rounded up, shoved into a barrel and then gassed is quick or humane, but whatever. What is as disturbing as the inhumanity and arrogance is the attempt to then clear our conscience by donating the meat to the needy. I guess the rich, middle class, and restaurants aren’t interested in park-fresh, carbon dioxide geese, served on a bed of rice, choice of vegetable and red wine. Instead we give it to the needy and feel good about passing on what the majority of us would not eat, let alone feed our children. Give it to the needy, they will eat anything. Right? I wonder how many employees of NeighborImpact will want to take some home to their family. They tried everything, including oiling eggs. Next time, ask BP to help. They seem to have mastered how to use oil to eliminate wildlife. Bon appetit! Gina McCrea 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

Zinn history book shows students both sides of the story By Bill Bodden Bulletin guest columnist

I

t was encouraging to learn from Janet Schloesser’s In My View column (“Zinn history book spreads anti-American distortions,” June 8) that Howard Zinn’s “People’s History of the United States” is used as a textbook at Mountain View High School and that its history teacher has engaged the attention of her students in this important subject. At least MVHS students are getting a more honest history lesson than what their peers in Texas may face from propaganda tracts masquerading as history books. According to press reports, Texas books would rewrite, among other points, the history of slavery as a component of “triangular trade,” reducing enchained human beings to the equivalent of cotton, tobacco and other cargoes. Criticism of aspects of American history is not necessarily anti-Americanism. Honest histories of all nations are, in part, portraits of their peoples with sins and virtues more or less common to all.

Among other misconceptions, Schloesser seems unaware that Japan had already indicated its willingness to surrender weeks before the people of Nagasaki and Hiroshima were incinerated in an act of barbarism that Gen. Dwight Eisenhower and colleagues disagreed with. Readers who prefer the truth would do well to search the Internet for “Truman Hiroshima Nagasaki Japan” to learn what the national archives at George Washington University and other reliable sources have to say on these monstrosities — not that such evidence will likely trump the scuttlebutt that has endured since Japan’s surrender. But that, again, is part of the human condition. A more plausible theory contends that President Harry S. Truman’s decision to use these horrific weapons was an opening gambit in a nuclear-laced Cold War. Ironically, the day before Nagasaki was bombed a representative of the United States signed an agreement in London endorsing the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1907 that forbade the bombard-

IN MY VIEW ment of non-military targets. Schloesser correctly noted that the United States helped rebuild Japan after the war, but her claim of self-rule for the Japanese wobbles on unstable ground. Despite becoming an American creditor, Japan continues to submit to U.S. military demands for use of its real estate. A similar claim can be made of helping to rebuild Western Europe, but before we get carried away with burnishing our national halo we would do well to consider that self-interest was at least as much, if not more, a motivation as humanitarianism. Another gambit in the looming Cold War. Schloesser criticized Zinn for his failure to discuss the wars in the European and Pacific theaters, but they appear to have been outside the book’s scope. Unfortunately, Zinn did not address the Nuremberg Trials and their counterparts in Tokyo. Important principles emerged from these major postwar events, such as

obeying orders from a higher authority is not a defense against committing immoral acts. But the only lesson we seem to have learned is that victors’ justice prevails. The popular myth of America’s entry into World War I, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin (“The Yanks are coming over there”), has persuaded the ill-informed that this was the first of two American bailouts of Britain and France. To the contrary, it was probably a worse and more criminal blunder than the Bush/Cheney/congressional war on Iraq; although, the last chapters have yet to be written on that continuing Middle Eastern folly. Because they believed that America would join in the war and give them “victory,” the British rejected talks of a truce that were being floated in the spring of 1917 when the belligerents were bogged down on the Western Front. The consequence was that more than a million people died between then and Armistice Day, and the path was set for World War II. Zinn has nothing to do with this

myth but gives an informed analysis of Wilson’s decision to join in the war. Zinn’s history of the American people serves a very useful purpose in bringing the roles of ordinary people and their fights for “liberty and (social and economic) justice for all” to the attention of students. This is contrary to other history books that tend, like an Ayn Rand novel, to give all the credit to the leaders and reduce ordinary citizens to bit players in the great dramas, unworthy of listing in the screen credits’ cast of characters despite their providing the labor that made our economic and manufacturing strengths so great and helped to make this a better nation. Zinn’s approach is an important step toward what students need in our knowledge of American history, that is, a textbook that will show both sides — virtues and vices, successes and failures — of government, military, academia, media, religion, capitalism and labor. A standard we would all do well to follow. Bill Bodden lives in Redmond.


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 C7

O D N Arlene Beverly (Hibbard) Caswell, of Bend Oct. 17, 1924 - July 5, 2010 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A gathering for family and friends will be held in Sisters, Oregon, at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

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

Doris T. Claypool, of Bend Jan. 13, 1907 - July 8, 2010 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471 niswonger-reynolds.com Services: Funeral service will be held at 11:00 a.m., on Wed., July 14, 2010, at Niswonger Reynolds Funeral Home Chapel, 105 NW Irving, Ave. Bend. Contributions may be made to:

United Pentecostal Church. 213 NW Lafayette, Bend, OR 97701.

Frank Paul Swindling, of La Pine June 4, 1924 - July 7, 2010 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine, Oregon, 541-536-5104, www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: At his request, no services. Contributions may be made to:

Newberry Hospice, 51681 Huntington Road, La Pine, Oregon 97739.

Linda R. Demers, of Madras May 25, 1940 - July 7, 2010 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral home, 541-475-2241. Services: Memorial Mass on Tuesday, July 13, 2010 at 10:00 a.m. at St. Patrick's Catholic Church in Madras.

Margaret Ruth Townsend, of Powell Butte May 25, 1923 - July 7, 2010 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home - Prineville, 541-416-9733. Services: A funeral service will be held 4:00 P.M. Saturday, July 10, 2010 at Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 SW Hwy. 126, Powell Butte, OR. Contributions may be made to:

Powell Butte Christian Church building fund. Powell Butte Christian Church, 13720 SW Hwy. 126, Powell Butte, OR 97753. 541-548-3066.

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

Avis June ‘Kuhlman’ Hamman August 19, 1917 - July 8, 2010 Avis June ‘Kuhlman’ Hamman passed away July 8, 2010, at the age of 92. Born August 19, 1917, in Strawn, Kansas, to Ed and Goldie Kuhlman. After graduating high school, she moved to California and married Wilbur (Bill) Hamman. They raised two daughters, Janice Smith and Judy Fogelquist. They moved to Crescent, Oregon, and started Hamman’s Garage. June was able to handle all aspects of the family business from driving the wrecker to changing oil. June and Bill loved to hunt and fish all over Oregon. She enjoyed reading and spending time with her family. June was proceeded in death by her husband, Bill; and daughter, Janice Smith. She is survived by her daughter, Judy (David) Fogelquist of Prineville, Oregon. Seven grandchildren, fifteen greatgrandchildren and ten great-great-grandchildren. She will be greatly missed. Memorial Service to be held Monday, July 12, 2010, 1:00 pm, at the Niswonger Reynolds Chapel, Bend, Oregon. Contributions can be made to the Newberry Hospice, PO Box 1888, La Pine, Oregon 97739.

Barney Edward Mason

Sergei Tretyakov, spy who fled from Russia to U.S., dies at 53 ByWilliam Grims New York Times News Service

Sergei Tretyakov, a high-ranking Russian spy who defected to the United States after the end of the Cold War, died on June 13 at his home in Florida. He was 53. His wife, Helen, announced his death Friday on the Washington radio station WTOP. Pete Earley, the author of a book about Tretyakov, “Comrade J.: The Untold Secrets of Russia’s Master Spy in America After the End of the Cold War” (2008), wrote on his website, www.peteearley.com, that Helen Tretyakov gave the cause of death as coronary arrest, and that she had asked her husband’s friends not to reveal the fact of his death until an autopsy could be performed under the supervision of the FBI. David Winterhalter, the director of investigations for the medical examiner’s office in Sarasota County, Fla., said an autopsy had been completed and his office was waiting for standard histology and toxicology tests to be completed before stating the cause of death. The FBI, he said, “is aware of everything that is going on.”

Flooding

August 12,1931 - June 20, 2010 He is survived by his wife, Shirley Mason; children, Michael A. Mason of Bend, Colleen J. McComb of Bend, Dennis J. Mason and his wife, Ricky of Brookings; sisters and brothers-in law, Oleta and George Nance of Lake Isabella, CA.; Novie and Bill Price of Vacaville, CA; sister, Myrna Howells of Lake Isabella, CA; brother, Edward Mason of Lake Isabella , CA; six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. A memorial service will be held on July 17, 2010, at Living Waters Foursquare Church, 1136 Fifield in Brookings, OR.

Homeless Continued from C1 “Having a 10-year program is very important because it sets out measurable goals,” said Mary Carroll, Homeless Prevention and Rapid Rehousing coordinator for the state’s Ending Homelessness Advisory Council in Salem. “Our goal is to end the institution of homelessness so that people wanting to get off the street have the opportunity to do that.” According to Carroll, 11 other communities in Oregon have already adopted the initiative, and the results have been encouraging. In 2009, the rate of chronic homelessness dropped, and many more programs preventing homelessness were offered in Oregon than in past years. In Central Oregon, the plan has been in the works since May 2009, and will encompass Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties, along with the Warm Springs area. The counties are planning on completing the proposal for the plan in the fall of this year. Though the plan calls for an end to homelessness in 10 years, cocommisioners involved with the plan say they are realistic about meeting the goal. “We won’t be able to completely do away with homelessness,” said co-chairwoman Deschutes County Commissioner Tammy Baney, citing that for some, homelessness is a choice and not necessarily an affliction. “But our hope is to remove policy barriers and create affordable housing so that we can make a significant difference.” According to Bruce Abernethy, co-chairman of the 10 Year Plan in Central Oregon, the plan is designed to ensure that those who don’t want to be homeless have options, with the goal that they will have the help they need to secure perma-

Continued from C1 The deluge was the result of an 18-inch Avion Water Co. water main that broke underneath Knott Road around 4:15 p.m., spilling between 4,000 and 5,000 gallons of water per minute and collapsing a small section of the roadway. It took Avion work crews until about 3 a.m. Friday to replace the broken pipe, and turn the water back on for about 200 customers in the neighborhood. Avion was also responsible for fixing the section of Knott Road that was damaged when the pipe burst. Road crews hired by Avion provided a temporary fix of by 7 a.m. Friday that allowed motorists to drive over

If you go Town hall meetings on homelessness on July 22 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the following locations:

BEND Bend’s Community Center on 1036 N.E. Fifth St.

REDMOND The Grange on 707 S.W. Kalama St.

SISTERS Sisters Fire Hall on 301 S. Elm St.

LA PINE Little Deschutes Lodge on Huntington Road and Victory Way

MADRAS Madras Senior Center on 860 S.W. Madison

PRINEVILLE Clover Building on 498 S,E. Lynn Blvd.

nent housing. With an estimated 2,402 people homeless in Central Oregon, 40 percent of whom are children, the plan would help provide a more stable living situation for people in need. “It’s a full school-worth of children in the area who do not have secure housing,” said Baney, citing that 767 children in Deschutes County are classified as homeless. “Imagine trying to be apart of a community if you don’t even know where you’re going to be staying the night.” Baney also pointed out that most of the homeless in Central Oregon are families with children, and that many people removed from the issue don’t understand the large amount of community members facing the threat of homelessness in the community. As part of the plan, two committees will work together to solve problems related to homelessness in the tri-county area. The first will be a working committee comprised

Tretyakov (pronounced traytya-COUGH), called Comrade J. by American intelligence officers, defected with his wife and daughter in October 2000. At the time, he held the title of first secretary of the Russian mission in New York and senior aide to the Russian ambassador to the United Nations, Sergey V. Lavrov. In fact he was a colonel in the SVR, the Russian intelligence service that replaced the KGB. From 1995 to 2000 he was responsible for all covert operations in New York City and at the United Nations. On his website, Earley, citing “an informed source,” wrote that Tretyakov did not know any of the 10 Russian agents arrested last month and had not been involved in their operations. Helen Tretyakov, speaking to WTOP news radio, denied rumors that her husband had tipped off American intelligence officials about the agents. “It wasn’t him who disclosed the names of these people,” she said. Although Tretyakov had refused to comment on whether he gave information to the United States while he was a Russian agent, Earley wrote that he might

have cooperated with American intelligence officers for three years before he defected. At that point, according to Earley’s book, which is based on extensive interviews with Tretyakov, he delivered 5,000 top-secret cables to American intelligence officials and, in debriefings by the FBI and CIA, provided detailed information about Russian operations in New York, including the names of contacts. “My defection was the major failure of the Russian intelligence, probably in its whole history,” Tretyakov told NPR, the public radio network, in 2008. Sergei Olegovich Tretyakov was born on Oct. 5, 1956, in Moscow. His grandmother had worked for the intelligence services and his father for the Ministry of Foreign Trade, which posted him to Tehran, where Sergei spent his early childhood. While studying at the Institute for Foreign Languages in Moscow, he was recruited by the KGB. “For me it was fascinating,” he said of the intelligence work, speaking to NPR. He spent his first five years

in the KGB in Moscow sifting through Western publications for information of use to the government. In 1990 he was sent to the Soviet mission in Ottawa, where he recruited Canadian informants with an animus toward the United States. After he defected, he lived in hiding with his wife and daughter, Ksenya, who also survives him. All three became American citizens. When “Comrade J.” was published, Tretyakov began making public appearances. After that he lived more or less openly, under his own name and without protection, although when he traveled abroad he had an FBI escort. In “Comrade J.,” Tretyakov wrote a long statement explaining his reasons for defecting. He said he switched sides because he had lost faith in the leaders who succeeded Mikhail S. Gorbachev. “I saw firsthand what kind of people were and are running the country,” he wrote, saying he believed they had enriched themselves and a handful of cronies. “I came to an ultimate conclusion that it became immoral to serve them.”

the street. A permanent repair of the asphalt was to completed Friday evening.. Jason Wick, the vice president of Avion Water Co., said a rock situated against the PVC pipe combined with the vibrations of running water caused a small crack to form in the main. That crack, he said, in turn split the entire length of the 20-footlong pipe. “It was a 20-foot crack,” Wick said. “That’s why we had a river.” He said the pipe was about 16 years old, and usually would have a lifespan of about 50 years. He added that the break was the third for Avion since 1987 for company’s large diameter pipes. Neither Nagler nor Wick knew how much damage was

done to the Nativity Lutheran Church, and cost estimates on the water main and road repairs were unavailable on Friday. “The actual line repair and road repair are not that incredibly expensive, but the damage to the building is going to be fairly expensive,” Wick said. “That’s our largest liability.” Avion’s insurance will cover the cost of Thursday’s incident, and Wick said the company’s provider is already working with Nativity Lutheran Church’s insurance representatives. For Nagler, though, the damage to his church is not what concerns him. Rather it’s the impact on his congregation and others who rely on the church’s food pantry that has him worried. He said it could take up to six

weeks for the church to have the water damage repaired. In the meantime, he said Trinity Episcopal Church in downtown Bend that has opened its doors to him and his congregation so they can continue their services at 9:30 a.m. Sundays. What Nagler is still trying to organize is how to continue the Nativity Lutheran Church’s food pantry, which he said serves about 500 people per month. “That’s going to be the hardest thing for us to figure out,” Nagler said. “How do we get ourselves back up and running for the people in need? Because they don’t have insurance.”

of nonprofits and community leaders, with the second being a steering committee made up of elected officials. The Working Committee will help at a ground level in the community, while the Steering Committee will work at an official level to change policies and ordinances that contribute to homelessness in Central Oregon. Funding for the working elements of the plan, including prevention and assistance services to the homeless in the community, will come from a wide variety of sources. Though the logistics of funding have yet to be solidified, many programs will be federally and state funded. In addition, nonprofits operating on donations from the community will also be providing programs to assist the homeless. According to Abernethy, the town hall meetings are an important step in the plan and will help the committees identify community members who can champion the cause and become involved. “A lot of people who are homeless are our neighbors,” said Abernethy. “The plan will only work if everyone pitches in.” The meetings are open to the public, and child care services will be available at some locations. Refreshments will also be available for those who attend the event. For more information about the plan and the town hall meetings, visit www.cohome less.org. Megan Kehoe can be reached at 541-383-0354 or at mkehoe@bendbulletin.com.

Nick Grube can be reached at 541-633-2160 or at ngrube@ bulletin.com.

Mail

instance provided reasonable notice to affected patrons.” Despite that, the order recommended that the Postal Service Continued from C1 The postal commission cited mail direct notice of closings to those concerns in its decision customers in the future. In its original decision to close this week. “The Postal Service has an the Crescent Lake post office, obligation to remedy the safety the Postal Service estimated that concerns and mail delivery is- closing the office would save sues raised in this proceeding $26,164 annually. The savings came from no not w ithsta nding longer employthe fact that this ing a postmasappeal must be dis“As I reread the ter in Crescent missed for jurisdicLake, less the tional reasons,” the decision I see cost of hiring a decision said. that they danced rural mail carriThe PRC diser. Because the missed the appeal a compromise. A Postal Service on the grounds that unique ZIP code operates withresidents didn’t appeal within 30 would help a lot to out a taxpayer subsidy, it needs days of the post solve many of the to offer mail office’s May 2009 service in costclosure. Cramblit problems created effective ways, and Goevelinger by the Postal the closure docargued that their Service.” ument said. appeal filed this U.S. Rep. year should be con- — Crescent Lake Greg Walden, sidered, because Community Action R-Hood River, the Postal Service Team President Carol and Sen. Ron didn’t post notice Wyden, D-Ore., of the post office Goevelinger each wrote letclosure in Crescent ters supporting Lake. Instead, the notice was posted in the Cres- Crescent Lake’s bid to re-open cent post office, which is nearly its post office. On Friday, Wyden 40 miles from parts of the Cres- spokesman Tom Towslee said Wyden will push for the ZIP code cent Lake service area. The PRC ruled that posting to be restored. “It seems like missing a deadthe notice in Crescent met U.S. Postal Service policy, since that line is pretty thin stuff for denyis the nearest post office to Cres- ing someone the kind of thing they’re asking for,” Towslee said. cent Lake. “Customers of a suspended “We’ll continue to make our case post office would be likely to with the Postal Service to at least visit the nearest post office in try and save their ZIP code.” order to obtain any postal services no longer available in their Keith Chu can be reached community,” the PRC order says. at 202-662-7456 or at kchu@ “The procedures followed in this bendbulletin.com.

Weekly Arts & Entertainment Fridays In


C8 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

THE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST

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

TODAY, JULY 10 Today: Mostly sunny, slightly cooler, afternoon breezes.

HIGH Ben Burkel

FORECASTS: LOCAL 70s

Western

90s Ruggs

Condon

Maupin

89/58

85/57

92/55

70/54

Warm Springs

Marion Forks

90/58

85/48

Willowdale Mitchell

Madras

87/53

Camp Sherman 81/48 Redmond Prineville 89/51 Cascadia 86/52 88/52 Sisters 84/50 Bend Post 89/51

86/50

77/39

Partly to mostly sunny today. Coastal clouds developing tonight. Central

91/57 88/45

Oakridge Elk Lake

85/48

La Pine

Hampton 84/48

Fort Rock

Vancouver 74/56

92/51

Bend 80s Boise 89/51

92/55

Reno

95/62

San Francisco Partly to mostly sunny 68/55 skies today. Clear to partly cloudy tonight.

80s

76/42

86/55

Elko

100s

88/49

Crater Lake

86/56

Idaho Falls

90s

102/71

90/50

Helena

95/62

Redding

Silver Lake

84/45

Missoula

Salt Lake City 92/67

LOW

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

HIGH

PLANET WATCH

Moon phases New

First

Full

Last

July 11

July 18

July 25

Aug. 2

Saturday Hi/Lo/W

LOW

Astoria . . . . . . . . 70/56/0.00 . . . . . 67/55/pc. . . . . . . 70/55/c Baker City . . . . . . 90/45/0.00 . . . . . 88/56/pc. . . . . . 90/52/pc Brookings . . . . . . 63/49/0.00 . . . . . 69/54/pc. . . . . . 71/59/pc Burns. . . . . . . . . . 91/44/0.00 . . . . . 90/53/pc. . . . . . 90/52/pc Eugene . . . . . . . . 95/58/0.00 . . . . . . 85/51/s. . . . . . 88/52/pc Klamath Falls . . . 89/52/0.00 . . . . . . 89/54/s. . . . . . . 89/55/s Lakeview. . . . . . . 91/48/0.00 . . . . . 89/56/pc. . . . . . . 88/55/s La Pine . . . . . . . . 94/51/0.00 . . . . . . 86/47/s. . . . . . . 86/45/s Medford . . . . . . 100/61/0.00 . . . . . . 95/60/s. . . . . . . 98/59/s Newport . . . . . . . 63/54/0.00 . . . . . 63/53/pc. . . . . . . 64/54/c North Bend . . . . . . 66/52/NA . . . . . . 65/56/s. . . . . . 67/58/pc Ontario . . . . . . . . 98/54/0.00 . . . . . 97/64/pc. . . . . . 98/62/pc Pendleton . . . . . . 99/58/0.00 . . . . . 94/63/pc. . . . . . . 95/64/s Portland . . . . . . . 94/61/0.00 . . . . . 83/58/pc. . . . . . 85/57/pc Prineville . . . . . . . 93/57/0.00 . . . . . . 86/52/s. . . . . . . 89/53/s Redmond. . . . . . . 98/55/0.00 . . . . . . 91/51/s. . . . . . . 89/49/s Roseburg. . . . . . . 97/66/0.00 . . . . . . 90/59/s. . . . . . 92/60/pc Salem . . . . . . . . . 96/60/0.00 . . . . . 85/55/pc. . . . . . 87/56/pc Sisters . . . . . . . . . 92/58/0.00 . . . . . . 84/50/s. . . . . . . 86/52/s The Dalles . . . . . 104/64/0.00 . . . . . 91/59/pc. . . . . . . 88/64/s

WATER REPORT

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

To report a wildfire, call 911

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

0

MEDIUM 2

4

HIGH 6

8V.HIGH 8

10

POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.com

LOW

PRECIPITATION

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91/61 24 hours ending 4 p.m.. . . . . . . . 0.00” Record high . . . . . . . . . . . . .96 in 1968 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.00” Record low. . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 in 1964 Average month to date. . . . . . . . 0.18” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .80 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.28” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46 Average year to date. . . . . . . . . . 6.34” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.. . . 29.98 Record 24 hours . . . . . . . 0.64 in 1933 *Melted liquid equivalent

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

LOW

LOW

84 42

TEMPERATURE

FIRE INDEX Sunday Hi/Lo/W

Sunny, mild.

HIGH

80 40

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . . . .6:42 a.m. . . . . . .9:46 p.m. Venus . . . . . . . .9:11 a.m. . . . . .10:54 p.m. Mars. . . . . . . .10:46 a.m. . . . . .11:29 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . . .11:56 p.m. . . . . .12:04 p.m. Saturn. . . . . . .11:36 a.m. . . . . .12:02 a.m. Uranus . . . . . .11:47 p.m. . . . . .11:52 a.m.

OREGON CITIES City

78/58

Christmas Valley

Chemult

69/50

Seattle

88/49

80/41

Calgary

70s

Eugene Partly to mostly sunny 85/51 skies today. Clear to partly Grants Pass cloudy tonight. 96/56 Eastern

89/49

86/47

84/46

BEND ALMANAC Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:32 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:49 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:33 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:48 p.m. Moonrise today . . . . 4:07 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 8:08 p.m.

WEDNESDAY Sunny, pleasant.

84 40

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

83/58

Burns

HIGH

NORTHWEST

82/48

86/47

LOW

91 50

Portland

Brothers

Sunriver

HIGH

Yesterday’s regional extremes • 104° The Dalles • 43° Meacham

TUESDAY Sunny, cooler, breezy.

A mix of sun and clouds will be the rule as dry weather continues over the region.

Paulina

85/49

Crescent

Crescent Lake

LOW

51

STATE

MONDAY Abundant sunshine, warm.

Tonight: Mainly clear, relatively mild.

89

Bob Shaw

Government Camp

SUNDAY

MEDIUM

HIGH

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 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,627 . . . . .55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116,213 . . . .200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 75,897 . . . . .91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . . 40,686 . . . . .47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143,337 . . . .153,777 River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . 384 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,900 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 146 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 148 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,186 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 231 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 17.9 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21.5 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

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

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

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

S

S

S

S

S

Vancouver 74/56

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

S

S

Calgary 69/50

Saskatoon 70/55

Seattle 78/58

Billings 90/60

Boise 95/62

Goodyear, Ariz. Leadville, Colo.

S Winnipeg 81/60

Bismarck 92/62 Rapid City 89/59

Cheyenne 84/55 San Francisco 68/55

• 2.56” Milton, Fla.

Las Vegas 107/82

Salt Lake City 92/67

Tijuana 70/59

Denver 90/61 Albuquerque 90/67

Los Angeles 72/62 Honolulu 86/73

S

S

S

S

S S

Quebec 81/60

Thunder Bay 79/60

St. Paul 88/68

Oklahoma City 90/72

Phoenix 109/89

La Paz 90/66 Juneau 64/51

Mazatlan 85/78

Green Bay 84/65

Des Moines 87/67 Chicago 84/67 Omaha 88/70 Kansas City 88/72

Dallas 92/76 Houston 94/77

Chihuahua 85/68

Anchorage 64/51

S

Portland 78/68

Portland 83/58

• 115° • 32°

S

To ronto 82/62 Buffalo Detroit 81/63 85/63

Columbus 85/62 Louisville 90/68 St. Louis Nashville 89/69 90/69 Little Rock Atlanta 91/73 88/72 Birmingham 91/70 New Orleans 93/78

Halifax 77/63 Boston 82/69

New York 82/70 Philadelphia 85/70 Washington, D. C. 84/69

Charlotte 90/68

Orlando 94/74 Miami 93/78

Monterrey 88/74

FRONTS

FASCINATING SIGHTS AT THE OREGON COUNTRY FAIR

Nick Cote / The (Eugene) Register-Guard

Performers wearing face paint and walking on stilts roam the trails Friday at the Oregon Country Fair 12 miles west of Eugene. It’s the 41st year for the festival of entertainment, crafts, food and people-watching. The fair continues today and tomorrow.

June’s weather trends: warm, wet and windy And much of that wetness was thanks to the Pacific Northwest By Randolph E. Schmid The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Warm, wet and windy! That was June, depending on where you lived in the United States. The month was exceptionally hot in the South and East, wetter than normal across a northern tier of states and may have had the second most tornadoes of any June on record, the National Climatic Data Center reported Friday. Nationally averaged, June was warmer than normal, a pattern that has been continuing in recent years as greenhouse warming caused by industrial and other emissions increases. June global climate data were

not yet available. But the climate center said it was the hottest June on record for New Jersey, Delaware and North Carolina, as a high pressure area directed hot, sunny weather over the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. It was the second hottest June on record in Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina, Florida and Louisiana, the agency added. In the contiguous 48 states only Washington and Oregon were cooler than normal, and both were also wetter than unusual. That was thanks to conditions in the Pacific Northwest which directed storms across the northern and central states, bringing

wetter than normal conditions. It was the wettest June on record for Michigan and near-record rainfall fell in Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska. In addition, the federal Storm Prediction Center said there were 387 preliminary tornado reports during June. If confirmed, this will be the second most active June on record — behind 1992. The center said there were 67 preliminary tornado reports in Minnesota, topping the previous record of 35 tornadoes during June 2005. The climate and storm centers are both agencies of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . .83/72/0.17 . . .87/69/t . . . .91/73/t Akron . . . . . . . . .78/72/0.49 . 84/60/pc . . . 83/63/s Albany. . . . . . . . . .93/73/NA . . .78/62/t . . 87/62/pc Albuquerque. . . .89/65/0.00 . 90/67/pc . . 90/65/pc Anchorage . . . . .71/46/0.00 . . .64/51/r . . 69/52/pc Atlanta . . . . . . . .97/76/0.00 . . .88/72/t . . 93/74/pc Atlantic City . . . .88/71/0.00 . . .82/72/t . . . 84/73/s Austin . . . . . . . . .91/76/0.26 . 92/72/pc . . 94/74/pc Baltimore . . . . . .93/73/0.00 . . .84/67/t . . . 89/70/s Billings. . . . . . . . .90/59/0.00 . 90/60/pc . . . .80/54/t Birmingham . . . .98/76/0.00 . . .91/70/t . . 94/71/pc Bismarck . . . . . . .88/52/0.00 . . .92/62/t . . 78/52/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . .96/64/0.00 . . .95/62/s . . . 95/59/s Boston. . . . . . . . .91/73/0.00 . . .82/69/t . . . .79/68/t Bridgeport, CT. . .85/74/0.00 . . .80/70/t . . 80/68/pc Buffalo . . . . . . . .81/70/0.48 . 81/63/pc . . . 84/65/s Burlington, VT. . .89/76/0.06 . 80/66/pc . . 84/63/pc Caribou, ME . . . .87/69/0.00 . . .81/66/t . . . .74/61/t Charleston, SC . .93/74/0.19 . . .93/76/t . . 91/75/pc Charlotte. . . . . . .97/76/0.00 . . .90/68/t . . 93/68/pc Chattanooga. . . .97/75/0.09 . 89/69/pc . . 95/71/pc Cheyenne . . . . . .76/46/1.12 . 84/55/pc . . . .82/54/t Chicago. . . . . . . .88/74/0.00 . 84/67/pc . . 87/70/pc Cincinnati . . . . . .86/73/0.31 . 86/64/pc . . . 87/69/s Cleveland . . . . . .79/73/0.64 . . .82/61/s . . . 85/65/s Colorado Springs 77/50/0.00 . 86/58/pc . . . .85/55/t Columbia, MO . .84/72/0.00 . . .87/65/s . . 88/70/pc Columbia, SC . .100/75/0.02 . . .95/73/t . . 95/71/pc Columbus, GA. .101/76/0.00 . . .92/73/t . . 95/76/pc Columbus, OH. . .81/70/0.80 . . .85/62/s . . . 87/67/s Concord, NH . . . .92/67/0.00 . . .80/70/t . . . .81/62/t Corpus Christi. . .90/78/0.04 . 90/76/pc . . 91/77/pc Dallas Ft Worth. .86/75/0.32 . . .92/76/t . . 96/79/pc Dayton . . . . . . . .84/71/0.19 . . .85/63/s . . . 85/68/s Denver. . . . . . . . .82/53/0.00 . 90/61/pc . . . .88/61/t Des Moines. . . . .88/67/0.00 . . .87/67/s . . . .85/66/t Detroit. . . . . . . . .83/73/0.25 . . .85/63/s . . 87/68/pc Duluth . . . . . . . . .80/57/0.00 . 84/63/pc . . . .74/57/t El Paso. . . . . . . . .88/70/0.00 . . .86/69/t . . . .84/72/t Fairbanks. . . . . . .84/58/0.00 . 75/54/pc . . . .71/57/r Fargo. . . . . . . . . .87/56/0.00 . 90/64/pc . . . .76/54/t Flagstaff . . . . . . .82/57/0.00 . . .80/53/t . . 80/50/pc

Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . .85/72/0.95 . . .86/61/s . . 87/66/pc Green Bay. . . . . .84/63/0.00 . . .84/65/t . . 86/65/pc Greensboro. . . . .94/73/0.08 . . .86/68/t . . 89/67/pc Harrisburg. . . . . .91/71/0.03 . . .85/66/t . . . 88/66/s Hartford, CT . . . .90/74/0.00 . . .82/69/t . . 86/63/pc Helena. . . . . . . . .90/51/0.00 . 86/56/pc . . . .79/56/t Honolulu . . . . . . .85/71/0.12 . . .86/73/s . . . 87/72/s Houston . . . . . . .91/76/0.00 . 94/77/pc . . 95/79/pc Huntsville . . . . . .96/74/0.00 . 91/67/pc . . 93/70/pc Indianapolis . . . .86/73/0.06 . . .86/66/s . . 87/67/pc Jackson, MS . . . .96/74/0.00 . . .93/73/t . . . .91/73/t Madison, WI . . . .84/63/0.00 . 83/64/pc . . 84/66/pc Jacksonville. . . .100/73/0.00 . 96/76/pc . . . .93/77/t Juneau. . . . . . . . .72/52/0.00 . . .64/51/r . . . .55/48/r Kansas City. . . . .85/66/0.00 . . .88/72/s . . . .89/73/t Lansing . . . . . . . .84/70/0.39 . . .86/61/s . . 87/65/pc Las Vegas . . . . .106/84/0.00 107/82/pc . 107/83/pc Lexington . . . . . .81/71/1.60 . 86/64/pc . . . 88/68/s Lincoln. . . . . . . . .85/59/0.00 . . .89/70/s . . . .87/69/t Little Rock. . . . . .90/78/0.05 . . .91/73/t . . 92/75/pc Los Angeles. . . . .67/60/0.00 . 72/62/pc . . 73/62/pc Louisville . . . . . . .87/75/0.50 . 90/68/pc . . . 92/72/s Memphis. . . . . . .92/77/0.05 . 91/74/pc . . 92/75/pc Miami . . . . . . . . .92/78/0.00 . 93/78/pc . . 94/78/pc Milwaukee . . . . .84/71/0.00 . 84/66/pc . . 86/68/pc Minneapolis . . . .87/67/0.00 . 88/68/pc . . . .83/62/t Nashville . . . . . . .90/77/0.00 . 90/69/pc . . 93/71/pc New Orleans. . . .92/76/0.00 . . .93/78/t . . . .94/78/t New York . . . . . .90/75/0.02 . . .82/70/t . . 89/70/pc Newark, NJ . . . . .87/75/0.00 . . .85/71/t . . 90/69/pc Norfolk, VA . . . . .88/75/0.00 . . .89/72/t . . . 91/70/s Oklahoma City . .87/73/0.00 . 90/72/pc . . . .92/74/t Omaha . . . . . . . .87/64/0.00 . . .88/70/s . . . .85/68/t Orlando. . . . . . . .95/71/0.00 . 94/74/pc . . . .92/76/t Palm Springs. . .112/75/0.00 107/79/pc . 110/80/pc Peoria . . . . . . . . .85/71/0.00 . . .86/63/s . . 87/67/pc Philadelphia . . . .91/74/0.01 . . .85/70/t . . . 90/69/s Phoenix. . . . . . .112/92/0.00 109/89/pc . 107/87/pc Pittsburgh . . . . . .87/69/1.61 . 82/57/pc . . . 83/61/s Portland, ME. . . .82/67/0.00 . . .78/68/t . . . .76/63/t Providence . . . . .86/72/0.00 . . .84/71/t . . . .83/69/t Raleigh . . . . . . . .95/72/0.00 . . .90/69/t . . 91/68/pc

Yesterday Saturday Sunday Yesterday Saturday Sunday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . .86/50/0.00 . . .89/59/t . . . .76/56/t Savannah . . . . .101/77/0.00 . . .94/76/t . . 93/74/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . .92/64/0.00 . . .95/62/s . . . 95/63/s Seattle. . . . . . . . .93/62/0.00 . 78/58/pc . . 79/59/pc Richmond . . . . . .93/72/0.00 . . .88/70/t . . . 92/70/s Sioux Falls. . . . . .85/59/0.00 . . .88/67/s . . . .81/59/t Rochester, NY . . .85/69/1.24 . 83/62/pc . . . 85/64/s Spokane . . . . . . .92/61/0.00 . 88/60/pc . . . 89/61/s Sacramento. . . . .89/56/0.00 . . .96/66/s . . . 97/66/s Springfield, MO. .85/71/0.01 . 88/67/pc . . . .89/71/t St. Louis. . . . . . . .87/73/0.36 . 89/69/pc . . . .89/74/t Tampa . . . . . . . . .92/76/0.00 . 92/77/pc . . 91/80/pc Salt Lake City . . .91/68/0.00 . 92/67/pc . . 91/66/pc Tucson. . . . . . . .105/87/0.00 100/76/pc . . 96/74/pc San Antonio . . . .89/75/0.06 . 92/75/pc . . 93/76/pc Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .85/73/0.00 . 90/73/pc . . . .90/74/t San Diego . . . . . .65/61/0.00 . 70/65/pc . . 70/66/pc Washington, DC .93/76/0.00 . . .84/69/t . . . 90/74/s San Francisco . . .67/55/0.00 . . .68/55/s . . . 67/55/s Wichita . . . . . . . .86/69/0.00 . 88/73/pc . . . .93/74/t San Jose . . . . . . .75/57/0.00 . . .88/59/s . . . 87/60/s Yakima . . . . . . .101/56/0.00 . 94/64/pc . . . 94/62/s Santa Fe . . . . . . .86/56/0.00 . 85/56/pc . . 85/59/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . .110/83/0.00 108/79/pc . 104/78/pc

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . .91/64/0.00 . . .83/61/t . . . .83/62/t Athens. . . . . . . . .82/69/0.00 . 83/67/pc . . 87/69/pc Auckland. . . . . . .54/43/0.00 . . .50/36/s . . . 53/38/s Baghdad . . . . . .116/86/0.00 . .116/90/s . . 119/94/s Bangkok . . . . . . .95/79/0.49 . . .94/81/t . . . .94/80/t Beijing. . . . . . . . .86/68/0.00 . . .83/68/t . . 88/69/pc Beirut. . . . . . . . . .84/73/0.00 . . .85/75/s . . . 89/74/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . .91/61/0.00 . 88/60/pc . . 89/62/pc Bogota . . . . . . . .68/54/1.32 . . .65/50/t . . 64/51/sh Budapest. . . . . . .82/54/0.00 . 81/56/pc . . 84/58/pc Buenos Aires. . . .57/39/0.00 . . .65/45/s . . 60/45/sh Cabo San Lucas .90/79/0.00 . . .86/71/c . . . 86/71/c Cairo . . . . . . . . . .93/73/0.00 . . .95/72/s . . . 97/70/s Calgary . . . . . . . .82/54/0.00 . .69/50/sh . . . 83/59/s Cancun . . . . . . . .88/77/0.00 . 89/79/pc . . 90/79/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . .64/55/0.18 . .69/56/sh . . 62/52/sh Edinburgh . . . . . .68/54/0.00 . .68/54/sh . . 63/51/sh Geneva . . . . . . . .93/63/0.00 . . .90/63/t . . . .90/62/t Harare . . . . . . . . .68/43/0.00 . . .67/47/s . . . 69/48/s Hong Kong . . . . .93/86/0.00 . . .93/82/t . . . .93/82/t Istanbul. . . . . . . .73/63/1.36 . .80/63/sh . . 85/67/pc Jerusalem . . . . . .97/59/0.00 . . .90/66/s . . . 94/68/s Johannesburg . . .59/45/0.00 . . .64/41/s . . . 67/44/s Lima . . . . . . . . . .66/59/0.00 . 62/59/pc . . 63/59/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . .84/64/0.00 . . .91/69/s . . . 85/67/s London . . . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . 81/61/pc . . 76/56/pc Madrid . . . . . . . .95/70/0.00 . .102/74/s . . 104/75/s Manila. . . . . . . . .88/81/0.00 . . .90/79/t . . . .91/80/t

