Bulletin Daily Paper 04/10/11

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This is volcano country Inside the High Desert Museum’s new Cascades exhibit • COMMUNITY, C1

IN COUPONS INSIDE

WEATHER TODAY

SUNDAY

Mostly cloudy High 57, Low 32 Page B6

• April 10, 2011 $1.50

Serving Central Oregon since 1903 www.bendbulletin.com

Suicide at Sage View prompts a review

SNAPSHOT OF HARDSHIP IN CENTRAL OREGON

1 in 5 on food stamps, and counting “We continue to have people signing up,” said Patrick Carey, Department of Human Services director for Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties. “Because of the way our economy in the area is based — on mortgages and building and real estate

By Erik Hidle The Bulletin

Nearly 40,000 Central Oregonians, or one in five, now receive benefits through Oregon’s food stamp program. And that number is growing.

The incident, in 2010 but not made public, is a first for St. Charles’ psychiatric center

— we got to be the first to see the increase, and I would guess we might be the last to see it go down. We have close to doubled our caseload in the past few years.” The count, as of the end of March, includes most children and adults. (Seniors

and individuals with disabilities receive benefits through another program.) In March 2008, roughly 21,000 locals were enrolled in the food stamp program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. See Food stamps / A6

BUDGET DEAL

Big Air competition at Bachelor

Stakes are far higher in the next fight: debt

By Betsy Q. Cliff The Bulletin

A state investigation into Sage View Psychiatric Center, the behavioral health unit of St. Charles Health System, found patient safety concerns after a patient there hanged herself last fall. The state found that Sage View failed in its requirement to give patients “the right to receive care in a safe setting.” The woman had previously attempted suicide at least twice and was found by hospital staff to be at high risk of doing it again. Nevertheless, special precautions often taken in high-risk cases were not in this case, the report found. The suicide occurred on Sept. 21, and the state investigation was completed shortly thereafter. The report also examined medical records from patients at Sage View during roughly the same time and found deficiencies in the care of those patients. The hospital did not disclose the event publicly. The Bulletin recently learned of the investigation through a public records request. Suicides that occur in hospitals are called “never events,” belonging to a group of medical errors that hospital quality organizations say should never occur while a patient is under hospital care. Hospitals are supposed to be able to prevent suicidal patients from killing themselves and other “never events,” such as operating on the wrong patient or body part, through a combination of the hospital environment, staff monitoring and, sometimes, medications. But clinical experts say patient suicides are very difficult, if not impossible, to prevent. Indeed, they are among the most common “never events” that occur in hospitals. In 2010, six patients committed suicide while in Oregon hospitals, according to the Oregon Patient Safety Commission. See Suicide / A4

By Jackie Calmes New York Times News Service

Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

Judging the big jumps It was not your normal day on Mount Bachelor. More than $5,000 in cash and prizes, including season passes, were up for grabs Saturday at the Big Air competition at the ski area, in which local and out-ofstate snowriders tried some crazy stunts. Above, one competitor gets his second jump judged. For more, including how our local snowriders placed, see Sports, Page D1.

U.S. AID TO PAKISTAN

The next man on the moon may be Russian

‘Sesame Street’: a new path to victory in the Muslim world? By Saeed Shah McClatchy-Tribune News Service

LAHORE, Pakistan — Under the Obama administration, U.S. civilian assistance to Pakistan has tripled to $1.5 billion a year, but critics say that money doesn’t seem to have done much to spur the fight against al-Qaida or Islamic extremism. Now the United States is throwing a new weapon into the mix — “Sesame Street,” the classic American children’s program populated with furry monsters. Funded with a $20 million grant from USAID, the economic assistance arm of the State Depart-

SUNDAY

We use recycled newsprint

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ment, the Pakistan version of “Sesame Street” will feature new muppets in a Pakistani village setting. The goal: to help the country’s young learn some basic words and numbers and maybe, by promoting better education, help reverse Pakistan’s descent into religious conservatism, violent extremism and economic stagnation. The program is likely to become the most visible American aid project in Pakistan in years. How effective it will be as policy remains to be seen. See Muppets / A8

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 108, No. 100, 46 pages, 7 sections

By Ilya Arkhipov and Lyubov Pronina Bloomberg News

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

A new Pakistani “Sesame Street” will feature Elmo and a variety of other muppets.

INDEX G4-5

Crossword C7, E2

Obituaries

Classified E1-6

Local

Perspective F1-6

TV listings

C2

Community C1-8

Milestones

Sports

Weather

B6

C6

B5

Stocks

Business G1-6

B1-6

WASHINGTON — The downto-the-wire partisan struggle over cuts to this year’s federal budget has intensified concern in Washington, on Wall Street and among economists about the more consequential clash coming over increasing the government’s borrowing limit. As they assessed the deal struck Friday night, less than two hours before government agencies were to run out of money, A N A LY S I S both parties laid claim to victories in a showdown that presaged the difficult spending fights to come between House Republicans and the Democratic-controlled Senate and White House. For instance, Republicans are vowing that before they will agree to raise the current $14.25 trillion federal debt ceiling — a step that will become necessary in as little as five weeks — President Barack Obama and Senate Democrats will have to agree to far deeper spending cuts for next year and beyond than those contained in the six-month budget deal that already cut $38 billion. Republicans have also signaled they will again demand fundamental changes in policy on health care, the environment, abortion rights and more as the price of their support for raising the debt ceiling. See Debt / A5

D1-6

MOSCOW — Russia is accelerating planned missions to the moon and Mars as it seeks to maintain its lead over China in space exploration and close the gap with the United States. The Russians may start manned flights to the moon by the end of the decade, 10 years earlier than previously planned, and establish a base there by 2030, according to their space agency. And by 2040, if all goes as planned, they may also send a man to Mars. “It is the first time that the government has allocated decent financing to us,” Anatoly Perminov, head of Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, said in a phone interview. The agency’s $3.5 billion budget for 2011 has almost tripled since 2007, reaching the highest since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. “We can now advance on all themes a bit,” Perminov said. See Space / A6

The Associated Press

Visitors walk the National Mall on Friday, a gloomy, rainy day, before news broke that a government shutdown had been averted. The larger implications of the compromise, however, are yet to be determined.

Inside • With the budget deal’s details to be worked out this week, both parties claim success, Page A2 • Deal presents signs of Obama’s path to the middle and Boehner’s to firmer footing, Page A2 • Assessing the GOP’s next move in the spending wars, Page A5


A2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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Oregon Lottery Results As listed by The Associated Press

POWERBALL

The numbers drawn Saturday night are:

5 14 32 53 56 11 Power Play: 4. The estimated jackpot is $27 million.

MEGABUCKS

The numbers drawn are:

3 14 17 34 37 38 Nobody won the jackpot Saturday night in the Megabucks game, pushing the estimated jackpot to $10.6 million for Monday’s drawing.

In budget deal, both parties say they won Bottom line: across-the-board cuts for nondefense programs By Carl Hulse New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — The hard-fought budget compromise late Friday that narrowly averted a government shutdown calls for increasing Pentagon spending while imposing significant cuts on a wide range of domestic federal programs. Under the agreement, Pentagon spending would rise nearly $5 billion this year — about $2 billion less than the increase initially sought by Republicans — while nondefense programs would receive targeted cuts as well as a $1 billion across-the-board decrease that would bring net spending reductions to roughly $38 billion. Led by Speaker John Boehner, Republicans said the cuts to the current budgets of federal agencies showed that they could impose their demands to reduce spending significantly and reverse decades of government growth even though they control just one chamber of Congress. “Instead of politicians talking about how much they wanted to increase spending, the entire debate of the last two months was about how much spending to reduce and where,” said Indiana Rep. Todd Rokita, one of 87 Republican freshmen. “This is progress.” The Democrats also laid claim to securing some victories. “This is an agreement to invest in our country’s future while making the largest annual spending cut in our history,” President Barack Obama said Saturday. He said that Democrats “prevented this important debate from being overtaken by politics and unrelated disagreements on social issues.” But some prominent voices in the party’s liberal base argued that Democrats will be at a disadvantage moving forward.