Mecca . . . . . . . .117/91/0.00 . .109/85/s . 101/80/pc Mexico City. . . . .66/59/2.15 . . .75/59/t . . . .77/59/t Montreal. . . . . . .86/73/0.00 . 82/62/pc . . 77/59/sh Moscow . . . . . . .90/66/0.00 . 86/63/pc . . . .84/61/t Nairobi . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . 71/55/pc . . 70/54/pc Nassau . . . . . . . .93/79/0.57 . . .90/79/t . . . .90/78/t New Delhi. . . . . 96/84/trace . . .97/82/t . . . .95/82/t Osaka . . . . . . . . .79/72/0.70 . . .84/72/t . . . .80/71/t Oslo. . . . . . . . . . .72/54/0.00 . . .69/53/c . . 68/55/sh Ottawa . . . . . . . .81/72/0.00 . . .83/62/s . . 79/59/sh Paris. . . . . . . . . . .91/70/0.02 . . .86/62/t . . . 85/59/s Rio de Janeiro. . .79/59/0.00 . .77/61/sh . . . .77/63/t Rome. . . . . . . . . .88/68/0.00 . . .89/72/s . . 89/73/pc Santiago . . . . . . .64/34/0.00 . . .62/40/s . . 49/42/sh Sao Paulo . . . . . .75/57/0.00 . .70/59/sh . . . .74/60/t Sapporo. . . . . . . .77/66/0.00 . . .77/68/t . . 78/68/sh Seoul . . . . . . . . . .88/70/0.00 . . .83/72/t . . . .82/70/t Shanghai. . . . . . .90/79/0.11 . . .82/75/r . . . .85/76/t Singapore . . . . . .90/77/0.01 . . .87/77/t . . . .86/77/t Stockholm. . . . . .79/61/0.00 . . .78/59/c . . . 80/60/c Sydney. . . . . . . . .61/50/0.00 . 63/47/pc . . 64/49/sh Taipei. . . . . . . . . .97/82/0.00 . . .97/84/t . . . .97/83/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . .88/72/0.00 . . .89/74/s . . . 92/75/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . .81/73/0.00 . . .85/74/t . . . .81/72/t Toronto . . . . . . . .77/70/0.20 . . .82/62/s . . . 83/63/s Vancouver. . . . . .79/64/0.00 . 74/56/pc . . 77/58/pc Vienna. . . . . . . . .84/52/0.00 . 84/56/pc . . 85/58/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . .82/54/0.00 . 82/56/pc . . 84/58/pc


S

NBA Inside James, Wade and Bosh sign deals, appear together in Miami, see Page D5.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SATURDAY, JULY 10, 2010

BASEBALL Mariners trade ace Cliff Lee to Rangers ARLINGTON, Texas — Cliff Lee is suddenly in the starting rotation for the AL West-leading Texas Rangers, who pulled off a big deal despite bankruptcy proceedings and unsettled ownership. Cliff Lee The struggling Seattle Mariners sent the ace lefthander and reliever Mark Lowe to the Rangers on Friday for rookie first baseman Justin Smoak and three minor leaguers. Texas also receives cash as part of the deal for Lee, who can become a free agent after this season. While the Rangers might have a hard time affording Lee long-term, they now have one of baseball’s best pitchers on board for a serious run at their first playoff appearance since 1999. “They’ve got a great team, they’re in first place and I’m going to try and go there and do everything I can to help them head in the direction they’re heading,” Lee said Friday before flying from Seattle to Texas. “They’re already in a good spot, have a great team and I just want to be one of the guys.” It was the third trade in less than a year for Lee, who was 8-3 with a 2.34 ERA in 13 starts for last-place Seattle. His first start for Texas could come tonight against Baltimore. Earlier in the day, a potential deal between the Mariners and the Yankees fell through. — The Associated Press

TOUR DE F R A N C E AT A GLANCE GUEUGNON, France — A brief look at Friday’s sixth stage of the Tour de France: Stage: A mainly flat 141.3mile run from Montargis to Gueugnon that again favored sprinters. Winner: Britain’s Mark Cavendish clinched the 12th stage Tour win of his career, and second in two days. U.S. rider Tyler Farrar was second and veteran Alessandro Petacchi of Italy was third. Yellow Jersey: Fabian Cancellara of Switzerland, who finished in the main pack. Defending champion Alberto Contador of Spain stayed in ninth, 1:40 back, and seventime champion Lance Armstrong remained 18th, 2:30 back. Horner watch: Bend’s Chris Horner, a member of Armstrong’s team, finished in 58th place, three seconds behind the winner. He is 43rd overall, 3:17 behind. Next stage: Today’s seventh stage is a 102.8-mile trek from Tournus to Station des Rousses that has six lowto mid-grade climbs in the Jura mountains. — The Associated Press

D

Oregon Mid-Am set to tee off at Brasada Lots of locals will take part in tourney for players 25 and older that is being staged in Central Oregon By Zack Hall The Bulletin

Some golfers in the field of the 22nd Oregon Mid-Amateur Championship might have creaky backs. Others might be discovering their first gray hairs. But none of the 114 men and 15 women in the field gets to play and practice every day as a member of a college golf team. The two-day, 36-hole stroke-play Mid-

Am begins today at the Club at Brasada Ranch in Powell Butte. And the Mid-Am is limited to golfers 25 years old and older, giving many of the players in the field a break from the kids of college age, or younger, who generally dominate Oregon’s top amateur tournaments. “It’s for the working guys and the old guys who have retired,” says 61-year-old Carey Watson, a part-time Sunriver resident who

played in the 2008 U.S. Senior Amateur. “But it really is a lot of fun. You get to play with some different guys.” Watson will be among 25 Central Oregonians playing in the 2010 Mid-Am. Bend golfers in the men’s field are Tony Battistella, Greg Beaulieu, Jake Bell, James Brown, Eric Carmichael, Roger Eichhorn, Bobby Grover, Dwight Hietala, Lane Lehrke, Brad Mombert, Ryan Roskowski, Nick Schaan, Kim Schwenke, Verle Steppe, Stein Swenson, Jon Walker and Jeff Ward, who will be joined by Redmond’s Bryan Paligo and Mike Reuther and Sunriver’s Scott Auerbach. See Mid-Am / D6

LOCAL BOXING

About the Mid-Am Where: The Club at Brasada Ranch, Powell Butte Format: 36 holes of stroke play When: Today and Sunday Tee times: Today, from 7:30 a.m. to 2:40 p.m. Sunday, TBD Who: Golfers age 25 and older. Handicap index limited to 10 for men, 22.4 for women Admission: Free for spectators

WEST COAST LEAGUE BASEBALL

Elks’ win streak ends at three Bulletin staff report

Photos by Tyler Roemer / The Bulletin

Jenah Duea, of Bend, shown here training at the Deschutes County Rocks Boxing Club in Bend, has qualified for the 2010 USA Boxing National Championships, which begin Monday in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Eyeing a title Bend’s Jenah Duea is headed to U.S. nationals next week, with a chance to make world championships By Mark Morical The Bulletin

Duea is hoping to qualify for the Women’s World Boxing Championships to be held later this year.

Add about 15 pounds to her chiseled frame, and Bend boxer Jenah Duea would be having Olympic dreams. But for now, she will have to settle for a shot at a national title. Duea (pronounced “Dewey”) is set to fight in the 2010 USA Boxing National Championships, scheduled for Monday through next Saturday at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colo. She won two bouts at the Pacific Northwest Regional Championships in Ontario in late May to claim the women’s 152pound weight class title and qualify for nationals. At the 2012 London Games, women’s boxing will make its Olympic debut — but

only in three weight classes (112, 132 and 165 pounds). The 5-foot-11-inch Duea, noting that she already struggled to move up from the 141pound class earlier this season, said reaching 165 pounds would just be too difficult. “That’s not necessarily a goal of mine,” Duea said of the Olympics earlier this week, “but it’s a spotlight on women’s boxing. “It’s a lot of weight,” she said of the prospect of reaching 165 pounds. “It’s not really something I have my sights on.” For now, her sights are on Colorado Springs, where nearly 300 of the country’s best amateur boxers — in both men’s and women’s divisions — will vie for national titles. Champions from 14 geographical regions are expected to compete. See Boxing / D6

The Bend Elks opened a homestand with a 7-5 loss to the Bellingham Bells in West Coast League baseball action on Friday night at Bend’s Vince Genna Stadium. Despite the loss, the Elks (197) still have a 3 1⁄2 -game lead over the Bells in the WCL’s West Division standings. The game was tied at 33 before the Bells scored twice in the seventh in- Next up ning and two • Bellingham more times Bells at Bend in the eighth. Elks The Elks tried to rally in the • W h en: ninth. With Today, 6:35 two outs, p.m. Adam Norton • Radio: started the KPOV-FM comeback at106.7 tempt with a solo home run. After a couple of walks to keep the Elks’ hopes alive, Bend High product Tommy Richards had an RBI single. But Bellingham reliever Ben Ruff struck out Riley Tompkins to end the game. Richards led the Elks with two hits, a run, and an RBI. Mitch Karraker went one for three with two RBIs. Brian Pointer had a hit, a walk, and two runs scored. Nick Loredo started for the Elks and went five innings, giving up three runs and four hits in taking a no-decision. Reliever Mike Lowden took the loss for Bend. Chris Pierce led the Bells with a double, a triple, and two runs batted in. The game is the first of eight straight league games at home for the Elks. The second game of a three-game series with the Bells is today at 6:35 p.m.

EXTREME SPORTS

Cold feat: Adventurer reaches poles, ready to tackle Everest Mark Cavendish wins Friday’s stage.

INDEX Scoreboard ................................D2 Cycling ......................................D3 Golf ............................................D3 MLB .......................................... D4 NBA ...........................................D5 Soccer .......................................D5 Prep sports ................................D5 Auto racing ............................... D6

Man goes to top, bottom, and summit of world to raise awareness of global warming

On the web To learn more about Eric Larsen’s expeditions and global warming, visit www.savethepoles.com

By Pat Graham The Associated Press

BOULDER, Colo. — Adventurer Eric Larsen savored every stride of his exhausting excursions to the North and South Poles. That is, when he wasn’t fretting about snow blindness, cracks in the ice, a shortage of food, tent fires, hypothermia, frostbite and severe whiteouts. Not to mention those hungry polar bears he

worried might mistake him for a seal while he skied and snowshoed over snow drifts in the Arctic. He avoided the bears and pretty much all of his other concerns to successfully navigate the first two legs of his quest. All that’s looming now is an encounter with Mount Everest beginning in late August. See Adventurer / D6

Courtesy of Eric Larsen via The Associated Press

Eric Larsen stands on Antarctica during an expedition to the South Pole in April. Larsen is trying to become the first person to reach both poles and the top of Mount Everest in a calendar year.


D2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

O A

SCOREBOARD

Basketball CYCLING

TELEVISION TODAY CYCLING 4:30 a.m. — Tour de France, Stage 7, VS. network.

GOLF 6 a.m. — PGA European Tour, Scottish Open, third round, Golf. 10 a.m. — Nationwide Tour, Ford Wayne Gretzky Classic, third round, Golf. Noon — U.S. Women’s Open, third round, NBC. Noon — PGA Tour, John Deere Classic, third round, CBS.

SOCCER 11:30 a.m. — World Cup, third place, Uruguay vs. Germany, ABC.

BASKETBALL 12:30 p.m. — WNBA, All-Star Game, ESPN.

BASEBALL 1 p.m. — MLB, Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Dodgers, Fox. 4 p.m. — MLB, Cincinnati Reds at Philadelphia Phillies, MLB Network. 7 p.m. — MLB, New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners, FSNW.

AUTO RACING 4:30 p.m. — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Lifelock.com 400, TNT. 7 p.m. — Drag racing, NHRA Northwest Nationals, qualifying, ESPN2.

SUNDAY CYCLING 4:30 a.m. — Tour de France, Stage 8, VS. network.

GOLF 6 a.m. — PGA European Tour, Scottish Open, final round Golf. 10 a.m. — Nationwide Tour, Ford Wayne Gretzky Classic, final round, Golf. Noon — U.S. Women’s Open, final round, NBC. Noon — PGA Tour, John Deere Classic, final round, CBS.

AUTO RACING 8:30 a.m. — Drag racing, NHRA Get Screened America Pro Modified Series, ESPN2. 9 a.m. — Formula One, British Grand Prix, Fox.

BASEBALL 10 a.m. — MLB, Atlanta Braves at New York Mets, TBS. 1 p.m. — MLB, New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners, FSNW. 3 p.m. — Minor league, All-Star Futures game, ESPN2. 5 p.m. — MLB, Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Dodgers, ESPN.

SOCCER 11:30 a.m. — World Cup, final, Netherlands vs. Spain, ABC. 7:30 p.m. — MLS, FC Dallas at Seattle Sounders FC, FSNW.

TOUR DE FRANCE Friday At Gueugnon, France Sixth Stage A 141.4-mile leg from Montargis to Gueugnon 1. Mark Cavendish, Britain, Team HTC-Columbia, 5 hours, 37 minutes, 42 seconds. 2. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Transitions, same time. 3. Alessandro Petacchi, Italy, Lampre-Farnese, same time. 4. Robbie McEwen, Australia, Katusha Team, same time. 5. Gerald Ciolek, Germany, Team Milram, same time. 6. Sebastien Turgot, France, Bbox Bouygues Telecom, same time. 7. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, same time. 8. Edvald Hagen Boasson, Norway, Sky Pro Cycling, same time. 9. Robert Hunter, South Africa, Garmin-Transitions, same time. 10. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Cervelo Test Team, same time. 11. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky Pro Cycling, same time. 12. Lloyd Mondory, France, AG2R La Mondiale, same time. 13. Mark Renshaw, Australia, Team HTC-Columbia, same time. 14. Brett Lancaster, Australia, Cervelo Test Team, same time. 15. Jurgen Roelandts, Belgium, Omega Pharma-Lotto, 3 seconds behind. 16. Matthieu Ladagnous, France, Francaise des Jeux, same time. 17. Samuel Dumoulin, France, Cofidis, same time. 18. Roger Kluge, Germany, Team Milram, same time. 19. Yukiya Arashiro, Japan, Bbox Bouygues Telecom, same time. 20. Luke Roberts, Australia, Team Milram, same time. Also 21. George Hincapie, United States, BMC Racing Team, same time. 22. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC Racing Team, same time. 27. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, Team RadioShack, same time. 28. Alberto Contador, Spain, Astana, same time. 38. Lance Armstrong, United States, Team RadioShack, same time. 39. Yaroslav Popovych, Ukraine, Team RadioShack, same time. 41. Fabian Cancellara, Switzerland, Team SaxoBank, same time. 49. Janez Brajkovic, Slovenia, Team RadioShack, same time. 55. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Team SaxoBank, same time. 58. Christopher Horner, United States, Team RadioShack, same time. 100. Sylvain Chavanel, France, Quick Step, same time. 101. Gregory Rast, Switzerland, Team RadioShack, same time. 104. Sergio Paulinho, Portugal, Team RadioShack, same time. 107. Levi Leipheimer, United States, Team RadioShack, same time. 109. Ryder Hesjedel, Canada, Garmin-Transitions, same time. 160. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC Racing Team, :34. 171. David Zabriskie, United States, Garmin-Transitions, 1:24. 185. Dmitriy Muravyev, Kazakhstan, Team RadioShack, 8:45. Overall Standings (After sixth stage) 1. Fabian Cancellara, Switzerland, Team Saxo Bank, 28 hours, 37 minutes, 30 seconds. 2. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky Pro Cycling, 20 seconds behind. 3. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC Racing Team, :39. 4. Ryder Hesjedel, Canada, Garmin-Transitions, :46. 5. Sylvain Chavanel, France, Quick Step, 1:01. 6. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Team Saxo Bank, 1:09. 7. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Cervelo Test Team, 1:16. 8. Alexandre Vinokourov, Kazakhstan, Astana, 1:31. 9. Alberto Contador, Spain, Astana, 1:40. 10. Jurgen Van Den Broeck, Belgium, Omega PharmaLotto, 1:42. 11. Nicolas Roche, Ireland, AG2R La Mondiale, same time. 12. Johan Van Summeren, Belgium, Garmin-Transitions, 1:47. 13. Denis Menchov, Russia, Rabobank, 1:49. 14. Bradley Wiggins, Britain, Sky Pro Cycling, same time. 15. David Millar, Britain, Garmin-Transitions, 2:06. 16. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic, Liquigas-Doimo, 2:24. 17. Luis-Leon Sanchez, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 2:25. 18. Lance Armstrong, United States, Team RadioShack, 2:30. 19. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Caisse d’Epargne, 2:32. 20. Thomas Lovkvist, Sweden, Sky Pro Cycling, 2:34. Also 24. Levi Leipheimer, United States, Team RadioShack, 2:53. 26. Janez Brajkovic, Slovenia, Team RadioShack, 3:00. 28. Andreas Kloeden, Germany, Team RadioShack, 3:01. 43. Christopher Horner, United States, Team RadioShack, 3:17. 51. Yaroslav Popovych, Ukraine, Team RadioShack, 3:26. 108. George Hincapie, United States, BMC Racing Team, 9:12. 114. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC Racing Team, 10:55. 120. Sergio Paulinho, Portugal, Team RadioShack, 12:17. 122. Gregory Rast, Switzerland, Team RadioShack, 12:35. 156. David Zabriskie, United States, Garmin-Transitions, 21:20. 160. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Transitions, 22:00. 186. Dmitriy Muravyev, Kazakhstan, Team RadioShack, 39:03.

SOCCER World Cup All Times PDT ——— THIRD PLACE Today, July 10 At Port Elizabeth, South Africa Uruguay vs. Germany, 11:30 a.m. ——— CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, July 11 At Johannesburg Netherlands vs. Spain, 11:30 a.m.

MLS

RADIO TODAY BASEBALL 1 p.m. — MLB, Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM 940. 6:35 p.m. — West Coast League, Bellingham Bells at Bend Elks, KPOVFM 106.7.

SUNDAY SOCCER 11 a.m. — World Cup, final, Netherlands vs. Spain, KICE-AM 940.

BASEBALL 5 p.m. — MLB, Chicago Cubs at Los Angeles Dodgers, KICE-AM 940. 5 p.m. — West Coast League, Bellingham Bells at Bend Elks, KPOV-FM 106.7.

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Columbus 8 2 3 27 20 New York 8 5 1 25 18 Toronto FC 5 4 4 19 16 Chicago 4 5 5 17 18 Kansas City 3 7 3 12 11 Philadelphia 3 7 2 11 15 New England 3 9 2 11 13 D.C. 3 9 2 11 11 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF Los Angeles 11 1 3 36 25 Real Salt Lake 9 3 3 30 28 Colorado 6 3 4 22 16 FC Dallas 5 2 6 21 16 San Jose 5 4 4 19 16 Houston 5 7 3 18 21 Seattle 4 8 3 15 16 Chivas USA 3 9 2 11 15 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Thursday’s Game Real Salt Lake 1, Chicago 0 Saturday’s Games Colorado at Toronto FC, 9 a.m. San Jose at Philadelphia, 3 p.m. D.C. United at New York, 4:30 p.m. Los Angeles at New England, 4:30 p.m. Columbus at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Chivas USA at Kansas City, 5:30 p.m.

GA 5 11 12 12 15 22 23 21

JOHN DEERE CLASSIC Friday AT TPC Deere Run Silvis, Ill. Purse: $4.4 million Yardage: 7,268; Par 71 Second Round a-denotes amateur

available. The Bulletin is not by TV or radio stations.

GA 12 17 15 19 17 23 26 25

GOLF PGA Tour

Listings are the most accurate responsible for late changes made

S B

Steve Stricker Paul Goydos

60-66—126 59-68—127

Friday Budapest, Hungary Quarterfinals Alexandra Dulgheru, (2), Romania, def. Anastasija Sevastova, Latvia, 6-7 (1), 6-2, 7-6 (4). Patty Schnyder, Switzerland, def. Polona Hercog (8), Slovenia, 7-5, 1-6, 6-4. Agnes Szavay (7), Hungary, def. Alize Cornet, France, 6-3, 6-1. Zuzana Ondraskova, Czech Republic, def. Anabel Medina Garrigues (4), Spain, 7-5, 1-6, 6-4.

IN THE BLEACHERS

SWEDISH OPEN Friday At Bastad Tennis Stadiun Bastad, Sweden Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Gisela Dulko (4), Argentina, def. Flavia Pennetta (1), Italy, 6-3, 6-1. Aravane Rezai (2), France, def. Lucie Safarova (3), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-3.

BASKETBALL WNBA

Jeff Maggert Matt Jones George McNeill Brendon de Jonge Aaron Baddeley Webb Simpson James Nitties Boo Weekley Charley Hoffman Rod Pampling Michael Letzig Mark Hensby Jay Williamson Chris Couch Charlie Wi Troy Matteson Jonathan Byrd Woody Austin Shaun Micheel Steve Lowery Brett Quigley Kevin Sutherland Chad Collins Joe Ogilvie Josh Teater Chris DiMarco Zach Johnson Charles Howell III Matt Weibring Jason Bohn Daniel Chopra John Senden Marco Dawson Matt Bettencourt John Mallinger Paul Stankowski Tim Clark Jason Day Richard S. Johnson Vaughn Taylor J.J. Henry Jeff Quinney Davis Love III Mark Wilson Pat Perez Brian Davis Steve Elkington Kevin Stadler Garrett Willis John Merrick Michael Connell Henrik Bjornstad Greg Chalmers Lee Janzen Chad Campbell Brad Faxon Tom Pernice, Jr. James Driscoll Robert Garrigus Matt Every Gary Woodland Rocco Mediate Michael Allen Todd Hamilton Spencer Levin Cliff Kresge Kenny Perry Andres Romero Michael Bradley Scott Piercy Skip Kendall Roger Tambellini

66-65—131 64-67—131 66-65—131 67-65—132 64-68—132 67-66—133 64-69—133 70-63—133 65-69—134 67-67—134 64-70—134 70-64—134 65-69—134 68-66—134 66-69—135 69-66—135 66-69—135 68-67—135 69-66—135 68-67—135 68-67—135 68-67—135 67-68—135 67-69—136 67-69—136 70-66—136 67-69—136 68-68—136 69-67—136 69-67—136 65-71—136 70-66—136 67-69—136 69-67—136 72-65—137 69-68—137 71-66—137 66-71—137 69-68—137 71-66—137 69-68—137 69-68—137 70-67—137 68-69—137 68-69—137 68-69—137 67-70—137 67-70—137 67-70—137 68-69—137 70-67—137 69-68—137 68-70—138 71-67—138 71-67—138 70-68—138 71-67—138 70-68—138 69-69—138 70-68—138 66-72—138 67-71—138 70-68—138 68-70—138 71-67—138 67-71—138 68-70—138 68-70—138 68-70—138 69-69—138 70-68—138 69-69—138

Failed to qualify Mathew Goggin Bob Estes David Duval Bubba Watson Stuart Appleby Graham DeLaet D.A. Points Chris Wilson Brad Adamonis Jarrod Lyle Joe Affrunti Ryuji Imada Chris Riley Omar Uresti Fredrik Jacobson Joe Durant Dean Wilson J.P. Hayes Carl Pettersson D.J. Trahan Kris Blanks J.L. Lewis Justin Bolli Rickie Fowler Nicholas Thompson John Rollins Ryan Palmer Scott McCarron Jimmy Walker a-Brad Benjamin K.J. Choi Johnson Wagner Glen Day Kevin Streelman Briny Baird Garth Mulroy Andrew McLardy Robert Gamez Tim Wilkinson Brent Delahoussaye Michael Sim Nathan Green Bill Lunde Brian Stuard Brenden Pappas Marc Leishman Blake Adams Cameron Percy Mathias Gronberg Troy Merritt Jason Dufner Chris Tidland Martin Flores Sunny Kim Rich Barcelo Roland Thatcher Ted Purdy John Huston Jerod Turner Cameron Tringale Charles Warren Notah Begay III Brett Wetterich Cameron Beckman Will MacKenzie Aron Price Jeff Gove Greg Kraft Carlos Franco Mike Small Kevin Johnson Vance Veazey Craig Bowden Steve Wheatcroft Chris Smith David Lutterus Judd Gibb

69-70—139 70-69—139 67-72—139 67-72—139 71-68—139 69-70—139 72-67—139 69-70—139 69-70—139 68-71—139 70-69—139 67-72—139 69-70—139 70-69—139 71-68—139 68-71—139 71-68—139 69-71—140 70-70—140 73-67—140 73-67—140 72-68—140 69-71—140 70-70—140 69-71—140 72-68—140 68-72—140 65-75—140 69-71—140 71-69—140 70-71—141 71-70—141 68-73—141 68-73—141 72-69—141 69-72—141 68-73—141 71-70—141 70-71—141 66-75—141 72-70—142 69-73—142 72-70—142 71-71—142 70-72—142 69-73—142 68-74—142 72-70—142 72-71—143 74-69—143 73-70—143 70-73—143 71-72—143 73-70—143 74-69—143 75-68—143 72-71—143 69-74—143 70-73—143 72-71—143 71-73—144 75-69—144 73-71—144 72-72—144 73-72—145 70-75—145 72-74—146 76-70—146 75-71—146 73-73—146 73-73—146 74-73—147 72-75—147 74-73—147 74-74—148 75-73—148 78-72—150

Kirk Triplett Parker McLachlin

76-75—151 75-79—154

LPGA Tour U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN Friday At Oakmont Golf Club Oakmont, Pa. Purse: $3.25 Yardage: 6,613; Par: 71 (36-35) Second Round 100 golfers have not completed the round Cristie Kerr 72-71—143 Brittany Lang 69-74—143 Christina Kim 72-72—144 Stacy Lewis 75-70—145 Amy Yang 70-75—145 Natalie Gulbis 73-73—146 Alexis Thompson 73-74—147 Inbee Park 70-78—148 Jee Young Lee 72-76—148 Kelli Shean 70-79—149 Yani Tseng 73-76—149 Heather Young 78-71—149 Vicky Hurst 72-77—149 Alena Sharp 72-78—150 Karen Stupples 75-75—150 Hee Young Park 78-72—150 Jennifer Rosales 78-73—151 M.J. Hur 70-81—151 Lindsey Wright 78-73—151 Ashli Bunch 78-74—152 Katherine Hull 75-77—152 Naon Min 73-79—152 Gwladys Nocera 79-74—153 Juli Inkster 77-76—153 Anna Nordqvist 77-76—153 Seon Hwa Lee 73-80—153 Marianne Skarpnord 80-73—153 Esther Choe 82-73—155 Alison Walshe 75-80—155 Momoko Ueda 80-75—155 Jennifer Gleason 82-74—156 Nicole Zhang 78-78—156 Junthima Gulyanamitta 81-75—156 Jessica Korda 79-78—157 Victoria Tanco 76-82—158 Hye Jung Choi 80-78—158 Louise Friberg 83-75—158 Becky Morgan 77-82—159 Irene Cho 79-80—159 Bo Mee Lee 84-75—159 Kyeong Bae 83-76—159 Janine Fellows 82-77—159 Sara-Maude Juneau 79-81—160 Ji Young Oh 82-78—160 Helen Alfredsson 81-79—160 Veronica Felibert 80-80—160 Pat Hurst 81-80—161 Rebecca Lee-Bentham 76-86—162 Heewon Han 83-79—162 Kimberly Kim 79-84—163 Sakurako Mori 83-80—163 Janice Moodie 78-86—164 Laura Diaz 81-83—164 Aiko Ueno 83-81—164 Gabriella Then 84-81—165 Nicole Vandermade 84-82—166 Jaye Marie Green 85-86—171 Liz Janangelo 84—WD Leaderboard SCORE THRU 1. Sophie Gustafson E 1 2. Cristie Kerr 1 F 2. Brittany Lang 1 F 2. Kristy McPherson 1 2 2. Shinobu Moromizato 1 1 2. Wendy Ward 1 2 2. Mhairi McKay 1 4 2. Jeong Eun Lee 1 DNS 2. Song-Hee Kim 1 DNS 10. Christina Kim 2 F 10. Mhairi McKay 2 5 10. Sandra Gal 2 5 10. Angela Stanford 2 2 10. Paula Creamer 2 2 10. Sakura Yokomine 2 3 10. Tamie Durdin 2 DNS 10. Chella Choi 2 DNS 10. Sarah Kemp 2 DNS 10. Jeong Jang 2 DNS 10. Louise Stahle 2 DNS 10. Lisa McCloskey 2 DNS 10. Michele Redman 2 DNS

TENNIS ATP ASSOCIATION OF TENNIS PROFESSIONALS ——— HALL OF FAME TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIPS Friday Newport, R.I. Singles Quarterfinals Mardy Fish (5), United States, def. Frank Dancevic, Canada, 6-7 (8), 6-4, 6-4. Richard Bloomfield, Britain, def. Ryan Harrison, United States, 5-7, 7-6 (3), 7-5. DAVIS CUP WORLD GROUP Quarterfinals Winners to semifinals, Sept. 17-19 France 2, Spain 0 Clermont-Ferrand, France Singles Gael Monfils, France, def. David Ferrer, Spain, 7-6 (3), 6-2, 4-6, 5-7, 6-4. Michael Llodra, France, def. Fernando Verdasco, Spain, 6-7 (5), 6-4, 6-3, 7-6 (2). Argentina 1, Russia 1 Moscow Singles David Nalbandian, Argentina, def. Nikolay Davydenko, Russia, 6-4, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (6). Mikhail Youzhny, Russia, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina, 6-3, 6-1, 6-4. Croatia 1, Serbia 1 Split, Croatia Singles Novak Djokovic, Serbia, def. Ivan Ljubicic, Croatia, 7-6 (3), 6-4, 6-1. Marin Cilic, Croatia, def. Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 6-4, 7-5, 6-2. Czech Republic 2, Chile 0 Coquimbo, Chile Singles Ivo Minar, Czech Republic, def. Nicolas Massu, Chile, 6-0, 6-2, 6-3. Jan Hajek, Czech Republic, def. Paul Capdeville, Chile, 6-0, 6-2, 6-1.

WTA WOMEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION ——— BUDAPEST GRAND PRIX

WOMEN‘S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Pct Atlanta 14 5 .737 Washington 12 5 .706 Indiana 11 6 .647 Connecticut 10 8 .556 Chicago 8 10 .444 New York 7 9 .438 Western Conference W L Pct Seattle 16 2 .889 Phoenix 7 11 .389 San Antonio 6 10 .375 Minnesota 6 11 .353 Los Angeles 4 13 .235 Tulsa 3 14 .176 ——— Friday’s Games No games scheduled Today’s Game WNBA vs. USA at Uncasville, Conn., 12:30 p.m.

GB — 1 2 3½ 5½ 5½ GB — 9 9 9½ 11½ 12½

BASEBALL WCL WEST COAST LEAGUE Standings (through Thursday’s results) ——— West Division W L Bend Elks 19 7 Kitsap BlueJackets 14 10 Bellingham Bells 18 13 Corvallis Knights 14 12 Cowlitz Black Bears 5 15 East Division W L Wenatchee AppleSox 12 11 Moses Lake Pirates 12 12 Kelowna Falcons 11 17 Walla Walla Sweets 8 16 ——— Friday’s Games Bellingham 7, Bend 5 Kitsap 5, Corvallis 1 Walla Walla 4, Wenatchee 2 Kelowna 3, Cowlitz 1 Today’s Games Bellingham at Bend Kitsap at Corvallis Walla Walla at Wenatchee Cowlitz at Kelowna

Pct. .731 .583 .581 .538 .250 Pct. .522 .500 .393 .333

Thursday’s Summary ——— Bellingham 002 100 220 — 7 10 2 Bend 011 001 002 — 5 8 0 Brewer, Ludtke (6), Ruff (9) and Chiarelli. Loredo, Lowden (6), Deaton (7), Spencer (8) and Karraker. W — Ludtke. L— Lowden. 2B — Bellingham: Pierce, Locker, Anderson. Bend: Pointer, Jenkings . 3B — Bellingham: Pierce.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League SEATTLE MARINERS—Traded LHP Cliff Lee and RHP Mark Lowe to Texas for 1B Justin Smoak, RHP Blake Beavan, RHP Josh Lueke, and INF Matt Lawson. National League CINCINNATI REDS—Placed C Ramon Hernandez on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 5. Activated C Ryan Hanigan from the 15-day DL. COLORADO ROCKIES—Activated LHP Jorge De La Rosa from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Esmil Rogers to Colorado Springs (PCL). FLORIDA MARLINS—Purchased contract of LHP Dan Meyer from New Orleans (PCL). Optioned RHP Tim Wood to New Orleans. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Signed OF Geoff Jenkins, who announced his retirement. NEW YORK METS—Recalled INF/OF Nick Evans from Binghamton (EL). Optioned RHP Ryota Igarashi to St. Lucie (FSL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Signed RHP Kevin Kleis, RHP Bryton Trepagnier and RHP Logan Pevny. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Placed LHP Dan Runzler on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Joe Martinez from Fresno (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Optioned RHP Luis Atilano to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS—Signed G Jordan Crawford. CHARLOTTE BOBCATS—Agreed to terms with F Tyrus Thomas on a five-year contract. CHICAGO BULLS—Signed and traded the contract of F Hakim Warrick to Phoenix for a 2011 second-round draft pick. DALLAS MAVERICKS—Re-signed C Brendan Haywood to a six-year contract. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS—Acquired F David Lee from the New York Knicks for F Anthony Randolph, F Kelenna Azubuike, F Ronny Turiaf and a 2012 secondround draft pick. LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS—Signed F Brian Cook. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed CB Jorrick Calvin to a four-year contract. Released WR Juamorris Stewart. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Signed WR-KR Armanti Edwards to a four-year contract. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed WR Carlton Mitchell to multiyear contract. OAKLAND RAIDERS—Agreed to terms with OL Jared Veldheer and OL Bruce Campbell. Released LB Isaiah Ekejiuba. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS—Agreed to terms with LB Donald Butler and DT Cam Thomas on four-year contracts. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Signed G Keydrick Vincent to a two-year contract. Released G Sergio Render. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Traded D Steve Eminger to the New York Rangers for LW Aaron Voros and LW Ryan Hillier. BOSTON BRUINS—Re-signed D Mark Stuart to a one-year contract. NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Signed D Brett Palin to a one-year contract. NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Agreed to terms with D Dylan Reese on a one-year contract. NEW YORK RANGERS—Agreed to terms with D Dan Girardi. PHILADELPHIA FLYERS—Signed F Nikolai Zherdev to a one-year contract.

FISH COUNT Fish Report Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,098 254 4,298 2,397 The Dalles 949 231 2,136 1,277 John Day 837 255 1,233 747 McNary 1,086 145 764 317 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Thursday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 328,459 25,353 58,655 27,019 The Dalles 257,367 21,571 27,708 14,018 John Day 236,749 20,910 19,780 9,102 McNary 204,125 14,626 11,562 4,490

• Leunen solid in first Summer League game: Redmond High and University of Oregon product Maarty Leunen helped lead the Houston Rockets’ Summer League team to its first win Friday, a 10082 victory over the Phoenix Suns at Las Vegas’ Thomas & Mack Center. Starting at forward, Leunen recorded eight points, five rebounds and three steals in the Rockets’ first Summer League game. Houston’s next Summer League contest is today at 7 p.m against the Dallas Mavericks. • Former Heat GM interviews with Trail Blazers: Former Miami Heat general manager Randy Pfund has interviewed to be the next GM of the Portland Trail Blazers. Team president Larry Miller told The Oregonian it was “easy to connect” with Pfund during a two-hour lunch at a Tigard restaurant. Pfund resigned from the Heat in 2008, two years after the club won an NBA championship. The Trail Blazers opened the free-agent signing period without a general manager after firing Kevin Pritchard on the day of the June draft. Former Cavaliers GM Danny Ferry has also interviewed for the job. • Bobcats, Thomas agree on deal: The Charlotte Bobcats made a long-term commitment to forward Tyrus Thomas on Friday, coming to terms on a fiveyear, $40 million contract with the restricted free agent. The deal was struck shortly after the New Jersey Nets presented a front-loaded offer sheet that would have been difficult for Charlotte to match because it’s close to hitting the luxury tax, a payroll figure owner Michael Jordan said the team would not exceed. Thomas averaged 10.1 points and 6.1 rebounds in 25 regular-season games with Charlotte. • Korver leaving Utah for Bulls: A person familiar with the situation says Kyle Korver is following Carlos Boozer from Utah to Chicago after agreeing to sign with the Bulls. The person spoke Friday on the condition of anonymity because the contract was not finalized and was not sure of the terms. ESPN reported it’s a three-year deal for about $15 million. Korver is a career 41-percent three-point shooter who hit 59 of 110 last year while averaging 7.2 points. • Timberwolves add Beasley from Heat: Now that LeBron James has finally made his decision, Timberwolves President of Basketball Operations David Kahn expects the Minnesota Timberwolves’ transformation to really start taking shape. James chose Miami on Thursday night and hours later the Wolves agreed to send a second-round pick to the Heat for Michael Beasley, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. Kahn declined comment about the trade Friday because NBA rules prohibit teams from discussing deals before the league has approved them.

Baseball • White Sox P Peavy done for season: Chicago White Sox pitcher Jake Peavy is done for the season. The right-hander said Friday he will have surgery on a detached right shoulder muscle next Wednesday and hopes to be throwing again by spring training early next year.

Auto racing • Busch: Full-time NASCAR switch could help Danica: Kurt Busch believes Danica Patrick will be better equipped to compete in NASCAR once she makes a full-time switch to stock car racing. Busch, the 2004 champion in NASCAR’s top series, said Patrick will have a hard time making the most of her talent in NASCAR without making a commitment to the sport. “Right now, she’s very limited because she’s still committed to the IRL schedule,” Busch said. “This is just a work in progress. We’ll have to wait and see the final product when she decides what road she’s going to go down.” • Busch wins Nationwide race: Kyle Busch pounced on Joey Logano on a restart in overtime, then pulled away to win the Nationwide series race at Chicagoland Speedway on Friday night. It was Busch’s 37th victory in NASCAR’s second-tier series, moving him into sole possession of second place in the series’ career wins list. Only Mark Martin has more, with 48. Toyotas swept the top five spots as Logano finished second, followed by Brian Scott, David Reutimann and Jason Leffler. Danica Patrick finished 24th, her first finish inside the top 30 in five Nationwide races this season. Patrick was two laps behind the leaders at the finish.

Sports • New method of finding HGH could hurt urine test: A new test that provides a breakthrough in detecting human growth hormone in blood is expected to become available soon and make it more difficult for athletes to use HGH without getting caught. It’s a test some experts consider so good, however, it could blunt the push for the urine-based test sought by some in baseball and football, possibly stalling promising research that has already cost many thousands of dollars. The new test, called a biomarkers test, scans the blood for chemicals the body produces after HGH use, which are detectable for up to two weeks. The test, expected to be available in the coming weeks or months, is a complement to — or maybe an improvement over — the current test, called an isoform test, which scans blood for synthetic HGH.

Olympics • $895M spent by British Columbia: British Columbia says it spent $895 million to host the Vancouver Olympic and Paralympic Games. That’s $155 million more than the official Olympic budget of $740 million. The release Friday of the new number is the first time the province has acknowledged that expenses such as pavilions at the 2006 Turin and 2008 Beijing Olympics were part of the costs that British Columbia paid to host to the world. Previously, the government’s budget for the Olympics only covered venues in British Columbia, entertainment sites and services.

Tennis • Officials scrutinize bets on Newport tennis match: Tennis officials are assessing reports of irregular betting on a first-round match between Richard Bloomfield and Christophe Rochus at the Hall of Fame grass-court tournament in Newport, Rhode Island. Online gambling exchange Betfair told The Associated Press on Friday that Tuesday’s match attracted an unusual $1.5 million in wagers and was the subject of dramatic price movement. Britain’s Bloomfield won the match 7-6 (1), 6-3. — From wire reports


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 D3

U.S. WOMEN’S OPEN

CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE

Armstrong is looking up as mountains loom Cavendish wins stage again, overall placing remains unchanged By Jamey Keaten The Associated Press

Mike Groll / The Associated Press

Cristie Kerr lines up a putt on the seventh green during the second round of the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pa., Friday. Kerr is tied for the lead.

Weather halts play, but Kerr gets share of clubhouse lead The Associated Press OAKMONT, Pa. — Cristie Kerr didn’t need to sink a long putt to gain a potentially significant advantage in the U.S. Women’s Open, or whip a 290-yard drive down one of Oakmont Country Club’s slender fairways. No, she only needed it to rain. A relentless string of thunderstorms that began with 100 of the 156 golfers still to begin or complete the second round caused play to be suspended at mid-afternoon Friday. Twenty-eight of the 31 golfers who were within three shots of the lead had played only a few holes or hadn’t teed off. Except for Kerr, the world’s No. 1 player, and first-round leader Brittany Lang, who shared the not-very-crowded clubhouse lead at 1-over 143. Sophie Gustafson was at even par, but she had 17 holes left in her round. Kerr finished her even-par 71 before the pelting rains flooded Oakmont’s famed Church Pew bunkers and saturated its super-fast greens. Those greens were beginning to turn a Cleveland Browns-like shade of brown — never a welcomed sight in Steelers-mad Pittsburgh — following four consecutive days of 90-degree weather. Lang slid from a first-round 69 to a 3-over 74 as temperatures went down but the scores didn’t, with Christina Kim a shot back at 2-over 144 following successive 72s. “We had a very dry course, and it can take a lot of rain,” said the USGA’s Mike Davis, who is confident that improving weather will allow the biggest event in women’s golf to finish on schedule Sunday night. But can Oakmont take a lot of Kerr? Especially now that she’ll play probably less than a full round on Saturday, rather than one full round and most of a second as many will? Kerr was the undisputed favorite to win her second Women’s Open in four years — she also won in 2007 — after winning the LPGA Championship two weeks ago by an unprecedented 12 shots. Only a week’s break between majors gives her a chance to maintain her confidence and, arguably, the mental edge she owns over the other

golfers. Taking on 108-year-old Oakmont, its Stimpmeter-busting greens and fabled hazards is difficult enough in a tournament where the leaders may have already seen the last of below-par scores. Taking on Kerr when she’s on her game may be equally rough, even if 21 golfers go into this morning within two shots of the lead. “You kind of, you know, sit in the weeds and wait, wait to kind of strike,” Kerr said. She was referring to the patience needed for Oakmont to yield some birdies, rather than trying to force them on a course where Angel Cabrera’s winning score for the 2007 U.S. Open was 5 over. Inadvertently, she might been referring to her strategy for taking on the rest of a field that may be beyond fatigued once a very long Saturday is over. Play is scheduled to resume at 4:30 a.m. PDT today, with the third round set for 11:30 a.m. The leaders won’t start the third round until approximately 2:30 p.m. PDT Saturday and will finish Sunday morning. That means Kerr might play only 12 holes or so today, compared to 36 for the less fortunate. Those playing all or most of their second rounds in the morning, including Gustafson, Kristy McPherson and two-time Women’s Open champion Karrie Webb, gain the advantage of softer greens and, thus, a friendlier putting surface. Conversely, the course will play longer because it’s wetter, and that could result in some bad lies that the fast, firm Oakmont didn’t produce until the rain fell. “The water, it’s going to make it play extremely long,” Lang said. “I don’t know how this course drains, but it’s going to play extremely long and soft.” Kerr, much like her bumpy first round, was streaky Friday. She had a double bogey and two bogeys in a span of four holes during her first nine, which began on No. 10, but she recovered with three consecutive birdies from No. 4 through No. 6. “You have to take opportunities when you have them for birdie and make them and get some momentum going, and that’s what I did on the front,” Kerr said.

GOLF ROUNDUP

Defending champ Stricker leads Goydos by a shot at Deere Classic The Associated Press SILVIS, Ill. — As he chatted about his day at the John Deere Classic, Steve Stricker was reminded that he now held the tournament’s 36-hole record. “So far,” he said with a smile. Stricker had good reason to be cautious because Paul Goydos, who had sent a buzz through the golf world by shooting only the fourth 59 in PGA Tour history on Thursday, was just starting his round. But the deft putting touch that had put Goydos in golf’s most exclusive club deserted him Friday and he settled for a 68, leaving him one stroke behind Stricker, the defending champion, heading into today’s third round. “Reality kicked in today,” Goydos said. Stricker, who almost matched Goydos with a 60 in Thursday’s round, came back with a solid 5-under par 66 for a two-day total of 126, which is 16 under at the TPC Deere Run. The old 36-hole record was 127 by David Frost in 2000, the first year the tournament was played at Deere Run. Showing no ill-effects from a shoulder injury that sidelined him for six weeks earlier this year, Stricker overcame a bogey on his fifth hole with accurate approaches that left him with makeable birdie putts. “It’s always tough to follow up a good round with another good round and for whatever reason, I thought I did a pretty good job of that today,” Stricker said. Goydos appeared to be on his way to another sizzling round when he birdied his 11th hole, the par-5 No. 2, to go 17 under and move ahead of Stricker by a stroke. Then his game unraveled. He failed to break par on any of the last seven holes and bogeyed two of them. After needing

only 22 putts on Thursday, he slogged through this round with 32, essentially the difference in his scores. “Yesterday was one of the greatest putting rounds maybe of all time and today was not,” Goydos said. “But that’s not — I think they call it the Sports Illustrated jinx. It’s just a reversion to the norm. Things tend to want to work their way to the center.” Still, he admitted: “I hit some pretty squirrely short putts coming in.” Jeff Maggert, Matt Jones and George McNeill were tied at 11-under 131, Maggert and McNeill shooting bogey-free 65s and Jones stumbling in at 67 after bogeying his final two holes. Also on Friday: Clarke surges to big lead at Scottish Open LUSS, Scotland — Darren Clarke was nearly flawless in miserable conditions in the Scottish Open, opening a three-shot lead as he looks to add to what already has been a banner year for golf in Northern Ireland. On a dreary day at Loch Lomond, Clarke chipped in for birdie on the tough 16th and holed a series of 20-foot birdie putts on the front nine for a 4-under 67, giving him the lead over Edoardo Molinari, who had a 69. Perhaps more impressive than being at 10-under 132 going into the weekend is that Clarke has made only one bogey — a three-putt from 20 feet on the par-3 11th hole on Friday — over his opening 36 holes. Bradley Dredge and Peter Hedblom each had a 69 and were at 6-under 136, while Francesco Molinari recovered from a double bogey on his opening hole for a 69 to finish another shot back. Phil Mickelson missed the cut at 4 over par.

GUEUGNON, France — Lance Armstrong has his mind on the mountains. The seven-time Tour de France champion is in 18th place after Friday’s stage, which was won by Mark Cavendish for his second straight sprint-finish victory. If Armstrong is going to make a move, it may come in the climbs. The weather was hot — 95-degree heat — and some tempers even hotter for the 141-mile sixth stage from Montargis to Gueugnon. Two riders broke out into a bike wheel-whacking brawl after the finish line. “Guys were suffering the whole stage,” Armstrong said. Cavendish called the stage — the longest this year — his hardest ride so far. “For us, these days are days when you can’t necessarily win the Tour, but you can certainly lose it,” Armstrong said, warning as he often does of the dangers of flat stages that end in frenzied sprints. The top of the standings didn’t change much. Barring crashes or mishaps, they rarely change a lot on flat stages. But with the Tour about to leave the lowlands, the climbers could step up while the contenders test their rivals for weakness. Today’s seventh stage is a 103mile route along six low- to midgrade climbs in the Jura range from Tournus to Station des Rousses. But the first real shakeout of climbers’ legs looms in Sunday’s stage, featuring two tough climbs including an uphill finish into the Morzine-Avoriaz ski station. “I would look for more animation and more attacks on Sunday,” Armstrong said. But will he attack? “Probably not. I still would wait

Christophe Ena / The Associated Press

Stage winner Mark Cavendish, center, talks to his teammates as he rides alongside Lance Armstrong, left, during the sixth stage of the Tour de France on Friday. and watch the other guys,” he said, anticipating that he’ll need to conserve energy for four rides in the Pyrenees in Week Three that are likely to have more impact on who wins. Armstrong’s last competitive test in mountains came in the Tour of Switzerland last month, where he finished second. He said he’s in even better shape now. “It was promising,” he said, referring to the Swiss race. “But, to be honest, I feel a lot better now then I did then: On the bike I feel stronger, recovery feels better, I’m a little bit lighter, which I think makes a big difference. We’ll see. It’s all hype until you get out there and do it.” The man who beat Armstrong in Switzerland, Frank Schleck of Luxembourg, broke his collarbone Tuesday during a stage run over cobblestones. Armstrong lost time that day after blowing a tire and hurting his chances for an eighth Tour victory. Defending champion Alberto Contador, the big favorite entering the Tour and one of the world’s best climbers, is encouraged. “Today I woke up with much better legs and that’s important

because tomorrow the difficulty starts, and I need to be at 100 percent,” the Spaniard said. Armstrong says his team is looking strong, with U.S. veterans Chris Horner and Levi Leipheimer, Germany’s Andreas Kloeden and young Slovene star Janes Brajkovic all ready for the mountains. “They’ll be good,” Armstrong said. “I think we can still have five guys there. ... Numbers will help us.” On Friday, Cavendish, of the U.S. team HTC Columbia, won a Tour stage for the 12th time in his career. He finished in 5 hours, 37 minutes, 42 seconds and was followed by Tyler Farrar of the U.S. and Alessandro Petacchi of Italy. The likely Tour title contenders crossed 3 seconds after Cavendish. Contador was 28th, Armstrong was 38th and overall race leader Fabian Cancellara 41st. Cancellara retained the yellow jersey and two-time Tour runnerup Cadel Evans of Australia held third place, 39 seconds back. Last year’s runner-up, Andy Schleck of Luxembourg, is sixth, 1:09 back. Contador is ninth, 1:40 behind, and Armstrong is 2:30 back in 18th.

Tour de France getting more dangerous? By Jerome Pugmire The Associated Press

GUEUGNON, France — The growing feeling among Tour de France riders is that this year’s race is one of the most dangerous in many years, with RadioShack rider Levi Leipheimer calling the crash-filled first week “brutal.” The Tour has seen many spills, especially on the cobblestone sections. The biggest victim was Frank Schleck of Luxembourg, the Tour of Switzerland winner who pulled out Tuesday because of a broken left collarbone sustained in a fall. More than half of the pack crashed during Monday’s rainaffected stage. “I’d say it was brutal. It was funny, I was just talking with Jens Voigt with 10 (kilometers) to go,” Leipheimer said after finishing Friday’s sixth stage in blazing heat. “He comes up to me and he said exactly what I was thinking: ‘Cycling is getting more and more dangerous all the time.’” Seven-time Tour champion Lance Armstrong has spoken of how frenzied this Tour has been, and Leipheimer agreed with his teammate. “This whole week is stressful, the speeds are high and the skills of the riders are improving all the time,” Leipheimer said. “No one gives an inch and every inch of the asphalt is taken. This sport is definitely evolving.” The unrelenting heat also looks to have gotten to some riders more than others, with Spanish rider Carlos Barredo of the Quick Step team fighting with Portuguese cyclist Rui Costa of Caisse d’Epargne at the finish line on Friday. Despite the intense heat and the dangers on and off the roads, Leipheimer is ready to lend his climbing skills to Armstrong when the Tour snakes into the mountains on Saturday. “I already feel some heavy legs,” he said. “But in the final when we’ve got to go, I can go, and that’s what matters.” Thomas reaching for the sky: British rider Geraint Thomas can hardly believe how well the first week of the Tour de France has gone for him. The 24-year-old Thomas held

NOTEBOOK onto the white jersey, worn by the Tour’s best young rider, after Friday’s mammoth 141.3-mile sixth stage from Montargis to Gueugnon. “I could get used to it, but every day’s like a bonus. But Andy Schleck and (Roman) Kreuziger are obviously in the same competition, so I’m under no illusions,” Thomas said. “It’s been

a nice first week, it’s not bad really, is it?” Thomas holds a lead of 49 seconds over Luxembourg rider Schleck and leads Kreuziger, who is Czech, by just over two minutes.


D4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS All Times PDT ——— AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB New York 55 31 .640 — Tampa Bay 52 34 .605 3 Boston 50 36 .581 5 Toronto 43 44 .494 12½ Baltimore 27 59 .314 28 Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 47 37 .560 — Chicago 47 38 .553 ½ Minnesota 45 41 .523 3 Kansas City 39 47 .453 9 Cleveland 34 52 .395 14 West Division W L Pct GB Texas 50 36 .581 — Los Angeles 47 42 .528 4½ Oakland 41 46 .471 9½ Seattle 34 52 .395 16 ——— Friday’s Games Detroit 7, Minnesota 3 Boston 14, Toronto 3 Cleveland 9, Tampa Bay 3 Baltimore 7, Texas 6, 10 innings Chicago White Sox 8, Kansas City 2 L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 5, 10 innings N.Y. Yankees 6, Seattle 1 Today’s Games Boston (Lackey 9-4) at Toronto (Morrow 5-6), 10:07 a.m. Minnesota (Blackburn 7-6) at Detroit (Bonderman 4-6), 1:10 p.m. Kansas City (Bannister 7-6) at Chicago White Sox (Floyd 4-7), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (Laffey 1-2) at Tampa Bay (Garza 9-5), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 0-3) at Texas (Harrison 1-1), 5:05 p.m. L.A. Angels (Kazmir 7-8) at Oakland (Sheets 3-8), 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Vazquez 7-7) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 6-5), 7:10 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Atlanta 51 35 .593 — New York 47 39 .547 4 Philadelphia 45 40 .529 5½ Florida 41 45 .477 10 Washington 39 48 .448 12½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cincinnati 49 39 .557 — St. Louis 46 40 .535 2 Chicago 38 49 .437 10½ Milwaukee 38 49 .437 10½ Houston 35 52 .402 13½ Pittsburgh 30 56 .349 18 West Division W L Pct GB San Diego 50 36 .581 — Colorado 48 38 .558 2 Los Angeles 48 38 .558 2 San Francisco 45 41 .523 5 Arizona 33 54 .379 17½ ——— Friday’s Games Philadelphia 9, Cincinnati 7, 10 innings Washington 8, San Francisco 1 Atlanta 4, N.Y. Mets 2 St. Louis 8, Houston 0 Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 4, 10 innings Colorado 10, San Diego 8 Florida 3, Arizona 2 L.A. Dodgers 9, Chicago Cubs 7 Today’s Games Atlanta (T.Hudson 8-4) at N.Y. Mets (Pelfrey 10-3), 1:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Gorzelanny 3-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Ely 46), 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Tr.Wood 0-0) at Philadelphia (Halladay 10-7), 4:05 p.m. San Francisco (J.Sanchez 7-6) at Washington (Stammen 2-3), 4:05 p.m. St. Louis (Suppan 0-4) at Houston (Myers 5-6), 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Karstens 2-3) at Milwaukee (Bush 3-6), 4:10 p.m. Florida (N.Robertson 6-6) at Arizona (I.Kennedy 3-7), 5:10 p.m. San Diego (LeBlanc 4-6) at Colorado (Hammel 6-3), 5:10 p.m.

NL ROUNDUP Phillies 9, Reds 7 (10 innings) PHILADELPHIA — Ryan Howard hit a two-run homer in the 10th inning after Philadelphia scored six runs in the ninth to tie it. Staked to a 7-1 lead by the ninth, Reds starter Mike Leake appeared to be cruising toward his first career complete game. Greg Dobbs hit a three-run homer and pinch-hitter Cody Ransom followed with a tying, tworun shot. Cincinnati B.Phillips 2b O.Cabrera ss Janish ss Votto 1b Gomes lf Stubbs cf Bruce rf Cairo 3b Heisey cf-lf C.Miller c Leake p F.Cordero p Rhodes p Totals

AB 5 6 0 3 5 1 6 5 4 4 4 0 0 43

R H 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 3 0 0 1 1 0 3 1 2 1 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 7 15

BI 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 7

BB 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 6

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

Avg. .302 .243 .280 .315 .285 .237 .270 .298 .290 .214 .389 -----

Philadelphia Rollins ss Victorino cf Ibanez lf Howard 1b Werth rf Dobbs 3b Schneider c Ju.Castro 2b b-B.Francisco ph Madson p Blanton p Herndon p Baez p a-Gload ph J.Romero p c-Ransom ph-2b Totals

AB 4 5 5 4 3 4 4 3 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 36

R H 0 1 1 1 2 3 2 3 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 9 12

BI 0 0 0 3 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 9

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

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

Avg. .248 .256 .247 .299 .282 .192 .236 .205 .256 .000 .185 .000 --.246 --.429

Cinci. 310 020 001 0 — 7 15 0 Phila. 000 100 006 2 — 9 12 2 No outs when winning run scored. a-fouled out for Baez in the 8th. b-walked for Ju.Castro in the 9th. c-homered for J.Romero in the 9th. E—Rollins (2), Howard (9). LOB—Cincinnati 13, Philadelphia 4. 2B—Cairo (5), Victorino (12), Ibanez 2 (18). HR—Gomes (11), off Blanton; Dobbs (3), off Leake; Ransom (1), off F.Cordero; Howard (17), off Rhodes. RBIs—Gomes 4 (60), Cairo 2 (13), Leake (1), Howard 3 (65), Werth (49), Dobbs 3 (12), Ransom 2 (3). SF—Werth. Runners left in scoring position—Cincinnati 8 (Heisey, Bruce 2, Gomes, B.Phillips 2, O.Cabrera 2); Philadelphia 1 (Werth). Runners moved up—Cairo, Ibanez. GIDP—Heisey. DP—Philadelphia 1 (Rollins, Ju.Castro, Howard). Cincinnati IP H R ER BB Leake 8 1-3 9 5 5 0 F.Cordero BS, 6 2-3 1 2 2 2 Rhodes L, 3-3 0 2 2 2 0 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB Blanton 5 1-3 12 6 5 2 Herndon 1 2-3 2 0 0 2 Baez 1 0 0 0 0 J.Romero 1 1 1 1 2 Madson W, 2-0 1 0 0 0 0 Rhodes pitched to 2 batters in the 10th. Inherited runners-scored—Herndon Leake (Howard), by J.Romero (C.Miller). T—3:03. A—45,029 (43,651).

SO 3 0 0 SO 7 2 0 0 2

NP 101 18 7 NP 102 45 12 30 11

ERA 3.53 4.20 1.56 ERA 6.41 3.86 4.45 2.45 6.55

1-0. HBP—by

Nationals 8, Giants 1 WASHINGTON — Ste-

phen Strasburg gave up a homer to the first batter he faced. then shut down San Francisco, allowing three hits in six innings, and Adam Dunn hit two homers for Washington. It was Strasburg’s first win in nearly a month. Strasburg (3-2, 2.32 ERA) finished with eight strikeouts and one walk. The No. 1 pick in the 2009 draft struck out Pat Burrell swinging at a 98 mph fastball to end the sixth. San Francisco Torres cf a-Rowand ph-cf F.Sanchez 2b A.Huff rf Burrell lf Posey c Sandoval 3b Ishikawa 1b Renteria ss Cain p Mota p b-Schierholtz ph D.Bautista p Totals

AB 2 2 3 4 4 4 3 3 3 2 0 1 0 31

R 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

H BI BB SO 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 11

Washington AB R H Morgan cf 5 1 2 Bernadina rf 5 1 1 Zimmerman 3b 4 0 0 A.Dunn 1b 4 3 3 C.Guzman ss 2 2 1 Desmond ss 0 0 0 W.Harris lf 4 0 3 A.Kennedy 2b 2 0 0 Storen p 1 0 0 Jo.Peralta p 0 0 0 Nieves c 4 0 2 Strasburg p 2 0 0 S.Burnett p 0 0 0 Alb.Gonzalez 2b 2 1 1 Totals 35 8 13

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

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

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

Avg. .281 .234 .289 .294 .289 .333 .267 .345 .303 .094 --.257 1.000 Avg. .252 .283 .292 .285 .298 .258 .180 .243 .500 .000 .186 .083 --.293

San Francisco 100 000 000 — 1 4 1 Washington 100 102 40x — 8 13 0 a-flied out for Torres in the 5th. b-flied out for Mota in the 8th. E—Cain (1). LOB—San Francisco 4, Washington 6. 2B—Ishikawa (6), Bernadina (9), A.Dunn (26), W.Harris (5), Nieves (5). 3B—Alb.Gonzalez (1). HR—Torres (7), off Strasburg; A.Dunn 2 (22), off Cain 2. RBIs—Torres (29), Morgan (14), A.Dunn 3 (58), W.Harris (19), Nieves 2 (11). SB—Morgan (20). Runners left in scoring position—San Francisco 2 (Sandoval, Rowand); Washington 3 (Nieves, Bernadina, Storen). Runners moved up—Renteria. GIDP—Nieves. DP—San Francisco 1 (Renteria, Ishikawa). San Fran. IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cain L, 6-8 6 2-3 11 8 7 3 6 114 3.34 Mota 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 7 3.21 D.Bautista 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 2.89 Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Strasbrg W, 3-2 6 3 1 1 1 8 95 2.32 S.Burnett H, 10 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 2.73 Storen H, 8 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 18 2.16 Jo.Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 0.96 Inherited runners-scored—Mota 1-1, Storen 1-0. WP—Cain. T—2:41. A—34,723 (41,546).

Dodgers 9, Cubs 7 LOS ANGELES — Russell Martin hit a three-run homer, All-Star Andre Ethier had two RBI singles and Casey Blake drove in two runs for Los Angeles. The Dodgers have won eight of 11, and they finally broke out some offense against the Cubs, who have lost the first two games of this series. Neither team had scored more than three runs in any of the previous four games between them at Dodger Stadium. Chicago Fukudome rf Theriot 2b-ss D.Lee 1b Ar.Ramirez 3b Byrd cf Colvin lf Fontenot ss b-Je.Baker ph-2b K.Hill c Lilly p M.Atkins p a-Nady ph Howry p c-A.Soriano ph Berg p Totals

AB 5 5 4 4 5 3 3 1 3 2 0 1 0 1 0 37

R H 1 1 0 1 2 1 2 3 1 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 11

BI 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6

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

SO 2 1 1 1 0 2 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 13

Avg. .258 .277 .230 .204 .319 .270 .294 .235 .213 .000 --.231 --.275 ---

Los Angeles Furcal ss J.Carroll 2b Ethier rf Kemp cf Loney 1b Blake 3b R.Martin c Paul lf Billingsley p Sherrill p Ju.Miller p Broxton p Totals

AB 5 3 5 4 3 2 4 4 3 0 0 0 33

R H 1 1 2 1 1 3 0 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 11

BI 0 0 2 1 1 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 9

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

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

Avg. .336 .290 .322 .264 .310 .256 .247 .244 .161 -------

Chicago 011 010 022 — 7 11 1 Los Angeles 033 111 00x — 9 11 1 a-reached on error for M.Atkins in the 6th. b-struck out for Fontenot in the 8th. c-struck out for Howry in the 8th. E—Lilly (2), Ethier (1). LOB—Chicago 8, Los Angeles 6. 2B—Ar.Ramirez (9), Colvin (10), Furcal (15), Kemp (17), Loney (25), Blake (17). 3B—Ar.Ramirez (1). HR—R.Martin (5), off Lilly. RBIs—Ar.Ramirez (31), Byrd 3 (40), Fontenot (18), K.Hill (8), Ethier 2 (52), Kemp (50), Loney (59), Blake 2 (36), R.Martin 3 (22). SB—Kemp (15). S—J.Carroll, Billingsley. SF—K.Hill, Blake. Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 6 (Lilly 2, Fontenot 2, Colvin 2); Los Angeles 5 (R.Martin, Kemp, Billingsley, Blake 2). Runners moved up—Theriot, Byrd, Fontenot. GIDP—D.Lee. DP—Los Angeles 1 (Furcal, Loney). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lilly L, 3-8 3 2-3 7 7 5 2 1 73 4.08 M.Atkins 1 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 24 6.75 Howry 2 3 1 1 0 1 30 6.14 Berg 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 5.40 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Billngsly W, 7-4 7 7 4 4 4 9 120 4.14 Sherrill 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 7.32 Ju.Miller 1 1 1 1 0 2 22 4.57 Broxton 1 2 1 1 0 2 17 2.11 Billingsley pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Sherrill pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Ju.Miller pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. Inherited runners-scored—M.Atkins 2-0, Sherrill 1-0, Ju.Miller 2-2, Broxton 1-1. WP—Billingsley, Ju.Miller. T—3:01. A—43,790 (56,000).

Rockies 10, Padres 8 DENVER — Ian Stewart hit two home runs, including a two-out, go-ahead grand slam in the seventh inning and Colorado won its fifth straight. Stewart’s third career slam and fourth multihomer game gave him a career-best six RBIs and helped the second-place Rockies pull within two games of the NL West-lead-

ing San Diego. San Diego Hairston Jr. 2b-ss Headley 3b Ad.Gonzalez 1b Hairston lf Hundley c Cunningham rf Denorfia cf E.Cabrera ss Gregerson p Stauffer p Correia p a-Gwynn ph Thatcher p R.Webb p Salazar 2b Totals

AB 2 5 5 4 5 4 3 4 0 0 2 1 0 0 1 36

Colorado AB Fowler cf 5 J.Herrera 2b 5 C.Gonzalez lf 4 Giambi 1b 3 Mora 1b 0 Olivo c 3 Hawpe rf 4 Street p 0 Stewart 3b 3 Barmes ss 4 De La Rosa p 2 Corpas p 0 R.Flores p 0 b-Eldred ph 1 Belisle p 0 R.Betancourt p 0 Beimel p 0 c-Spilborghs ph-rf 1 Totals 35

category with 20.

R H 2 1 0 0 2 2 2 1 2 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 10

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

BB 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

SO 0 2 2 2 1 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 12

Avg. .246 .273 .301 .227 .263 .340 .260 .188 --.167 .107 .223 ----.226

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

BI 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10

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

SO 4 1 0 0 0 0 4 0 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 14

Avg. .244 .321 .312 .277 .252 .317 .270 .000 .258 .250 .222 .000 --.600 .333 --.000 .261

H 0 2 3 2 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 11

San Diego 012 130 100 — 8 10 1 Colorado 005 000 50x — 10 11 2 a-doubled for Correia in the 6th. b-struck out for R.Flores in the 6th. c-flied out for Beimel in the 8th. E—E.Cabrera (3), Barmes 2 (7). LOB—San Diego 6, Colorado 4. 2B—Hairston (8), Hundley 2 (11), Cunningham 2 (6), Gwynn (8), Giambi (6), Olivo (7). HR—Ad.Gonzalez (18), off De La Rosa; C.Gonzalez (16), off Correia; Stewart (10), off Correia; Stewart (11), off Gregerson. RBIs—Ad.Gonzalez 2 (56), Hairston (27), Cunningham 2 (10), Denorfia (15), C.Gonzalez 2 (57), Giambi (19), Olivo (41), Stewart 6 (44). SF—Denorfia. Runners left in scoring position—San Diego 3 (E.Cabrera 2, Ad.Gonzalez); Colorado 2 (Hawpe 2). Runners moved up—Denorfia. GIDP—Headley. DP—Colorado 1 (J.Herrera, Barmes, Mora). San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Correia 5 7 5 5 1 8 92 5.26 Thatcher H, 3 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 13 2.04 R.Webb H, 2 1 3 3 3 0 2 22 2.41 Gregersn L, 2-5 2-3 1 2 2 1 1 15 3.00 Stauffer 1 0 0 0 0 2 7 0.37 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA De La Rosa 4 1-3 6 7 5 1 6 95 4.94 Corpas 1 2 0 0 1 2 17 4.60 R.Flores 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 8 3.10 Belisle W, 4-3 1 1 1 1 0 2 17 2.77 Betancourt H 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 7 4.65 Beimel H, 15 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 2.33 Street S, 4-4 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 2.38 Inherited runners-scored—R.Webb 1-0, Gregerson 2-2, Corpas 2-2, R.Flores 2-0, Beimel 1-0. HBP—by De La Rosa (Hairston Jr.), by Belisle (Hairston). T—3:25. A—36,123 (50,449).

Brewers 5, Pirates 4 (10 innings) MILWAUKEE — Ryan Braun’s two-out single scored Rickie Weeks from second base in the 10th inning and Milwaukee snapped a five-game losing streak. Milwaukee tied it at 4 in the ninth on George Kottaras’ RBI triple off Octavio Dotel, who blew his fourth save in 23 chances. The Pirates have lost four consecutive games and 22 of their last 24 on the road. Pittsburgh AB R H A.McCutchen cf 5 1 2 Tabata lf 4 1 2 N.Walker 2b 4 0 1 G.Jones 1b 5 0 1 Alvarez 3b 4 0 1 Doumit c 5 0 0 Milledge rf 4 1 2 Hanrahan p 0 0 0 Dotel p 0 0 0 Meek p 0 0 0 Cedeno ss 4 1 1 Maholm p 3 0 0 Church rf 1 0 0 Totals 39 4 10 Milwaukee Weeks 2b Hart rf Fielder 1b Braun lf McGehee 3b Gomez cf Kottaras c A.Escobar ss D.Davis p a-Inglett ph Coffey p b-Counsell ph Capuano p Loe p Axford p c-Edmonds ph 1-Bush pr Totals

AB 3 4 3 5 4 3 4 4 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 34

R 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5

BI 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4

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

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

Avg. .292 .236 .289 .276 .197 .261 .271 ------.220 .029 .190

H BI BB 0 0 1 1 2 0 1 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 5 3

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

Avg. .268 .287 .266 .287 .274 .227 .197 .240 .000 .338 .000 .242 .000 .000 --.269 .143

Pittsburgh 001 120 000 0 — 4 10 1 Milwaukee 200 000 011 1 — 5 8 0 Two outs when winning run scored. a-struck out for D.Davis in the 5th. b-grounded out for Coffey in the 7th. c-singled for Axford in the 10th. 1-ran for Edmonds in the 10th. E—Doumit (5). LOB—Pittsburgh 8, Milwaukee 6. 2B—G.Jones (19), Alvarez (4), Cedeno (11). 3B—Kottaras (1). HR—Milledge (2), off D.Davis; A.McCutchen (8), off D.Davis; Hart (20), off Maholm; Fielder (19), off Hanrahan. RBIs—A.McCutchen 2 (26), Alvarez (10), Milledge (25), Hart 2 (63), Fielder (38), Braun (52), Kottaras (20). SB—Cedeno (8), Weeks (6), Gomez (10). CS—Tabata (3). Runners left in scoring position—Pittsburgh 5 (Alvarez 2, Doumit 2, Cedeno); Milwaukee 1 (Gomez). Runners moved up—G.Jones, McGehee. GIDP—Gomez, Kottaras. DP—Pittsburgh 2 (N.Walker, Cedeno, G.Jones), (N.Walker, Cedeno, G.Jones). Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Maholm 7 3 2 2 2 4 100 4.37 Hanrahan H, 14 1 1 1 1 0 1 16 3.93 Dotel BS, 4-23 1 2 1 1 0 1 16 4.41 Meek L, 4-3 2-3 2 1 1 1 1 17 1.11 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA D.Davis 5 7 4 4 3 2 78 7.51 Coffey 2 0 0 0 0 3 19 4.54 Capuano 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 10 4.35 Loe 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 14 1.64 Axford W, 4-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 14 2.63 Inherited runners-scored—Loe 1-0. IBB—off Meek (Fielder). HBP—by Maholm (Gomez, Hart, Weeks). WP—Axford. T—3:00. A—27,767 (41,900).

Marlins 3, Diamondbacks 2 PHOENIX — Ricky Nolasco won his fourth straight decision and Dan Uggla drove in two runs with a bloop single and a broken-bat infield hit to lead Florida. Nolasco (9-6) allowed two runs and six hits in seven innings, striking out six and walking three. The right-hander didn’t alllow a home run for the first time in five starts. He entered the game the NL leader in that

Florida Coghlan lf G.Sanchez 1b H.Ramirez ss Cantu 3b Nunez p Uggla 2b C.Ross cf Stanton rf R.Paulino c Nolasco p b-Lamb ph Hensley p Helms 3b Totals

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

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

Arizona C.Young cf K.Johnson 2b J.Upton rf Montero c M.Reynolds 3b Ad.LaRoche 1b S.Drew ss G.Parra lf Haren p J.Gutierrez p a-Ojeda ph Heilman p Totals

AB 4 4 3 4 4 4 3 3 2 0 0 0 31

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

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

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

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

Avg. .276 .299 .292 .260 --.285 .288 .225 .283 .125 .206 .000 .255

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

SO 0 2 2 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9

Avg. .263 .273 .256 .365 .213 .253 .273 .275 .392 --.125 .000

Florida 002 000 100 — 3 11 0 Arizona 000 100 100 — 2 6 0 a-sacrificed for J.Gutierrez in the 7th. b-struck out for Nolasco in the 8th. LOB—Florida 10, Arizona 6. 2B—Coghlan (20), Cantu (22), Stanton (4), S.Drew (16). RBIs—Uggla 2 (51), C.Ross (46), C.Young (60), G.Parra (15). S—Ojeda. Runners left in scoring position—Florida 6 (C.Ross 3, Coghlan, R.Paulino, Cantu); Arizona 4 (M.Reynolds, Haren 2, K.Johnson). Runners moved up—C.Young. GIDP—Cantu. DP—Florida 1 (Nolasco, G.Sanchez); Arizona 1 (M.Reynolds, K.Johnson, Ad.LaRoche). Florida IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nolasco W, 9-6 7 6 2 2 3 6 105 4.55 Hensley H, 11 1 0 0 0 0 3 12 2.45 Nunez S, 19-24 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 3.03 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Haren L, 7-7 6 2-3 10 3 3 2 6 118 4.36 J.Gutierrez 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 7.42 Heilman 2 1 0 0 1 2 23 3.89 Inherited runners-scored—J.Gutierrez 2-0. IBB—off Heilman (H.Ramirez). T—2:42. A—18,117 (48,633).

Cardinals 8, Astros 0 HOUSTON — Adam Wainwright pitched eight scoreless innings and Matt Holliday hit a three-run homer for St. Louis. Albert Pujols drove in three runs and Kyle McClellan pitched a perfect ninth to complete the shutout for St. Louis and end a three-game skid. St. Louis F.Lopez 3b Miles 2b Rasmus cf B.Ryan ss Pujols 1b Holliday lf Jay rf-cf Greene ss-2b-3b Y.Molina c Wainwright p b-Stavinoha ph McClellan p Schumaker 2b-rf Totals

AB 5 0 4 1 4 5 4 3 4 3 1 0 4 38

R H 1 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 8 11

Houston AB R Bourn cf 4 0 Keppinger 2b 4 0 Berkman 1b 2 0 Ca.Lee lf 3 0 Pence rf 4 0 Ja.Castro c 4 0 C.Johnson 3b 4 0 Ang.Sanchez ss 3 0 Norris p 1 0 Byrdak p 0 0 Sampson p 0 0 a-Bourgeois ph 1 0 G.Chacin p 0 0 Daigle p 0 0 Totals 30 0

BI 1 0 0 0 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 8

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

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

SO 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 4 SO 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 5

Avg. .276 .324 .281 .195 .305 .303 .377 .261 .222 .163 .262 .500 .260 Avg. .262 .276 .255 .238 .259 .182 .286 .200 .056 ----.316 1.000 ---

St. Louis 110 000 033 — 8 11 0 Houston 000 000 000 — 0 6 0 a-singled for Sampson in the 8th. b-flied out for Wainwright in the 9th. LOB—St. Louis 5, Houston 7. 2B—F.Lopez (11), Rasmus 2 (17), Pujols (21), Jay (6), Greene (2). HR—Holliday (15), off Norris; Pujols (21), off Daigle. RBIs—F.Lopez (22), Pujols 3 (64), Holliday 3 (47), Schumaker (20). CS—Bourn (8). S—Norris. Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis 3 (Jay, Wainwright, Y.Molina); Houston 3 (Keppinger, C.Johnson, Ca.Lee). Runners moved up—Greene, Y.Molina, Bourn. GIDP—Ca.Lee. DP—St. Louis 1 (Greene, Schumaker, Pujols). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Wnwrgt W, 13-5 8 6 0 0 3 4 109 2.11 McClellan 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 2.21 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Norris L, 2-6 7 2-3 7 5 5 1 4 113 5.97 Byrdak 0 1 0 0 1 0 9 4.64 Sampson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 5.68 G.Chacin 2-3 2 2 2 0 0 9 4.57 Daigle 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 7 7.00 Byrdak pitched to 2 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Sampson 2-0, Daigle 1-1. IBB—off Norris (Pujols). T—2:39. A—33,224 (40,976).