Roll call shows uneasiness Details of the specific cuts, which Boehner said would amount to $500 billion over the next decade, were still emerging. Given a new spending total for the next six months, congressional aides were to spend the weekend spreading the cuts across agencies and writing the fine print of legislation that is to be considered in the House midweek, with the Senate to follow. Not everyone was pleased with the outcome. The House voted early Saturday 348-70 to send Obama a stopgap measure to finance the government through Thursday while the compromise legislation is drafted. Forty-two Democrats and 28 Republicans, mainly conservatives, opposed the stopgap bill, signaling that Boehner still has some selling to do. Obama signed the measure into law Saturday afternoon. And though Boehner won significant ground and the applause of his caucus, his approach — like Obama’s — carries the risk that some will view him as too conciliatory, as illustrated by the 54 Republicans who voted against an earlier temporary spending bill, forcing the speaker to rely on votes from Democrats to get it through.

Philip Scott Andrews / New York Times News Service

President Barack Obama made a surprise visit Saturday to the Lincoln Memorial, telling visitors they were able to see the sights because of last night’s budget deal.

Obama’s move to recapture the middle aid suggested a willingness on his part to go further than they would like in rePresident Barack Obama opened thinking the social welfare system. last week by calling on Democrats to David Plouffe, a senior adviser to the embrace his re-election campaign. He president, rather urged Democrats to closed it by praising Republicans for “consume the details of this.” “The easy forging a compromise to cut thing to do is to go in your spending this year and avert A N A L Y S I S corner and throw political a government shutdown. spitballs,” Plouffe said in an The juxtaposition made interview Saturday. “... But clearer than ever the more centrist gov- you can’t view any kind of agreement erning style Obama has adopted since with the other side as weakness.” his party’s big losses in November and his recapture-the-middle strategy for How might voters respond? winning a second term. But in agreeing Friday night to what The White House is hoping voters will he called the largest annual spending view compromising and trying to reach cut in the nation’s history, the president consensus as signs of mature leaderfurther decoupled himself from his par- ship in a partisan environment, not ty in Congress, exacerbating concerns weakness — the attribute Republican among some Democrats about whether lawmakers and potential presidential he is really one of them and is willing candidates are most frequently trying to to spend political capital to defend their attach to Obama. principles on bigger battles ahead. After Republicans found success castThe question of where Obama’s bot- ing Obama as a reflexive liberal intent tom line is on Democratic priorities will on expanding the reach of government, be that much more urgent to his party as the president has sought to reintroduce House Republicans, energized by their himself as a pragmatic leader more atsuccess in resetting the terms of the tuned to the political center than to the debate in Washington, press an aggres- ideologies of left or right. He has talked sive conservative agenda in the coming about this brand of politics for years, but months that includes deeper spending now his challenge is to employ it. cuts and a fundamental reshaping of the In his handling of the closing stages Medicare and Medicaid programs. of the budget negotiations, he portrayed The president may be viewed as lib- himself more as a mediator urging the eral by some of his conservative critics, two parties to do their jobs than as anbut to the traditional base of the Demo- other Democrat at the table. As he did cratic Party, he is often seen as not lib- in December in agreeing to extend the eral enough. As details of the budget Bush tax cuts in return for some ecoagreement came to light Saturday, the nomic stimulus measures, he proved first criticism came from the left, with willing to trade some of his party’s priRep. Jesse Jackson Jr., D-Ill., accusing orities in order to secure others. the president of “keeping the governPolls regularly suggest that the indement open on the backs of the poor and pendent and moderate voters — pardisenfranchised.” ticularly women — who abandoned Even before the battle over this year’s Democrats in 2010 prefer compromise budget, many liberals were concerned to partisan feuding, and in that sense that Obama’s sponsorship of a fiscal Obama has an opportunity to win back commission that recommended changes an important segment of the coalition to Social Security, Medicare and Medic- that sent him to the White House.

By Jeff Zeleny

New York Times News Service

Speaker finds his voice John Boehner emerged from last week’s down-to-thewire budget battle with a fresh reputation as a House speaker able to unify a feisty band of Republicans. And Boehner, a key architect of the budget deal, was praised for holding out for bigger cuts than most expected. Boehner’s new lofty standing is different from the expectations of just a few months ago. Die-hard conservatives have rarely been big Boehner fans, despite his consistently conservative voting record. His affability, and past John Boehner record of compromise, didn’t suggest the kind of toughness they wanted. Further, Boehner’s spokesman, Michael Steel, offered this reminder Saturday: “Republicans are still the minority in Washington. We control one-half of onethird of the government.” But a unified GOP has shown it can matter, and Republicans have renewed confidence. “The speaker anticipates us well, and reads us well,” said Rep. Dan Lungren, R-Calif., who in 2008 challenged Boehner for the Republican leadership post. Boehner faces new tests this week, as lawmakers work out details of the last-minute Friday night agreement. — McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Deal’s details trickle out The Associated Press With a government shutdown averted, at least for now, about 800,000 federal workers avoided furloughs. And while there are few details available regarding the pending appropriations bill, which would fund the day-to-day operating budgets of federal agencies through the Sept. 30 end of the budget year, aides did say that the measure avoids outright cuts to the IRS, though the president’s hoped-for increases were denied. Cuts to Pell Grants for college students from low-income families were restored, as were cuts to health research and the “Race to the Top” initiative that provides grants to better-performing schools. Large cuts to foreign aid were tamed. Anti-abortion lawmakers did succeed in winning a provision to block taxpayer-funded abortions in the District of Columbia. And the House speaker won funding for a personal initiative to provide federally funded vouchers for District of Columbia students to attend private schools. Some $18 billion of the spending cuts involves cuts to so-called mandatory programs whose budgets run largely on autopilot. To the dismay of budget purists, these cuts often involve phantom savings allowed under the decidedly arcane rules of congressional budgeting.

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T OP S T OR I ES

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 A3

Echoes of 2008 in Gaza standoff

8TH ANNIVERSARY

On day Saddam fell, cleric issues warning By Tim Arango and Khalid D. Ali

But the event — an annual rite of the Shiite underclass loyal to BAGHDAD — A day after al-Sadr — took on more political Defense Secretary Robert Gates importance this year because it suggested that U.S. troops could came amid the debate here and remain here for years, in Washington about tens of thousands of whether U.S. troops protesters allied with will leave on schedule Muqtada al-Sadr, the by the end of the year or anti-American Shiite stay on in some capaccleric, flooded the ity. The departure date streets demanding an was set by a security end to the American agreement that binds military presence. both countries. The protests were Muqtada “We want them to get scheduled before Gates’ al-Sadr out of the country,” said comments — made Sheik Ahmed al-HasFriday during a visit nawi, one of the event’s to troops in northern Iraq — al- organizers. “It’s the last year for though his statements may have them.” fueled some of the day’s fervor. The protesters were whipped up by comments drafted by al-Sadr, No national unrest, yet who is continuing his religious Al-Sadr’s ability to galvanize studies in Iran but who sent a his followers to fill the streets message to the crowd threaten- — on vivid display Saturday — is ing to reconstitute his militia, the part of his power over Prime Mahdi Army, if the U.S. military Minister Nouri al-Maliki, who did not leave this year. has recently faced anti-governA demonstration against the ment protests modeled after American invasion is held each those in Tunisia and Egypt. But April 9, the anniversary of the the demonstrations have not yet fall of Baghdad in 2003 and the led to a powerful national movedate when Iraqis, with the help ment, largely because loyalists to of U.S. Marines, pulled down a al-Sadr, who has said the governstatue of Saddam Hussein. ment should be given time to adNew York Times News Service