Braves 4, Mets 2 NEW YORK — Melky Cabrera and Omar Infante hit back-to-back homers with two outs in the seventh inning off knuckleballer R.A. Dickey, and NL East-leading Atlanta beat New York 4-2 on Friday night. Infante, the All-Star utility player, had four hits and scored twice to help the Braves open a fourgame lead over New York, their biggest margin of the season. Atlanta Prado 2b Me.Cabrera rf Infante 3b McCann c Glaus 1b Hinske lf c-M.Diaz ph-lf Y.Escobar ss G.Blanco cf Hanson p O’Flaherty p b-Conrad ph Venters p e-T.Hudson ph Saito p Wagner p Totals

AB 5 5 5 3 4 3 2 4 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 37

R H 0 0 2 3 2 4 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 12

New York AB R Pagan cf 5 0 Jos.Reyes ss 3 0 D.Wright 3b 3 0 I.Davis 1b 4 0 Bay lf 3 0 Thole c 3 0 F.Rodriguez p 0 0 Francoeur rf 4 0 R.Tejada 2b 2 0 a-J.Feliciano ph 1 0 Cora 2b 1 0 Dickey p 2 2 P.Feliciano p 0 0 Dessens p 0 0 d-N.Evans ph 1 0

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

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

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

Avg. .332 .263 .321 .267 .257 .273 .198 .237 .327 .156 --.250 .000 .237 .000 ---

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

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

Avg. .304 .277 .317 .257 .268 .500 --.255 .216 .283 .228 .313 ----.000

Parnell p Barajas c Totals

0 0 1 0 33 2

0 0 8

0 0 2

0 0 2

0 .000 0 .240 9

Atlanta 100 010 200 — 4 12 0 New York 001 010 000 — 2 8 1 a-grounded out for R.Tejada in the 6th. b-struck out for O’Flaherty in the 7th. c-grounded out for Hinske in the 7th. d-struck out for Dessens in the 7th. e-sacrificed for Venters in the 8th. E—Jos.Reyes (6). LOB—Atlanta 11, New York 8. 2B—McCann (16), Y.Escobar (12), Jos.Reyes (15), I.Davis (16). HR—Me.Cabrera (3), off Dickey; Infante (2), off Dickey. RBIs—Me.Cabrera (24), Infante (23), Glaus (57), Jos.Reyes (33), D.Wright (65). SB—Me.Cabrera (4), Pagan (17). CS—Infante (3). S—T.Hudson, Jos. Reyes. SF—D.Wright. Runners left in scoring position—Atlanta 5 (Hinske, Hanson, M.Diaz 2, Prado); New York 6 (I.Davis 2, D.Wright, J.Feliciano 2, Francoeur). Runners moved up—McCann, Francoeur. DP—New York 1 (Thole, Thole, Jos.Reyes). Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hanson 5 2-3 7 2 2 1 6 94 4.13 O’Flahrty W, 3-1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.30 Venters H, 9 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 1.33 Saito H, 12 1 1 0 0 1 1 17 3.55 Wagner S, 20 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 1.24 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Dickey L, 6-2 6 2-3 9 4 3 2 6 119 2.77 P.Feliciano 0 1 0 0 1 0 6 2.34 Dessens 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 6 1.56 Parnell 1 1 0 0 0 1 8 1.80 F.Rodriguez 1 1 0 0 1 1 14 2.51 P.Feliciano pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—O’Flaherty 2-0, Dessens 2-0. IBB—off Dickey (G.Blanco), off P.Feliciano (Glaus), off F.Rodriguez (McCann). WP—Hanson, Saito 2, F.Rodriguez. T—3:06. A—36,356 (41,800).

AL ROUNDUP Yankees 6, Mariners 1 SEATTLE — Phil Hughes joined teammates CC Sabathia and Andy Pettitte as 11-game winners before the All-Star break, and Mark Teixeira hit two home runs for New York, which won its season-best seven straight. Hughes (11-2) gave up one run in seven innings. In his last outing against Seattle on June 29, he was tagged for a season-high 10 hits and six earned runs. New York Jeter ss Swisher dh Teixeira 1b A.Rodriguez 3b Cano 2b Posada c Granderson cf Curtis rf Gardner lf Totals

AB 5 3 4 3 5 2 4 4 3 33

R 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 1 6

H BI BB 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 7 6 5

SO 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4

Avg. .273 .304 .243 .273 .337 .263 .235 .238 .309

Seattle I.Suzuki rf Figgins 2b Branyan dh Jo.Lopez 3b F.Gutierrez cf Kotchman 1b M.Saunders lf Ro.Johnson c Ja.Wilson ss Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 36

R 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

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

SO 1 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 7

Avg. .328 .235 .261 .240 .260 .208 .216 .208 .254

New York 100 004 001 — 6 7 0 Seattle 000 001 000 — 1 9 1 E—Jo.Lopez (9). LOB—New York 8, Seattle 8. 2B—Curtis (3), Figgins (11), Branyan (11), Jo.Lopez (17), Ro.Johnson (10). 3B—Cano (2). HR—Teixeira (16), off Pauley; Teixeira (17), off French. RBIs—Teixeira 2 (59), A.Rodriguez (70), Cano 2 (57), Granderson (24), Jo.Lopez (33). SB—Figgins (24). S—Swisher. SF—A.Rodriguez. Runners left in scoring position—New York 4 (Curtis, A.Rodriguez, Gardner 2); Seattle 7 (Jo.Lopez, Branyan 2, I.Suzuki, Kotchman, Ja.Wilson 2). Runners moved up—F.Gutierrez. New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hughes W, 11-2 7 6 1 1 0 5 109 3.65 D.Robertson 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 5.46 Park 1 2 0 0 0 1 33 6.18 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pauley L, 0-1 5 2 3 1 1 1 82 1.00 C.Cordero 1 2 2 2 2 1 23 6.52 French 3 3 1 1 2 2 51 6.39 Pauley pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored—C.Cordero 2-2. HBP—by French (Posada). WP—French. T—2:55. A—39,645 (47,878).

Angels 6, Athletics 5 (10 innings) OAKLAND, Calif. — Erick Aybar homered to lead off the 10th inning and Torii Hunter and Bobby Abreu also went deep as Los Angeles ended its five-game road losing streak. Los Angeles E.Aybar ss H.Kendrick 2b B.Abreu rf Tor.Hunter cf H.Matsui dh J.Rivera lf 1-Willits pr-lf McAnulty 1b Napoli 1b Frandsen 3b J.Mathis c Totals

AB 5 4 4 4 2 4 1 3 1 4 4 36

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

H BI BB 2 1 0 0 0 1 3 2 1 1 2 1 0 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 6 5

Oakland Crisp cf Barton 1b R.Sweeney rf a-Carson ph K.Suzuki c Cust dh b-A.Rosales ph Kouzmanoff 3b M.Ellis 2b Gross lf Pennington ss Totals

AB 5 5 4 1 5 4 1 4 4 4 4 41

R H 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 1 0 2 5 11

BI 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 4

BB 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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

Avg. .281 .277 .256 .301 .251 .237 .243 .071 .252 .296 .235

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

Avg. .281 .273 .296 .154 .247 .288 .269 .269 .284 .255 .263

L.A. 200 001 020 1 — 6 8 1 Oakland 002 001 020 0 — 5 11 1 a-struck out for R.Sweeney in the 10th. 1-ran for J.Rivera in the 9th. E—J.Rivera (5), Pennington (12). LOB—Los Angeles 6, Oakland 6. 2B—R.Sweeney (19), Kouzmanoff (16), Gross (6), Pennington (16). 3B—Crisp (3). HR—B.Abreu (9), off Mazzaro; Tor.Hunter (15), off Breslow; E.Aybar (3), off A.Bailey; Cust (3), off Pineiro. RBIs—E.Aybar (16), B.Abreu 2 (46), Tor.Hunter 2 (62), H.Matsui (47), Crisp (13), K.Suzuki (36), Cust (16), Gross (16). SB—E.Aybar (14). SF—H.Matsui. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 4 (McAnulty, J.Rivera, J.Mathis, Willits); Oakland 5 (R.Sweeney 2, Gross 2, Barton). Runners moved up—Crisp 2, M.Ellis. GIDP— J.Rivera. DP—Oakland 1 (Mazzaro, Pennington, Barton). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pineiro 7 8 3 3 0 3 106 3.95 Rodney BS, 3-9 1 3 2 2 0 2 17 3.57 Jepsen W, 1-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 18 4.66 Fuentes S, 16 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 4.26 Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Mazzaro 7 4 3 3 3 5 107 3.81 Breslow 1 2 2 2 0 0 22 3.15 A.Bailey L, 0-3 2 2 1 1 2 3 37 1.75 IBB—off A.Bailey (H.Matsui). WP—Pineiro. PB— K.Suzuki. T—2:59. A—13,156 (35,067).

White Sox 8, Royals 2 CHICAGO — Mark Bueh-

rle pitched shutout ball into the eighth inning and A.J. Pierzynski hit two home runs as Chicago won its sixth straight. Buehrle took a line drive off his right (nonthrowing) wrist on Scott Podsednik’s leadoff single in the first, but was not seriously injured. The lefthander allowed six hits in seven-plus innings and was replaced by Sergio Santos after walking David DeJesus to start the eighth. Kansas City Podsednik lf Kendall c DeJesus rf B.Butler 1b Betemit 3b Aviles 2b Bloomquist dh Maier cf Y.Betancourt ss Totals

AB 5 5 3 3 4 3 4 4 4 35

Chicago AB Pierre lf 4 Al.Ramirez ss 4 Rios cf 3 Konerko 1b 4 Quentin dh 2 1-Lillibridge pr-dh 0 Pierzynski c 3 An.Jones rf 4 Viciedo 3b 3 Beckham 2b 3 Totals 30

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2

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

R H 0 1 0 0 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 0 2 2 0 3 0 1 1 1 8 12

BI 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 2 0 0 7

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

SO 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2

Avg. .298 .263 .328 .324 .365 .314 .232 .256 .261

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

Avg. .260 .274 .306 .299 .236 .429 .243 .206 .286 .207

Kansas City 000 000 002 — 2 8 0 Chicago 020 110 04x — 8 12 0 1-ran for Quentin in the 8th. LOB—Kansas City 9, Chicago 2. 2B—Podsednik (6), Konerko (15), Beckham (12). HR—Y.Betancourt (6), off Marquez; Pierzynski (5), off Chen; Pierzynski (6), off V.Marte. RBIs—Y.Betancourt 2 (36), Konerko (62), Pierzynski 4 (25), An.Jones 2 (25). SB—Podsednik (25), Rios (23). CS—Rios (9). S—Pierzynski. Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 5 (Betemit, DeJesus, Maier, B.Butler 2); Chicago 1 (Pierre). Runners moved up—DeJesus. GIDP—Al.Ramirez, Viciedo, Beckham. DP—Kansas City 3 (Aviles, Y.Betancourt, B.Butler), (Betemit, Aviles, B.Butler), (Betemit, Aviles, B.Butler). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Chen L, 5-3 3 1-3 6 3 3 1 1 65 3.81 Texeira 2 2-3 3 1 1 0 1 33 3.82 V.Marte 1 2-3 3 4 4 2 1 36 4.91 D.Hughes 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 3.67 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Buehrle W, 8-7 7 6 0 0 3 2 114 4.24 S.Santos 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 1.93 Marquez 1 2 2 2 0 0 16 18.00 Buehrle pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—S.Santos 1-0. WP— V.Marte. T—2:38. A—25,572 (40,615).

Indians 9, Rays 3 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Jayson Nix homered for the sixth time in his last seven games and Jhonny Peralta hit a three-run homer for Cleveland. Cleveland went ahead 3-1 on Nix’s solo shot off James Shields (7-9) in the fifth. Cleveland Brantley cf J.Nix 2b C.Santana c Hafner dh Kearns rf Jh.Peralta 3b LaPorta 1b Duncan lf Crowe lf Donald ss Totals

AB 5 5 4 4 5 5 5 3 1 3 40

R H 0 0 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 1 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 9 13

Tampa Bay Zobrist rf Crawford lf Longoria 3b C.Pena 1b Joyce dh Jaso c B.Upton cf Brignac ss S.Rodriguez 2b Totals

AB 5 4 2 4 4 3 4 3 3 32

R 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

BI 0 1 0 0 1 3 1 1 0 1 8

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

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

Avg. .136 .220 .284 .246 .268 .251 .253 .268 .244 .280

H BI BB 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 3 2 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 6 3 8

SO 2 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 6

Avg. .285 .320 .295 .205 .162 .275 .230 .266 .270

Cleveland 020 010 141 — 9 13 0 Tampa Bay 001 000 101 — 3 6 0 LOB—Cleveland 7, Tampa Bay 11. 2B—C.Santana (11), Kearns (16), LaPorta (6), Donald (12), Crawford (21), B.Upton (20). HR—J.Nix (7), off J.Shields; Duncan (5), off J.Shields; Jh.Peralta (6), off Sonnanstine; C.Pena (18), off Herrmann. RBIs—J.Nix (14), Kearns (36), Jh.Peralta 3 (39), LaPorta (17), Duncan (13), Donald (12), C.Pena 2 (54), Joyce (5). SB—Crawford (30), Longoria (13). Runners left in scoring position—Cleveland 4 (Brantley 2, LaPorta 2); Tampa Bay 6 (Joyce, S.Rodriguez, Zobrist, Brignac, Jaso 2). Runners moved up—C.Pena, Brignac. GIDP—Brignac. DP—Cleveland 1 (Donald, LaPorta). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Carmna W, 8-7 6 2-3 5 2 2 4 4 116 3.64 C.Perez H, 9 1-3 0 0 0 3 1 19 2.70 J.Smith 1 0 0 0 1 0 22 5.28 Herrmann 1 1 1 1 0 1 16 3.07 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Shields L, 7-9 6 1-3 6 4 4 1 9 106 4.87 Choate 1 1 1 1 0 1 19 6.04 Sonnanstine 2-3 4 3 3 0 1 16 4.26 Cormier 1 2 1 1 1 0 23 4.50 Inherited runners-scored—C.Perez 1-1, Sonnanstine 1-1. HBP—by Carmona (S.Rodriguez), by J.Shields (Hafner). WP—J.Shields. PB—C.Santana. Balk—J.Shields. T—3:09. A—23,116 (36,973).

Red Sox 14, Blue Jays 3 TORONTO — Jon Lester pitched six innings to win his third consecutive start and Boston hit four homers in a victory over Toronto. Kevin Youkilis, Adrian Beltre, Mike Cameron and Bill Hall connected for Boston, which snapped a four-game skid and improved to 6-1 against the Blue Jays this season. Hall finished with three hits and four RBIs. Boston Scutaro ss E.Patterson 2b D.McDonald lf-rf D.Ortiz dh Youkilis 1b Shealy 1b A.Beltre 3b J.Drew rf Nava lf Cameron cf Hall 2b-ss Cash c Totals

AB 3 3 5 4 2 3 3 3 1 4 4 4 39

R 1 0 1 1 1 0 3 1 1 3 1 1 14

Toronto AB R F.Lewis lf 4 0 Ale.Gonzalez ss 2 0 J.McDonald ss 2 1 J.Bautista rf 2 0 1-Wise pr-rf 1 0 V.Wells cf 4 1 J.Buck c 4 0 A.Hill 2b 4 0 Overbay 1b 3 0 Encarnacion 3b 4 0

H 2 1 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 3 3 0 14

BI 2 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 3 4 0 13

BB 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 1 8

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

Avg. .281 .220 .271 .258 .294 .000 .338 .276 .306 .291 .239 .111

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

SO 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1

Avg. .276 .254 .231 .240 .233 .272 .273 .187 .249 .210

J.Molina dh Totals

3 1 33 3

1 7

1 3

1 4

2 .296 6

Boston 037 301 000 — 14 14 0 Toronto 000 002 100 — 3 7 1 1-ran for J.Bautista in the 6th. E—Overbay (4). LOB—Boston 8, Toronto 7. 2B— A.Beltre (26), Hall 2 (7), V.Wells (26), J.Buck (15). HR— Hall (7), off R.Romero; Youkilis (18), off Tallet; A.Beltre (13), off Tallet; Cameron (3), off Tallet; J.McDonald (2), off Lester; J.Molina (2), off Manuel. RBIs—Scutaro 2 (27), D.McDonald (22), Youkilis 2 (57), A.Beltre (55), Cameron 3 (14), Hall 4 (24), J.McDonald (6), J.Buck (41), J.Molina (6). SF—Youkilis, Hall. Runners left in scoring position—Boston 6 (D.Ortiz, Cash 2, Nava 2, E.Patterson); Toronto 2 (A.Hill 2). Runners moved up—J.Buck. GIDP—D.Ortiz, Encarnacion. DP—Boston 1 (A.Beltre, E.Patterson, Shealy); Toronto 1 (Frasor, Overbay, J.McDonald, Overbay). Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lester W, 11-3 6 4 2 2 2 6 96 2.78 Manuel 2 2 1 1 1 0 40 6.23 Richardson 1 1 0 0 1 0 16 1.93 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Romero L, 6-6 2 1-3 5 9 5 3 2 56 3.71 Tallet 1 5 4 4 1 0 43 6.59 Janssen 2 1-3 2 1 1 1 1 47 4.20 Purcey 2 1-3 2 0 0 2 3 43 2.25 Frasor 1 0 0 0 1 0 10 4.86 Inherited runners-scored—Tallet 3-3, Purcey 2-0. T—3:13. A—27,567 (49,539).

Tigers 7, Twins 3 DETROIT — Magglio Ordonez drove in three of Detroit’s seven runs over two innings. AL Central-leading Detroit won its fourth straight and for the 16th time in 18 home games. Minnesota Span cf O.Hudson 2b Mauer c Thome dh Kubel rf Cuddyer 1b Delm.Young lf Hardy ss Punto 3b Totals

AB 5 5 3 2 4 4 4 4 4 35

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

BI 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 3

BB 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 3

SO 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 10

Avg. .276 .275 .297 .265 .261 .263 .305 .231 .244

Detroit A.Jackson cf Raburn lf 1-Kelly pr-lf Ordonez dh Mi.Cabrera 1b Boesch rf C.Guillen 2b Inge 3b Laird c Worth ss Totals

AB 2 3 0 4 3 3 4 4 3 4 30

R H 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 3 0 1 1 2 0 2 0 0 1 1 1 2 7 11

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

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

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

Avg. .304 .208 .220 .314 .346 .345 .295 .269 .192 .274

Minnesota 000 101 001 — 3 11 0 Detroit 250 000 00x — 7 11 1 1-ran for Raburn in the 6th. E—A.Jackson (3). LOB—Minnesota 8, Detroit 6. 2B—Cuddyer (19), Boesch (18). 3B—C.Guillen (1). RBIs—Kubel 2 (48), Hardy (14), Ordonez 3 (55), Mi.Cabrera (74), Boesch (48), C.Guillen 2 (28). SB—Delm.Young (4), A.Jackson (14). S—A.Jackson. SF—Mi.Cabrera. Runners left in scoring position—Minnesota 5 (Delm.Young 3, O.Hudson 2); Detroit 5 (Inge 2, Laird, Mi.Cabrera 2). Runners moved up—Raburn. GIDP—Delm.Young, A.Jackson, Inge. DP—Minnesota 3 (O.Hudson, Cuddyer), (Hardy, O.Hudson, Cuddyer), (Punto, O.Hudson, Cuddyer); Detroit 1 (C.Guillen, Mi.Cabrera). Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Liriano L, 6-7 1 2-3 6 7 7 2 1 52 3.86 Al.Burnett 3 1-3 3 0 0 0 1 36 3.60 Duensing 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 14 1.66 Guerrier 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 3.00 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 2 15 2.41 Crain 1 1 0 0 0 0 15 3.93 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Verlndr W, 11-5 5 1-3 8 2 2 2 7 103 3.82 Weinhardt H, 2 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 19 3.38 Coke 1 0 0 0 1 0 15 2.52 Perry 0 2 1 1 0 0 9 5.47 Valverde 1 1 0 0 0 1 18 0.95 Perry pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. Inherited runners-scored—Al.Burnett 1-0, Guerrier 2-0, Weinhardt 3-0, Valverde 2-1. HBP—by Liriano (Raburn, Boesch). WP—Guerrier. PB—Laird. T—3:13. A—42,549 (41,255).

Orioles 7, Rangers 6 (10 innings) ARLINGTON, Texas — Corey Patterson hit a gametying grand slam with two outs in the ninth inning, Jake Fox homered leading off the 10th and Baltimore rallied to beat Texas. Baltimore C.Patterson dh M.Tejada 3b Markakis rf Wigginton 1b Ad.Jones cf Pie lf Fox lf Wieters c 1-Tatum pr-c S.Moore 2b C.Izturis ss b-J.Bell ph Lugo ss Totals

AB 5 5 5 4 5 3 2 2 3 3 3 1 1 42

R H 1 4 0 1 1 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 2 1 0 1 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 15

BI 5 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 7

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

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

Avg. .292 .275 .308 .253 .274 .333 .229 .245 .259 .254 .241 .200 .261

Texas Andrus ss M.Young 3b Kinsler 2b Guerrero dh Hamilton cf B.Molina c N.Cruz rf Dav.Murphy lf J.Arias 1b a-C.Davis ph-1b Totals

AB 6 4 5 5 5 4 5 2 1 2 39

R H 0 0 1 1 1 2 1 1 0 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 6 10

BI 0 0 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 1 6

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

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

Avg. .284 .305 .312 .324 .349 .190 .298 .269 .280 .180

Baltimore 000 110 004 1 — 7 15 3 Texas 004 000 020 0 — 6 10 1 a-grounded out for J.Arias in the 6th. b-struck out for C.Izturis in the 9th. 1-ran for Wieters in the 5th. E—M.Tejada (14), Wigginton (13), Tatum (2), M.Young (13). LOB—Baltimore 10, Texas 12. 2B— C.Patterson (10), Markakis 2 (28), S.Moore (2), N.Cruz (12), Dav.Murphy (15). HR—C.Patterson (5), off N.Feliz; Fox (5), off Nippert; Guerrero (20), off Matusz. RBIs— C.Patterson 5 (19), Wigginton (45), Fox (16), Kinsler (29), Guerrero 3 (75), J.Arias (9), C.Davis (2). SB—Andrus (23), Hamilton (7), Dav.Murphy (4). S—S.Moore. SF—Kinsler, C.Davis. Runners left in scoring position—Baltimore 8 (Wigginton 2, S.Moore, Markakis 2, Ad.Jones 2, M.Tejada); Texas 8 (Hamilton 2, Andrus 2, M.Young, B.Molina, Guerrero, C.Davis). Runners moved up—M.Tejada 2, Guerrero, C.Davis. GIDP—Wigginton, Ad.Jones, B.Molina. DP—Baltimore 1 (C.Izturis, Wigginton); Texas 2 (Feldman, Andrus, J.Arias), (M.Young, Kinsler, C.Davis). Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Matusz 3 6 4 4 4 2 76 4.77 Albers 3 1 0 0 1 1 32 4.74 Uehara 1 1 1 0 0 1 14 4.00 Ohman 1-3 1 1 0 0 0 7 2.81 Mata 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 10 8.79 Berken W, 2-1 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 2.02 Simon S, 12-14 1 0 0 0 0 0 12 3.38 Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Feldman 7 8 2 2 0 2 94 5.32 O’Day H, 11 1 0 0 0 0 0 18 1.53 N.Feliz 2-3 3 4 4 1 1 26 3.82 Strop 1-3 2 0 0 1 0 13 2.45 Nippert L, 3-4 1 2 1 1 1 0 23 5.40 Feldman pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Uehara pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Ohman 1-1, Mata 11, O’Day 1-0. IBB—off Mata (M.Young), off Nippert (C.Patterson). HBP—by O’Day (M.Tejada). WP—Berken. Catchers’ interference—Tatum. T—3:51. A—24,216 (49,170).


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 D5

NBA

PREP NOTEBOOK

Miami welcomes LeBron to Heat

Mountain View fills soccer vacancies

James, Wade, Bosh make first appearance since agreeing to play together in Florida

Bulletin staff report

By Tim Reynolds The Associated Press

MIAMI — Farewell, Cleveland. Hello, Miami. LeBron James never had 24 hours quite like this. The decision. The letter. The arrival. The celebration. All filled with drama, all representing a new chapter for the two-time MVP. “I understand now that I’ve made the right decision,” James said. A packed arena of Miami Heat fans, plus another 10,000 or so outside the building, couldn’t have been more thrilled to hear James say those words. His acquisition by the Heat became official Friday night, not long after he, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh — the NBA’s newest superstar trio — arrived together in a spectacle typically reserved for rock concerts and award shows. Dressed in a white Heat uniform for the first time, James took a look at his new home crowd, folded his arms across his chest after he and his teammates were dropped from the sky on a forklift, and nodded. The MVP has taken center stage in Miami. “We know what the fans want,” James said. In case there was some question, they told him: Yes, a “Beat L.A.” chant broke out in July, call it an opening salvo aimed at the two-time defending champion Lakers. Great fanfare. Great expectations. “It’s still surreal, man,” Wade said. “Me, Chris and ’Bron. We ready. We want to go to the gym now.” Wade was in the middle as the trio was lifted skyward for the entrance — Bosh on his right, James on his left. Bosh pointed to the fans and screamed, while Wade aimed his index fingers at the crowd and James strutted about to the fans’ delight. They walked down the stairs to a long runway, slapping high-fives with fans, clapping their hands and soaking in the atmosphere. “We wanted to come here, then LeBron wanted to come,” Bosh said. “Let’s get it done, man. Let’s get this thing going.” Meanwhile, behind the scenes, the Heat continued working on sign-and-trade deals for both players, which were completed long after the event ended, around 11 p.m. The Heat sent two future first-round and two second-round picks to the Cavaliers for James, while packaging two first-round picks to the Raptors for Bosh. Next up for Miami: Deals for Mike Miller and Udonis Haslem, both expected to be done in

J. Pat Carter / The Associated Press

From left, Chris Bosh, Dwyane Wade and LeBron James acknowledge the cheers during a fan event at American Airlines Arena in Miami Friday. The three free agents have agreed to play for the Heat.

Cleveland rocked by losing LeBron CLEVELAND — Charred remains of a torched LeBron James jersey were scattered among ashes and 10 spent wooden matchsticks on a sidewalk across the street from Quicken Loans Arena. Over on Ontario Street, workers prepared to remove a massive 100-foot-high billboard of James, his arms outstretched, that has been a downtown tourist attraction for years. Now, it’s only a painful reminder of another Cleveland sports loss. “It’s a disgrace,” Reverend Jesse Harris said, standing with a few onlookers under James’ imposing figure. “It’s time to bring it down.” One day after James ripped this city’s heart out by saying he was leaving for Miami, Cleveland distanced itself from a family member. LeBron James, the schoolboy star from Akron who revived a downtrodden NBA franchise and raised championship hopes for seven seasons with the Cavaliers, is no longer welcome. In a matter of hours, James went from the most-adored athlete in Cleveland history to its most hated. From hero to

the coming days, and a planned meeting with Lakers point guard Derek Fisher. “We here now,” James said. “And we’re here for a long time.” Wade, Bosh and James all signed their six-year contracts

villain before the sun rose. For the Cavaliers, life after LeBron will be very different. Without James, the Cavs are no longer title contenders and now must revamp a roster missing its best player. Cleveland has some tradable assets, but general manager Chris Grant must decide whether to rebuild or try to maintain the club’s championship-caliber status. Grant’s charge is complicated by owner Dan Gilbert’s pledge that the Cavs will win a championship before James does. Shortly after James announced he was leaving, Gilbert fired off an incendiary letter to Cleveland’s fans, ripping the 25-year-old and promising to deliver a title after James failed. Gilbert called James’ decision “cowardly” and later told The Associated Press he believes James quit during playoff games this year and last. Gilbert’s shocking accusation and pointed remarks were the talk of Cleveland on Friday, easing the loss but also raising questions about how he would have acted had the megastar announced he would stay. — The Associated Press

earlier Friday night, each set to make about $2 million less than the $16.6 million they could have demanded for the coming season. “They’re going to be here for a while,” Heat president Pat Riley

said, adding, “all three of these gentlemen up here are going to be here for a long time and they’re going to be here for a long time for us to enjoy, thoroughly enjoy.” At the rally, which was announced Friday afternoon and people still snatched up all 13,000 available seats in an hour, fans were given posters with James, Wade and Bosh together in Heat uniforms — “Yes. We. Did.” was the slogan in big white letters. If Riley gets his way, the party will be the first of many for the NBA’s newest star cluster — a grouping everyone, even Wade, is still getting used to. “When I look around and see No. 6 and No. 1 on the court with me, that’s when it’s going to see real,” Wade said. James will wear No. 6 in Miami, Bosh No. 1, both having switched their numbers. Wade considered swapping his No. 3 as well. “Then I realized, three is magical, and now it represents more than just my number,” Wade said. “It represents the three of us making sacrifices as well.” Wade and Bosh decided Tuesday that they would play together in Miami, releasing that information to the world on Wednesday. With that, it was all up to James, who said he decided Thursday morning — hours before his made-for-TV announcement special that night — that he’d join the Heat and form a power triple. James touched down Friday morning, took his physical, and then arrived for the party. Expectations couldn’t be higher, and James, Wade and Bosh all accepted the challenge. “The road to history,” James wrote early Friday on Twitter, “starts now.”

Mountain View High School will have two new head soccer coaches this fall. Chris Rogers, a 1990 Redmond High graduated who has coached at Sisters High in the past, will be the Cougars’ new boys coach, replacing Lynden Evans, who stepped down after leading Mountain View to the Class 5A state final last season. Rogers, 38, has an extensive club soccer background, and is currently on staff with Oregon Rush. “I’m stoked,” said Rogers, who has been coaching since 1991. “I’ve wanted this position for quite some time. A lot of the boys coming up I’ve coached before in club.” Mountain View will also have a new head girls soccer coach in Grant Mattox, who has assisted with Bend High’s soccer program the past four years. “I wanted the challenge of taking over a program,” said Mattox, 49, who is a teacher at Elk Meadow Elementary in Bend. “I’m fortunate to inherit a great group.” The Cougars advanced to the second round of the 5A playoffs last season and played in the state title game in 2008. Prospective players looking for information about the Mountain View girls soccer team should go to www.cougargirlssoccer.webs.com/.

The Oregon Bicycle Racing Association has announced plans to launch a high school developmental and training cyclocross league this fall. OBRA’s initial season will be made up of three races this fall with the championships held over Thanksgiving weekend. According to OBRA, the communities expected to field teams are Bend, Eugene/Corvallis, Newport, Salem/Keizer, Portland, Hood River and Medford. Former Mountain View standout to play at Willamette SALEM — Sean Dart, an allstate post player for Mountain View High School during the 2007-08 high school basketball season, is transferring from Eastern Oregon University in La Grande to Willamette University in Salem. Dart will have three years of eligibility at Willamette. Elks to host high school evaluation camp The Bend Elks will host a threeday Central Oregon Showcase baseball camp running July 31 to August 2 at Vince Genna Stadium and the Bend Fieldhouse. Cost is $289 per player. The camp is for incoming freshman through seniors at the high school level. College coaches from all levels will be on hand to evaluate prospective players. Seattle University’s Donny Harrel will serve as lead instructor. For more information, go to www.bendelks.com.

Redmond High golfer signs with Division II school REDMOND — Andy Rodby, a recent graduate of Redmond High, has signed a National Letter of Intent to play collegiate golf at NCAA Division II Hawai’i Pacific University in Honolulu. Rodby, a four-year varsity player for the Panthers, led Redmond to a runner-up finish at the 2010 Class 6A state tournament.

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UPCOMING GAMES

11

12

13

SOCCER

And the World Cup award winners are... By Nancy Armour The Associated Press

JOHANNESBURG — he World Cup is winding down, and with the final days come the big awards. Let FIFA decide the best player and stingiest goalkeeper. After a month packed with 62 games and 32 teams, there are lots of other prizes to be handed out for this first World Cup on the African continent. Here are some World Cup awards for the good, the bad, the ugly and, of course, one for the octopus:

T

The Golden Vuvuzela: South Africa may have been the first World Cup host to fail to get out of the group stage, but Bafana Bafana was a delight from Siphiwe Tshabalala’s blistering left-footed shot in the opening game to the team dancing its way into the stadium for its final match (a win over the French, more on them later). The home fans were even better, enthusiastically cheering for every team and giving this World Cup a most distinct soundtrack with the blare of their vuvuzelas. The New Glasses: England got robbed of a goal and Argentina was gifted one as officials created a highlight — or lowlight — reel of errors at this World Cup. The bad calls raised

howls anew that soccer use video replay or other technologies, and FIFA president Sepp Blatter grudgingly agreed to consider it. But this is the same guy who once said, “Let’s leave football with errors,” so don’t bet on changes. The Hand of God: Diego Maradona was every bit as entertaining as a coach as he was a player. Whether he was stalking the sidelines, grimacing over fouls as if they were personal assaults, or celebrating Argentina’s wins as if each was the tournament final, you couldn’t take your eyes off of him. There were no outrageous outbursts, and while the verdict is still out on whether he really can coach, he didn’t do anything to hurt Argentina, either. The Silver Earplugs: Love ’em or hate ’em, those vuvuzelas and their swarm-of-bees sound stamped this World Cup as South Africa’s own. But don’t expect them to sweep the sports world. Wimbledon, the rugby World Cup, the Ultimate Fighting Championship all banned them. Not to be outdone, the United Arab Emirates’ General Authority of Islamic Affairs and Endowments issued a fatwa against vuvuzelas if they exceed 100 decibels, which they usually do.

The Tarnished Ball: France behaved so abominably it might have locked this up for 2014, too. The defending runners-up staged a mutiny and refused to practice, pouting like a bunch of 3-year-olds in need of naps over coach Raymond Domenech’s decision to send Nicolas Anelka home following Anelka’s expletive-filled rant at halftime of the second group stage game. Oh, the French played abysmally, too, slinking home with one lousy point and one measly goal. Quelle catastrophe! The Rusty Shoes: Wayne Rooney, Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi may be the biggest thing going in the game these days, but they were World Cup flops. Messi was the main reason Argentina reached the quarterfinals, creating plays for his teammates and occupying opposing defenses’ attention. But he left without scoring a single goal. Ditto for Rooney. C’mon, guys. Even offensively challenged Greece managed to knock in a pair of goals. Ronaldo at least scored one goal, but it was more accidental than intentional. And stop with the flopping and the whining. It’s beyond tiresome. The Kinda Comeback Kids: Sales of antacid skyrocketed last month, thanks to the U.S.

team and its penchant for late rallies. Much as the Americans swore they didn’t like doing it, playing catch-up seemed to suit them, and their doggedness and clutch play won them new fans. The thrill ride was too good to last, though, and the Americans bowed out in the second round to Ghana after falling behind one time too many.

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D6 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

AUTO RACING: NASCAR

Bowyer, others head into Chicagoland scrambling to make Chase for the Cup By Chris Jenkins The Associated Press

Courtesy of Eric Larsen via The Associated Press

Polar explorers Darcy St. Laurent and Antony Jinman ski along a large crack in the Arctic Ocean ice on an expedition with Eric Larsen during March of this year. Larsen has already visited both poles this year.

Adventurer Continued from D1 Summit the famed peak and he believes he’ll become the first to trek to the top, bottom and summit of the world in a 365-day span. “I haven’t allowed myself to think about how close I am,” said the 39-year-old Larsen, who embarked on his adventure by departing for the South Pole on Nov. 16 and hopes to scale Everest by mid-October. “It’s a trick I learned from polar travel — focus only on the moment.” For Larsen, the mission isn’t so much about glory as raising awareness of global warming and the effects it’s having on melting ice caps. That includes educating people through any social media possible. So after each 11-hour day of clomping over harsh terrain — pulling a sled loaded with 125 pounds of food, fuel and supplies — Larsen still logged on to his solar-charged computer and recorded his thoughts. He blogged, posted pictures and narrated podcasts, just to open a window into his world of ice. “We get people to connect with these places, which many think are blank wastelands,” Larsen said. He may have even had the first live tweet from the North Pole, typing into his mobile device upon arrival, “Standing on top of the world. Getting to the North Pole is the same as stopping Global

Mid-Am Continued from D1 Central Oregon golfers in the women’s field are Rosie Cook, Kailin Downs, Amy Mombert and Kareen Queen, all of Bend. Another notable tournament entry is David Jacobsen, brother of PGA Tour veteran Peter Jacobsen and winner of the 2010 Mirror Pond Invitational last month at Bend Golf and Country Club. The Mid-Am is being played in Central Oregon for the second year in a row. Last year, Portland’s Randy Mahar and Loree McKay were the men’s and women’s champions, respectively, at

Boxing Continued from D1 Duea, 27, trains with Richard Miller, coach of the Deschutes County Rocks Boxing Club in Bend. “Personally, I think she’s gonna win the tournament,” Miller said. “She’s been training hard. She’s the easiest person to train. Whatever you tell her to do, she does. And she wants to win and she knows she can do it.” If Duea advances to the semifinals, she will qualify for the U.S. team. If she wins the tournament, she will advance to the Women’s World Boxing Championships, set for September in Barbados. After easily winning her two bouts at regionals, Duea is confident she can advance deep into the national tournament. “I definitely have the attitude that I can hang with any of those girls,” she said. “I’m not just going there for the experience. I might be taken over by nerves,

Warming. Begin with one step.” Larsen’s odyssey began as a hired guide leading a small outfit to the South Pole. He had hoped to fund his own crew, but given the tight economy, this was the only way to launch the first leg, which he estimated would’ve cost $200,000. The trip took 48 days and covered roughly 750 miles with temperatures consistently hovering around minus 15. The intense headwinds were the biggest hindrance, incessantly howling at 25 mph and kicking up dangerous whiteouts. “Traveling through the Antarctic is a combination of the hardest thing I ever did and watching paint dry,” Larsen said. “It’s not action-packed.” On Jan. 2, his group reached the South Pole, too wiped out to really celebrate. They snapped photos, gobbled down a quick breakfast and went to bed. After that, Larsen returned home to unwind, throwing in a quick vacation to Mexico to lay on the beach before beginning his next stage. “Just wanted to soak up the sun,” said Larsen, who splits time between Boulder and Grand Marais, Minn., when he’s not off on expeditions. “I didn’t realize how worn out I was.” To conquer the North Pole, Larsen enlisted the help of Darcy St. Laurent, a search-and-rescue technician for the Canadian Air Force, and Antony Jinman, a British explorer. They arrived in the area of northern Ellesmere Island on

March 2 for a jaunt that was supposed to cover 490 miles but actually wound up being closer to 550. Unlike the South Pole, which is on a continent, the North Pole is reached by crossing the frozen Arctic Ocean. They often lost up to two miles a day because of the movement of the ice. Frustrating, for sure. The temperatures turned out to be cooler in the Arctic, too, with the mercury regularly plunging to 30 below zero. Sometimes, they had to hop on floating chunks of ice in order to reach larger drifts. And sometimes, they would even step into the bone-chilling water while skiing across the top of the ice. Breaking through the ice — even bundled up in numerous base layers — meant having to abruptly stop and build camp to avoid hypothermia or frostbite. “Those are dangerous mistakes,” Larsen said. For all the worries over weather and fretting over frostbite, there were the awe-inspiring moments, when all the grinding work took a back seat. Like when the trio heard a melodic humming rising up from below them as chunks of ice underneath the ocean collided. A sound they won’t soon forget. “It was like a symphony,” St. Laurent explained. “We just sat there and listened to this incredibly rhythmic music. With open water nearby, it was like you were at a cottage by the lake. “Of course, it was a lot colder.” The team reached its target on April 22 — Earth Day. Again, another muted celebra-

Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. And both are expected to be at Brasada Ranch this weekend to try to defend their titles. “There are some REALLY good players coming over to this thing. And a lot of them are seniors,” says 62-year-old Stein Swenson. “Why wouldn’t (the Oregon Golf Association, Oregon MidAm sponsor) be able to attract a big, good field? Everybody loves coming over here.” One of the attractions of the Mid-Am this year is the golf course itself, says Swenson, who says he has played Brasada some 20 times. Its straight-forward design should make the course a good test of golf, Watson says.