By Ibrahim Barzak and Josef Federman The Associated Press

Kahlid Mohammed / The Associated Press

Followers of Muqtada al-Sadr wave Iraqi flags as they burn American flags and an effigy of former President George W. Bush during a rally Saturday marking the eighth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad. The powerful radical cleric has threatened to reactivate his militia if U.S. troops extend their stay. dress the country’s needs, have stayed away. If al-Sadr changed his mind, and al-Sadr supporters began protesting against the government, it would be a serious challenge to al-Maliki’s authority. President Barack Obama, whose rise to national prominence followed his outspoken opposition to the war in Iraq, has

said publicly that all troops will leave by the end of the year, but Gates’ comments Friday amounted to a rare public acknowledgement of what many officials say privately: that there is much behind-the-scenes deliberation about a continued presence of U.S. forces after this year. Gates had mentioned the possibility of keeping troops in what he called

an “advise-and-assist” role. But in some places, especially in the northern city of Kirkuk, disputed by Arabs and Kurds, there is widespread fear that the absence of U.S. troops could lead to violence. “This area,” said Nahida al-Dainni, a member of Parliament from the Iraqiya coalition, “will be a civil war if U.S. troops leave.”

In Egypt, anger flares at military Gbagbo’s IVORY COAST

By Maggie Michael

forces said to regain ground Bulletin wire reports

CAIRO — Thousands of demonstrators barricaded themselves in Cairo’s central square with burned-out troop carriers and barbed wire Saturday and demanded the removal of the military council ruling Egypt, infuriated after soldiers stormed their protest camp overnight, killing at least one and injuring 71 others. In a sign the confrontation could escalate, the military warned Saturday evening that it will clear Tahrir Square of protesters “with all force and decisiveness” for life to get back to normal. The warning could presage a repeat of the scene before dawn, when hundreds of soldiers, including a highly trained parachute unit, swarmed into Tahrir Square, firing in the air and beating protesters with clubs and shocking some with electrical batons. Troops dragged away protesters, while others staggered away bleeding from beatings and gunshot wounds. Witnesses reported two killed, though the Health Ministry insisted there was only one death. “It was like a horror movie,” said Mohammed Yehia, an activist and university student from the Nile Delta who was among the protesters. The confrontation marks a dangerous juncture in Egypt’s three months of upheaval.

Khalil Hamra / The Associated Press

A protester holds shell casings as another man holds up his blood-stained hand following an attack by security forces in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. Angry demonstrators returned here late Saturday, some declaring they were ready to face martyrdom, less than a day after Egypt’s military rulers used force to break up a protesters’ camp in the square where their revolution began. When longtime president Hosni Mubarak was ousted on Feb. 11 after 18 days of mass demonstrations against his authoritarian rule, protesters hugged and kissed soldiers on tanks in Tahrir Square, praising them for protecting their “revolution.” Most welcomed the handover of power to the Armed Forces’ Supreme Council, a body of top generals headed by Defense Minister Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi. In the weeks since, tensions have risen. Protest leaders have been critical of the military coun-

cil’s handling of the post-Mubarak transition, and the public has been angered by its failure to prosecute Mubarak. But both sides also worked to stay on good terms.

Developments in Libya, Syria, Yemen Moammar Gadhafi’s soldiers and rebel gunmen battled in the streets of a key front-line city Saturday after the Libyan military used shelling and guerrilla-style tactics to open its most serious push into opposition territory

since international airstrikes began. NATO airstrikes, meanwhile, hammered at Gadhafi’s ammunition stockpiles and armored forces, destroying 17 tanks. At least eight people were killed in the fighting over Ajdabiya, a hospital official said. Recapturing the city would give the Libyan military a staging ground to attack the rebels’ main stronghold, Benghazi, about 100 miles farther east along the coastal highway. Gadhafi’s forces were approaching Benghazi when they were driven back by the international air campaign launched last month to protect civilians and ground Gadhafi’s aircraft. Syrian forces, meanwhile, fired on mourners at a funeral for slain protesters Saturday as authorities vowed to crush any new unrest from a three-week uprising that showed no sign of letting up even as the death toll topped 170. Activists vowed to accelerate their movement with daily protests nationwide, bringing new pressure on President Bashar Assad’s authoritarian regime. And in Yemen, government forces shot bullets and tear gas at demonstrators in the capital and another city Saturday as longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh resisted a diplomatic push for the resignation that hundreds of thousands of his own people were demanding in the streets. On Saturday, after a top Qatari official called for Saleh’s resignation, Yemen recalled its ambassador to the Gulf nation.

After a relative calm After two years of relative calm, the situation began to deteriorate nearly three weeks ago with rocket fire toward Israel and a retaliation that killed Gazans. It escalated dramatically last weekend when an airstrike killed three Palestinian militants who Israel said were plotting to carry out a cross-border kidnapping. On Thursday, Hamas militants fired an antitank missile at an Israeli school bus, wounding two people on board, including a teenage boy. Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said that act crossed a line and he vowed a harsh response. Hamas says Israel has used excessive force in its retaliation, which has killed six civilians and wounded more than 65 people.

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Japan orders more fail-safes for nuke plants Bulletin wire reports

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and cooled, goals that have eluded emergency teams struggling with cascading problems in the month since the devastating tsunami damaged their cooling systems. Omori said the extent of damage to the reactors and other problems still need to be assessed. Getting a quick resolution to the Fukushima crisis would give a boost to a nation trying to recover from the severe disasters and to the tens of thousands forced to evacuate communities near the plant and already wearying of living in shelters with no prospects of returning home. “It could take decades. We will all have to move away,” said 36year-old Hitomi Motouchi, who left a home on the fringe of the evacuation zone and is living in a gymnasium in Fukushima city.

Wi

TOKYO — The Japanese government Saturday ordered the nation’s nuclear power plant operators to secure more emergency generators after a series of malfunctions at two such plants raised concerns about whether Japan was vulnerable to a second nuclear accident. The new nuclear malfunctions followed an aftershock of magnitude 7.1 that ripped through northeastern Japan late Thursday, knocking out power to more than 4 million households and businesses. The government also moved to ban the planting of rice in soil containing too much radioactive material. While sales of some milk, vegetables and fish have already been prohibited because of contamination, the new measures affect the nation’s staple crop, a foundation of its culture as well as its diet. Once Japan’s leaky nuclear complex stops spewing radiation and its reactors cool down, making the site safe and removing the ruined equipment is going to be a messy ordeal that could take decades and cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Radiation has covered the area around the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant and blanketed parts of the complex, making the job of “decommissioning” the plant — rendering it safe so it doesn’t threaten public health and the environment — a bigger task than usual. Toshiba Corp., which supplied four of Fukushima’s six reactors, submitted a road map recently to the plant’s operator for decommissioning the crippled reactors. The study, done with three other companies, projects that it would take about 10 years to remove the fuel rods and the reactors and contain other radioactivity at the site, said Keisuke Omori of Toshiba. That timeline is far faster than those for other nuclear accidents and contains a big caveat: The reactors must first be stabilized