“It’s a well-designed golf course,” Watson says. “A lot of the tee shots are downhill … and the fairways are generous. You just have to keep it on the right side of the hole when you’re around the greens. It’s all right in front of you. It’s a lot of fun and a very fair golf course.” Tee times today will begin at 7:30 a.m. and will continue through 2:40 p.m. The golfers will be reordered on Sunday according to first-round scores. Spectators are welcome, and admission is free.

but talentwise, I definitely can hang in there.” Duea moved to Bend about nine months ago from New York, where she was working on Wall Street in sales and trading for Bank of America. A boxer in New York, Duea hooked up with Deschutes County Rocks shortly after moving to Bend — a move she said she made for a “change of pace.” She lives with her younger brother, Eric Duea, and currently works as a server at Jackson’s Corner, a small restaurant near downtown Bend. She also works in stone masonry. “I wanted to be closer to my brother,” Duea said of her move to Central Oregon. “It’s been pretty cool.” She plans to leave Sunday, along with Miller, for Colorado Springs. “It seems a little bit surreal,” Duea said. “I didn’t have expectations to do this level of competition when I moved here. It’s something I never expected.” USA Boxing women’s bouts

tion. They were just too cold, too wiped out. “Getting to the North Pole is 10 times more difficult than the South,” said Larsen, who spent around $155,000 to reach the destination. “The weather conditions were so sporadic — we would have snowstorms and then it would suddenly clear. But the icescape — it was just so beautiful.” To prepare for his Everest excursion, Larsen has been climbing peaks such as Mount Rainier and going on five-mile hikes with a 50-pound pack strapped to his back. In addition to training, Larsen also is giving presentations to corporations, trying to raise lastminute funding for a trip to Everest he estimates will cost nearly $100,000. “I have a very meager life with terrible health insurance and no amenities whatsoever,” Larsen said, grinning. “But I’ve gotten to go on these expeditions, tell cool stories and connect people with these places. “That’s a real privilege.”

JOLIET, Ill. — After watching a win slip away in a frustrating finish at Daytona last week, Clint Bowyer finds himself stuck in a big group of marquee drivers scrambling to make the Chase. Bowyer was in position to win at Daytona International Speedway a week ago, but a caution flag came out just before the last lap and the race went into overtime. Bowyer slipped back into the pack after the restart, spun out and finished 17th. When he woke up the next day, the frustration hadn’t gone away. “Oh, it carried on for a couple of days,” Bowyer said. “I haven’t been that upset in a while. I was so frustrated. I hated it for these guys (his crew). They work so hard on these cars and we were so close. I wanted to be able to do that for them.” And do it for his Chase chances. Instead of getting a nice points boost for a victory, Bowyer now is 14th in the standings heading into tonight’s race at Chicagoland Speedway. And he’s not the only good driver who’s concerned. With eight races remaining before the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, less than 100 points separate 11th-place driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. from Ryan Newman in 15th. Stuck in between them are Carl Edwards, Mark Martin and Bowyer. Only the top 12 drivers after the Sept. 11 race at Richmond are eligible to compete in NASCAR’s version of the postseason. Bowyer and others say it’s not too early to start worrying about points. “Oh, yeah,” Bowyer said. “Everybody does. The Chase is on.” Although Earnhardt is 11th in points, he didn’t necessarily seem convinced he’s got the

consist of four two-minute rounds. (Men’s bouts are scheduled for three rounds of three minutes each.) Fights are scored on a point system administered by judges, and boxers earn points for punches landed. The USA Boxing National Championships have been staged annually since 1888, according to usaboxing.org, making it the longest-running amateur boxing tournament in the United States. The event consistently showcases future Olympians and world champions, according to the website. Former men’s champions include Pernell Whitaker, Oscar De La Hoya, Sugar Ray Leonard, Floyd Mayweather Jr., and Muhammad Ali (as Cassius Clay). “It’s definitely a once-in-a-lifetime kind of thing,” Duea said. “I don’t know if I’ll get the chance again.” Mark Morical can be reached at 541-383-0318 or at mmorical@ bendbulletin.com.

www.educate.com

541-389-9252 Bend • 2150 NE Studio Rd. Redmond • 1332 SW Highland Ave.

10 Presented by

TWO BIG WEEKENDS

July 16, 17, 18 & 23, 24, 25 Presented by

Zack Hall can be reached at 541-617-7868 or at zhall@ bendbulletin.com.

11th-best performing team in the sport right now. “I think that’d be slightly generous,” Earnhardt said. And Earnhardt admitted he was nervous about the upcoming stretch of races. “I’m nervous about losing points, not making the Chase, just having a bad week,” Earnhardt said. “I don’t think I’m any more nervous about it than I usually am. Everybody hates to fail.” Eight races is a long time in NASCAR. But with so many other good teams scrambling alongside him to make the Chase, Bowyer said it will be tough to make a major move in the points. “Eight races seems like a lot, but I’ll tell you it’s not much,” Bowyer said. “As good as the drivers and the teams are in front of us that we’re going to have to beat out of that thing, you don’t just knock out 100 points, 200 points a race. You’re going to have to chisel away at it — maybe 10, maybe 20 (points) at the most a race. So it’s going to take time.” Bowyer has benefited from Richard Childress Racing’s resurgence this season, though he doesn’t have the points to show for it — unlike teammate Kevin Harvick, who is leading the points after winning at Daytona and could be in line for a big weekend at Chicagoland, a place where he has won twice. “We’ve got great cars,” Bowyer said. “Every time we get a little bit of light shined on us, we get our legs knocked out from underneath of us. It’s just frustrating. It’s been a very frustrating year. But it’s not over, and we’re in a good position. We’ve got to be able to capitalize on these next eight races and get ourselves in the chase. I really feel like our equipment is competitive enough to get it done.”

Fridays: Noon - 6 pm, Saturdays & Sundays 10 am - 6 pm


E SATURDAY, JULY 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

VILLAGE AT COLD SPRINGS~SISTERS

Redmond Canyon Classic This lovingly maintained home has an air of elegance about it yet offers a casual and gracious style of living. Step inside and you will find quality throughout with large bright rooms, hardwood floors, beautiful tile work and a master suite fit for a queen. The backyard is private, overlooking the dry canyon, and the covered back patio/ deck is the perfect spot for a summer of outdoor entertaining. Enjoy 1894 sq.ft of living on .65 of an acre, a double car garage, RV parking and outstanding mountain views. Truly a property you will love to call home! $339,000. MLS#201005838

Take a tour at The Village at Cold Springs this weekend during the Sisters Quilt Show. We’re also on this year’s COBA Tour of HomesTM July 16-25. The Village at Cold Springs is designed with the motor coach owner in mind, offering oversized RV parking on your site with FULL RV hookups, extended driveways with low curbs, and large 12 ft. wide gates. Maintenance free living includes front yard landscaping and yard care. New homes starting at $139,990! Directions: west Hwy 20 to Sisters, west on McKinney Butte Road, north on Trinity Way, west at roundabout. Call 541-549-6681 or find us on the web at www.hayden-homes.com for more information.

ASPEN RIM WWW.HAYDEN-HOMES.COM 541-306-3085

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BARBARA MYERS, BROKER, CRS, GRI (541) 480-7183 COLDWELL BANKER MAYFIELD REALTY

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Central Oregon’s

Premier Home Showcase Each summer, the Tour of Homes™ showcases the best in Central Oregon home building. by Lori Gleichman, for The Bulletin Advertising Department Builders are showcasing quality, value and affordability in the 2010 Central Oregon Builders Association (COBA) Tour of Homes™, according to Tim Knopp, executive vice president of the Central Oregon Builders Association, which sponsors the annual event. “This year’s Tour is a great opportunity to highlight that homes are a great value in Bend right now,” he said. “Prices have come down a long way since the highs of 2007, but the quality is outstanding and the amenities in these homes are wonderful.” There are 37 homes featured on the 22nd annual Tour, ranging from six homes less than $200,000 to one priced at $1.8 million. “We have 17 homes priced under $300,000,” said Knopp, adding that this is the best price point on the market these days. “In past years, these homes would have been priced in the $500,000 range. And they still have all the extras you expect in a Tour home. This is the best opportunity for builders to showcase what’s possible.” Another central theme to the 2010 Tour of Homes™ is environmentally

friendly designs and amenities he said. “We have more homes than ever before that are Earth Advantage certified and High Performance Homes,” he said. This is important not only for the immediate gratification found in using sustainable materials and installing energy-saving systems, but also in the long-term cost of maintaining the home. It all feeds in to the sharp focus on

Butte to downtown Bend, and styles range from six popular craftsmen homes on Tour in Northwest Crossing to a hip home built by Bend Trend Homes. Knopp also pointed out a few special homes. Habitat For Humanity’s three-bedroom, two-bath home in Parkway Village has some of the most innovative green features on the Tour, giving it the honor of scoring the best on the High Performance Home scale.

builders and Pahlisch Homes are regulars on the Tour of Homes™, it’s also exciting to welcome newcomers, including the Olsen Brothers, HiLine Homes and Neil Kelly. Finally, the Tour is a great way to explore Central Oregon, said Knopp. “A home on the Tour creates a great sense of excitement and momentum for a neighborhood,” Knopp said. “This adds a lot of value to that neighborhood and benefits other sellers there, too.”

“This year’s Tour is a great opportunity to highlight that homes are a great value in Bend right now. Prices have come down a long way since the highs of 2007, but the quality is outstanding and the amenities in these homes are wonderful.” the value and affordability of housing now, explained Knopp. Tour goers will also notice the diversity of housing in Central Oregon. Size ranges from a 728-square-foot accessory dwelling unit (ADU) converted from a garage to a five-bedroom, six-and-a-half-bath home in Sisters that covers almost 7,000 square feet. Locations range from the golfing community of Tetherow to Powell

He also invites people to stop by the one-bedroom apartment in Discovery Park Lodge, the affordable senior housing complex in Northwest Crossing. “It’s the type of housing you’d see in a more urban area,” he explained, showing that leasing or renting are viable alternatives to owning a home in Central Oregon. While builders like SunWest Builders, PacWest Homes, SolAire Home-

“Despite the economy, people are still trying to find a way to call Central Oregon home,” he continued. In fact, people plan vacations around the Tour of Homes™, Knopp said, calling months in advance to get the dates. “And I continue to be amazed at how far away some of them are … calls from New Jersey and Florida, as well as those from people in Nevada and Arizona.”

Builders are “very optimistic” about the Tour this year, sensing that a turn in the market is just about here. “As I said, prices have come down quite a bit and existing inventory is shrinking,” said Knopp. “As a result, we’re seeing multiple offers on homes selling right now. We’re also seeing a lot of custom contracts being signed this summer, which will mean even more homes on the Tour next year.”

The 2010 Tour of Homes™ July 16-18 and July 23-25 Hours: Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sundays from noon to 6 p.m. The official Tour of HomesTM guide will be inserted into The Bulletin on Wed., July 14. Tour guides will also be available at The Bulletin, the COBA office, the Redmond Chamber of Commerce, at each Tour home and online at www.bendbulletin.com


E2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809 634

638

648

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Apt./Multiplex SE Bend

899 NE Hidden Valley #2

½ off first month rent!

Houses for Rent General

1/2 OFF the 1st Month’s Rent! 2 bedroom, all appliances, gas fireplace, w/s paid, garage. $650 mo. 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616 - Want To Rent 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654 - Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 732 - Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condominiums & Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 634

Rentals

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

600

1/2 Off First Month’s Rent 1700 NE Wells Acres #40 Cozy 2 bdrm/ 1 bath w/ patio. All kitchen appls., w/s/g pd, no pets. $575+dep. CR Property Management 541-318-1414

605

130 NE 6th St. 1/2bdrm 1 bath, w/s/g pd., laundry room, no smoking, close to school. $395-425 rent+dep. CR Property Management 318-1414

Roommate Wanted Beautifully furnished home near BMC East, bdrm. and bath avail. $475/mo. includes utils. & cable, no smok ing/pets, 541-389-9680.

630

Rooms for Rent Mt. Bachelor Motel has rooms, starting at $150/wk. or $25/night. Includes guest laundry, cable & WiFi. 541-382-6365 NE Bend, area of 8th & Greenwood, laundry & cable incl., parking, $400. 541-317-1879

#1 Good Deal! 2 bdrm., 1.5 bath townhouse, W/D hookup, W/S/G paid, $625 + dep., 2922 NE Nikki Ct., 541-390-5615. 2317 NE Mary Rose Pl. #2 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances, incl. washer/dryer! garage, W/S paid!! Lawn care provided. $675 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

631

Condominiums & Townhomes For Rent Long term townhomes/homes for rent in Eagle Crest. Appl. included, Spacious 2 & 3 bdrm., with garages, 541-504-7755.

2 Bdrm., 1 bath Duplex, 1400 sq.ft., dbl. attached garage, W/D incl., fenced yard, $750 per mo., please call 541-410-4255.

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

$99 MOVES YOU IN !!! Limited numbers available 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks, Mountain Glen, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. $ Pick Your Special $ 2 bdrm, 1 bath $525 & $535 Carports & A/C included. Pet Friendly & No App Fee! FOX HOLLOW APTS.

(541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co.

1 BDRM $425 2 BDRM $445

Country Terrace 61550 Brosterhous Rd. All appliances, storage, on-site coin-op laundry BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 541-382-7727

640 1 Bdrm. Condo in 7th Mtn. Resort, all utils. incl., resort amenities, $850/mo., offered by Patty McMeen Real Estate, 541-480-2700 Old Mill Studio, separate entrance, all utilities pd. $500 mo. plus $500 deposit. Small pet neg. No smoking. 541-382-1941.

636

Summer Special!

1 Month Rent Free 1550 NW Milwaukee. $595/mo. Large 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, Gas heat. W/D incl., W/S/G Pd. No Pets. Call us at 382-3678 or

Visit us at www.sonberg.biz 45 NW Greeley #2 DOWNTOWN! 1 bdrm, elec. heat, W/D hook-up or onsite laundry. W/S/G paid! Lawn care provided! $550 mo.

541-382-7727 BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

A CLEAN 1 bdrm. in 4-plex next to Park, 2 decks, storage, laundry on site, great location, W/S/G paid, no dogs, $540/mo. 541-318-1973 A clean, quiet, spacious 1 bdrm., river & mtn. views, West hills, laundry, deck, $655 mo., 541 382-7654, karenmichellen@hotmail.com A Westside Condo, 2 bdrm., 1 bath, $595; 1 bdrm., 1 bath, $495; woodstove, W/S/G paid, W/D hookups. (541)480-3393 or 610-7803 Fully furnished loft apt. on Wall St., Bend. To see, is to appreciate, no smoking/pets, $1000/all util. paid. & parking. 541-389-2389 for appt.

NW-Side, 1/2 mile to COCC, spacious 2 bdrms., 950 sq. ft., $550/mo. W/S/G paid, 2 on-site laundries, covered parking, 541-382-3108 SHEVLIN APARTMENTS Near COCC! Newer 2/1, granite, parking/storage area, laundry on site. $600/mo. 541-815-0688.

Small cute studio, all utilities paid, close to downtown and Old Mill. $450/mo., dep. $425, no pets. 330-9769 or 480-7870. Westside Condo, 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath, W/D, A/C, garage, in quiet 4-plex, at great westside location, $800, 1737 SW Knoll, 541-280-7268

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Westside Village Apts. 1459 NW Albany 1st Month Free with 1 year lease or ½ Off first month with 8 month lease. * 1 bdrm $495* * 2 bdrm $575 * W/S/G paid, cat or small dog OK with deposit. Call 382-7727 or 388-3113.

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

LOOK IN OUR 5 4 1 -3 2 2 -7 2 5 3

Apt./Multiplex SW Bend

Spacious Quiet Town home 2 Bdrm. 1.5 Bath, W/D. Private Balcony and lower Patio, storage W/S/G paid $675 2024 NE Neil. 541-815-6260

1015 Roanoke Ave., $590 mo., $550 dep., W/S/G paid, 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath townhouse, view of town, no smoking or pets. Norb 541-420-9848.

DEALS ABOUND!

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

Spacious 1080 sq. ft. 2 bdrm. townhouses, 1.5 baths, W/D hookups, patio, fenced yard. NO PETS. W/S/G pd. Rents start at $495. 179 SW Hayes Ave. Please call 541-382-0162.

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

BEND RENTALS • Starting at $495. Furnished also avail. For pictures & details www.alpineprop.com 541-385-0844

$99 Move in $250 deposit Be the first to live in one of these Fantastic Luxury Apartments. THE PARKS Call 541-330-8980 for a tour today! Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens Inc.

642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond 1st Month Free 6 month lease! 2 bdrm., 1 bath, $550 mo. includes storage unit and carport. Close to schools, on-site laundry, no-smoking units, dog run. Pet Friendly. OBSIDIAN APARTMENTS 541-923-1907 www.redmondrents.com 2553 & 2580 SW 20th St.2/1 duplexes, garage, yard, W/D hookup, on cul-de-sac, $600+dep, incl. yard maint., no pets/smoking.541-382-1015

Powell Butte, in secluded area, 3 bdrm., 1 bath, garage,wood stove, W/D hookup, first, last, $400 dep, $600/mo, peg. neg., 541-447-4750. The Bulletin is now offering a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

650

SECTION!!! DON’T MISS OUT ON FINDING CHEAP DEALS!

Houses for Rent NE Bend

PRICE TO PLACE AD: 4 DAYS $20 • 70K READERS

2 Bdrm. Duplex, gas fireplace, back yard, $825/mo. incl. yard maint & water, no smoking, pet okay, 1225 NE Dawson Dr. 402-957-7261 4 bdrm., 2 bath, 1748 sq. ft., wood stove, big rear patio, dbl. lot, fenced yard, storage shed & carport, $950/mo. 541-480-3393,541-610-7803

*Additional charges may apply.

CHECK OUT OUR NEW MAP FEATURE ONLINE @

725 NE SHELLEY Nice 3 bed, 2.5 bath, hot tub, A/C, garage, trex decking, large bonus room. $1350/mo ABOVE& BEYOND PROP MGMT 541-389-8558 www.aboveandbeyondmanagement.com

Available Now, small 1 bdrm. cottage, fenced yard, no garage, pet? $525 mo., 1st/last+dep. no W/D hookup. 541-382-3672.

WWW.BENDBULLETIN.COM /GARAGESALES

AVAIL. NOW: Quiet 3/2 plus family room, on cul-de-sac, .48 acre, fenced, RV parking, woodstove. No smoking. $995 + dep. 541-388-2159

We c Call your 541-385-5809 the f to advertise and drive traffic toto yo your garagegara sale today!!

Call about our Specials

Studios to 3 bedroom units from $395 to $550 •Screening fee waived • Lots of amenities. • Pet friendly • W/S/G paid THE BLUFFS APTS. 340 Rimrock Way, Redmond 541-548-8735 GSL Properties

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809

Ask Us About Our

Summertime Special! Chaparral & Rimrock Apartments Clean, energy efficient nonsmoking units, w/patios, 2 on-site laundry rooms, storage units available. Close to schools, pools, skateboard park, ball field, shopping center and tennis courts. Pet friendly with new large dog run, some large breeds okay with mgr. approval. 244 SW RIMROCK WAY

541-923-5008 www.redmondrents.com

Like New Duplex, nice neighborhood, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, garage, fenced yard, central heat & A/C, fully landscaped, $700+dep. 541-545-1825. SW REDMOND: 2 bdrm., 1.5 bath, 1270/sf. apt (and) 3 bdrm., 3 bath 1554/sf apt. Built 2004, appl. inc/ W/D, W/S/G pd, no pets/smoking, credit check req., HUD ok, For appt/info: 541-504-6141

646

Apt./Multiplex Furnished Attractive, Furnished apartment in NW Crossing, incl. W/D, full kitchen Near park & cafe’s. $550/mo. 2541 Lemhi Pass. 541-408-7774.

632

Apt./Multiplex General The Bulletin is now offering a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend $99 1st Month! 1 & 2 bdrms avail. from $525-$645. Limited # avail. Alpine Meadows 330-0719 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

$100 Move-In Special Beautiful 2 bdrm, quiet complex, park-like setting, covered parking, w/d hookups, near St. Charles. $550/mo. 541-385-6928. 1039 NE HIDDEN VALLEY 2 bedroom 2 bath, garage, water/sewer/lawn maint includ. Avail now. $695 ABOVE & BEYOND PROP MGMT 541-389-8558 www.aboveandbeyondmanagement.com

1/2 Off First Full Month 1027 NE Kayak Lp. #2 3 bdrm/ 2 bath, basic appl., gas heat, gas fireplace, 1 car garage, no pets. $775+dep. With 6 month lease. Viking Property Management 541-416-0191

TUMALO OASIS! SATURDAY JULY 10 1-4 PM

SATURDAY 11-2

Rare opportunity to own small acreage in Tumalo! 3217 sq. ft. on 1.6 acres, plus a 4-bay shop for all the toys. Meticulously maintained, 64920 NW Glacier View Drive Directions: Hwy 20 West, turn north recently updated, on Old Bend-Redmond Hwy, approx. amazing grounds, 3 miles, turn east on Glacier View Dr. Cascade views. Don’t miss it!

$665,000

Hosted & Listed by: EDIE DELAY Principal Broker

541-420-2950

1188 NE 27TH - $99,500 This wonderful triple wide overlooks the interior pond in Snowberry Village- Bend’s premier 55+ community. Home is 1600 sf and features 3BR/2BA w/ separate living room and great room. Open living with vaults and lots of windows. A Martha 1188 NE 27th, #111, Bend Stewart kitchen w/separate pantry + all appliances included. Directions: Hwy 20 east to 27th Large laundry w/lots of built-ins. Street, head north, Snowberry Village Oversize 2-car garage with extra is on east side of street. storage. Enjoy the front deck or relax on the back deck, your choice. Price now reduced!

$99,500

Hosted & Listed by:

MARILYN ROHALY Broker

541-322-9954

Bend, Oregon


To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 E3

650

658

745

745

Houses for Rent Redmond

Real Estate For Sale

740

Houses for Rent NE Bend

Condominiums & Townhomes For Sale

Homes for Sale

Homes for Sale

NOTICE:

A Beautiful 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath duplex in Canyon Rim Village, Redmond, all appliances, includes gardener. $849 mo. 541-408-0877.

700

MT. BACHELOR VILLAGE C O N D O , ski house #3, end unit, 2 bdrm, sleeps 6, complete remodel $197,000 furnished. 541-749-0994.

Looking to sell your home? Check out Classification 713 "Real Estate Wanted"

New large luxury family home 3/2.5 3200 sq.ft., W/D, fridge, daylight basement, large lot, views, no pets. $1450. 503-720-7268.

705

745

Real Estate Services

Homes for Sale

Know your neighbors! Nestled in Bend's only environmentally friendly co-housing community. http://home.bendbroadband.com/higherground/. Lots of sunlight! 3 bdrms, 2 baths, 1450 sq. ft., foam panel construction, large decks, cozy loft. Bamboo floors. $239,000 Call Jen: 541 678-5165.

All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified SPOTLESS 3 bdrm., 2 bath, dbl. garage, RV parking, fenced, cul-de-sac, avail. now., lawn care incl., $995/mo. 541-480-7653 When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to

call Classified 385-5809 to place your Real Estate ad Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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Houses for Rent NW Bend

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Houses for Rent Sunriver

2 Story, 2 Bdrm., 2 bath, garage. Fenced yard, 1/2 acre. OWWII. $750/mo. 541-598-2796. 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, dbl. garage, W/S/G incl., OWWII, $895/ mo. + dep., no smoking, please call 503-651-1142 or 503-310-9027. VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range from $425 $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061

* Real Estate Agents * * Appraisers * * Home Inspectors * Etc. The Real Estate Services classification is the perfect place to reach prospective B U Y E R S AND SELLERS of real estate in Central Oregon. To place an ad call 385-5809

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Real Estate Trades Trade your 5+ acres + home for our beautiful home in West Linn (just south of PDX). 503 534-1212. MLS #10013267. Owner/broker. TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

The Bulletin

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CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, please call us:

385-5809 The Bulletin Classified ***

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

OPEN HOUSE Sunday 12-3 4 bedroom, 3½ bath custom, 3 + acre country-living home located in Desirable Sundance. Newly upgraded features throughout. Upgrades include Silestone kitchen countertops, travertine marble countertops in all bathrooms and laundry room; Ef22070 Quebec Drive ficient kitchen with new Jenn-air $446,000 cook top; new dishwasher, glass facing cabinets. Sweeping Cascade Mountain views. 720 sq.ft. detached shop with room for RVs & toys. Park like-treed landscaping. Potential Horse property. Designed for entertaining! Directions: 27th East to Rickard, right on Billadeau, left on Sweet Grass, left on Quebec. Hosted and Listed by Gregg Hayden, Principal Broker, 541-390-6139

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Houses for Rent Prineville Country Living, older 3 bdrm, quiet & secure home on our farm. Clean, fenced yard, storage avail. Pets neg. $725/mo. 541-633-0569.

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Commercial for Rent/Lease 1944½ NW 2nd St NEED STORAGE OR A CRAFT STUDIO? 570 sq. ft. garage, Wired, Sheetrocked, Insulated, Wood or Electric Heat $275. Call 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

$1195 3/2, 2 acres, w/d, wood stove, outbuildings, dbl. garage. 23168 Maverick Ct.

541-923-8222 www.MarrManagement.com

699 NW Florida 3/ 2.5/ dbl grge. Extra nice, dwntwn, spacious. Lrg deck, Enrgy Effcnt, w/d, gardener, no pets/smkng. $975+dep. CR Property Management 541-318-1414 A Newly Remodeled 1+1, vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, small yard, w/fruit trees, dog area/garden, $650, 541-617-5787. Fantastic 1 bedroom on Awbrey Butte. Just in time for unobstructed view of fireworks! W/D, garage, outdoor living space. $700/mo. ABOVE & BEYOND PROP MGMT 541-389-8558 www.aboveandbeyondmanagement.com

WESTSIDE, pet friendly, small 1 bdrm house, fenced front & back, large indoor & outdoor storage, walk town & groceries. $550 incl. water. 541-330-7379

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Houses for Rent SE Bend 1144 SE Gatewood Pl.

Lease: 679 SE Business Way, 5000+ sq.ft, light industrial, 3 overhead doors, exc. parking, office suite w/mtn. views. Talk to me! 907-252-2794. Light Industrial, various sizes, North and South Bend locations, office w/bath from $400/mo. 541-317-8717

Office/Warehouse space 3584 sq.ft., 30 cents a sq.ft. 827 Business Way, 1st mo. + dep., Contact Paula, 541-678-1404. The Bulletin is now offering a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

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Office/Retail Space for Rent An Office with bath, various sizes and locations from $250 per month, including utilities. 541-317-8717 Approximately 1800 sq.ft., perfect for office or church south end of Bend $750, ample parking 541-408-2318.

3 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances incl. washer/dryer, A/C, gas heat/fireplace, dbl garage, fenced yard. $925 mo. 541..382.7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

20644 SE Redwing Ln. FOXBOROUGH- 3 bdrm, 2 bath, gas fireplace, hardwood floors, dbl. garage, fenced yard with landscaping maintained! $950 mo.. 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

752 Breitenbush 3 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances, gas heat, dbl garage, fenced yard. $875 mo. 541..382.7727

Guaranteed Build Time or ...

WE PAY YOU!

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

Call for a FREE Plan Book

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

Avail. Now, 3 bdrm., 1 bath, new paint inside, yard, wood stove, single garage, no pets or smoking $750 mo., 1st, last, & dep. 541-389-7734.

Central Oregon (800) 970-0149

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Houses for Rent SW Bend 60944 Aspen Lane Romaine Village! 2 bdrm w/ all appliances incl. washer & dryer! Carport & extra storage, clubhouse, Pool & Spa!! $665. 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

61351 SW Rock Bluff Ln in Elkhorn Estates, immaculate 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1656 sq.ft, A/C, private back yard, gas fireplace, sprinklers, all kitchen appl, pet?, $1045 mo. + $1200 dep., 541-389-0969 An older 2 bdrm., 2 bath manufactured, 938 sq.ft., wood stove, quiet .5 acre lot in DRW on canal $695, 541-480-3393, 541-610-7803

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Houses for Rent Redmond 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, 1120 sq.ft., dbl. garage, fenced, new paint, vinyl, carpet & appl., $800/mo., $1200 dep., no pets/smoking, 541-480-2468

$550 2/1, hardwood floors, carport, downtown area. 206 SW 9th St. $895 3/2.5, washer/dryer, gas fireplace, sprinklers, garage w/opener. 1730 SW 22nd Ct. $925 4/2, w/d hookup, gas fireplace, sprinklers, garage w/opener. 1986 NW Joshua Tree Ct. $1000 3/2, central air, gas fireplace, garage w/opener. Golf Community. 4250 Ben Hogan

$75,900 $71,900 (limited time)* *Limited number available at this price. Only available from Central Oregon office.

NEW PLAN - SAVE $4,000!

On Your Site, On Time, Built Right

541-923-8222 www.MarrManagement.com REALTOR


E4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

10 Presented by

TWO BIG WEEKENDS

July 16, 17, 18 & 23, 24, 25 Fridays: Noon - 6 pm, Saturdays & Sundays 10 am - 6 pm


To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 E5

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Homes for Sale

Northeast Bend Homes

Redmond Homes

Crook County Homes

Recreational Homes and Property

Acreages

"Not Short, Not Distressed, No Banks to Deal With" Call Today, this will go fast! 21057 Clairaway Ave 3 bdrm/2 bath, 1472 SF, .46 Acre Lot. Great Condition, Room for all your toys. Convenient location to shopping, schools, and Hospital

BARGAIN PRICED, move-in condition in quality NE neighborhood, 4 bdrm, 2½ bath, 2645 sq. ft., distressed walnut flooring, granite countertops and SS appliances. Drive by 2974 NE Red Oak Drive. $244,900. Call Kurt Jurgenson, River Park Real Estate Services, 541-815-2182.

Offered at $145,000 Ray Bachman, Broker, GRI 541-408-0696 www.Raybachman.com

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

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Sunriver/La Pine Homes PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. www.dukewarner.com The Only Address to Remember for Central Oregon Real Estate

749

Southeast Bend Homes 3 Bdrm., 1.75 bath, 1736 sq. ft., living room w/ wood stove, family room w/ pellet stove, dbl. garage, on a big, fenced .50 acre lot, $169,900. Randy Schoning, Broker, Owner, John L. Scott. 541-480-3393.

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3 Bdrm. 2 bath single story on ½ acre, built in 2003, also ½ acre lot with well, same area, So. of Sunriver. Please call 509-585-9050 for info.

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

Prineville Duplex Almost new, fully rented with garage, patio and fireplace. 1200 sq.ft. each side. Great price! $130,000. Lawnae Hunter, Principal Broker Hunter Properties, LLC 541-389-7910 541-550-8635

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Homes with Acreage FSBO: 2 Bdrm., 1 Bath Home 1.47 Acres +/- Comm. Water & Sewer Detached. Garage/Shop Sunriver Area $224,900. Call R. Mosher 541-593-2203. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CL AS S I F I E DS Silver Lake: Dbl. wide, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, dbl. garage, w/covered RV storage, town block w/multiple hookups, $147,000, 541-576-2390.

Crook County Homes Large 2/1 home, large bonus room, living room, new roof and garage. Bring any reasonable offer. Call Keith at 503-329-7053.

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Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

Farms and Ranches 35 ACRE irrigated hay & cattle farm, close to Prineville, raises 85 ton of hay & pasture for 10 cows, reduced to $395,000. Will consider trade for small acreage or ? 541-447-1039. 35 acre irrigated hay & cattle farm, close to Prineville, raises 85 ton of hay & pasture for 10 cows, sacrifice for $425,000, 541-447-1039

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds

CHRISTMAS VALLEY L A N D, new solar energy area, 360 acres $96,000. By Owner 503-740-8658 PCL 27s 20e 0001000 Powell Butte: 6 acres, 360° views in farm fields, septic approved, power, OWC, 10223 Houston Lake Rd., $149,900, 541-350-4684.

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Lots

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

WOW! A 1.7 Acre Level lot in SE Bend. Super Cascade Mountain Views, area of nice homes & BLM is nearby too! Only $199,950. Randy Schoning, Broker, John L. Scott, 541-480-3393.

Acreages

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Redmond Homes

7 Mi. from Costco, secluded 10 acres and end of road, lots Juniper w/ mtn. views, power & water near by, asking $250,000. 541-617-0613

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F S B O : Cozy 2+2, dbl. garage, w/decks & lots of windows, hot tub, wood stove & gas heat, near Lodge, $275,000, owner terms, 541-617-5787.

Cottage Style 3 bdrm., garage, heat pump, landscaped. Clean home, safe neighborhood. $65,000 for home AND .013 lot. 541-815-1216.

CRESCENT LAKE CABIN Lake front. $399,000 503-329-0959

H Multi Family H

2 bdrm, 1 bath, SE Bend New carpet, large yard. Pets okay. $7,900.00 or $1,000 down, $200 month. 541-383-5130. 3/1 in DRW. Nice yard, W/D, fridge., new furnace, new bath plumbing, quiet park. $8900. 541-728-0529. 60311 Cheyenne Rd., #16

14 ACRES, tall pines bordering Fremont National Forest, fronts on paved road, power at property. Zoned R5 residential, 12 miles north of Bly, OR. $45,000. Terms owner 541-783-2829.

Move-In Ready! Homes start at $8999. Delivered & set-up start at $28,500, on land, $49,000, Smart Housing, LLC, 541-350-1782.

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Smith Rock Mobile Park, Space 17. 55+ Park. 2 bdrm., 1.5 bath, A/C, awning, storage, RV parking. $15,000 OBO. 541-499-2845,541-475-2891

Guaranteed Build Time or ...

WE PAY YOU! Call for a FREE Plan Book Central Oregon (800) 970-0149

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Northwest Bend Homes COUNTRY LIVING, CITY CLOSE. Near Tumalo park & river, 1.25 acres, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, pond, studio, 4-car garage. Owner/ broker, 541-633-3033. $313,000. FSBO, Gated Community w/all amenities on 1/2 acre, 3+2 & bonus studio apt, near river, elec./wood heat, $350,000. 541-617-5787.

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Southwest Bend Homes $4000 Down DRW, 24X48 3/2 Golden West mfd. home on 1 acre canal lot, payment $697 mo./30 yrs. Owner for info. 541-505-8000. Eugene.

$75,900 $71,900 (limited time)* *Limited number available at this price. Only available from Central Oregon office.

NEW PLAN - SAVE $4,000!

On Your Site, On Time, Built Right


E6 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

COLDWELL BANKER www.bendproperty.com

MORRIS REAL ESTATE SA OPE T. N 11 -3

G N DI

5 acres with older manufactured home on it. Great potential for dream home, mountain views, newer well, beautiful gardens with lots of flowers; 3 garage areas; plenty of room for all your toys. MLS#2010006336 4285 NW Coyner Ave.

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SYNDE ANDERSON, Broker, CRS, WCR 541-420-1111

Powell Butte | $665,000

New Earth Advantage townhomes in 19+ acres with Cascade views from every NORTHWEST CROSSING. Great room w/ room. Low maintenance property. 1-level, gas fireplace. Secluded patio. 3 bedrooms, 2.5 great room, 3 bedrooms + den. 2.5 baths. baths, double garage. Move in today! Builder 3-car garage, shop, barn & paddocks. to contribute $5,000 toward closing costs. MLS#201004379 MLS#2713334 Directions: Shumway, east on Busset, right 2502 NW Crossing Dr. on Robinson.11305 Robinson Ln.

MARGO DEGRAY, Broker, ABR, CRS 541-383-4347

Independently Owned and Operated

Bend, OR 97702

REALTOR

Prineville | $77,000

Rivers Edge Village | $99,000

SE Bend | $120,000

Darling home, completely updated with new windows, carpet, paint and kitchen cabinets. Cozy gas fireplace in living room. Nice fenced back yard. MLS#201005779

G N I D N E P

Enjoy the sunrise from this large east facing view lot. Some City, Smith Rocks and southern views. Almost 1/4 acre and reduced to $99,000! MLS#201005716

Great starter home! Remodeled bathrooms, newer carpet and a new roof. Located on a large .2 of an acre lot. Great home for the price. Bring all offers. MLS#201005586

WENDY ADKISSON, Broker 541-383-4337

DICK HODGE, Broker 541-383-4335

JJ JONES, Broker 541-610-7318 • 541-788-3678

Redmond | $164,900

NW Bend | $164,900

LI NE ST W IN G

Open Sat. & Sun. 12-4 | $299,900 RE PR DU ICE CE D

Redmond | $169,500

486 SW Bluff Dr.

SAT OP . & EN SU N. 1 -3

541-382-4123

MARY STRONG, Broker, MBA 541-728-7905

Lot Close to River | $120,000 Must See Inside | $139,000 For Lease - Prime Location Hassle-Free & Affordable | $139,900

Woodriver Village is the location of this lot Bright and affordable with 4 bedrooms which is .40 of an acre and you could sub- plus family room. Large windows bring divide into 3 lots. Just south of Farewell in the sunlight while refinished wood Bend Park and the Deschutes River. Great floors, fresh carpet and paint invite you to location, close to the Old Mill. make this your home. MLS#201005580 MLS#2910497

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

1330 - 7500 sq. ft. available. Street front, corner of Reed Market & 3rd St. High traffic volume, great visibility and ample parking. $.75-$1.50 per sq. ft. MONTH TO MONTH LEASE AVAILABLE. 1180 S. Hwy 97

Updated/upgraded NE Bend condo. New appliances, carpet and stone. 2 master suites with A/C, 2.5 baths. Great room with fireplace, fans. Large 2-car garage. Pool, spa, clubhouse, tennis. All landscaping done for you! MLS#2808401

LESTER & KATLIN FRIEDMAN FRIEDMAN & FRIEDMAN, P.C., Brokers 541-330-8491 • 541-330-8495

Nice home with an open floor plan, large Build your dream home on this dining area, gas fireplace and pantry. spectacular north facing view lot! .72 acre Natural gas furnace plus a heat pump to on a quiet cul-de-sac in Skyliner Summit meet all your heating and cooling needs. area close to downtown. City lights view Incredible water feature in backyard. at night! A must see!! MLS#201005616 MLS#201005795 1962 Jack Lake Ct.

ROOKIE DICKENS, Broker, GRI, CRS, ABR 541-815-0436

JOY HELFRICH, Broker 541-480-6808

LISA CAMPBELL, Broker 541-419-8900

DARRYL DOSER, Broker, CRS 541-383-4334

Redmond Charm | $165,000

NE Bend | $199,900

Redmond | $199,900

Elevated corner lot. Builder’s own home, charming features. Wood ceilings, custom gas fireplace, feature bay window. Extensive decking, nice landscaping. No thru traffic. MLS#201005147 Directions: Hwy 97 to Maple to 1856 NW 8th

Great single level living in super neighborhood. Vaulted, gas fireplace, two dining options, large master suite, landscaped, quiet fenced backyard, comfort and ease for $199,900. MLS#201002133

Turn Key & Move-In Ready. Open flowing floor plan, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, vaulted ceilings, separate living areas. Laundry room. Gas heat, A/C, gas fireplace. Large deck. Great location. MLS#201001969

Updated beautiful 3 bedroom home with 2-car garage + a detached extra garage that has heat. Situated on a cul-de-sac. For complete info please call the toll-free recording at 800-909-8572 ex 111. MLS#201004017

Better than new 3 bedroom, 2 bath! Conveniently located in new neighborhood close to shopping & medical facilities. Great room floor plan with gas fireplace. Large corner lot, fenced back yard & mountain views MLS#201004596

3 bedroom, 2 bath, office, walk-in closet, jetted tub & marble tile. Tongue & groved pine vaulted ceiling. 2-car attached garage. Located in Tall Pines north of downtown La Pine, privacy on 1 acre. MLS#201003652

SUE CONRAD, Broker, CRS 541-480-6621

JUDY MEYERS, Broker, GRI 541-480-1922

JOANNE MCKEE, Broker, ABR, GRI, CRS 541-480-5159

NICHOLE BURKE, Broker 661-378-6487 • 541-312-7295

GREG FLOYD, P.C., Broker 541-390-5349

SUSAN AGLI, Broker, SRES 541-383-4338 • 541-408-3773

Smith Rock & Cascade Views | $250,000

SW Bend | $250,000

Golf Course Frontage | $275,000

NW Bend | $299,500

River Rim | $335,000

River Rim | $335,000

Single level with upgrades; granite counters, cherry cabinets, hardwood & slate floors, 3-car garage, floor to ceiling cabinets and Ultimate garage flooring. Spectacular landscaping, deck with portico. MLS#201006286 60955 Woods Valley Pl.

3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2300 sq. ft. Open great room floor plan with 2 dining areas, master on main, den, 3-car garage, room to expand, & more. Beautiful outdoor living area. MLS#201004068 19950 Sugar Mill Loop

MARK VALCESCHINI, P.C., Broker, CRS, GRI 541-383-4364

VIRGINIA ROSS, Broker, ABR, CRS, GRI 541-383-4336

JOHN SNIPPEN, Broker, MBA, ABR, GRI 541-312-7273 • 541-948-9090

Bank Owned | $359,950

Sunriver | $375,000

Golf Course View | $375,000

La Pine | $233,500

SA OPE T. N 11 -2

SA OPE T. N 12 -3

Newer Extra Garage NE Bend/Single Level | $229,900

MARTHA GERLICHER, Broker 541-408-4332

RE PR DU ICE CE D

Big, close up view of Smith Rock & Very cute 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1554 sq. ft. 2ND FAIRWAY, Bend Golf & Country Two homes on one RM zoned lot. Each Cascade Views. 4.69 Acre Lot, 2.50 acres home on a private corner lot near the Old Club. Premium location in Timber Ridge. cottage style home has 1 bedroom - 1 Irrigated & Septic FS Approved. Great Mill. Nice, open floor plan with skylights. 1820 sq. ft., single level, one-owner, 2nd bath. Close to NW shopping, schools and horse and view property. Call for more Beautifully landscaped yard, fully fenced home with great room styling and pool parks. information. Great price for a rare find. with hot tub. room. Lots of windows and good privacy. MLS#201003696 MLS#2906502 MLS#201005340 MLS#2910602

DIANE LOZITO, Broker 541-548-3598

SCOTT HUGGIN, Broker, GRI 541-322-1500

DON & FREDDIE KELLEHER, Brokers 541-383-4349

Eagle Crest | $339,000 Views in Powell Butte | $339,900 NE Bend/Invest Now | $349,000

This chalet offers many upgrades, has rarely been used and has never been in the rental pool. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1447 sq. ft. Located on the 9th fairway, enjoy all the amenities of Eagle Crest Resort. MLS#2714563

Beautiful Cascade Mountain views, Bachelor to Mt. Hood on 6.09 acres. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Corian slab in kitchen, separate 288 sq. ft. bonus/office off detached garage. Lots of space to park RVs. MLS#201001965

CRAIG LONG, Broker 541-480-7647

CAROLYN PRIBORSKY, P.C., Broker, ABR, CRS 541-383-4350

LYNNE CONNELLEY, EcoBroker, ABR, CRS 541-408-6720

JACKIE FRENCH, Broker 541-312-7260

CHUCK OVERTON, Broker, CRS, ABR 541-383-4363

RAY BACHMAN, Broker, GRI 541-408-0696

Mountain High | $429,000

Views! | $470,000

NW Bend | $519,900

SW Bend | $575,000 RE PR DU ICE CE D

Ridgewater | $383,000 Sunriver Fun! | $385,000

Fully rented 4-plex built in 1995 within Beautiful NW Bend 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 2100 sq. ft., 3 bedroom, 3 bath totally 1879 sq. ft., 2 bedroom, 2 bath located 2747 sq. ft. home on .23 of an acre lot. blocks of medical center, bus line and remodeled. 2 fireplaces, gourmet kitchen, in gated Mountain High Community. Two-year Home Warranty. Open floor shopping. Quiet street. Each unit 3 bedgranite counters. Oversized 2-car garage Overlooks the 13th fairway. Granite plan with gas fireplace. Nice deck to a room/2.5 baths, 1-car garage with washer/ with storage, landscaped/sprinkler system. counters, stainless steel range/oven, builtfenced and private backyard. dryer hookups. Lots of parking. MLS#201004983 in refrigerator & Pozzi wood windows. MLS#201005470 MLS#201006185 tourfactory.com/526869 Park-like setting #1 Stag Lane MLS#201003573

Ranch Cabin close to the river, playground, tennis courts, trails, the mall and pool. 3 bedrooms plus a loft. Master is on main floor. Back deck and fireplace in the living room. MLS#2807398

Spacious 3052 sq. ft. home on .42 of City lights and Smith Rock, fantastic Beautiful Craftsman in NorthWest Crossan acre wooded lot. Traditional sunken views from almost every room. Main ing. Great location. Open floor plan with living room with fireplace and a great level living, quality builder. 3009 sq. ft., lots of vaults and windows, large kitchen, room/family room. Private setting at back 4 bedrooms + office & bonus room. 3-car master on main, extensive hardwood and of cul-de-sac. Large master suite. garage. Not a short sale! tile. Fenced backyard & extra parking. MLS#201004189 MLS#2911624 MLS#201000475

3 bedroom, 3 bath, 3189 sq. ft. home completely remodeled in 2005. Nice .60 acre lot in a great location on the way to Mt. Bachelor. Beautiful kitchen, open floor plan, huge master suite & RV parking. MLS#201004368

SHERRY PERRIGAN, Broker 541-410-4938

DOROTHY OLSEN, Broker, CRS, GRI 541-312-7263

CRAIG SMITH, Broker 541-322-2417

CATHY DEL NERO, P.C., Broker 541-410-5280

NANCY MELROSE, Broker 541-312-7263

GREG MILLER, P.C., Broker, CRS, GRI 541-322-2404

Black Butte Ranch | $575,000

Sunriver | $594,900

NW Bend/Awbrey Glen | $675,000

NW Bend | $695,000

2.5 Acres | $695,000

NE Bend | $749,000

Numerous upgrades have been completed on this 4 bedroom, 3 bath, 2034 sq. ft. furnished home that sleeps 15. Great room floor plan with master bedroom on main level. Double attached garage. MLS#201003074

Multiple upgrades, extra-tall ceilings upstairs & down, combed cedar siding, oversized 2-car garage. 2 master suites + a lock-out. Expansive views from the upstairs living area. Previous rental info. available. MLS#201005860

Custom built home on .6 of an acre lot. Beautiful high end details throughout. 4 bedrooms, office, and bonus room! Main floor master. Private wooded yard with water feature and hot tub. MLS#201003567

Incredible Cascade views, 40 acres designated Wildlife Habitat, 23 acres water, horse set-up, borders government land. Custom home, soaring ceilings and windows, floor to ceiling fireplace. Serene! MLS#201002767

Impeccable single level, on a park-like 2.5 acres. Located at the edge of Bend city limits. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 3034 sq. ft. MLS#201006141

Beautiful, open 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath floor plan on almost 20 acre estate. Mountain views, park-like landscaping, security gate, RV storage, 6-stall barn and turnouts. Won’t last long at this price! MLS#201006113

PAT PALAZZI, Broker 541-771-6996

JACK JOHNS, Broker, GRI 541-480-9300

DIANE ROBINSON, Broker, ABR 541-419-8165

JIM & ROXANNE CHENEY, Brokers 541-390-4030 • 541-390-4050

NORMA DU BOIS, P.C., Broker 541-383-4348

DARRIN KELLEHER, Broker 541-788-0029

Redmond | $750,000

Tumalo Country Setting | $989,000

NW Bend | $995,000

SE Bend | $1,100,000

SE Bend | $1,149,000

405.5 Acres/Income Stream | $1,700,000

3 bedroom, 3 bath log home on 20 acres located south of Redmond. 10.5 acres of irrigation, fenced, level property with 2 fish ponds. One with fish. MLS#2910155

Privacy with Cascade Mountain views, in-ground irrigated pastures & pond. ONE LEVEL remodeled & updated. Granite kitchen, travertine floors, new baths & beamed ceilings. 2-car garage, 30x48 shop, 36x32 barn. MLS#2909228 18769 Ridgecrest Rd.

4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3767 sq. ft. home in beautiful condition with gorgeous mountain views on a 1.6 acre lot, a total private setting. Sit on your deck and watch the sunsets. Triple attached garage. MLS#201001648

Exquisite 5466 sq. ft. home, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms + 2 1/2 baths. Great room, formal dining & den. Upstairs bonus room & 1/2 bath. 18.24 acres, 2.5 irrigated, 6+ car/RV garage, Cascade Mountain views. MLS#2910060

Take in sweeping Cascade Mtn. views from this gorgeous home on over 19 acres. Gourmet kitchen, lots of stone and “Tuscan” accents. Estate-like private setting, swimming pool and detached studio. MLS#2902614

High on the NW side of Grizzly Mountain by thousands of acres of Grasslands. 4 buildable parcels, springs, pond, timber, 2 structures & wells. Power, wildlife and rock quarry for income stream. Owner terms. MLS#201005415

BILL PORTER, Broker 541-383-4342

CAROL OSGOOD, Broker 541-383-4366

DAVE DUNN, Broker 541-390-8465

SHELLY HUMMEL, Broker, CRS, GRI, CHMS 541-383-4361

JANE STRELL, Broker 541-948-7998

BOB JEANS, Broker 541-728-4159

LI NE ST W IN G

Inviting European Country Flair in this one-of-a-kind 3 or 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath, 3800 sq. ft. home. Exquisite quality wood work, tile, travertine, stain glass & dramatic 2-story, vaulted living room with loft. MLS#201003319


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 F1

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EMPLOYEE PRICING ON THESE AND MANY MORE BOB THOMAS DEALS!

SUMMER PRE-OWNED SUPER SALE!

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2006 MINI Cooper

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2007 Toyota Highlander

2008 Honda CR-V

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$19,747

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2008 Chevrolet Silverado LS

2007 GMC Yukon SLE

#W30404A,VIN: 155199

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ACCORD

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Special HFS A.P.R. financing available on all new 2010 Accord, Civic, Accord Crosstour, Insight, Fit and Ridgeline models. 0.9% APR financing for 24-60 months available to customers who qualify for the HFS Super Preferred or Preferred credit tier. Example: 0.9% for 36 months financing at $28.16 a month for every $1,000.00 financed. Dealers set actual vehicle sales prices. See participating dealers for details. For well qualified buyers. Not all buyers may qualify. Higher rates apply for buyers with lower credit ratings. Offer valid July 1, 2010 through September 7, 2010 only on approved credit by Honda Financial Services through participating dealers. Honda Financial Services’ standard credit criteria apply.

O N 3 R D S T R E E T J U S T N O R T H O F T H E U N D E R PA S S W W W. B O B T H O M A S - H O N D A . C O M (541) 382-2911

O N 3 R D S T R E E T J U S T N O R T H O F T H E U N D E R PA S S W W W. B O B T H O M A S - H O N D A . C O M (541) 382-2911 Vehicles subject to prior sale. Photos for illustration purposes only.


F2 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

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

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PLACE AN AD

Edited by Will Shortz

Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines *UNDER $500 in total merchandise 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16.00

Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

Garage Sale Special

OVER $500 in total merchandise 4 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $17.50 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32.50 28 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60.50

4 lines for 4 days. . . . . . . . . $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

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

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 8:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

*Must state prices in ad

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702 PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday.

General Merchandise

200 202

Want to Buy or Rent WANTED: Cars, Trucks, Motorcycles, Boats, Jet Skis, ATVs - RUNNING or NOT! 541-280-6786. Wanted washers and dryers, working or not, cash paid, 541- 280-6786. Wanted washers and dryers, working or not, cash paid, 541- 280-6786. We Want Your Junk Car!! We'll buy any scrap metal, batteries or catalytic converters. 7 days a week call 541-390-6577/541-948-5277

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Items for Free Faux Log Siding, large amount, you pull nails, FREE, call 503-882-6499.

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Items for Free

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

Low Cost Spay & Neuter is HERE!! Have your cats & dogs spayed and neutered! Cats: $40 (ask about out Mother & Kittens Special!) Dogs: $65-$120 (by weight). We also have vaccines & microchips avail. 541-617-1010. www.bendsnip.org

Pembroke Welch Corgi Pups AKC reg., 3 males, 2 females, $300, Madras, 541-475-2593

Pallets, Free, good cond. or great firewood, you load and haul, 541-420-0097.

Adult Cat Adoption Special BORDER COLLIE/ HEELER Chocolate AKC Lab male $300. During the Month of July PUPS. $125. Call Shots, wormed dewclaws. adoption fee for all adult cats 541-763-4052, Fossil, OR. Ready 7-4-10. Please call is only $20.00. All Cats are Stephanie at: 541-932-4868 Scrap/Firewood, NE Bend, tested for feline aids/leuke- Border Collie pups, workor email ing parents great personaliFree, you haul, please call mia. Adoption includes spay/ stephsthekid@yahoo.com ties. $300. 541-546-6171. 541-420-0809. neuter, microchip, first set of vaccinations and a free Chocolate & Black health exam with a local vet- Boxer Puppies, AKC Registered $700 each, 1st two shots Lab puppies. AKC Regiserinarian. For information What are you 541-325-3376. tered. Ready to go. Call come by the shelter at 1355 looking for? You’ll Jack Jennings at: NE Hemlock Ave or call Cavalier King Charles Spaniels 541-633-9113 541-923-0882. . find it in The Breeding pair. Ruby 3 yrs female, blenheim male 9 Bulletin Classifieds AKC Alaskan Malamute months. Excellent pets & Dachshunds Mini health guarPups, ready now, $600-$650 breeders. $1000 each. antee, puppy kit, pics & info eac h. 541-408-4715 541-419-7680 highdesertdogsonline.com mandk@oregonfast.net $300 each 541-416-2530 Chihuahua- Absolutely adorable AKC German Shorthair 208 teacups, 2 males, wormed, 1st English Bulldog, AKC Reg, 1 Pups, avail. 8/1 $650. shots, $250, 541-977-4686 male left $1700, all shots Pets and Supplies (541)678-0107 905-6644 541-325-3376.

541-385-5809

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to fraud. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Hot Tub, requires repair, FREE, you haul, please call 503-882-6499.

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Estate Sales

Estate Sales

All goes, machine, shop tools, antiques, camp, gun cabinet, china, furniture,snow blower, 55836 Wood Duck Dr, Sunriver,Fri-Sat, 9-3, 541-385-7414

HH FREE HH Garage Sale Kit

Barn/ Misc./ Collectibles Sale! 68308 Cloverdale R d . Fri. Sat, 8-4. Yard & misc. tools/hardware, Honda 5.5 compressor, p/up tool box, 2001 Toyota Avalon, Roadmaster tow bar, Victorian child’s sled, 1800s walnut chairs, oak rocker, parlor and dining room chairs, dbl. bed, 1920s curved front hutch, folding screen, bookcases, toys, records, TV computer tables, camp cot, Body Solid weight machine, digital camera, lens, collectible glassware, old kitchen, Hoosier spice jars, and canisters, cut depression, Fenton Fry Foval, Bohemian, Carnival and Westmorland, kerosene table and hanging lamps, nic-nacs, old jars, Shawnee Gondor and McCoy pottery, Jewel tea, restaurant-ware, vintage dishes, HL Mossrose, Satsuma tea set, linens, framed 1890s Appanzell lace runner, vintage cookbooks, craft, antique, collectible reference books, leather craftsman, Arabian Horse World, history, biography, vintage sewing machine, art, prints and oil, and more.

DON'T FORGET to take your signs down after your garage sale and be careful not to place signs on utility poles! www.bendbulletin.com

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs • $1.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For “Garage Sale Success!” • And Inventory Sheet PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT AT: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

AKC German Shorthair puppies, solid liver, both parents used for guiding, great pets. $450. 541-420-1869, msg. Black Lab AKC Puppy, dew claws removed, shots given, good field and show pedigree. Price reduced to $200. 541-280-5292

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Griffin Wirehaired Pointer Pups, both parents reg., 5 males, 4 females, born 6/20, ready for home 1st week in Aug, $1000, 541-934-2423 or loreencooper@centurytel.net

HAVANESE Male Puppies 8wks Non-Allergy/shed shots $900 Adult $500 541-915-5245

Heeler English Bulldog Puppies! Only 3 males left, ready for new homes July 1st. AKC certified and they have been vet checked and had 1st shots. $1800. each. Contact Laurie (541)388-3670

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Pups, standards & minis,$150 ea. 541-280-1537 http://rightwayranch.spaces.live.com

JACK RUSSELL PUPS, 7 weeks old, first shots, dew claws removed, tails docked. Females $225; males $200. 541-447-7616.

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Pembroke Welsh Corgies, AKC, KITTENS! Just in from foster 1st shots/worming, 8 weeks homes, social, playful, alold, males & female avail., tered, shots, ID chip, free vet 541-447-4399 visit, more! Low adoption fees, discount for 2. Nice Pembrook Welsh Corgi female, cats also avail. Open Sat/Sun 7 yrs., real sweetheart, owner 1-5 PM, call re: other days. Mini, AKC Dachshunds, black & moving must sell, paid $700 tan, black & brindle, short & 317-3931, 389-8420, phosell for $220. 541-588-0150 long hair, call for more intos/map: www.craftcats.org formation $275 to $325. Pomeranians,1 male wolf sable. 541-420-6044,541-447-3060 “Kittens, Kittens, Kittens” 1 black & white male & 1 female. $350ea. 541-480-3160 The Humane Society of RedMiniature American Eskimo mond has Kittens. Adoption 16 weeks, $250 (Sr. Citizen POODLES, AKC Toy,home fee of $40.00 includes spay/ discount) 541-788-0090. raised. Joyful tail waggers! neuter, microchip, first set of Affordable. 541-475-3889. vaccinations & a free health Miniature Australian exam with a local VeterinarPoodle, standard pups (5), only Shepherd - Show Quality ian. All kittens are tested for 2 weeks. Put your deposit black tri male. Born in Oct., feline aids/leukemia. For down now! 541-647-9831. current on shots. Pet price more information come by w/o papers/neuter agreethe shelter at 1355 NE HemPUG MIX PUPPIES, 3 boys, 1 ment $300. Out of Interlock Ave or call us at girl, $75 each. 1st shots. national Champion parents. 541-923-0882. 541-389-0322 For more info: www.ArrowBPaints.com or Koi, Water Lilies, Pond Plants. Schnoodle Pup, 10 week male, call: 541-576-2056 Central Oregon Largest 2nd shots, pup kit, very Selection. 541-408-3317 sweet $395. 541-410-7701. Min Pin Puppy, Adorable, Red, 12 weeks old, tail/ dew claw SHIH-POO adorable toy pups, Labradoodles, Australian hypo-allergenic, 1 male, 1 done. UTD shots. $200. Imports 541-504-2662 female left. $350 ea.. Call 541-598-7996. www.alpen-ridge.com Martha at 541-744-1804. Nice adult companion cats Labradoodles, multi-generation, SHIH-TZU MALE, 2 years, FREE to seniors! Altered, 4 left, born 5/19, chocolate gold and white, $275. shots, ID chip, more. & black, 541-647-9831. 541-788-0090. 541-398-8420.

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Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend

E S T A T E

S A L E

Family home since 1921! Lots of old things, bedroom set, small tables, mission rocker & chairs, old wooden tool chests & tools, trunks, WWII items, washtubs & enamelware, copper boiler, linens, childrens items, old paper & sheet music, old photos & albums, some Bend memorbilia, lots of beautiful colored glass of all kinds, figurines, nick-nacks, old pocket watches, coin collection, books, dish sets, plus sofa, lamps, loads of misc. House, yard & shed full.

F r i. & S a t . , 9 - 4 Crowd Control Numbers issued Friday at 8 a.m.

1 3 7 5

N W

Alb a n y

A t ti c E s t a t e s & A p p r a i s a l s 541-350-6822

For pictures & info go to

Flea Market

www.atticestatesandappraisals.com

GARAGE/BARN SALE Sun. 7/11, 9-2. Furniture, antique dishes, tools, jewelry, boat trailer. 23220 E. Hwy 20, follow signs.

“Free Barn Cats” The Humane Society of Redmond has Free Barn Cats available. All Barn Cats have been tested for feline aids/ leukemia, vaccinated, spayed /neutered. For more info call 541-923-0882 or come by the shelter at 1355 NE Hemlock Ave.

English Bulldog brindle female. 8 wks and ready to go! Please leave msg. 541-588-6490

Chihuahua Pups, Apple Head males well bred, small, $175. 541-420-4825.

Chi-Pom puppies, Active, 6 weeks old July 8. Healthy, playful & ready for a home. $200 cash for choice. Call for descriptions/photo. 541-480-2824.

French

Saturday, July 10, 10-4 Bend’s most fabulous flea market! Antiques, vintage and artisan goods. 120 NE River Mall Ave. See pomegranate-home.com

puppies 9 weeks old, 2 females available $200. Please call 541-460-3247 for more information.

Black & Yellow Lab Pups, AKC, champion hunting lines, Dew Claws removed, 1st shots, de-wormed & vet checked, ready to go, $350, 541-977-2551.

just s. of 14th & Galveston

at Pomegranate

Chihuahua

FOUND male loop-earred bunny KITTENS 2 girls, 2 boys, very friendly, and FREE! on 31st St. in Redmond, July 541-389-0322. 1st. Call 541-948-5202.

Estate Sale, Sat. & Sun., 8am3pm. 723 NW Harmon Blvd. between Galveston & Newport. Lots of quality stuff. Garage Sale: freight-damaged swords & knives, like new; Ford access. p/up & cars, tools, table saw. Fri.-Sat., 8-5, 65530 78th St.

Garage Sale,NW Crossing, 2465 NW Sacagaewa Ln, alley access, Fri 8-4, Sat. 9-2, home decor, lots of misc.

ITS NO ORDINARY GARAGE SALE! Huge estate sale filling an airplane hangar! High GARAGE SALE Sat.7/10 7-2pm. Toys, tools games, books & end, like new, furniture, acmore. 20210 Meadow Ln. cessories, & art from an Hwy 20 to Mtn View to Sceamazing Tumalo ranch home! nic to Meadow Ln. July 9-11. Fri 3-6pm, Sat & Sun 9-3pm. 1120 SE Sisters Liquidation sale 90% of stuff is Estate Fri. & Sat. 8-3, 2440 Ave, Redmond. Look for NEW. Multi-family! Lighting SW Indian Ave., Redsigns, north side of airport. & tile galore! Gifts & drapery, mond, furniture, antiques, home improv, tools, baby/ SATURDAY 9-1, 61476 Brosterappliances, tools & more. toddler clothes & toys. Fri & hous Rd. Parti-lite, houseSat. 8:30-4. 63290 Lavacrest hold items, tools, computer, Estate Sale Sat/Sun. 8-4 colSt. 97701 kids clothes, and more. lectables, china, crystal, pk Moving To Mexico: Sat. 8-2, tires & wheels, utility box, 64495 Research Rd., Tumalo, 281 camping, household +nudownsizing, designer items, merous items 15433 Quail Fundraiser Sales tools, 7’ Christmas tree. Crooked River Ranch 541-980-5981 Please help support us building Multi Family, Fri. thru Sun. a much-needed orphanage 8-5, 21316 Limestone, raFamily Estate Sale: 19202 for the street kids in Tijuana, dial arm saw, plants, weight Cherokee Rd., Fri. & Sat. 8-4, Mexico. Fri. & Sat., 9-6, huge bench, and so much more! go Baker Rd. left on Cinder multi-family garage sale. Butte., go 1 mi. left on Mini61581 Twin Lakes Loop. NOTICE tonka, right on Cherokee to Remember to remove sale, round oak table with 4 282 your Garage Sale signs chairs, hide-a-bed, lots of (nails, staples, etc.) after your hand tools, depression glass, Sales Northwest Bend Sale event is over! THANKS! 3 china closets oak hight From The Bulletin and your chair, lots of jewelry, 85 Merc Central Oregon Families with local Utility Companies Grand Marquis, (4) 5 ft. glass Multiples is having their anshowcases, new fridge, pornual BIG garage sale. Saturtable swamp cooler, too day July 10th from 7-2pm. much to list. MUST SEE, 1164 NW Redfield Circle on www.bendbulletin.com 382-6773. Awbrey Butte.

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Sales Redmond Area

Sales Other Areas

Huge garage sale! Tons of kid Multi-Family Sale: Sat. 8-4, Fri/Sat. 9-5, antiques & coland adult clothes mostly deClothes, woodworking tools, lectibles, clothes & home designer, household, bike seat, glassware, dishes, tires, cor & a whole lot more. kid jogger, toys and etc..... packing material, kids clothes Dealers discounts corner of 271 SE Amanda Ct.. SaturNW 22nd & Maple. & toys, 61579 American YARD SALE SAT ONLY 8 - 1. Friday & Saturday 9-4, day 7/10.. 8-2pm.. L p. off of American Ln. 1291 NW City Heights Dr., 20628 Obie Way, housekitchen, kids stuff, furn. and Garage Sale in Redmond. hold, furniture, fridge, tools, Huge Sale Sat. 8am to 1pm 3 Sporting, camping, household, TVs, appliances, light fixmore. Everything must go! Totally cleaned out house tools, automotive, bldg. supand much more! tures, household, clothing, & garage! Fri. & Sat. 7/9 & plies, nice things, good deals. 284 shoes, furniture, kitchen sink. Huge 2 Family Yard Sale, Sat. 10. 9 AM-3PM @ 559 SE Centennial. Thru Sun. 1962 SE Fairwood Dr. (Reed 10-?, 61860 Gosney Rd. an3590 SW 35th Street. Sales Southwest Bend Mkt., Shadowood, Fairwood) U Name It, I Might Have It! tique desk, furniture, 541-548-2048 Fri., Sat. & Sun. 8-4, 61445 children’s toys, train set, A TEACHER Retires! 100's SE 27th St. #121, no tools or costumes holiday decor Books, Trim, Charts, Bulletin HUGE SALE fishing gear, years of stuff! housewares clothes all great Huge Community Yard Sale to Boards, VINTAGE JEWELRY, ~Tools, camping gear, condition, from NE 27th St. Benefit Animals. July 10-11, Crafts, Homeschool, Juicer, Yard Sale: Fri. 7/9 - Sun. 7/18, bikes, books, Log Queen 3.5 mi. out Hwy. 20 East. 8-5, 8950 S. Hwy 97, in big Household Etc. 8-5, SAT. 9-?, 69 SE Cessna Dr., lots of Bed Set, Dining set, home yellow barn! 100's of items, July 10. 19760 Rock Bluff Ln. great stuff, something for decor. Everything's gotta HUGE Estate Sale, Thurs. must sell to vacate barn! All everyone! go! Friday 8 - 4, Saturday Big Garage Sale: Friday 8-4, Fri. & Sat. 8-3, 22405 proceeds for nonprofit res8-4. 2234 SE Pilatus Lane, and Saturday 8-12, Cool Alfalfa Mkt. Rd. at Powell cue efforts. 728-4178. 290 Bend, 97702. 541-389-7307 stuff, 19915 Quail Pine Butte Hwy. Antiques, huntLp., off Powers. ing & fishing items, tools and Sales Redmond Area HUGE Estate Sale Thurs Moving Sale, Fri & Sat. 7-3, much much more! 7-4, Fri. & Sat. 9-4. Divorce Sale! Decor, house21115 Merrit Court in Pon- Big garage sale Saturday at antiques, tools, tools tools! wares, collectibles. 61280 HUGE GARAGE SALE. FRI/SAT derosa Estates off 27th 2633 SW Evergreen Ave in Fishing, camping, lawnmowBronze Meadow Ln., off Pow7/9-7/10. 9:00-3:00. 21189 Street queen bed, camping Redmond. Furniture, Home ers, chainsaws, vintage tools, ers. Sat., 8-3. No early birds. Cooley Rd. Bend. Furniture, gear, tools, crafts, hunting & kids & more. vintage farm implements, baby items and other cool fishing gear, books, Washe & Downsizing Sale: Sat. Only, 8-3, Craftsman shredder/chipper, Eagle Crest The Ridge, Fri. junk! Deschutes Mkt. to JD Dryer available July 28th. 19979 Heron Lp, No early 3-wheeler, boat motors, yard & Sat. 9-4 at multiple loEstates. JD estates to birds, furniture, small kitchen tools, yard decor, air comMULTI-FAMILY, appliances, cations starting at Merlin Cooley. 541-322-0683 appl., clothes, linens, more! pressor, vintage bikes, utility computer, luggage, decor, Dr. (directions to West trailers, collectibles, Avon clothing, misc. Sat. only 7-3 ELIMINATED STORAGE UNIT MOVING SALE: Sat. only, 8-6. Ridge) Estate: Art, furniture, bottles, all household furni61584 SE Fargo Lane. Too much to list! 26630 Horsell Rd. in Alfalfa. golf clubs, cart, bikes, ture, 2000 Chevy Z71 4x4 Fri., Sat. & Sun. 10-4. Lots of vehicles, 2 D-4 Cats, Multi-Family Garage Sale: clothes, decor & much more. X-cab, corner of North 60958 Ashford Drive. tractors, backhoe, for more Fri. & Sat. 8-3, 21363 BarHelmholtz& Coyner info call Mark, 541-480-8388. tlett Ln., behind Compass Friday & Saturday 9-?, 2143 GARAGE SALE 7/10 & 11. and much more! NW Canyon Drive. Clothes, Church off Bear Creek. boating gear, tools, misc. Multi Family, Fri. 8-5 & Sat. household items and miscelprojects, 60891 Ashford Dr., 8-4, 20687 Flintlock Ct. MULTI-FAMILY Garage Sale, laneous. Romaine Village. HUGE Family SAT. ONLY, starts at 9. Lots tools, plumbing, furniture, Fri. & Sat. 8-4, 3749 SW Garage Sale -July 9,10,11, of cool stuff - furn. tools, etc. home decor and lots of misc. HUGE SALE! Sat. only, starts 8 TOMMY ARMOUR LN, vin8AM to 5PM Collectible everything will be sold! a.m. 19415 Blue Lake Loop. tage linens, kids books, Multi-Family, Fri.-Sat. 9-5, 2815 Books, Collectible Toys, 61326 Fairfield, cross st. off in The Parks,Everything Baby! records and much more. NE Woodridge Ct., books, Furniture, Avon ColFoxborough & Brosterhous. Household, camping, misc.! glassware, antiques, baby lectibles, Collectible items - crib, etc., wet suit, Gladys Steinlicht Spoons, Collectible FiguYard Sale: 19220 Cherokee Rd. child’s rolltop desk, 132 sq.ft. rines, Antiques, Clothes, DRW. Fri. & Sat. 8am-5pm. ceramic tile, lots more. Jewelry. Everything MUST Too much stuff to list. Tires, 60886 Willow Creek Loop Go! 2109 NW 98th Lane, boat, Jeep, tools, etc. Multi-Famiy Sale: Heavenly Redmond, off 101St., Hwy. SATURDAY, July 10 • SUNDAY, July 11 YARD SALE Fri., Sat., Sun, 9-6. Aroma Soy Candles, small 126 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Crowd control admittance 141 SW 15th St. #11. chest freezer, boys clothes & numbers issued at 8:00 am Saturday Housewares, furn., appl., toys, Heckle & Jeckle cookie tools, boat/motor, fishing. HUGE Garage Sale Fri. & Sat. jar, collectibles, more! Fri.-Sat. Parking only on side opposite of Mailboxes 8-3, 3131 SW 41st St. , off 9-4,1861 NE Tombstone Way DO NOT PARK ON GRASS! 286 of Wickiup, a little bit of evSir Christopher Sterling Flatware; 60 Hummel figurines; Antique erything! Sales Northeast Bend 288 Throne chair X base Dining Room table and 6 chairs Matching Sales Southeast Bend china Cabinet; 50 pieces of Fostoria American; Cut Glass; CranHuge Garage Sale, berry glass; Brides basket; Pickle Castor; Castor set; Over 300 Sat. 9am-4pm, Redmond Boys Fri. and Sat., 8-2. Tools, clothes pieces of jewelry costume and good; Antique round glass front & Girls Parking lot, 1055 SW & kids, 2-4, books, desk, china cabinet; Set of dishes; Queen bed; KitchenAid washer and Deschutes Ave. Don’t miss! 12th Annual Neighborhood pool, reloading equip., misc. dryer; Refrigerator; Two loveseats; coffee and end table; Sale Alpenview Lane off 61371 Ward Rd. Lamps; Linens; Hundreds of pieces of clothing and shoes for la- Multi-Family Sale July 9-11. Bear Creek Rd. Fri. 8-4 & dies, size 14 to XL and size 10 shoes; Dressers and chests and Sat. 8-2 follow the signs! Fri.-Sat. 8-4, 61315 Steens TOOLS; Pet & Golf supply; bookcases; Small side tables and outdoor furniture; Books and Housewares; Clothes; MORE! Table saw, camping, treadMtn. Lp, off 27th, antiques, cook books; Hundreds of Christmas items and other holiday 3024 NW 19th St, Redmond. mill, books, crafts, home dehousewares, tools, auto, RV, items; Oleg Cassini fur coat and other fur coats; Leather coats; cor, tools, desk, fabric-fat collectibles, golf clubs, more! Lots of pictures; Bookcases; Decorator items; 78 record player Park Wide Yard Sale, Mtn.. quarters and much more! and radio; Records - 33s; Purses; Quilting rack; Needlepoint View Mobile Home Park, Almost Empty Nest Sale. Toys, GREAT STUFF! Books, toys, pieces; Ice chests; Cleaning and food supplies; Faux Tiffany 6100 S. Hwy 97. Thurs.sports, fashionista, home deXBox, boat, bikes. 18th, style lamp; Bronzes; Kitchen pots and pans and bakeware and Sat., 9am-4pm. Lots of cor, hunting. Take Ward to Scottsdale, Futurity. 8-12 Sat tools; Few hand tools and garden tools and garden decor items; spaces selling many things!!! Ropp, Sat. only, 7:30 start. only. 541-419-4604. Brass--glass--silver-&-copper--items. So much more to see!!! Presented by: Unique Garage Sale: 1844 COMMUNITY YARD SALE HUGE GARAGE/ESTATE SALE NE 8th, Fri. & Sat. 8-3, lots 155 NE Craven Road #7, You don’t want to miss this Deedy’s Estate Sales Co., LLC of unique items and colBear Creek Village Apts. one! 105 SE Bridgeford Blvd. www.deedysestatesales.com lectibles, much more! JULY 10, 8-3 Fri. & Sat., 9-5. 541-419-2242 days ~ 541-382-5950 eves Sports equip. bikes, kids toys/clothes, log playhouse, lots more. 2652 NW Rainbow Ridge Dr. Sat. 9-2

Fossil/mineral specimens galore & home furnishing Something for everyone Sat/ Sun 9-3, 21789 Obsidian Ave.

SUPER MOVING SALE

4 Family Neighborhood Sale at West Powell Butte Estates on 126 between Redmond & Powell Butte, shop items, tools, antiques,quality clothes, vintage jewelry, Fri-Sat. 8-5. Follow signs from Hwy. 126.

Crooked River - Huge barn sale. July 10 & 11, 10-4pm. So many items at bargain prices-some free. Furniture, rugs, linens, art, kitchen, garden tools, hospital bed, small appliances, aircon, clothes, jewelry, much more. Signs to fire station to 9020 Panorama. Farm/Garage Sale: Fri.Sun., 9-6, Alfalfa area, 62645 Dodds Rd., 9 mi E. of Bend, off Hwy 20, 541-318-7070,

Fri. & Sat., 10-2. 16696 Shaw Pine Ct., E. off Hwy 97 at Finley Butte, and R. on Mitts. Accent furn., household, decorative, collectible items, vintage incl. jewelry, serpentine walnut daybed, scrapbook supplies, games, books, mens L and XL Tall suits & clothing, baby gear, Christmas, DVDs, CDs, albums. HUGE Estate Sale 50 plus yrs. of accumulation, Fri. & Sat. 8-5, Kent Rd. off Cloverdale Rd, Sisters, collectible cookbooks, carpentry tools, lots of guy stuff

Madras: Sat./Sun 8-4, 2478 SE Bitterbrush Dr., Canyon View Estates quality clothes for men & women +access. decor outdoor pots, decor, & furniture, rugs, bedding etc . Saturday & Sunday 8 am.-5 pm., 3340 NW Odem Avenue, Terrebonne, guns, rifles, sporting goods & more.


THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 F3

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809 208

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Pets and Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Sporting Goods - Misc.

Misc. Items

Fuel and Wood

HELP YOUR AD TO stand out from the rest! Have the top line in bold print for only $2.00 extra.

Log Truck loads of dry Lodgepole firewood, $1200 for Bend Delivery. 541-419-3725 or 541-536-3561 for more information.

Siberian Husky puppies AKC. Champion lines. $725. stones-siberians@live.com 541-330-8627

Standard Poodle Jabez Pups, 6 males & 2 females, chocolate, black, apricot & cream $800 & $750. 541-771-0513 Jabezstandardpoodles.com Whippet Puppies, 6 weeks unique family dogs $350 each. 541-280-1975. Working cats for barn/shop, companionship. FREE, fixed, shots. Will deliver! 389-8420 Yellow Lab AKC Puppies, OFA hips/elbows cert., champion bloodlines, dew claws removed, 1st shots & wormed, ready 8/1, $500. 541-728-0659. (Taking deps.) Yorkie, AKC, Male, 8.5 mo., weighs 5.5 lbs., very active, housebroken, loves children, $500 Firm. No checks. 541-419-3082

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The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D . For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Surf Board, 9’6”, Jacobs, new, $600 OBO, signed by Hap Jacobs, call 541-306-4632.

249

Art, Jewelry and Furs Christian Lassen Ocean Serigraphs (3), 20% of 2003 appraisal, 541-306-4632. Rare Ann Ruttan Original, 6’x4’, $7000 OBO, please call 541-408-4613.

251

VANITY late 1940s, exc. cond, carved mirror, $265. 541-633-3590.

Hot Tubs and Spas

Washer, Kenmore, Super Capacity Plus, $125, please call 541-598-4714.

Hurricane 7 Person Self Contained Spa, wood sides, newer pump, cover, runs great, $995. 541-408-7908

212

Antiques & Collectibles

Furniture & Appliances

Need help fixing stuff around the house? Call A Service Professional and find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

255

Computers

#1 Appliances • Dryers • Washers

Kenmore Gas BBQ’er, side burner exc. shape, $75. 541-480-5950. NEED TO CANCEL OR PLACE YOUR AD? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line Call 383-2371 24 hrs. to cancel or place your ad! PATIO SET Tropitone 87” tile stone table, chairs & umbrella, make offer. 388-2348. The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 7 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised equals $25 or Less • One ad per month • 3-ad limit for same item advertised within 3 months Call 385-5809 fax 385-5802 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

SEASONED JUNIPER $150/cord rounds, $170/cord split. Delivered in Central Oregon. Call eves. 541-420-4379 msg. Tamarack & Red Fir Split & Delivered, $185/cord, Rounds $165, Seasoned, Pine & Juniper Avail. 541-416-3677, 541-788-4407

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Trees, Plants & Flowers HUGE TREE LIQUIDATION SALE!! 300 Trees left, dont miss out! Shade & Ornamental potted trees. Must Go! $8-$17. Volume discounts avail. Sat. & Sun. 10-4, 6268 W. Hwy 126, Redmond. 541-480-5606.