Jack R. Miller, D.M.D. Branden R. Ferguson, D.D.S

NE

Forces supporting Ivory Coast’s entrenched strongman broke through the security perimeter imposed around the presidential compound Saturday, firing on French helicopters in an advance that appeared to breathe new life into Laurent Gbagbo’s camp, which had been teetering on the brink of defeat. Residents in the Cocody district of Abidjan reported two hours of explosions and heavy arms fire before sunrise Saturday, and French forces said helicopters attempting to evacuate diplomats from a residence near the presidential compound were hit by machine gun fire. No French soldiers were injured in the attack by pro-Gbagbo forces, but the helicopters fired back destroying one armored vehicle, said Cmdr. Frederic Daguillon, the French forces spokesman. Since Friday, Gbagbo loyalists have recaptured territory in Abidjan, the economic capital, repelled a French military operation, attacked his rival’s headquarters and recaptured state television and radio, which resumed broadcasting messages of defiance. Gbagbo was still surrounded by forces loyal to his rival, Alassane Ouattara, the country’s internationally recognized president, which were backed by troops from France and the U.N. But Saturday evening, his forces attacked the Golf Hotel, where Ouattara has maintained his headquarters since winning the election in November. A U.N. official said it was the first time Gbagbo’s forces had attacked the hotel. State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said in a statement the U.S. condemns the new assault. “It is clear that Gbagbo’s attempts at negotiation this week were nothing more than a ruse to regroup and rearm,” he said. “Gbagbo’s continued attempt to force a result that he could not obtain at the ballot box reveals his callous disregard for the welfare of the Ivoirian people.” In power for a decade, Gbagbo refuses to step aside, even though the U.N. has ruled that he lost the November presidential election to his political rival Ouattara. For the last four months, Ouattara has been living out of the Golf Hotel, protected by U.N. forces as the internationally recognized leader of Ivory Coast. With fighting ongoing, it was difficult late Saturday to determine whether Gbagbo’s soldiers had succeeded in gaining ground or whether the counterattack had failed to turn the tables.

The Associated Press

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Palestinian militants fired more than 30 rockets at southern Israel on Saturday and Israeli warplanes killed five militants in the Gaza Strip in the most intense fighting since Israel’s 2008-09 offensive in the Hamas-ruled territory. The escalating series of strikes and counterstrikes has killed 18 Gazans since it began Thursday following a Hamas missile attack against an Israeli school bus. The continuing clashes are increasing the probability of a full-scale military confrontation. Israeli officials said the airstrikes would continue as long as the rockets persist. Hamas officials insisted they were trying to restore quiet, but said they were prepared to fight.

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A4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Suicide Continued from A1 Often, “patients are admitted to psychiatry units because they are suicidal,” said Dr. Jan Fawcett, a professor of psychiatry at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine and a national expert on suicide prevention. “How do you know if a person is at acute risk? That’s the hardest thing to know.” This latest case at St. Charles occurred about 21⁄2 years after the public suicide of Cindy Powell, who leapt to her death from a hospital balcony. This instance is the first patient suicide in Sage View’s seven-year history, hospital officials said. Whether the deficiencies found in the state’s report contributed to the incident is an open question and one the report does not try to answer. “You try to do everything in a hospital to keep everyone safe,” said Dr. Magnus Lakovics, a Bend psychiatrist and medical director for St. Charles’ behavioral health services. “That doesn’t prevent someone from committing suicide.”

A risky assessment The woman came into the emergency department at St. Charles Redmond, where she was hearing voices and talking about committing suicide. The voices told the woman they hated her and wanted her to kill herself, according to a social worker’s report. The woman told the social worker she didn’t feel safe with herself. The voices wouldn’t leave her alone, the woman said. The woman was transferred to St. Charles Bend, the only area hospital with an inpatient psychiatric ward. She was monitored in the hospital’s psychiatric emergency room for several hours after her Sept. 20 arrival and transferred to Sage View. As the patient left the emergency area, the nurse wrote a note in the medical record: “condition at discharge — serious.” When the patient got to Sage View, another nurse took over, again assessing the woman’s condition. According to this assessment, the woman denied hearing voices. “Behavior is strange,” the nurse noted, according to the state report. “Poor judgment, poor insight and (her) mood is angry.” The nurse noted that the patient had attempted suicide twice before and had scars on her arms from cutting herself. Despite this, the nurse documented her risk of suicide as “low.” The nurse left the section labeled “recommendations” blank. This documentation “did not meet organization standards,” the hospital said in a response submitted to the state. The nurse was fairly new, the hospital noted, and needed “additional mentoring in how better to approach this type of problem.” Robin Henderson, the director of St. Charles’ behavioral health services, told The Bulletin that staff training was not an issue in the incident. In a later statement relayed through spokeswoman Lisa Goodman, Henderson said, “If it had been, we would have been cited by (the state) as negligent.” Based on suicide risk assessments, staff at Sage View will decide how much observation a patient needs. Sage View staffers check in with every patient at least once an hour, but some patients are checked more frequently, sometimes every half hour or 15 minutes. The riskiest patients never leave the staff’s sight and occasionally are not allowed out of arm’s reach. The woman was put on hourly checks, the lowest level of risk, according to the state report. The investigators note there were indications that should have sent up red flags, including previous suicide attempts and assessments that indicated the patient’s risk was high and her condition serious. During an interview with state investigators, the nurse who had done the assessment said that he or she (the state report does not specify the nurse’s gender) had a “gut feeling” the patient was “OK.” The last recorded observation of the patient was at 11 a.m. on Sept. 21. Before the 12 p.m. check, the woman broke a plastic hanger and wedged it in the upper corner of her bedroom door, according to a hospital report on the incident. She used the hanger and a bedsheet to form a ligature and hanged herself. The hospital’s report indicates she died at 11:55 a.m.

Hospital response The hospital responded to the incident in a number of ways. It notified the patient’s family as well as state and local officials. The Bend Police Department

opened an investigation, which is still ongoing. The hospital also began a process known as a root cause analysis, delving deep into hospital processes and trying to learn what went wrong. “Whenever any type of incident occurs ... you want to as quickly as possible interview everybody who might be involved,” said Henderson, “and really figure out, were there breakdowns that occurred?” This was an “everybody boots on the ground” investigation, said Leslie Ray, a patient safety consultant at the Oregon Patient Safety Commission who read the state report. She guessed that the investigation took at least 500 hours, “just because of how deep and thorough it is.” A patient suicide, Ray said, “is one of the more complex (issues) that a system has to deal with.” Coming out of the investigation, the hospital changed a number of practices, Henderson said. “I think it would be fair to say ... what we found were opportunities for improvement.” In particular, the hospital changed the program it uses to assess risk. The new program more clearly lays out and weighs the risk factors for a given patient, Henderson said. The hospital also gave staff more training around how to assess risk in potentially suicidal patients. In addition, the hospital changed some things in the rooms at Sage View. The hospital no longer allows patients to use hangers. Though a chair was not used in the suicide, those are gone from rooms as well, according to the hospital’s report to the state. The hospital also investigated whether to install pressure-sensitive alarms on doors though for now has decided they cost too much and are not reliable enough. It has changed to thicker, harderto-knot bedsheets. But it’s unclear whether any of these changes would have prevented this suicide or will help to prevent another one, Lakovics said. “The thing you have to realize is, even if we make all these changes ... there’s a very good chance it will happen again,” he said. “It’s the nature of the problem.” Lakovics said the system of assigning patients risk is imperfect, and medicine is not able to predict the future. “We do the best we can,” Lakovics said. “We put certain people in high-risk categories, and guess what? The ones that aren’t in the high-risk categories still do it.”