269

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Farm Market

300 308

Farm Equipment and Machinery 1998 New Holland Model "1725" Tractor. $13,900. Very good condition. Original owner. 3 cylinder diesel. 29hp. ~ 1300 hours. PTO never used. Backhoe and box scraper included. Trailer also available. (541) 420-7663. 2005 Kubota L5030HSTC 4WD w/LA853 Loader. 166 hours. 50 HP Diesel. Hydro Static. A/C Cab. $29,500 Estate Sale. 541-480-3265 DLR. Big Newhouse cattle squeeze chute needs paint $500. 541-447-1039.

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days

THE BULLETIN requires computer advertisers with mulBarkTurfSoil.com tiple ad schedules or those Instant Landscaping Co. selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the PROMPT DELIVERY name of the business or the Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi 541-389-9663 Start at $99 term "dealer" in their ads. FREE DELIVERY! Flow Blue and Potato masher audio & studio equip. McInPrivate party advertisers are Lifetime Warranty collection; vintage African DAN'S TRUCKING tosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, defined as those who sell one Also, Wanted Washers, fabric & Saris. 541-419-9406. Top soil, fill dirt, landscape Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, computer. Dryers, Working or Not & gravel. Call for quotes NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 OUTDOOR MARKET (Private Party ads only) Call 541-280-6786 504-8892 or 480-0449 256 Wedding/shower decor: cenSaturday, 10-4 Appliances! A-1 Quality & Honesty! terpieces, some floral, bridal Free: 42” Riding mower, need Fuel tank 64 inch wide for Immigrant’s Corner Photography A-1 Washers & Dryers shower games. $5 all; nice engine. You haul. Marketplace, 675 SE 9th pickup with pump $235. $125 each. Full Warranty. cut-glass pattern punch bowl, 541-923-8627. 541-318-9959 541-447-1039. Camera, Nikon FE 35 mm, Free Del. Also wanted W/D’s with stand, 10 glass cups, 36-72 Zoom & 28-200 Zoom, dead or alive. 541-280-7355. Check out the 215 John Deere 2X16 hydraulic plastic ladle $20; Glass buf$300 OBO, like new, classifieds online rollover plow with 3 pt. hitch fet luncheon plates, 1960s Appliances, new & recondiCoins & Stamps 541-306-4632. $485. 541-447-1039. style $10 all. Come & see, www.bendbulletin.com tioned, guaranteed. Overmake offer on any or all. 257 stock sale. Lance & Sandy’s WANTED TO BUY Updated daily SWATHER DOLLY, $500; 541-419-6408. Maytag, 541-385-5418 US & Foreign Coin, Stamp & Musical Instruments Baler NH 282, PTO, twine, Lawn Edge Trimmer, CraftsCurrency collect, accum. Pre Bdrm., Set, queen size, incl. 261 SOLD; Bale Wagon, man 4 hp., 3 wheel, like new 1964 silver coins, bars, mattress, boxsprings, used 1 NH1010 SOLD; Swather Medical Equipment $195. 541-388-0811. rounds, sterling fltwr. Gold mo., 2 night stands, head/ Hesston 6400, $3500; J D coins, bars, jewelry, scrap & footboard, dresser, chest, SUPER TOP SOIL Swather, Cab, A/C, diesel, Electric Hospital Bed and Matdental gold. Diamonds, Rolex $700, 541-419-4260. A300 Twin Knife header, tress, side rails $175. S.E. www.hersheysoilandbark.com & vintage watches. No colScreened, soil & compost 1910 Steinway Model A $5500; all field ready, PrinevBend. phone 541-617-6071 Bed, Captains, twin size, 4 lection to large or small. Bedmixed, no rocks/clods. High Parlor Grand Piano burled ille, 541-419-9486 drawers, $50, please call rock Rare Coins 541-549-1658 humus level, exc. for flower 263 mahogany, fully restored in & 541-598-4714. beds, lawns, gardens, out, $46,000 incl. profes241 Tools straight screened top soil. sional West Coast delivery. Comfortaire Hospital Type Bicycles and Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you 541-408-7953. Drill Press, American Machine, Motorized Queen Bed The haul. 541-548-3949. Accessories 5-spd., industrial model, very best, in great condi1950’s Baldwin Baby Grand $225, 541-385-9350. tion $950 OBO. 541-788 Piano, w/bench, good 270 Schwinn Womens High Timber -6184 cond., needs some intermal Milling Machine, Tree Brand, Alum. mnt. bike. Shocks, like Lost and Found repair, $475, 541-408-3215. 42”, power feed articulating new, $170. 541-480-5950 Entertainment Center, with 27” head, tools, hold downs, vice, Found: 2 Hats & Scarf after paRARE EGCon acoustic guitar Hitachi TV, $125, please call Sidewinder Mountain Bikes, 2 $3200, 541-549-1875. some classical, hispanic, rade on Sun. 7/4, Oregon New 26” Schwinn, $85 ea 541-598-4714. western. $239 541-382-2543. Wagner Paint Crew, used twice, Ave, call 541-382-4464. T HE L ITTLE G I A N T (Firm), call 541-317-0184 FREEZER 6’ chest $90 OBO; 7” wet tile saw, Found a cruiser bike. Please RTV500 • 4X4 Upright piano, older, Baus Piano $100. $50, OBO, call 541-306-4632. 242 Co. NY, dark brown wood, $250 As low as call to identify. 541-350-5425. OBO. 541-389-0322. Exercise Equipment 541-317-2827. 0% APR Financing 264 Freezer Upright, Blue Ribbon, The New Kubota RTV500 com260 Snow Removal Equipment Found: Bag of wrenches, 7/5, off white, $125, please call Treadmill, ProForm XP 542E, pact utility vehicle has all the Village Westoria, on Re541-598-4714. very good condition $300 Misc. Items comfort, technology and revere, 541-383-4107. 541-317-5156. Fridge, Frigidaire, white, dbl. finements of a larger utility Bedrock Gold & Silver doors, water & icemaker, 21 Treadmill, Sears 400 ProForm vehicle – but fits in the bed FOUND CABELA’S 2010 hard BUYING DIAMONDS & cu.in., exc. $250. 382-5921 of a full-size, long bed cover book by Elton Gregory Crosswalk, elec. exc. cond. R O L E X ’ S For Cash pickup. Financing on apschool. call 541-923-7607. $500. 541-388-3789. 541-549-1592 proved credit. Furniture SNOW PLOW, Boss FOUND: Female Puppy, 245 Midstate Power BISSELL SHAMPOOER, 8 ft. with power downtown Bend, on the 4th LIKE NEW, $50. Golf Equipment of July, to identify 771-8523. turn , excellent condition Products 541-923-1848. $2,500. 541-385-4790. 541-548-6744 Found Key Fob with three keys. 2005 Street-legal Columbia Redmond BUYING DIAMONDS on Quebec Drive July 5th, golf cart, new batteries, curVisit our HUGE home decor FOR CASH Please call 541-280-0452. tains, like new. $3,950. 265 consignment store. New SAXON'S FINE JEWELERS 541-410-5423 items arrive daily! 930 SE Building Materials Found Sanddisk 512mb camera 541-389-6655 Textron & 1060 SE 3rd St., Adams Idea Hybrid Tech card, 6/17, Powerline Trail at Bend • 541-318-1501 Bend Habitat RESTORE OS, P-7, 6,5,4,3, Hybrid Reg. Paulina Lake, 541-383-0882. BUYING www.redeuxbend.com Building Supply Resale graphite $300. 318-8427. Lionel/American Flyer trains, Lost Dog: toy Fox Terrier/ChiQuality at LOW PRICES accessories. 408-2191. huahua mix, female, near 740 NE 1st 312-6709 GENERATE SOME excitement in Clubs, Calloway X20,steel irons, 5-PW, w/4 hybrid, 3 mo. old, Steelehead Falls, white, red*** Open to the public . your neigborhood. Plan a ga$325; Taylor Made Burner dish brown spots, has collar, CHECK YOUR AD rage sale and don't forget to Logs sold by the foot and also driver, custom, regular shaft, “Dallas”, 6/30, very friendly, Please check your ad on advertise in classified! Log home kit, 28x28 shell $100, 541-350-7076. 541-504-4422,541-953-3000 the first day it runs to 385-5809. incl. walls (3 sided logs) make sure it is correct. ridge pole, rafters, gable end Lost Gold Bracelet, in Drake Log Furniture, lodgepole & Irons, Ping Zing, 2-SW, graphSometimes instructions ite, exc., $250 OBO; Call Park, at Farmers Market or logs, drawing (engineered) juniper, beds, lamps & tables, over the phone are mis 541-306-4632. near bridge, 7/7, Reward, all logs peeled & sanded made to order, understood and an error Tractor, Case 22 hp., 541-617-0240. $16,000 . 541-480-1025. 541-419-2383 can occur in your ad. 246 fewer than 50 hrs. 48 in. If this happens to your ad, Metal exterior door, 3ft. x 6.5 LOST: Olympus Camera at the mower deck, bucket, auger, Mattresses good Guns & Hunting please contact us the first ft., frame and trim, exc. $70. Riverbend park Saturday 7/3, blade, move forces sale quality used mattresses, day your ad appears and and Fishing 541-480-5950 Please call 541-388-0244, $11,800. 541-325-1508. at discounted we will be happy to fix it 808-960-5853 fair prices, sets & singles. 267 as soon as we can. 30-30, Winchester model 94. Lost: Silver Money, Sat. 7/3, Deadlines are: Weekdays 541-598-4643. lever action. pre-64 & 325 Fuel and Wood Turquoise & coral decoration, 12:00 noon for next day, post-64, $500. 647-8931. Hay, Grain and Feed Microwave, Kenmore, White, in Bend, 541-385-6012. Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sun$25, please call A Private Party paying cash day; Sat. 12:00 for MonWHEN BUYING 1st Cutting Orchard Grass, MISSING from 17001 Elsinore 541-598-4714. for firearms. 541-475-4275 day. If we can assist you, 2-tie, $110/ton, Alfafla Grass FIREWOOD... Rd., Sunriver: ‘Katie-Kat’ or 503-781-8812. please call us: Mix Feeder hay, $90/ton, tortoise shell calico with half MODEL HOME To avoid fraud, The 385-5809 CASH!! good quality Alfalfa, $110/ton, tail, wearing harness & collar FURNISHINGS Bulletin recommends The Bulletin Classified For Guns, Ammo & Reloading 541-475-4242, 541-948-0292 with ID & rabies tags. MissSofas, bedroom, dining, payment for Firewood *** Supplies. 541-408-6900. ing since 6/11. Reward. sectionals, fabrics, leather, only upon delivery & FIND IT! 541-977-4288 or 977-3021. home office, youth, HANDGUN SAFETY CLASS for inspection. DO YOU HAVE BUY IT! accessories and more. concealed license. NRA, SOMETHING TO SELL REMEMBER: If you have lost an • A cord is 128 cu. ft. MUST SELL! Police Firearms Instructor, SELL IT! FOR $500 OR LESS? animal don't forget to check 4’ x 4’ x 8’ (541) 977-2864 Lt. Gary DeKorte. Sun. July The Bulletin Classifieds The Humane Society in Bend, www.extrafurniture.com • Receipts should include, 11th, 5:30-9:30 pm. Call Non-commercial 382-3537 or Redmond, name, phone, price and kind Kevin, Centwise, for reserva1st Quality Grass Hay advertisers can 923-0882 or Prineville, of wood purchased. tions $40. 541-548-4422 Rolltop desk, Jefferson, 52”, Barn stored, no rain, 2 string, place an ad for our 447-7178 exc. $275 OBO, call Exc. hay for horses. Hunting Bow, Golden Eagle, 541-306-4632. $120/ton & $140/ton "Quick Cash Special" like new, arrows, rest, sight, Looking for your next 541-549-3831 1 week 3 lines Sleeper Couch, queen size, release, hardcase, $300 OBO, employee? $10 bucks $125, please call call 541-382-8393. All Year Dependable Place a Bulletin help 2010 1st Cutting, Timothy or 541-598-4714. wanted ad today and Grass Hay, no rain, no ferFirewood: SPLIT Lodgepole Stevens single shot 20 ga. shot 2 weeks $16 bucks! reach over 60,000 tilizer, $130/ton, in barn, NE Sofa & Chair, leather, purcord, $165 or mixed $135. gun, refinished & reblued, readers each week. Redmond, Please Call Bend Delivery Cash, Check. chased at Mtn. Comfort, like Ad must $150. 541-595-0941 Your classified ad will 541-771-4000. Visa/MC. 541-420-3484 new, $1000, 541-419-8860. include price of item WIN 73 32/20, 38/40, 71/348, also appear on CRUISE THROUGH classified Table, 8 chairs, 2 leaves, 2010 Season, Orchard Grass, & 94 30/30 & 32. Marlin bendbulletin.com which www.bendbulletin.com when you're in the market for dark pine, good cond., $1500 Orchard / Timothy, small model 375/375 & 30/30. currently receives over or a new or used car. firm, 541-383-2535. bales, no rain, delivery avail., REM 41, 30 REM, Browning 1.5 million page views Call Classifieds at 5 ton or more, $130/ton, Safari 30-06, Perrazzi 12 ga. every month at 385-5809 541-610-2506. single shot, trap. WIN 101 12 no extra cost. ga., single shot trap & O/U Bulletin Classifieds 35 Ton Grass Hay for sale, GENERATE SOME excitement LOG TRUCK LOADS: DRY 12 ga. WIN model 12, 12 ga. Get Results! baled this July, very green, in your neigborhood. Plan a LODGEPOLE, delivered in trap. Pumps, auto and Seeking witnesses to accident Call 385-5809 or place 80 lb. bales, $125/ton, in garage sale and don't forget Bend $950, LaPine $1000, side-by-side 12 & 20 ga. at 4:07 p.m. on 7/3, at Coloyour ad on-line at Culver, Please call to advertise in classified! Redmond, Sisters & PrinevH & H Firearms rado & Wall. 541-389-0662, bendbulletin.com 541-475-4604. 385-5809. 541-382-9352 ille $1100. 541-815-4177 help greatly appreciated. Bob Dylan Wanted: 1966 Paramount Theater Portland Concert Poster, will pay $3000 Cash, 310-346-1965.

personals

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 Barns

Debris Removal

M. Lewis Construction, LLC "POLE BARNS" Built Right!

JUNK BE GONE

Garages, shops, hay sheds, arenas, custom decks, fences, interior finish work, & concrete. Free estimates CCB#188576•541-604-6411

Building/Contracting NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who contracts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license means the contractor is bonded and insured. Verify the contractor’s CCB license through the CCB Consumer Website

l Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel 541-389-8107

DMH & Co. Wild Fire Fuel Reduction. Yard Debris/Clean Up, Hauling Licensed & Insured 541-419-6593, 541-419-6552 Free Trash Metal Removal Appliances, cars, trucks, dead batteries, any and all metal trash. No fees. Please call Billy Jack, 541-419-0291

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

Remodeling, Handyman, Home Inspection Repairs, Professional & Honest Work. CCB#151573-Dennis 317-9768

541-385-5809

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through

House Keeping Services: 11 yrs of experience in house keeping. Angelica Lopez House Keeping & Janitorial, 541-633-3548,541-633-5489

Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. Small or large jobs. On-time promise. Senior Discount. All work guaranteed. Visa & MC. 389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded, Insured, CCB#181595 Margo Construction LLC Since 1992 •Pavers •Carpentry, •Remodeling, •Decks, •Window/ Door Replacement •Int/Ext Painting ccb176121 480-3179 Home Help Team since 2002 541-318-0810 MC/Visa All Repairs & Carpentry ADA Modifications www.homehelpteam.org Bonded, Insured #150696 Bend’s Reliable Handyman Low rates, quality work,clean-up & haul, repair & improve, painting, fences, odd jobs, more. 541-306-4632, CCB#180267

Domestic Services Home Is Where The Dirt Is 10 Years Housekeeping Experience, References, Rates To Fit Your Needs Call Crecencia Today! Cell 410-4933

The Bulletin Classifieds

Hourly Excavation & Dump Truck Service. Site Prep Land Clearing, Demolition, Utilities, Asphalt Patching, Grading, Land & Agricultural Development. Work Weekends. Alex541-419-3239CCB#170585

I DO THAT!

FENCING, SHELTERS, REPAIRS Cows get out? Neighbors get in? Call Bob anytime, He’ll come running! 541-420-0966. CCB#190754

Handyman

• DECKS •CARPENTRY •PAINTING & STAINING •WINDOWS AND DOORS and everything else. 21 Years Experience.

Randy, 541-306-7492 CCB#180420 Accept Visa & Mastercard

476

Employment Opportunities

Central Oregon premium grass hay. First Cutting. No Rain, No Weeds, $150/ton or $190/ton delivered to limited areas. 541-475-0383 QUALITY 1st cutting orchard grass hay. No rain. Cloverdale area. $110 ton, 2 twine 70-75# bales, 541-480-3944. Wheat Straw: Certified & Bedding Straw & Garden Straw; Compost, 541-546-6171.

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Horses and Equipment 200 ACRES BOARDING Indoor/outdoor arenas, stalls, & pastures, lessons & kid’s programs. 541-923-6372 www.clinefallsranch.com

Employment

400 421

Schools and Training Advertise in 30 Daily newspapers! $525/25-words, 3-days. Reach 3 million classified readers in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Washington, Utah & British Columbia. (916) 288-6019 email: elizabeth@cnpa.com for the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection. (PNDC)

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The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809

ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. *Medical, *Business, *Paralegal, *Accounting, *Criminal Justice. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. Call 866-688-7078 www.CenturaOnline.com (PNDC)

4 Horse Trailer & Prefert Arena fencing, 1991 straight load trailer, in good shape, $3500; Prefert metal arena, 15 panels, incl. walk thru, $2800, Sherry, 541-350-9188 DIAMOND J STABLES is re-opening at the end of July! call Lori to hold a stall at 541-389-8164. Limited Stalls available.

TRUCK SCHOOL www.IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-438-2235

454

Looking for Employment CAREGIVER AVAIL. Retired RN Bend/Sunriver/Redmond day time hrs., affordable rates, local refs. 541-678-5161.

Advertise and Reach over 3 million readers in the Pacific Northwest! 30 daily newspapers, six states and British Columbia. 25-word classified $525 for a 3-day ad. Call (916) 288-6010; (916) 288-6019 or visit www.pnna.com/advertising_ pndc.cfm for the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection. (PNDC) APT. ASSISTANT MANAGER Part-Time Fox Hollow Apts. 541-383-3152 Cascade Rental Management

Automotive Front End/Suspension Tech needed. Experience is essential for this fast paced job. Send replies to: 1865 NE Hwy 20, Bend, OR 97701. Automotive

Immediate opening for mid level entry Automotive Technician, for super busy shop. Exp. is required, ASE certified is a plus, but not required. Must have own tools, good driving record. Must pass drug test. Wages DOE. We offer full benefit pkg. Drop off resume or pick up application at: 2225 NE Hwy 20, Bend. No phone calls please.

470 READY FOR A CHANGE? Don't just sit there, let the Classified Help Wanted column find a new challenging job for you. www.bendbulletin.com

345

Livestock & Equipment BEEF CALVES 300-800 lbs., pasture ready, vaccinated, delivery avail. 541-480-1719. SWAP MEET & BBQ Saturday July 10th. Hosted by THE O'LE TACK ROOM ALL Vendors Welcome ~ Spaces FREE. Call NOW to reserve your spot. Spaces go FAST! 7th and Cook, Tumalo ~ 312-0082

Automotive

Domestic & In-Home Positions CAREGIVER wanted for elderly woman, room/board, + Ref. needed. 541-549-1471. We are looking for an experienced caregiver for our elderly parents. This is an employee position, and possible live-in. 541-480-0517 or 541-548-3030 jensen.cpa@bendcable.com

476

Employment Opportunities Addiction Counselor: Part time, women’s groups & assesments, Mon., Tue, Wed. 9-3, CADC or masters level, exp.. Salary DOE, Fax resume to 541-383-4935 or mail to 23 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend, 97701. ADVERTISING

SALES

Working Service Manager opportunity in beautiful Prineville, OR. Robberson Ford Sales Inc. is looking for a hard-working, highly motivated Service Manager to lead our service team. Don't miss this chance to build your career and join the #1 Ford dealer in Central Oregon. All inquiries are highly confidential. Email resume to tweber@robberson.com Robberson Ford is a drug free workplace. EOE. Bends Reliable Handyman For Sale, Zero Down for qualified person. Will assist with start up, Unbelievable marketing strategies, 541-306-4632.

ASSISTANT

A position is available in The Bulletin Advertising department for a Retail Sales Assistant. This position assists outside sales representatives with account and territory management, accurate paperwork, on-deadline ad ordering, and with maintaining good customer service and relationships.

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Llamas/Exotic Animals Alpacas for sale, fiber and breeding stock available. 541-385-4989.

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Farmers Column A farmer that does it right & is on time. Power no till seeding, disc, till, plow & plant new/older fields, haying services, cut, rake, bale, Gopher control. 541-419-4516 Custom Haying, Farming and Hay Sales, disc, plant, cut, rake, bale & stack, serving all of Central Oregon, call 541-891-4087.

Duties include but are not limited to: Scheduling ads, organizing paperwork, proofing ads, taking photos, ad layout, filing and working with customers on their advertising programs. A strong candidate must possess excellent communication, multi-tasking and organizational skills. The person must be able to provide excellent customer service and easily establish good customer rapport. The best candidates will have experience with administrative tasks, handling multiple position responsibilities, proven time management skills and experience working within deadlines. Two years in business, advertising, sales, marketing or communications field is preferred. The position is hourly, 40 hours per week offers a competitive compensation plan with benefits. Please send a cover letter and resume by Monday 7/19/10 to Advertising Sales Assistant c/o The Bulletin, 1777 SW Chandler Ave, Bend, OR 97702.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

New Hours Beginning July 17

383

Business Hours:

Produce and Food KIMBERLY ORCHARDS Kimberly, Oregon U Pick: Dark sweet cherries Rainier Cherries Bring Containers Open 7 Days per week 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. Only. (541) 934-2870

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Classified Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

(This special package is not available on our website)

Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care

Power Equipment Repair

Holmes Landscape Maint. Clean Ups, Dethatch, Aeration, Weekly/Biweekly Maint. Free Bids, 15 Yrs. Exp. Call Josh, 541-610-6011.

Consolidated Pest Control Ants, spider, rodents and more! Fast, professional service. ccb #187335. 541-389-3282 www.consolidatedpest.net

Masonry

Remodeling, Carpentry

Chad L. Elliott Construction

RGK Contracting & Consulting 30+Yrs. Exp. • Replacement windows & doors • Repairs • Additions/ Remodels • Garages 541-480-8296 ccb189290

ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES

Handyman

www.hirealicensedcontractor.com

or call 503-378-4621. The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. Some other trades also require additional licenses and certifications.

Excavating

325

Hay, Grain and Feed

More Than Service Peace Of Mind.

Spring Clean Up •Leaves •Cones and Needles •Debris Hauling •Aeration /Dethatching •Compost Top Dressing Weed free bark & flower beds Ask us about

Fire Fuels Reduction Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing •Pruning •Edging •Weeding •Sprinkler Adjustments Fertilizer included with monthly program

Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential Free Estimates Senior Discounts

541-390-1466 Same Day Response

NOTICE: OREGON Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise to perform Land scape Construction which in cludes: planting, decks, fences, arbors, water-fea tures, and installation, repair of irrigation systems to be li censed with the Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be in cluded in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before con tracting with the business. Persons doing landscape maintenance do not require a LCB license.

Nelson Landscape Maintenance Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial • Sprinkler installation and repair • Thatch & Aerate • Summer Clean up • Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly & monthly maint. •Flower bed clean up •Bark, Rock, etc. •Senior Discounts

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB#8759

Landscape Design Installation & Maintenance. Offering up to 3 Free Visits. Specializing in Pavers. Call 541-385-0326 ecologiclandscaping@gmail.com

MASONRY Brick * Block * Stone Small Jobs/Repairs Welcome L#89874.388-7605/385-3099

541-279-8278 Roof/gutter cleaning, debris hauling, property clean up, Mowing & weed eating, bark decoration. Free estimates. Yard Doctor for landscaping needs. Sprinkler systems to water features, rock walls, sod, hydroseeding & more. Allen 536-1294. LCB 5012. Gregg’s Gardening, Lawn & Ground Maint. I Can Take Care Of All Of Your Yard Care Needs! Free estimates, 233-8498. Redmond area only.

Tile, Ceramic Steve Lahey Construction Tile Installation Over 20 Yrs. Exp. Call For Free Estimate 541-977-4826•CCB#166678

Painting, Wall Covering

LADYBUG LAWN CARE Clean up, maintenance, pruning, bark, edging, affordable, reliable quality service 541-279-3331, 541-516-1041

WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, a semiretired painting contractor of 45 years. Small Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. Wallpapering & Woodwork. Restoration a Specialty. Ph. 541-388-6910. CCB#5184

Collins Lawn Maintenance Weekly Services Available Aeration, Spring Cleanup Bonded & Insured Free Estimate. 541-480-9714

MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist Oregon License #186147 LLC. 541-388-2993


F4 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Finance & Business

Cook

Millwrights: Warm Springs Forest Products Industries is seeking journeyman level millwrights for openings in Warm Springs, Oregon. Applicants must be able to: • Perform various duties in a fast paced modern sawmill. • Perform trouble shooting, maintenance, repairs and replacements for production equipment. • 1-3 Years of industrial maintenance experience as a journeyman or equivalent. • Broad trade skills - welding, pneumatics, hydraulics. • Strong mechanical skills able to use a variety of hand and power tools. • Good reading skills for drawings, service manuals, and blueprints. • Able to work safely. Warm Springs Forest Products offers a safe work environment as well as competitive wages, benefits packages, and 401K plan. E-mail: dhenson@wsfpi.com

500

The Ranch has an immediate opening for a seasonal Cook. Knowledge in all areas of food preparation a must. Must be willing to work weekends and holidays. Some benefits. Salary DOQ. Apply on-line at www.blackbutteranch.com . BBR is a drug free work place. EOE. CRUISE THROUGH Classified when you're in the market for a new or used car.

The Bulletin Classifieds is your Employment Marketplace Call 541-385-5809 today! Customer Service Part-Time

Reps

-

Remember.... Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site will be able to click through automatically to your site.

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Motorcycles And Accessories

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Motorcycle trailer, Kendon standup two place, Electric wench, straps, storage box. $1295. 503-559-0538, 541-306-7905

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. 541-385-5809

Simpson Voyager motorcycle helmet XX-Lrg. grey met., visor clear, $100. 410-5631.

Real Estate Contracts YAMAHA 650 CUSTOM 2008, GENERATE SOME excitement in LOCAL MONEY We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 extension 13.

528

Loans and Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200.

beautiful bike, ready to ride, full windshield, foot pads, leather saddle bags, rear seat rest & cargo bag to fit, 1503 mi., barely broke in, $4750. Please call 541-788-1731, leave msg. if no answer, or email ddmcd54@gmail.com for pics. YAMAHA 650 CUSTOM 2008, beautiful bike, ready to ride, full windshield, foot pads, leather saddle bags, rear seat rest & cargo bag to fit, 1503 mi., barely broke in, $4750. Please call 541-788-1731, leave msg. if no answer, or email ddmcd54@gmail.com for pics. Yamaha Road Star Midnight Silverado 2007, 1700cc, black, excellent condition, extended warranty, 8600 miles. Just serviced, new battery, new Dunlop tires. $8500, 541-771-8233

573 Sales Come join our team! Standard TV & Appliance is the largest, independently owned appliance retailer in the Pacific Northwest. We need professionals who have experience delivering excellent customer service both in person and on the phone. Must have strong ten key and data entry skills, great attitude and professional appearance. Varying shifts including nights and weekends, working 16-21 hours per week. Wages are competitive and come with a monthly bonus. Must pass a background check and drug screen. Send Resume or Apply in Person at: 63736 Paramount Drive Bend, OR 97701 Delivery Driver

A utomobile S ales P rofessionals N eeded! We have immediate openings with Smolich Nissan and Smolich Hyundai , THE source for the largest selection of new and used cars, trucks, and suv's in Central Oregon. Sales experience preferred. Applicants must be professional minded, with the attitude and desire to succeed. Professional attire required. We train our salespeople! We offer an aggressive pay plan along with insurance, 401k, and vacation. Call Jack Broome @ 541-749-4025 or Dirk Zanchin @541-389-1178 for more details. Or apply in person at our new Hyundai facility on the corner of Hwy 20 and Purcell (across from Costco) or at our Nissan store at 1835 Hwy 20 (across from Pilot Butte)

Standard TV & Appliance is looking for a full-time delivery driver. Position requires heavy lifting, leadership, professional appearance and ability to work Saturdays. Drivers need recent experi- SALES - Between High School and College? Over 18? Drop ence driving a box truck and that entry level position. Earn must be insurable with no what you're worth!!! Travel more than 3 moving violaw/Successful Business tions. Must also pass a backGroup. Paid Training. Transground check, lift test and portation, Lodging Provided. drug screen. 1-877-646-5050. (PNDC) Send Resume or Apply in Person at: SALES - Inside Telesales 63736 Paramount Drive Full time positions open Bend, OR 97701 immediately. 2+ years inside sales exp. preferred. Must be Director of Supply Chain: Ruff a self-starter, team player, & Wear, the market leader in goal-oriented. Local high performance, innovacompany. Email resumes to: tive dog gear is on a mission mark@AllFinancialAdvisors.com to enhance and inspire outdoor adventures between dogs and their human comSales Position: A promipanions. We’re looking to nent National Wholesale hire someone who loves to Agricultural Parts Dissolve problems, enjoys chaltributor is seeking a Terlenging work, and has a keen ritory Sales Representasense of adventure. tive to cover portions of www.ruffwear.com/careers Oregon, Washington and for details. Idaho. Responsible for developing new accounts as well as servicing and Experienced National growing existing accounts. Freight Brokers Overnight travel is reSatellite Transportation is quired. Farm or farm maseeking Experienced Nachinery knowledge is tional Freight Brokers. helpful. Base salary plus Must know all aspects of commission. E-mail rethe industry. Willing to sume and cover letter to train those with moderate larry.hansen@smalink.com background. Please email resume to: jeff@satellitetrans.com Senior Research Assistant / Research Associate: Implement research studies in Prineville area. Recruit and General engage clinics with studies; DO YOU NEED A train staff in data collection; GREAT EMPLOYEE recruit and consent patients; RIGHT NOW? conduct qualitative studies. Call The Bulletin before Apply to michaell@ohsu.edu. noon and get an ad in to Full ad at: publish the next day! http://www.ohsu.edu/hr/jo 385-5809. bs/job_details.cfm?job_posti ng_id=IRC30660 VIEW the Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com Summer Work! Customer Sales / Service, $12.25 base/appt. Apply at: www.workforstudents.com or call 541-728-0675. Host/ Hostess The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D. For more information about an advertiser, you may call Don’t miss out on the unique the Oregon State Attorney opportunity to work in the General’s Office Consumer Ranch’s newly renovated Protection hotline at Lodge restaurant. Do you 1-877-877-9392. enjoy working with people, and have a “customer first” attitude? We are looking for an enthusiastic, customer service oriented individual to join Team BBR. This is for Welders/Fabricators afternoon and pm shifts only. with experience needed in Must be willing to work high production fabrication weekends and holidays. facility. Immediate openApply on-line at ings on swing shift, offering www.blackbutteranch.com competitive pay based on BBR is a drug free work place. experience. Must be able to EOE pass welding test. Field Installers with welding Hotel and millwright experience Part-time positions avail., needed for field installation which included front desk, projects. Must be willing to food service, housekeeptravel extensively. Excellent ing. Apply in person to Pine compensation package. Ridge Inn, phone calls not Candidates for both posiaccepted. 1200 SW Centions must possess a valid tury Drive, Bend. drivers license and be able to pass a preemployment physiHVAC SERVICE TECHNICIAN cal/drug screen. Western HVAC service tech immediPneumatics offers a full benate opening to join our team efits package including in Eugene. We have been in health/dental insurance, business over 60 years, 401(k), life insurance and steady work is avail for the paid time off. Send resume long term. Competitive or download an application wages and full benefits. Must to: have min. 1 yr. HVAC exp., 3 Western Pneumatics, Inc. yrs. preferred. Must have Attn: Human Resources valid DL, and be CFC CertiP O Box 21340 fied. Email resume to chrisEugene, Oregon 97402 tine@marshallsinc.com www.westernp.com

A BEST-KEPT SECRET! Reach over 3 million Pacific Northwest readers with a $525/25-word classified ad in 30 daily newspapers for 3-days. Call (916) 288-6019 regarding the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection or email elizabeth@cnpa.com (PNDC) Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

Boats & RV’s

800

Polaris Phoenix 2005, 2X4, 200 CC, new rear end, new tires, runs excellent $1800 OBO, 541-932-4919.

Yamaha 250 Bear Cat 1999, 4 stroke, racks front & rear, strong machine, excellent condition $1600 541-382-4115,541-280-7024

HARLEY DAVIDSON 1200 Custom 2007, black, fully loaded, forward control, excellent condition. Only $7900!!! 541-419-4040

Harley Davidson Heritage Softail 1988, 1452 original mi., garaged over last 10 yrs., $9500. 541-891-3022

Harley Davidson Screamin’ Eagle Electric-Glide 2005, 2-tone, candy teal, have pink slip, have title, $25,000 or Best offer takes. 541-480-8080.

Harley Soft-Tail Fat Boy -Lo 2010, 360 mi., mat & glossy black, brushed chrome, lowest Harley stock seat - 24”, detachable windshield, backrest, luggage rack, $16,675, call 541-549-4949 or 619-203-4707, Jack.

Harley Ultra 2001, Near perfect, always garaged and dealer serviced. Tons of upgrades. Ready for road trip today. $12,000 firm for quick sale. Call (541) 325-3191

Honda Shadow Deluxe American Classic Edition. 2002, black, perfect, garaged, 5,200 mi. $4,995. 541-610-5799.

Honda XR50R 2003, exc. cond., new tires, skid plate, DB bars, asking $675, call Bill 541-480-7930. Kawasaki 900 Vulcan Classic 2006, always garaged, never down, lots of custom accessories, low miles, great bike over $9000 invested will sell for $4000. 541-280-1533, 541-475-9225.

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870

2000 BOUNDER 36', PRICE REDUCED, 1-slide, self-contained, low mi., exc. cond., orig. owner, garaged, +extras, must see! 541-593-5112 Beaver Patriot 2000, hot water heater, diesel elec. motor, Walnut cabinets, solar, passengers foot rest, no smoking, no children, Bose stereo, Corian countertops, tile floors, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, W/D, exc. cond., beautiful! $99,000. 541-215-0077

boat, like new, used twice, has pole holder & folding seats. $1300. 541-617-0846.

Bounder 34’ 1994, only 18K miles, 1 owner, ga14’ 1965 HYDROSWIFT runs but needs some TLC.

$550 OBO! 818-795-5844, Madras

15’ Crestliner, tri hull walk thru windshield, Johnson 55 hp., Minnkota 50 hp trolling motor Hummingbird fishfinger, new carpet, electrical, newly painted trailer, new wheel bearings, & spare tire, motor in good running condition., $1795. 541-389-8148

17.3’ Weld Craft Rebel 173 2009, 75 HP Yamaha, easy load trailer with brakes, full canvas and side/back curtains, 42 gallon gas tank, walk through windshield, low hours, $21,500. 541-548-3985. 17’ Canoe, alum. w/ 3 paddles, life jackets, boat cushions, extras, $275. 541-318-1334.

17’ Sailboat, Swing Keel, w/ 5HP new motor, new sail, large price drop, was $5000, now $3500, 541-420-9188.

17’

Harley Davidson Ultra Classic 2008, 15K mi. many upgrades, custom exhaust, foot boards, grips, hwy. pegs, luggage access. $15,000 obo. 541-693-3975.

ers, 17’, fiberglass boats, all equip incl., paddles, personal flotation devices, dry bags, spray skirts, roof rack w/towers & cradles -- Just add water, $1850/boat Firm. 541-504-8557.

Motorhomes

16 Ft. Hewes Sportsman, aluminum, full curtains, 90 hp. Honda EZ load $20,000. w/extras 541-330-1495.

Harley Davidson Heritage Soft Tail 2009, 400 mi., extras incl. pipes, lowering kit, chrome pkg., $17,500 OBO. 541-944-9753

the bells & whistles, sleeps 8, 4 queen beds, asking $18,000, 541-536-8105

Tioga C24' 1994, Exceptional cond. $17,900. Lots of extras. A/C, Onan Gen, Awnings, Sleeps 6, Solar panel, Micro, 541-410-7005.

Seaswirl

1972,

Tri-Hull, fish and ski boat, great for the family! 75 HP motor, fish finder, extra motor, mooring cover, $1200 OBO, 541-389-4329.

18’ SEASWIRL, new interior, 165HP I/O, 10HP Johnson, fish finder, much more, $1990,541-610-6150 19’ Blue Water Executive Overnighter 1988, very low hours, been in dry storage for 12 years, new camper top, 185HP I/O Merc engine, all new tires on trailer, $7995 OBO, 541-447-8664.

19 FT. Thunderjet Luxor 2007, w/swing away dual axle tongue trailer, inboard motor, great fishing boat, service contract, built in fish holding tank, canvas enclosed, less than 20 hours on boat, must sell due to health $34,900. 541-389-1574.

20.5’ 2004 Bayliner 205 Run About, 220 HP, V8, open bow, exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. tower, Bimini & custom trailer, $19,500.. 541-389-1413

rage kept, rear walk round queen island bed, TV’s,leveling hyd. jacks, backup camera, awnings, non smoker, no pets, must see to appreciate, too many options to list, won’t last long, $18,950, 541-389-3921,503-789-1202

Bounder 34' Ford 460 1994, great condition & best floor plan. Sleeps 6, asking $15,900. VIN# B03562. Beaver Coach Sales 541-322-2184. Dlr# DA9491

Jayco 29 Ft. BHS 2007, full slide out, awning, A/C, surround sound, master bdrm., and much more. $14,500. 541-977-7948 JAYCO 31 ft. 1998 slideout, upgraded model, exc. cond. $10,500. 1-541-454-0437.

Everest 32’ 2004, 3 slides, island kitchen, air, surround sound, micro., full oven, more, in exc. cond., 2 trips on it, 1 owner, like new, REDUCED NOW $26,000. 541-228-5944

Jayco JayFlight Expo 2007 Series M-25RKS TT w/ slideout. Used only once. $18,495. 541-573-7827 or junqueor@live.com

1982 PIPER SENECA III Gami-injectors, KFC200 Flight Director, radar altimeter, certified known ice, LoPresti speed mods, complete logs, always hangared, no damage history, exc. cond. $175,000, at Roberts Field, Redmond. 541-815-6085. Beechcraft A36 BDN 1978 3000TT, 1300 SRMAN, 100 TOP, Garmins, Sandel HSI, 55X A/P, WX 500, Leather, Bose, 1/3 share - $50,000 OBO/terms, 435-229-9415.

Tioga TK Model 1979, took in as trade, everything works, shower & bathtub, Oldie but Goody $2000 firm, as is. Needs work, must sell 541-610-6713

MUST SELL! 2008 Komfort 32’. GORGEOUS, have lots of pics. $17,900 OBO. Call 541-728-6933 or email teryme@aol.com Nash 22’ 2011, queen walk around bed, never used, $17,000, call 541-420-0825.

Travel 1987,

Queen

34’

65K mi., island queen bed, oak interior, take a look. $12,500, 541-548-7572.

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28 ft. 2007, Generator, fuel station, sleeps 8, black & gray interior, used 3X, excellent cond. $29,900. 541-389-9188.

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Fleetwood 355RLQS 2007, 37’, 4 slides, exc. cond., 50 amp. service, central vac, fireplace, king bed, leather furniture, 6 speaker stereo, micro., awning, small office space, set up for gooseneck or kingpin hitch, for pics see ad#3810948 in rvtrader.com $38,500, 541-388-7184, or 541-350-0462.

Fleetwood Prowler Regal 31’ 2004, 2 slides, gen., solar, 7 speaker surround sound, micro., awning, lots of storage space, 1 yr. extended warranty, very good cond., $20,000, MUST SEE! 541-410-5251

Grand Junction 39’ 2008, 3 slides, 2 A/C

“WANTED” RV Consignments All Years-Makes-Models Free Appraisals! We Get Results! Consider it Sold!

2000 Hitchhiker II, 32 ft., 5th wheel, 2 slides, very clean in excellent condition. $18,000 (541)410-9423,536-6116.

units, central vac, fireplace, Corian, king bed, prepped for washer/dryer & gen., non-smoker owned, immaculate, $39,900, Call 541-554-9736

Randy’s Kampers & Kars 541-923-1655

Winnebago Class C 28’ 2003, 2 slides, 44,000 mi., A/C, awning, in good cond., $39,000, call 541-593-7257.

Winnebago Itasca Horizon 2002, 330 Cat, 2 slides, loaded with leather. 4x4 Chevy Tracker w/tow bar available, exc. cond. $65,000 OBO. 509-552-6013.

Winnebago Sightseeer 27’ 2004 30K, 1 slide, hyd. jacks, lots of storage, very clean, exc cond, $41,900,541-504-8568

Yellowstone 36’ 2003, 330 Cat Diesel, 12K, 2 slides, exc. cond., non smoker, no pets, $82,000. 541-848-9225.

Columbia 400 & Hangar, Sunriver, total cost $750,000, selling 50% interest for $275,000. 541-647-3718 TWO HANGARS at Roberts Field, Redmond, OR. spots for 5 airplanes. Fully leased, income producing. $536 annual lease. $250,000 both For details, 541-815-6085.

916

Trucks and Heavy Equipment INTERNATIONAL 1981 TRUCK, T-axle-300 Cummins/Jake Brake, 13 spd. transmission, good tires & body paint (white). Also, 1993 27’ step deck equipment trailer T-axle, Dove tail with ramps. Ready to work! $9500 takes both. 541-447-4392 or 541-350-3866.

Mustang MTL16 2006 Skidsteer, on tracks, includes bucket and forks, 540 hrs., $21,000. 541-410-5454

We keep it small & Beat Them All!

Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. for Snowbirds, solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $17,995. 541-923-3417.

Hitchiker II 1998, 32 ft. 5th wheel, solar system, too many extras to list, $15,500 Call 541-589-0767.

885

Canopies and Campers EAGLE CAP 2007 9.5 w/ slide, like new $22,000; 2001 1 ton Ford Dually 4x4, 88K mi., $22,000. Buy both for $42,000. 541-350-5425.

Carriage 35’ Deluxe 1996, 2 slides, W/D incl., sound system, rarely used, exc. cond., $16,500. 541-548-5302 Cedar Creek RDQF 2006, Loaded, 4 slides, 37.5’, king bed, W/D, 5500W gen., fireplace, Corian countertops, skylight shower, central vac, much more, like new, $43,000, please call 541-330-9149.

COLLINS 18’ 1981, gooseneck hitch, sleeps 4, good condition, $1950. Leave message. 541-325-6934

EAGLE CAP 2008 short bed camper. slide right side. Canopy on left side. elect. jacks, generator, microwave, radio, AM/FM sound system. $21,500. 541-923-8770 Host Rainier 2006 9.5 DS camper. Fully loaded with generator, Full bathroom, AC, TV, DVD, Stereo, double slides, inverter, back awning, etc. Exc. condition. Retailed for 36 grand, asking $22,000 OBO. Frank. 541-480-0062

Lance 11.5’ 1992, elec. jacks, micro, A/C, awnings on both sides & back, very clean, no dents, non smoker., clean, $6000 OBO. 541-408-4974.

Wabco 666 Grader - New tires, clean, runs good -$8,500. Austin Western Super 500 Grader - All wheel drive, low hours on engine - $10,500. 1986 Autocar cement truck Cat engine, 10 yd mixer $10,000. Call 541-771-4980

925

Utility Trailers 2008 CargoMate Eliminator enclosed Car Hauler 24’x8’ wide, full front cabinet, also 4 side windows, 2 side doors, rear ramp, diamond plate runners. vinyl floors, lights. All set up for generator. Paid $13,500. Asking $10,000 OBO. Frank, 541-480-0062.

Cargo Trailer HaulMark 26’ 5th wheel, tandem 7000 lb. axle, ¾ plywood interior, ramp and double doors, 12 volt, roof vent, stone guard, silver with chrome corners, exc. cond., $7800 firm. 541-639-1031.

Discovery 37' 2001, 300 HP Cummins, 26,000 mi., garaged, 2 slides, satellite system, $75,000. 541-536-7580

Dutch Star DP 39 ft. 2001, 2 slides, Cat engine, many options, very clean, PRICE REDUCED! 541-279-9581. Fleetwood Expedition 38’, 2005, 7.5KW gen. W/D, pwr awning w/wind sensor, 4 dr. fridge, icemaker, dual A/C, inverter AC/DC, auto. leveling jacks, trailer hitch 10,000 lbs, 2 color TV’s, back up TV camera, Queen bed & Queen size hide-a-bed, lots of storage, $95,000. 541-382-1721 Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp. diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires, under cover, hwy. miles only, 4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp. propane gen., & much more 541-948-2310. Hard to find 32 ft. 2007 Hurricane by Four Winds, Ford V10, 10K mi., 2 slides, 2 Color TV’s, backup cam, hydraulic jacks, leather, cherry wood and many other options, Immaculate condition, $63,900. (541)548-5216, 420-1458

1000

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE ESTATE OF CHARLOTTE CHRISTINE URBEN NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES DEPARTMENT OF PROBATE No. 10PB0059MS Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the above estate and has qualified. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to presnet the same with proper vouchers within four months from this date at 7300 SW Bel Aire Drive, Beaverton, Oregon 97008 or they may be barred. All persons whose rights may be affected by the proceedings in the administration of the decedent’s estate may obtain additional information from the records of the Court, the personal representative, or the attorney for the personal representative. Dated and first published this 10th day of July, 2010. Carl L. Urben Personal Representative

Houseboat 38X10, w/triple axle trailer, incl. private moorage w/24/7 security at Prinville resort. PRICE REDUCED, $21,500. 541-788-4844.

Jamboree Class C 27’ 1983, sleeps 6, good condition, runs great, $6000, please call 541-410-5744.

Allen Reel Attorney for Personal Representative 7300 SW Bel Aire Drive Beaverton, OR 97008 Telephone: (503) 643-8999

Get your business GRO W

IN G

With an ad in

The Bulletin's

20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

908

Aircraft, Parts and Service

Everest 2006 35' 3 slides/awnings, island king bed, W/D, 2 roof air, built-in vac, pristine, $37,500 OBO541-689-1351

Fifth Wheels

Yamaha Grizzly 660 2006, 408 mi, 38 hrs, excellent condition with records, Warn winch, snow plow, front and rear racks with bags. Moving, must sell $6200 OBO. Call 310-871-8983

mi., exc. cond., factory cover, well maintained, $2900 OBO, call 541-280-5524.

CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 385-5809

Pungo120 Wilderness; incl. Yakima car rack w/Thule Brackets; Aquaboard Paddles; Exc. cond.: $800 Call 541-382-7828 or 541-728-8754.

Tioga 31’ SL 2007, Ford V-10, dining/kitchen slide out, rear queen suite, queen bunk, sleep sofa,dinette/bed,sleeps 6-8, large bathroom, 12K, rear camera, lots of storage, $59,900 OBO, 541-325-2684

900

Gearbox 30’ 2005, all

Sea Kayaks - His & Hers, Eddyline Wind Danc-

12’ 2005 Alaskan Deluxe Smokercraft

860

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

Kayak:

Snowmobiles

Reporter Seeking Part-Time Sports Reporter The Bulletin is seeking a part-time sports reporter. Writing/reporting experience and good general knowledge of a broad range of sports, especially high school sports, is preferred. Position requires flexibility to work weeknights and Saturdays. Applicant must be able to meet tight deadlines and possess good computer and typing skills. Direct inquiries to sports editor Bill Bigelow at bbigelow@bendbulletin.com. To apply, send cover letter and relevant clips/writing samples to Marielle Gallagher at: mgallagher@bendbulletin.com or The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR, 97708-6020.

ATV Trailer, Voyager, carries 2 ATV’s, 2000 lb. GVWR, rails fold down, 4-ply tires, great shape, $725, 541-420-2174.

Boats & Accessories

Motorcycles And Accessories

OUT-CAST Pac 1200, never in water, great for the Deschutes, John Day or small lakes. Cost new $2800, asking $1400 firm. Go to www.outcastboats.com to view boat. 541-420-8954

Watercraft

850

Arctic Cat F5 2007, 1100

Malibu Skier 1988, w/center pylon, low hours, always garaged, new upholstery, great fun. $9500. OBO. 541-389-2012.

875

ATVs

Southwind Class A 30’ 1994, twin rear beds, loaded, generator, A/C, 2 TV’s, all wood cabinets, basement storage, very clean, $14,999 or trade for smaller one. 541-279-9445/541-548-3350

your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

865

Business Opportunities

COLORADO 5TH WHEEL 2003 , 36 ft. 3 Slideouts $27,000. 541-788-0338

Autos & Transportation

Mini Winnie 31' 2000 , walk around Queen, Sofa, Booth. Excellent cond., 33K mi., asking $25,500. VIN #A10246 Beaver Coach Sales 541-322-2184. Dlr# DA9491

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to O.R.S. 86.705 et seq. and O.R.S. 79.5010, et seq. Trustee's Sale No. OR-USB-108436 NOTICE TO BORROWER: YOU SHOULD BE AWARE THAT THE UNDERSIGNED IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND THAT ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust made by, KIMBAL W. ANDERSON AND KIMBERLEY A. ANDERSON, HUSBAND AND WIFE, as grantor, to ASSET FORECLOSURE SERVICES, as Trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as beneficiary, dated 4/21/2006, recorded 4/27/2006, under Instrument No. 2006-28862, records of DESCHUTES County, OREGON. The beneficial interest under said Trust Deed and the obligations secured thereby are presently held by MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.. Said Trust Deed encumbers the following described real property situated in said county and state, to-wit: LOT THIRTY (30), ESTATES AT PRONGHORN, PHASE 1, RECORDED DECEMBER 19, 2002, IN CABINET F, PAGE 337, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. The street address or other common designation, if any, of the real property described above is purported to be: 65670 PRONGHORN CLUB DRIVE BEND, OR 97701 The undersigned Trustee disclaims any liability for any incorrectness of the above street address or other common designation. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: Amount due as of June 4, 2010 Delinquent Payments from October 01, 2009 9 payments at $2,455.92 each $22,103.28 (10-01-09 through 06-04-10) Late Charges: $859.60 TOTAL: $22,962.88 FAILURE TO PAY INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, IMPOUNDS AND LATE CHARGES WHICH BECAME DUE 10/1/2009 TOGETHER WITH ALL SUBSEQUENT INSTALLMENTS OF PRINCIPAL, INTEREST, IMPOUNDS, LATE CHARGES, FORECLOSURE FEES AND EXPENSES; ANY ADVANCES WHICH MAY HEREAFTER BE MADE; ALL OBLIGATIONS AND INDEBTEDNESSES AS THEY BECOME DUE AND CHARGES PURSUANT TO SAID NOTE AND DEED OF TRUST. ALSO, if you have failed to pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property or pay other senior liens or encumbrances as required in the note and deed of trust, the beneficiary may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. The beneficiary may require as a condition to reinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you have paid all senior liens or encumbrances, property taxes, and hazard insurance premiums. These requirements for reinstatement should be confirmed by contacting the undersigned Trustee. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums being the following: UNPAID PRINCIPAL BALANCE OF $463,407.92, PLUS interest thereon at 4.375% per annum from 9/1/2009, until paid, together with escrow advances, foreclosure costs, trustee fees, attorney fees, sums required for the protection of the property and additional sums secured by the Deed of Trust. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee, will on October 12, 2010, at the hour of 11:00 AM, in accord with the standard of time established by ORS 187.110, at FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE DESCHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW BOND STREET, BEND, County of DESCHUTES, State of OREGON, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, the interest in the said described property which the grantor had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the same. Sale Information Line: 714-730-2727 or Website: http://www.lpsasap.com DATED: 6/4/2010 LSI TITLE OF OREGON, LLC AS TRUSTEE By: Asset Foreclosure Services, Inc., as Agent for the Trustee 22837 Ventura Blvd., Suite 350, Woodland Hills, CA 91364 Phone: 877-237-7878 Sale Information Line: 714-730-2727 By: Norie Vergara, Sr. Trustee Sale Officer ASAP# 3601426 06/19/2010, 06/26/2010, 07/03/2010, 07/10/2010


To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • Saturday, July 10, 2010 F5

925

933

935

935

975

975

975

975

975

Utility Trailers

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Concession Trailer 18’ Class 4, professionally built in ‘09, loaded, $29,000, meet OR specs. Guy 541-263-0706

Chevy Avalance Super Deal! Z71 2002, 4x4,

Chevy Z21 1997, 4X4, w/matching canopy and extended cab., all power, $5950. 541-923-2738.

Iron Eagle Utility Trailer 2007, swing rear gate, 5x8, 24” sides, $1150, 541-325-2684.

931

Trailblazer

4x4, leather, loaded, sunroof, 85K miles! VIN #369336.

Dodge

1500

2007,

4x4, 34K miles, nice truck! VIN #558431.

$13,995

$17,000 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Smolich Auto Mall

940

Vans

Lowest Price of Year Event!

$675.

Dodge Durango 2008 Only $21,988

Transmissions, (2), Chrysler, Torque-Like, $250, no exchange, 541-385-9350.

smolichmotors.com

932

541-389-1177 • DLR#366

Antique and Classic Autos Ford F150 2003, 4x4, Crewcab, 97K miles! VIN #A29264.

$12,995 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Cadillac El Dorado 1977, very beautiful blue, real nice inside & out, low mileage, $5000, please call 541-383-3888 for more information. Chevy Corvette 1979, 30K mi., glass t-top, runs & looks great, $12,500, 280-5677.

Chevy

Wagon

1957,

4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453. Chrysler 300 Coupe 1967, 440 engine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, repainted original blue, original blue interior, original hub caps, exc. chrome, asking $10,000 OBO. 541-385-9350.

Ford F150 Lariat 2001, step side, 4x4, loaded, white w/tan, leather, CD, tow pkg., running boards, alloy wheels, all pwr., exc., 109K, avail. 9/1, KBB private at $9400, call 541-306-4632.

Ford F250 1992, A/C, PS, 5 spd., 5th wheel hookups, $4000. 541-382-6310 after 4pm. Ford F-250 XLT Superduty 2002, 4X4, Supercab, longbox, 7.3 Diesel, auto, cruise, A/C, CD, AM/FM, pwr. windows/locks, tow pkg., off road pkg., nerf bars, sprayed in bedliner, toolbox, mud flaps, bug shield, dash cover, 32K mi., orig. owner, $22,995, 541-815-8069 Ford F350 2003 FX4 Crew, auto, Super Duty, long bed, 6.0 diesel, liner, tow, canopy w/minor damage. 168k, $14,750 trade. 541-815-1990.

Corvette 1956, rebuilt 2006, 3 spd., 2, 4 barrel, 225 hp. Matching numbers $52,500, 541-280-1227.

Ford Excursion XLT 2000, 4WD, V-10, runs great, 4” lift, $8000 OBO, 541-771-0512. Ford Excursion XLT 2004, 4x4, diesel, white, 80% tread on tires, low mi., keyless entry, all pwr., A/C, fully loaded, front & rear hitch, Piaa driving lights, auto or manual hubs, 6-spd. auto trans., $23,000, 541-576-2442

Ford Explorer 2004, 4X4, XLT, 4-dr, silver w/grey cloth interior, 44K, $14,750 OBO, perfect cond., 541-610-6074

Isuzu Trooper 1995, 154K, new tires, brakes, battery runs great $3950. 541-330-5818.

Jeep CJ7 1986, Classic 6 cyl., 5 spd., 4x4, 170K mi., last of the big Jeeps, exc. cond. $8950, 541-593-4437

JEEP Grand Cherokee Laredo 1999 4x4, 6 cyl., auto, new tires, 1 owner, 123k mostly hwy mi., like new. KBB @ $6210. Best offer! 541-462-3282

4x4,6.0 Diesel long box, auto, X-liner, Super Hitch, camper ready, 20K, Arizona beige, like new, $32,500, 541-815-1523

Drastic Price Reduction! Ford T-Bird 1955, White soft & hard tops, new paint, carpet, upholstery, rechromed, nice! $39,000. 541-548-1422.

GMC 1-ton 1991, Cab & Chassis, 0 miles on fuel injected 454 motor, $1995, no reasonable offer refused, 541-389-6457 or 480-8521.

Ford Diesel 2003 16 Passenger Bus, with wheelchair lift. $4,000 Call Linda at Grant Co. Transportation, John Day 541-575-2370

Karman Ghia 1970 convertible, white top, Blue body, 90% restored. $10,000 541-389-2636, 306-9907.

cab, 117K, hideaway gooseneck model, $4500, 541-815-8236

loaded, sunroof, 73K miles! VIN #264499.

$11,995 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 2001, 4.7L, dark blue, AWD, new tires, new radiator, ne battery, A/C charged, new sound system, beautiful, solid ride, $7900, 541-279-8826.

Mercedes 380SL 1983, Convertible, blue color, new tires, cloth top & fuel pump, call for details 541-536-3962

OLDS 98 1969 2 door hardtop, $1600. 541-389-5355

Jeep Wrangler 2004, right hand drive, 51K, auto., A/C, 4x4, AM/FM/CD, exc. cond., $12,500. 541-408-2111

VW Cabriolet 1981, convertible needs restoration, with additional parts vehicle, $600 for all, 541-416-2473.

VW Super Beetle 1974, New: 1776 CC engine, dual Dularto Carbs, trans, studded tires, brakes, shocks, struts, exhaust, windshield, tags & plates; has sheepskin seatcovers, Alpine stereo w/ subs, black on black, 25 mpg, extra tires, $4800 call 541-388-4302.

933

Pickups

Honda Ridgeline 2006, 77K Miles, leather, sunroof, navigation, heated seats and much more. VIN #518567.

2WD, 4.7L engine, 81,000 miles, wired for 5th wheel, transmission cooler, electric brake control, well maintained, valued at $14,015, great buy at $10,500. 541-447-9165.

Like New, But for Less $$$ Only 1,000 Miles! VIN #791057

Only $29,850

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1177 • DLR#366

Smolich Auto Mall

Sport Utility Vehicles 2500

2004,

4x4, Duramax, under 100K miles, long bed, very clean. VIN #135580.

Nissan Rogue 2008 Auto, power group, 19K Miles, Moonroof. Vin #110180

$21,995 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Only $23,755 Cadillac Escalade 2007, business executive car Perfect cond., black,ALL options, 67K, reduced $32,000 OBO 541-740-7781

smolichmotors.com 541-749-4025 • DLR

Lowest Price of Year Event!

BMW 325Ci Coupe 2003, under 27K mi., red,

Cadillac Coupe DeVille 1990, $1500 Firm, Please call 541-536-2836.

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Hyundai Tiburon 2008 Only 18K Miles! Vin #266412

Only $14,988

Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl white, very low mi. $9500. 541-788-8218. NEED TO SELL A CAR? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers 385-5809

Lincoln Continental 2000, loaded, all pwr, sunroof, A/C, exc. cond. 87K, $6250 OBO/ trade for comparable truck, 541-408-2671,541-408-7267

366

Mazda 3 i 2008, seNissan 350Z Anniversary Edition 2005, 12,400 mi., exc. cond., leather, nav. system, alloy wheels, Bose sound, rear spoilers, $21,400 obo.541-388-2774

Porsche 928 1982, 8-cyl, 5-spd,

Mazda SPEED6 2006, a rare find, AWD 29K, Velocity Red, 6 spd., 275 hp., sun roof, all pwr., multi CD, Bose speakers, black/white leather $19,995. 541-788-8626

runs, but needs work, $3500, 541-420-8107.

If you have a service to offer, we have a special advertising rate for you.

Ford Fusion AWD 2007, All power, priced below WHOLESALE BOOK! VIN #150686.

Call Classifieds! 541-385-5809. www.bendbulletin.com

Porsche Targa 911SC 1979, 110K, Very sharp and clean car, 2 deck lids, one w/whale tail. Drive an investment $15,800. 541-389-4045

Mercedes 230SLK 1998, exc. cond., extra wheels/studded tires, convertible hardtop, yellow/black leather, many extras. $6800 OBO,541-617-0268

$9,995 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155 Ford Mustang Cobra 2003, flawless, only 1700 orig. mi., Red, with black cobra inserts, 6-spd, Limited 10th anniversary edition, $27,000 or trade for newer RV & cash; pampered, factory super charged “Terminator”, never abused, always garaged, please call 503-753-3698,541-390-0032

FREE MAINTENANCE 2 YR/24K MILE ON 2010 MODELS!*

smolichmotors.com 541-389-1178 • DLR

366

automatic, 34-mpg, exc. cond., $12,480, please call 541-419-4018.

Honda Civic LX, 2006, auto,, CD, black w/tan, all power, 48K, 1 owner, $11,500. OBO. 541-419-1069

Subaru Legacy 1993, 165K miles, 5-speed manual, good condition and maintenance $1300 firm, call Tim 541-923-3412.

Nice clean and fully serviced . Most come with 3 year, 36,000 mile warranty. Call The Guru: 382-6067 or visit us at www.subaguru.com The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Toyota Camry Hybrid, 2007, 60k mi., extra snow tires 5k miles,city 31/hwy 39. Extras, $16,950. 541-788-1776 Toyota Corolla LE 2007, Grandma’s Car, in new cond., 1455 mi., why buy new, save $$$. $13,500, 541-389-4608.

Volkswagen New Beetle 2003 74,800 mi. $7,000 Blue w/ black charcoal interior, air conditioning, power steering, AM/FM stereo & cassette, moon roof, power windows and more. Call Rick @ 541-788-8662

VW Bug 1969, yellow, sun roof, AM/FM/CD , new battery, tires & clutch. Recently tuned, ready to go $3000. 541-410-2604.

NEW 2011 SUBARUS ARE STARTING TO ARRIVE STOP IN AND SEE THEM TODAY! *This is a combination offer. Make your best deal on a package price.

AS LOW AS

2.9

%

FOR UP TO 72 MONTHS

*On Approved Credit

New 2010 Subaru Impreza 2.5i 1 AT

$

117

Payment*

Model AJA-01 MSRP $18,190. SALE PRICE $16,999. VIN: AG512214 Price includes Destination & Freight, Price after all factory rebates and incentives. Rebates and special rates are not stackable. *Bi-weekly payments, 72 months @ 4.99% A.P.R. On Approved Credit. Does not include Registration, $699 Trident or $338 Doc & Vin Reg. 15% Down payment cash or equity.

385-5809 The Bulletin Classified ***

Hyundai Accent 2005, 76K miles! VIN

New 2011 Subaru Outback 2.5i

#334061.

$5,995 www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

We will pay CASH for your vehicle Buying vehicles now thru July! Central Oregon's Largest Used Vehicle Inventory Over 150 Used in stock see it on www.smolichmotors.com

4X4 * Truck * SUV * Cars starting at $995

Pre-Owned vehicles on sale everyday All Makes & Models including Honda - Toyota - Ford - Jeep - Volvo Chevy - Dodge - Audi - VW - Chrysler Nissan - Kia - Hyundai - Suzuki - Acura

1 AT

$

146

Payment*

Model BDA-01 MSRP $24,220. SALE PRICE $24,220. VIN: B1314502 Price includes Destination & Freight, Price after all factory rebates and incentives. Rebates and special rates are not stackable. *Bi-weekly payments, 84 months @ 4.99% A.P.R. On Approved Credit. Does not include Registration, $699 Trident or $338 Doc & Vin Reg. 15% Down payment cash or equity.

New 2010 Subaru Legacy 2.5i Premium 1 AT

$

146

Payment*

Model AAC-02 MSRP $22,384. SALE PRICE $21,249. VIN: A1244901 Price includes Destination & Freight, Price after all factory rebates and incentives. Rebates and special rates are not stackable. *Bi-weekly payments, 72 months @ 4.99% A.P.R. On Approved Credit. Does not include Registration, $699 Trident or $338 Doc & Vin Reg. 15% Down payment cash or equity.

New 2010 Subaru Forester 2.5X Special Edition 1 AT

$

142

Payment*

Model AFA-21 MSRP $21,690. SALE PRICE $20,625. VIN: AG785217 Price includes Destination & Freight, Price after all factory rebates and incentives. Rebates and special rates are not stackable. *Bi-weekly payments, 72 months @ 4.99% A.P.R. On Approved Credit. Does not include Registration, $699 Trident or $338 Doc & Vin Reg. 15% Down payment cash or equity.

We BUY - SELL - SERVICE all makes

Smolich Motors www.smolichmotors.com Hwy 20 in Bend (541) 389-1177 • (541) 749-4025 (541) 389-1178

Porsche Cayenne Turbo 2008, AWD, 500HP, 21k mi., exc. cond, meteor gray, 2 sets of wheels and new tires, fully loaded, $69,000 OBO. 541-480-1884

convertible, 2 door, Navy with black soft top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929.

Honda Accord EX 1990, in great cond., 109K original mi., 5 spd., 2 door, black, A/C, sun roof, snow tires incl., $4000. 541-548-5302

*** Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes instructions over the phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, please call us:

MINI COOPER “S” 2006 Convertible. 6 Speed. Leather. Loaded. 37K miles. 1 owner. Must see. $18,999. 541-480-3265 DLR.

Ford Focus 2007, 17,982 miles, includes winter tires and rims, $11,000. 541-475-3866

black leather, $15,000 Firm, call 541-548-0931. Buick LeSabre 1996, 108K Mi., 3800 motor, 30 MPG Hwy, leather, cold air, am/fm cassette and CD, excellent interior and exterior condition, nice wheels and tires. Road ready, $3450. 541-508-8522 or 541-318-9999.

366

dan, 4-cyl., auto, 20,300 mi., mostly hwy., like new, still under factory warranty, $12,295, 541-416-1900.

Family Owned and Operated for over 40 years

NISSAN

Chevrolet Suburban 3/4 Ton 4WD 1988. Silverado, A/C, 8 Passenger, Tow, Snow Tires, MUST SEE! $2999. 541-480-3265 DLR.

Chevy 3/4 Ton 350 1974, automatic, dual gas tanks, wired for Chevy Tahoe 2001, loaded, 3rd seat, V8, leather, heated camper and trailer. Dual seats, 6" lift Tough-Country, batteries. One owner. 35" tires, A/C, CD, exc. Lots of extras. $2950, cond., 78K, running boards. 541-549-5711 $13,600. 541-408-3583

Smolich Auto Mall

541-749-4025 • DLR

car, great shape, 120K miles, excellent snow car $5400. 541-383-8917 Audi S4 2005, 4.2 Avant Quattro, tiptronic, premium & winter wheels & tires, Bilstein shocks, coil over springs, HD anti sway, APR exhaust, K40 radar, dolphin gray, ext. warranty, 56K, garaged, $30,000. 541-593-2227

Mercedes Benz C300 2008, 4WD, GPS, 24K, take over lease, $646/mo,541-678-5756

HYUNDAI

Smolich Certified Pre-Owned or Factory Certified Pre-Owned Shop with confidence at Smolich Motors

Lowest Price of Year Event!

935 Chevy

Chrsyler Sebring Convertible 2006, Touring Model 28,750 mi., all pwr., leather, exc. tires, almost new top, $12,450 OBO. 541-923-7786 or 623-399-0160. Dodge Neon SXT 2003, 41K mi., A/C, pwr. windows, auto, $5300, 541-480-5097..

Vehicle Acquisition S A L E Inventory SALE Certified SALE Jeep Wrangler 2009

Toyota Tundra 2006,

www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Mercedes 320SL 1995, mint. cond., 69K, CD, A/C, new tires, soft & hard top, $13,900. Call 541-815-7160.

Only $2,999

Lowest Price of Year Event!

$19,995

CHEVROLET COLORADO Ext. Cab 2009. 4x2, 4 cyl., 5 spd., Toyota Tacoma SR5 4WD 2007 A/C, CD, alloys. Victory Red. Access Cab w/canopy. V-6, 1 owner. Warranty. Must see. auto., A/C, CD, tow, alloys. $13,500. 541-480-3265 DLR. Warranty. 1 owner. 23K mi. $21,500. 541-480-3265 DLR.

$2,495

Saab 9-3 SE 1999

SUBARUS!!!

Vin #173509

Automobiles

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

Smolich Auto Mall

www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

International Flat Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $2500. 541-419-5480.

Chevy Corvette L-98 1988 Red Crossfire injection 350 CID, red/black int. 4+3 tranny, #Match 130K, good cond. Serious inquiries only $16,500 OBO. 541-279-8826.

975

Audi A4 3.0L 2002, Sport Pkg., Quattro, front & side air bags, leather, 92K, Reduced! $11,700. 541-350-1565

Lexus LS400 1993

HYUNDAI

Honda Civic LX 2006, 4-door, 45K miles, Jeep Grand Cherokee 2002, 4x4, leather,

speed. VIN #006400.

smolichmotors.com

CHECK YOUR AD GMC Sierra 2500 1995, 4X4, 350 auto, club

CHEVY CORVETTE 1998, 66K mi., 20/30 m.p.g., exc. cond., $18,000. 541- 379-3530

Audi A4 Avant Wagon 1998, great

Ford F350 XLT CrewCab 2007

Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199

Dodge Van 3/4 ton 1986, PRICE REDUCED TO $1300! Rebuilt tranny, 2 new tires and battery, newer timing chain. 541-410-5631.

Only 25K Miles! VIN #134449

Toyo LT235/75R15 M&S, on Ford 5 hole rims, $50. 541-480-5950

Buick Special 1947, 4 dr., stock, newer tires, brakes, uphostery, chorme and paint, $12,500 OBO, 541-548-2808.

4x4, Sport pkg., sunrrof, 37K miles! VIN #035470.

$11,495

www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

brake, runs good. 541-389-1582.

Lowest Price of Year Event!

Hyundai Elantra 2000, 4 Dr., all power, 5

Toyota Rav-4 2006,

www.ownacar.com 541-548-5116• Dlr 6155

Automotive Parts, DODGE 1972 ¾ ton Camper Special, new tires, trailer Service and Accessories Tires, (4), All Season, size, 235/65R17, $100, please call 541-598-4714.

never pay for gas again, will run on used vegetable oil, sunroof, working alarm system, 5 disc CD, toggle switch start, power everything, 197K miles, will run for 500K miles easily, no reasonable offer refused, $2900 OBO, call 541-848-9072.

tow pkg., loaded, runs great, 112K mi. $10,500. 541-383-8917.

Chevy 2002, Interstate 2008, enclosed car carrier/util., 20x8.5’, GVWR !0K lbs., custom cabs. & vents loaded exc. cond. $6795. 605-593-2755 local.

Mercedes 300SD 1981,

Smolich Auto Mall

CALL 888-701-7019 CLICK SubaruofBend.com VISIT 2060 NE HWY 20 • BEND AT THE OLD DODGE LOT UNDER THE BIG AMERICAN FLAG Thank you for reading. All photos are for illustration purposes – not actual vehicles. All prices do not include dealer installed options, documentation, registration or title. All vehicles subject to prior sale. All lease payments based on 10,000 miles/year. Prices good through July 12, 2010. Subject to vehicle insurance; vehicle availability.


F6 Saturday, July 10, 2010 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classified • 541-385-5809

SUMMER Sell-A-Bration

2010 DODGE RAM 1500 SLT QUAD CAB 4X4

2010 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

2010 JEEP WRANGLER UNLIMITED 4X4 0% for 36 months on approved credit

MSRP ...................... $28,930 Smolich Discount ......... $2,545 Customer Cash ............ $1,500

SMOLICH SALE PRICE

SMOLICH SALE PRICE

23,885

$ J10048 VIN: AL162418 • 1 at this price

Power sliding doors and Rear DVD!

MSRP ...................... $36,190 Smolich Discount ......... $3,805 Customer Cash ............ $2,500 SMOLICH SALE PRICE

24,885

$

DT10003 VIN: AS157573 • 1 at this price

Plus $2,750 Bonus Cash when you finance through GMAC. 0% available for 60 months on approved credit in lieu of $2500 customer cash.

DT09035 VIN: 139196

Plus $1000 Bonus Cash when you finance through GMAC!

0% for 60 months on approved credit in lieu of $1000 customer cash.

2010 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4X4

2010 DODGE RAM 2500 BIG HORN CREW CAB 4X4

2010 DODGE CHARGER AWD

MSRP ...................... $33,890 Smolich Discount ......... $3,005 Customer Cash ............ $4,000

MSRP ...................... $34,655 Smolich Discount ......... $2,770 Customer Cash ............ $3,000

MSRP ...................... $49,160 Smolich Discount ......... $3,775 Customer Cash ............ $1,500

SMOLICH SALE PRICE

SMOLICH SALE PRICE

SMOLICH SALE PRICE

26,885

$ J09093 VIN: AC102154 • 1 at this price

29,885

$

5.7 Hemi!

Plus $2,000 Bonus Cash when you finance through GMAC. 0% available for 60 months on approved credit in lieu of $4000 customer cash.

28,885

$ Leather and moonroof!

43,885

$

6.7 Cummins Turbo Diesel! D10022 VIN: AT141963 • 1 at this price

D10022 VIN: AT141963 • 1 at this price

0% available for 36 months on approved credit in lieu of $1500 customer cash.

0% available for 72 months on approved credit in lieu of $3000 customer cash.

Call us at 541-389-1177 1865 NE Hwy 20 • Bend All sale prices after dealer discounts, factory rebates and applicable incentives. Terms vary. See dealer for details. Limited stock on hand. Manufacturer rebates and incentives subject to change. Art for illustration purposes only. Subject to prior sale. Not responsible for typos. Expires 7/12/2010. On Approved Credit.

CHRYSLER CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED SALE!! Limited, Leather!

certified pre-owned

Leather, Nice!!

Very Clean!!

Sahara, Less than 2k Miles!

Limited! Low Miles!

Only 1,700 Miles!

2007 JEEP COMMANDER $

2008 DODGE DURANGO SLT $

2006 JEEP LIBERTY 4X4 $

2009 JEEP WRANGLER $

2007 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE $

2010 DODGE CHALLENGER RT $

VIN: 633050, Stk# D10037A

VIN: 134449, Stk# DT09051A

VIN: 6W246894, Stk# J10018B

VIN: 791053, Stk# J10054A

VIN: 592685, Stk# P10163

VIN: 129754, Stk# D10053A

29,995

23,995

14,995

SM O LI C H N IS SA N

29,995

26,995

29,995

S M O LI C H HY UN DA I

• 3 month/3,000 mile Maximum Care Warranty • 6 Years/80,000 Mile Power Train Warranty • 125 pt. Inspection • Roadside Assistance • Carfax

Powertrain Limited Warranty

Visit us at : www.smolichhyundai.com

VISIT SMOLICHNISSAN.COM

NEW 2010 NISSAN ALTIMA

CLASS LEADING

&

CLASS LEADING

Auto, CD, P/W & more...

$

19,495

...HYUNDAI

IT

HIGHWAY

2011 SONATA

+DMV

36 MONTH L E A S E

VIN: 507890. MSRP $22,775; Smolich Discount $1,780; Rebate $1,500

NEW 2010 NISSAN PATHFINDER 4x4, 7 Passenger

$

VIN: 651790, MSRP $21,050. Initial Cap Cost $20,770. Cash Cap Reduction $2,303.70. Customer Cash Down $2,825.00. Aqc. Fee $595. Lease End Value $11,998.50. 36 mo. 12,000 Miles per Year. On approved credit.

25,995 +DMV

VIN: 610534. MSRP $30,830; Smolich Discount $2,335, Rebate $2,500

NEW 2010 NISSAN MURANO AWD, ABS & more...

$

26,545 +DMV

VIN: 104222. MSRP $30,575; Smolich Discount $2,780, Rebate $1,250

NEW 2010 NISSAN TITAN Crew Cab, 4x4

$

27,795

“MOST FUEL-EFFICIENT CARMAKER IN AMERICA” -EPA

2010 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GLS

$

159/MO. 0% 60 — OR —

for

MOS. FINANCING PLUS $1,500 HMFC BONUS CASH

2 AT THIS PRICE! VIN: 872490, 871974. MSRP $17,795. INITIAL CAP COST $17,295. CASH CAP REDUCTION $1,518. CASH DUE @ SIGNING $1,999. REBATE $1,750. ACQUISITION FEE $595. LEASE END VALUE $10,855. 12,000 MILES PER YEAR, 24 MO. LEASE. ON APPROVED CREDIT.

NEW 2010 HYUNDAI ACCENT 3-DR HATCHBACK Auto, A/C

$

12,613

+DMV VIN: 308521. MSRP $35,635; Smolich Discount $3,840; Rebate $4,000

SMOLICH NISSAN

541- 389 -1178

“ W e m a ke c a r b u y i n g e a s y. ” All vehicles subject to prior sale, tax, title, license & registration fees. All financing, subject to credit approval. Pictures for illustration purposes only. Offers expire Sunday, July 12, 2010 at close of business.

VIN: 150981. MSRP $13,855, HMFC BONUS $1,000. SMOLICH DISCOUNT $242.

and 0% A.P.R. for 60 Months

WE MOVED SMOLICH HYUNDAI STOP BY! 2250 NE HWY 20

541-749-4025 www.smolichhyundai.com

CENTRAL OREGON’S LARGEST USED SELECTION! 7 Day Exchange Program 3000 Mile/3 Month Powertrain Warranty

SMOLICH Carfax-Vehicle History • Free Rental Car CERTIFIED 105 Point Vehicle Inspection

w w w. s m o l i c h m o t o r s . c o m


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