Public disclosure When state investigators came to St. Charles at the beginning of October, they found additional breaches of patient safety in at least two other patients. Though those cases did not result in grave harm, they did indicate that the hospital was not following federal and state regulations in some instances. Among other findings, the investigators noted that just one day before the suicide occurred, staff at Sage View had given a razor to a woman who had a history of cutting herself. The hospital, according to its response to the state, has discontinued the use of razors. When the suicide occurred, the hospital did not disclose it or the investigation to the public because officials did not feel the risk extended to the wider community, Goodman said. “Our threshold for disclosing some of these events publicly would be whether there’s a risk to other patients,” she said. In this case, said hospital attorney Gary Bruce, patient privacy trumps a right to community knowledge. “Our first obligation is to the patient and his or her right to privacy. And then shortly after that set of rights is our obligation to the community to keep them safe.” The hospital has previously disclosed cases in which there was grave harm to a patient while in the hospital. In 2008, the hospital held a press conference after the death of Cindy Powell, the woman who leapt to her death in the lobby. Later that same year, the hospital issued a news release after a patient died when his tracheostomy tube was inadvertently sealed off by a staff member at the hospital, suffocating the man. Both Lakovics and Henderson expressed concern that disclosure of the current patient safety issues would discourage people from using the hospital. “I don’t want the community to get frightened and scared of mental health care,” Lakovics said. “The hospital is like anything else. There’s many things we can’t help, but there’s so much we can do.” Betsy Q. Cliff can be reached at 541-383-0375 or at bcliff@bendbulletin.com.

SCORES SWARM MADRID AS SPAIN GRAPPLES WITH BASQUES, TERRORISM

The Associated Press photos

but that ruling will likely come after the May 22 elections. The new party, which was unveiled Feb. 7, is the culmination of intense internal debates within ETA-linked pro-independence groups, which concluded that bombs and bullets were no longer an effective way to seek a Basque state independent of Spain and France. ETA declared a cease-fire in September and went further in January by calling it permanent, although it has called 11 truces throughout its 40-year history of violent separatism. The group has killed more than 825 people since the late 1960s and is considered a terrorist organization by Spain, the European Union and the U.S.

Thousands of people, including mourners of victims of terrorism, marched with Spanish flags in a rally in Madrid called by the AVT (Victims of Terrorism Association) on Saturday to protest against Basque separatists. Last Saturday, tens of thousands on the other side demonstrated in Spain’s troubled Basque region, calling for the government to legalize a new pro-independence party, Sortu, that says it rejects violence by armed separatist group ETA. The Supreme Court denied Sortu legal status and barred it from running in local elections in May, finding that the party is a repackaged version of ETA’s outlawed political wing Batasuna. Sortu can appeal to the Constitutional Court,

Taliban seen stirring violence over Quran burning By Carlotta Gall New York Times News Service

MAZAR-E-SHARIF, Afghanistan — While it is still too early to say who were the killers of the seven U.N. employees last week, senior police officials say they suspect current or former Taliban members or other insurgents of leading the violence, aided by sympathizers and hard-line mullahs who whipped up a crowd of thousands angered by a Quran burning in the United States. Whether the killings were planned, the violence has proved to be a disturbing gauge of the depths of Taliban influence in this progressive northern city, which has always been friendly to the foreign intervention, and of the apparent potential of the Taliban to foment unrest. Perhaps most unsettling for Western and Afghan officials, former Taliban fighters who were supposed to have switched loyalties as part of a U.S.-financed program were among those who snatched weapons from guards, police officials said. Three who were living under police protection just a few blocks from the ransacked U.N. compound

have been arrested. That former Taliban fighters may have been involved raises serious questions about the U.S.backed reintegration program, an important element in the strategy to wean Taliban fighters from the insurgency and for President Hamid Karzai to forge peace. Fewer Taliban members than envisioned have taken advantage of the program, which has received $50 million in U.S. financing. Even for those who have, the violence shows, getting them to change sides may be easier than changing their minds. It is just one of many quandaries raised by the deadly events that began with protests against the burning of a Quran by American pastor Terry Jones in Florida but ended with a mob killing three U.N. staff members — a Swedish human rights officer, a Norwegian pilot and a Romanian political officer — and four Nepalese guards. Five Afghan civilians also were killed when the police fired on the crowd, and 20 were wounded. As demonstrations continue to ripple across the country, some of them violent, larger questions are being raised as to how serious the government is about protecting foreigners working in Afghanistan and the ability of the Afghan

security forces to take over. “One day we will have to analyze why the protests only took place in Afghanistan,” said Staffan de Mistura, head of the U.N. mission in Afghanistan. While still blaming the American pastor for inciting the violence, de Mistura on Friday called for the killers to be brought to justice. “There is no justification, no excuse, no possible reason for anyone to have done that horrible act.”

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C OV ER S T ORY

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est financial institutions in recent days met with Geithner, House Speaker John Boehner and other lawmakers, arguing for the importance of raising the debt ceiling.

Unpopular votes The United States is one of the few nations that limits its debt by law, and votes in Congress to raise the ceiling, which happens every few years, are perhaps the least popular that lawmakers face. Financial and government leaders alike have grown accustomed to some political brinkmanship over raising the cap, confident that Congress ultimately would do so, usually with the party holding the White House supplying most votes. (So it was that Obama, as a senator in 2006, voted against a Bush administration request to raise the debt limit; it passed with mostly Republican votes.) What makes this year different, people in both parties say, is the

and President Barack Obama. The 2012 spending blueprint written by the House Budget Committee chairman, Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis., is on a collision course with Democrats determined to allow only modest changes, if any, to Medicare, Medicaid and other programs. “It will be much more difficult, with much higher stakes, with the debt ceiling and the 2012 budget,� said Thomas Mann of the Brookings Institution, who co-wrote a book on Congress, “The Broken Branch.� “I see little sign the tea party members and their allies will lower their demands or embrace a pragmatic strategy,� Mann said. “Boehner will have a hard time duplicating this success, especially if Obama is more forceful in filling the vacuum on the Democratic side of the debate.� Obama’s re-election chances will depend partly on his ability to resolve these issues ahead. With some skill and luck, he may emerge either as a pragmatic problem-solver or the man who took reasonable stands against an out-of-the-mainstream GOP that forced a government shutdown or debt default. In a statement shortly after the budget deal late Friday, Obama said some cuts will be painful and he acknowledged, “I would not have made these cuts in better circumstances.� The budget negotiations are difficult because voters sent contradictory messages last fall. They want Congress to stop the partisan bickering and solve the nation’s big problems, including the deficit. Many voters, especially in elections where Republicans ousted House Democrats, also said they are sick of wishy-washy lawmakers who compromise on major issues. Anyone who missed their warning had only to look at former Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah. A solid conservative, he nonetheless was denied his party’s nomination by GOP activists angry that he cooperated with Democrats on a few issues. This time, Boehner persuaded enough Republicans to go along with him. Soon the country will see if he can repeat the feat with social conservatives who think it’s now their turn to prevail, and with anti-spending advocates who viewed last week as an appetizer for an upcoming feast on federal programs and costs.

large number of congressional Republicans, including the many newcomers who gave the party a House majority, who are strenuously opposed to government spending, and egged on by the activist tea party movement to use the leverage of the debt-limit vote to make their stand. “We want to see real structural, cultural-type changes tied to this debt ceiling,� said Rep. Mick Mulvaney, a first-term South Carolina Republican. “... There has got to be game-changing kinds of changes to get us to vote for it.� He dismissed warnings about default as “just posturing� and said Democrats should bear the responsibility for passing any measure to increase the borrowing limit. “It’s their debt. Make them do it. That’s my attitude.� In fact, the debt was created by both parties and past presidents as well as Obama. Of the nearly $14.2 trillion in debt, roughly $5 trillion is money

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Not much time left Boehner said after the November elections that his new members would have to deal with the debt limit “as adults.� But with many tea party-backed Republicans feeling that they already compromised more than they wanted on the current year’s budget, it is not clear how receptive the freshman Republicans will be to a deal this time. The just-concluded budget fight has spawned talk that the White

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WASHINGTON — If you look at it as most people will, Republican conservatives were the chief winners in the budget deal that forced Democrats to accept historic spending cuts they strongly opposed. Emboldened by last fall’s election victories, fiscal conservatives have changed the debate in Washington. The question no longer is whether to cut spending, but how deeply. Rarely mentioned is the idea of higher taxes to lower the deficit. Their success is all the more notable because Democrats control the Senate and White House. But more difficult decisions lie ahead, and it’s not clear whether GOP lawmakers can rely on their winning formula. They pushed Democrats to the brink, then gave in just enough to claim impressive achievements, rather than holding the line and triggering a government shutdown that might have yielded far less politically. The GOP victories came on spending. Their concessions dealt mainly with social issues, where they tried to limit abortions and restrict environmental rules. House Republicans who care intensely about such social issues may fight harder next time, giving Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, fewer bargaining chips to appease Democrats. Tea party Republicans, some of whom found the cuts too small in Friday’s lastminute agreement, might insist on deeper ones from now on. Two fast-approaching debates could make this past week’s showdown look like a preliminary skirmish. Congress soon must vote to increase the government’s borrowing limit to avoid the first-ever default on U.S. loan payments. With the 2011 budget battle still fresh, lawmakers are now focusing on the spending debate for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1. The House Budget Committee has approved, on a partisan vote, a bill that would cut spending by $5.8 trillion over 10 years and make major cost-saving changes to the Medicare and Medicaid health programs. These are the big-picture, bigmoney issues that tea partyers have awaited eagerly. Many have pledged to vote against a higher debt ceiling without major givebacks from Senate Democrats

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House and Congress will perhaps resort to a series of short-term extensions of the debt limit while they bargain over a debt-reduction plan or some other mandatory budget restraints. The question is, how might global financial markets react? “We’ve never seen that before,� said Robert Rubin, the Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton and a longtime Wall Street executive. “But I know this: It’s not a risk I’d take.� After this week, Congress recesses until early May, returning just two weeks before Treasury hits the debt ceiling. Even stretching the deadline for action to July, there would be little time to agree on a debt-reduction accord as Republicans demand — or even on the basis for negotiations. So attention is turning to a bipartisan “Gang of Six� in the Senate. The senators, three from each party, have met for 10 months to negotiate a comprehensive plan on taxes, entitlement programs and military spending. They have considered recommendations made by Obama’s bipartisan fiscal commission in December. “It would be nice to have it in a package form by the debt-limit� debate, said Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga. But even if the six agree, he added, “hitting everyone else with something this major, it’s going to take some time to be digested.� House Republicans in effect outlined their starting position last week, when, amid the fight over 2011 spending, they unveiled their budget for the 2012 fiscal year and beyond. It would cut $6 trillion over 10 years, mostly from projected spending for Medicare and Medicaid. But those savings would be offset by about $4 trillion in tax cuts. The result, according to the Congressional Budget Office, would be continued annual deficits until 2040 — necessitating more votes to raise the debt limit, even under House Republicans’ plan, for decades to come.

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The government is about to hit the legal borrowing limit of $14.2 trillion. For a rough idea of the source of all that debt, a breakdown through the 2010 fiscal year, which ended Sept. 30, is shown at right.

THE SPENDING WARS: AN ANALYSIS

By Charles Babington

Sept. 30, 2010 $13.5 trillion

the government has borrowed from other accounts, mostly from Social Security revenues, according to federal figures. Several major policies from the past decade when Republicans controlled the White House and Congress — tax cuts, a Medicare prescriptiondrug benefit and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — account for more than $3.2 trillion. The recession cost more than $800 billion in lost revenues from businesses and individuals and in automatic spending for safetynet programs like unemployment compensation. Obama’s stimulus spending and tax cuts added about $600 billion through the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. Though the recent standoff that consumed Washington over spending for the 2011 fiscal year ended without a government shutdown, the messy process and 11th-hour settlement have stoked trepidation about the debt-limit fight to come. If Republicans and Democrats found it so hard to compromise over a few billion dollars, the thinking goes, how can they ever come together on a multiyear, multitrillion-dollar plan to cut the debt within months? “If I were still Treasury secretary, it would worry the hell out of me,� said James Baker, who served in that office for President Ronald Reagan; the total federal debt nearly tripled over his two terms. “But it doesn’t worry me as a good Republican, and one who wants to finally see some fiscal responsibility in this country.� Baker, long known as a deal-maker, said Republicans were right to say, “OK, we’ll increase the debt limit, Democrats, if you will enact enforceable spending restraint.�

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Continued from A1 Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has told congressional leaders the government would hit the limit no later than May 16. He outlined “extraordinary measures� — essentially moving money among federal accounts — that could buy time until July 8. Once the limit is reached, the Treasury Department would not be able to borrow as it does routinely to finance federal operations and roll over existing debt; ultimately, it would be unable to pay off maturing debt, putting the U.S. government — the global standard-setter for creditworthiness — into default. The repercussions in that event would be as much economic as political, rippling from the bond market into the lives of ordinary citizens through higher interest rates and financial uncertainty of the sort that the economy is only now overcoming, more than three years after the onset of the Great Recession. Given the short time frame for action and the prospect of an intractable political clash, leaders in both government and business are already moving to avert a crisis that most likely would be “a recovery-ending event,� as Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, testified recently in the Senate. He described a sequence of events that “would cascade through the financial markets,� provoking another credit crisis like that in 2008 and causing interest rates to jump. Geithner has been meeting privately with senior lawmakers of both parties to underscore the economic stakes. At the White House, Obama’s chief economic adviser, Gene Sperling, peeled away from the spending fight in recent weeks to turn nearly full time to developing the administration’s strategy for the debt-limit debate. Central to that, administration officials say, is whether Obama initiates bipartisan talks on a long-term debt-reduction plan that tackles taxes, military spending and fastgrowing entitlement programs like Medicare and Medicaid. Executives of the nation’s larg-

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Space Continued from A1 But this time — unlike 50 years ago, when beating the U.S. into space marked a geopolitical victory in the Cold War — Russia is focusing on the commercial, technological and scientific aspects of space travel. President Dmitry Medvedev has named aerospace one of five industries the government plans to nurture to help diversify the economy of the world’s largest energy supplier away from resource extraction. “We are increasing the space budget as the time has come for a technological breakthrough,” Dmitry Peskov, the spokesman for Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, said by phone. “We need to replace outdated infrastructure and continue to support the flagship status of the space industry.” Russia’s Soyuz TMA-21 spacecraft with three astronauts on board was launched early Tuesday from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to the International Space Station. The launch marks the 50th anniversary on April 12 of Yuri Gagarin’s first mission to space. Alexander Samokutiaev and Andrey Borisenko of Roscosmos and NASA’s Ron Garan docked at the station Wednesday. Russia is working on the ISS with the U.S. It will provide the only way for American astronauts to travel to the station following a decision to end the almost 30year-old space shuttle program this year, with the last two flights scheduled for April and June.

Outsourcing NASA Russia receives $752 million from the U.S. for sending crews to the ISS through 2015. The country is using the launch fee of $63 million per member on craft development, maintenance and upgrade, Perminov said. President Barack Obama announced last year an end to NASA’s Constellation program, developed under George W. Bush’s administration, which would have built rockets and spacecraft for a return to the moon by 2020. The decision has been criticized by former NASA astronauts and officials, including the agency’s previous administrator and Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, because they say it will sideline the American space program. With no manned government rockets ready to go, routine trips to so-called low-earth orbit will be outsourced to private companies. NASA is seeking an $18.7 billion budget for next year, $300 million less than the funding targeted for this year.

China’s aspirations China, which made its first successful manned flight in 2003 aboard the Shenzhou spacecraft, plans to put a capsule on the moon in 2013 and have the technology for a manned mission in 2020, said Xu Shijie, a member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference. The country plans to have its own orbital station in about 2020. Russia’s space industry did suffer a blow last year when a Proton-M rocket failed to deliver three navigation satellites into orbit for Glonass, a rival to the U.S. Global Positioning System. But Russia may be able to complete a Mars mission within 12 years if it is included in the new federal space program, though a flight to Mars is more likely in cooperation with other space programs, according to the Roscosmos plan. Roscosmos last June began a Mars flight simulation program, locking three Russians, two Europeans and a Chinese astronaut in a 18,800-square-foot, five-module complex to live there in isolation for 17 months.

7 dead in Dutch mall shooting The Associated Press ALPHEN AAN DEN RIJN, Netherlands — A man armed with a machine gun opened fire in a crowded shopping mall on Saturday, killing six people and wounding 15, then committed suicide, officials and witnesses said. Children were among the casualties, including an infant who was lightly injured, said Mayor Bas Eenhoorn. Three of the wounded were hospitalized in critical condition. The rampage ended when the attacker shot himself in the head at the Ridderhof mall in Alphen aan den Rijn, a suburb 19 miles southwest of Amsterdam. The gunman was identified as a 24-year-old.

C OV ER S T OR I ES

Mixed results for Cuba’s new business class By Paul Haven The Associated Press

HAVANA — There was no colorful bunting to mark the grand opening, and no way to advertise in the local press. There was not even money to hand out fliers in this decaying Havana neighborhood of potholed streets and crumbling one-story homes. So when the freshly painted front window of the tiny pizzeria swung open on the most important afternoon in Julio Cesar Hidalgo’s life, nobody noticed at first. Hidalgo and his girlfriend, Gisselle de la Noval, waited for half an hour, then another, and another. Finally, 92-year-old Estrella Soto shuffled up to the takeout counter and ordered a medium pizza with onion toppings. “I love it,” she declared, and Hidalgo and de la Noval have barely sat down since. They sold seven more pizzas in the next 15 minutes, and a total of 30 on their March 8 opening day. The following Saturday they had their best afternoon yet, churning out 60 pies from a used gas oven that looks too narrow even for a small family’s needs. It has been six months since President Raul Castro opened this tightly controlled communist country to a smattering of free-market capitalism, in the most significant change to its economy in decades. By March 8, entrepreneurs had taken out more than 171,000 business licenses, according to state-run media, more than two-thirds of the 250,000 goal for all of 2011. As Cuba’s new business class journeys cautiously forth, some are enjoying the first fruits of success. Others say the terrain has been rockier than anticipated. Some have already closed the door on their dreams. “Cubans are entrepreneurial people, and to the extent they are allowed to work and make some

Franklin Reyes / The Associated Press

Julio Cesar Hidalgo, takes a break after preparing pizza at his newly opened Baldoquin’s Cafeteria, run out of his home, in Havana. Hidalgo, a former state employee, and his girlfriend opened the tiny pizzeria on March 8. money, they will,” said Lorenzo Perez, a former IMF economist and member of the Association of the Study of the Cuban Economy, a nonpartisan Washington, D.C.-based think tank. But he added the new enterprises face stiff challenges in a country where few have business acumen, raw materials are hard to find, tax rates can be exorbitant and myriad government regulations still restrict basic activities. “All over the world, the percentage of small businesses that succeed is very small, even in the United States,” said Perez. “In Cuba, the difficulties are enormous ... but that doesn’t mean it can’t be done.” Dozens of restaurants have opened, some of them remarkably chic for an island of 11 million people where it can be hard to find such basics as matching tables and chairs, and an explosion of private apartments have been put on the rental market. Those who have sought out

licenses say the process is fast and straightforward. Fears that government inspectors — some looking for kickbacks — would undo the free market drive have not materialized, perhaps because there are not yet enough. Meanwhile, the government has pushed back indefinitely plans to lay off 500,000 state workers, acknowledging the move was extremely difficult and had to be handled with the utmost delicacy. More details are likely to be announced at a key Communist Party Congress slated to begin April 16. But it has not all been smooth sailing for the entrepreneurs. Danilo Perez, a 21-year-old bookkeeper who got a license to sell pirated DVDs, threw in the towel two weeks ago. He said when he went to get a license in December, officials told him he needed to pay $2.50 a month to operate a street-side kiosk. But when he went back in March, they told him the rates had gone up to $10.50 a month, with an ex-

tra month’s taxes in advance. “There were many people protesting — some even crying — because they didn’t have the money to pay,” said Perez, who is unemployed and getting help from his parents. Back at Hidalgo’s pizza parlor, the strains of business ownership were evident. Hidalgo has spent more than $1,000 to get the pizzeria off the ground, much of it a gift from a cousin in the United States. Now that it is open, he spends hours standing up each day next to the hot oven, and hours more each week lugging sacks of flour and large cans of tomato sauce back on his bicycle. He has been able to find all the ingredients he needs in official shops, a sign, he says, that the government is making good on promises to increase access to raw materials. Hidalgo said he has had no time to contemplate success because he falls asleep at the end of each long day before his head hits the pillow.

Food stamps Continued from A1 Despite significant staffing constraints, Carey’s agency is working to accommodate the additional applicants while making sure current clients are recertified for benefits. Carey said his staffing level for specialists working on foodstamp certification is currently at 72 percent. The staffing level for specialists who handle cash benefits for families is even lower, Carey said, around 38 percent. “Staffing levels are certainly low, as we’ve been in a hiring freeze since last July,” Carey said. A little over a year ago, as staffing was reduced and applications for benefits continued to rise, Carey said, his office implemented a new system to move applicants more quickly through the process. Previously, applicants were asked in-depth questions to determine whether they qualified for other programs. The new process sacrifices those longer interviews to achieve quicker turnaround. “Because of the mad rush of people over the last couple of years, we now have a process where we try to get everyone who qualifies onto food stamps either that day or the next,” Carey said. “The federal government mandates 30 days as the time frame for getting people signed up, but we understand people are often hungry now. When people are hungry, I don’t want to tell them it’s going to be 30 days until they get help.” The percentage of Central Oregonians receiving SNAP benefits is slightly higher than the statewide number, which is roughly 17 percent. “If you were to go back to (the SNAP enrollment numbers for) July 2008 and compare it to now, I know you would see an increase of about 50 percent,” DHS spokesman Gene Evans said. “On staffing, statewide, I think we’re down about 500 positions.” Erik Hidle can be reached at 541-617-7837 or at ehidle@bendbulletin.com.


THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 A7


A8 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Muppets Continued from A1 The star of SimSim Humara (“Ours”), as the Pakistani edition of “Sesame Street” is called, is Rani, a cute 6-year-old human muppet who loves science and reading, and her curiosity will be used to encourage questioning. Other characters include a spirited adult woman, Baaji, who enjoys family time and tradition, and Baily, a hardworking donkey who longs to be a pop star. They’ll speak entirely in local languages — the Urdu spoken by most Pakistanis as well as four regional languages. The only cast member of the American version that will have a role is Elmo, the cheerful monster toddler; Big Bird, Cookie Monster and Count von Count have been cut to make way for local characters. Filming will begin in Lahore this summer, and the show will begin airing in the fall. Its target audience is deprived children outside the big cities. Because it will be broadcast on the national state broadcaster, PTV, it should be available even in the smallest village. Following the “Sesame Street” formula, each show will pick one word and one number to highlight. “The idea is to prepare and inspire a child to go on the path of learning. And inspire the parents of the child to think that the child must be educated,” said Faizaan Peerzada, the chief operating officer at the Lahore-based Rafi Peer Theater Workshop, which was awarded the project, in collaboration with Sesame Workshop, the creator of the American show. “This is a very serious business, the education of the children of Pakistan, at a critical time.”

‘A gift for the children’ The show will have strong female characters and carry an implicit message of tolerance — much needed in a dangerously fractured society — but it will feature no pro-American propaganda or any overt challenge to hard-line religious sentiment. “I think this is a gift for the children of Pakistan, a means of joyful learning,” Peerzada said. “I think the American taxpayer will be very happy with the results.” The Peerzadas are one of Pakistan’s foremost creative clans. Four Peerzada brothers, one sister and a Peerzada child, run the Rafi Peer Theatre Workshop, which was established in the 1970s. Their father founded a pioneering theater company. Another brother, Salman, the oldest, is a filmmaker. In the 1980s, the family moved into puppetry, and there’s a puppet museum, said to be Asia’s largest, with colorful and ghoulish models from across the world, at their sprawling cultural center on the outskirts of Lahore. Being an artist, however, hasn’t been easy — or safe. Pakistani extremists have relentlessly targeted entertainment, the arts and anything associated with the international community. The Peerzadas used to put on an annual performing arts festival that attracted performers from all over the globe, but the festival has been suspended since 2008 after it was bombed, injuring nine people. In 2009, the restaurant at the cultural center also was bombed, and in May, there was an explosion at the puppet museum. Faizaan Peerzada blamed a “mindset that disagrees with diversity” for the attacks, and the family vows to continue its work.

$20 million for a show reaching 3 million The $20 million grant will produce the Pakistani “Sesame Street” for four years, with 78 episodes in Urdu, 56 in regional languages, a radio show, mobile TV vans to show the program in remote areas and a traveling muppet road show. Larry Dolan, director of the education office at USAID for Pakistan, said the expenditure is a valuable addition to the “series of different pots” of educational assistance the U.S. provides. The target audience for the TV show, at 3 million children, is much larger than would benefit from the same expenditure on, say, new school construction. The muppets will also be used to front public service messages, on issues such as health, that will reach 95 million people. “Teaching kids early on makes them much more successful when they get to school. And this program will have the capacity to encourage tolerance, which is so key to what we’re trying to do here,” Dolan said. “In terms of bang for the buck, reaching 95 million people is pretty important. This is much more than a TV program, far more ambitious than a ‘Sesame Street’ series.” Still, there are critics. They point

out that $20 million could fund the building of 113 primary schools and cover their costs for three years, based on the figures used by The Citizens Foundation, a Pakistan nongovernmental organization that provides high-quality education to poor children. “A contextualized Sesame Street would be good, important and useful. But if I had $20 million for education in Pakistan, it’s not the first thing I would do,” said Mosharraf Zaidi, a columnist for Pakistan’s The News,

C OV ER S T ORY a daily newspaper. Pakistan indeed remains deeply dependent on international assistance, including billions of dollars in civilian and military aid from the United States. But unlike many USAID projects in Pakistan and elsewhere, the Sesame Street initiative doesn’t appear to involve money going to expensive outside consultants and for lavish offices. Rafi Peer’s existing facilities will be used, at no extra cost. New York-based Sesame Workshop, founded more than four

decades ago as Children’s Television Workshop, is a nonprofit organization that has backed 30 different local co-productions of the program around the world, including in Indonesia, Nigeria and South Africa. “Children learn best when educational materials match their own cultural experiences,” said Charlotte Cole, senior vice president at Sesame Workshop. “These programs have the essence of ‘Sesame Street,’ then take on the essence of the local region.”

“The idea is to prepare and inspire a child to go on the path of learning. And inspire the parents of the child to think that the child must be educated.” — Faizaan Peerzada, of the Rafi Peer Theater Workshop, left, pictured with his brother Photo from McClatchy-Tribune News Service


L

Inside

www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2011

Bend to lay off two workers

Salem Week

By Nick Grube The Bulletin

Examining each week of the 2011 Legislature from a Central Oregon perspective Analysis

Health hints from over here By Nick Budnick The Bulletin

SALEM — Even as the Legislature looks to Gov. John Kitzhaber to find nearly $300 million in savings in Oregon’s health care system for the needy, lawmakers are looking to Central Oregon — for both hope and caution. Kitzhaber’s budget relies on making the Oregon Health Plan more efficient, meaning the state version of the federal Medicaid program that serves about 600,000 of the state’s neediest people must become leaner.

B

OREGON Pendleton pushes solar energy, see Page B3. OBITUARIES Sidney Lumet, director of ‘Serpico,’ ‘Network,’ others, see Page B5.

Last week, lawmakers took the findings of a task force put together by Kitzhaber and set up a joint Senate-House committee to turn the group’s recommendations into reality. As they did so, top lawmakers were looking at the results of a pilot project set up in Central Oregon two years ago. Rep. Peter Buckley, DAshland, cited the Central Oregon program when he and the other two top budget leaders in the Legislature unveiled a proposed state budget on March 29. See Health / B2

The city of Bend will implement its first layoffs of the upcoming biennial budget cycle when it terminates two employees in its five-person facilities maintenance division on June 30. City Manager Eric King attributes the layoffs to shrinking demand for building space, which, in turn, is the result of previous cuts to Bend’s workforce. He

says it should not be taken as a sign of things to come. “We’ve kind of consolidated,” King said. “Our facility needs aren’t as great as they have been over the past several years.” Since fiscal year 2007-08, the city has laid off 58 employees and eliminated at least 49 vacant positions. As a part of that contraction, the city was able to move out of some of the buildings in which many of those employees worked.

Because the city no longer needs to maintain those buildings, the facilities division does not need all of its current staff. King said it’s too soon to know if there will be more layoffs. Bend faces a number of budgetary challenges, including a City Council provision to try to bring increasing personnel costs in line with current revenue projections, which are expected to remain relatively stagnant.

Future layoffs will depend, in part, on the outcome of current salary negotiations with police and firefighters, says King, as well as contract negotiations with the city’s three unions that are expected to take place in 2012. “It just depends on where things land with those negotiations,” King said. “There are a lot of unknowns with what the outcome will be in 2012.” See Layoffs / B2

PACIFIC PARTY A celebration of Asian and island culture — oh poi! By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

When Ami Zepnewski moved to Bend, something like the Asian/Pacific Islander Festival held Saturday at Central Oregon Community College would have been hard for her to imagine. “I’ve been here 11 years, and when I first got here, I felt like I was the only Asian person around.” Zepnewski, the Japanese teacher at Summit and Mountain View high schools, had plenty of company on Saturday. An estimated 350 people filled the student center to participate in arts and crafts activities, watch demonstrations of tae kwon do and Polynesian dancing, and feast on a buffet of Japanese, Chinese, Hawaiian and Thai food prepared by local restaurants. Zepnewski said people of Japanese ancestry probably make up the largest slice of the Asian population in Central Oregon, and the March 11 earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan is still very fresh in their minds. See Festival / B2

Who’s making news Age: 41 vice president at Clear One Health Plans, Education: resident of Bend since Occidental College, 1997 bachelor’s in exercise science, 1992; California Last week in Salem: State University, Worked on health Fullerton, master’s reform legislation; in kinesiology, 1996; presentations to the Oregon State University, Mike Bonetto Oregon Employers master’s in public health Council, Oregon Health administration, 2003, Leadership Council and and Ph.D. in public health with an Oregon State University; provided emphasis on health policy, 2005 testimony in the new Joint Health Care Transformation Committee; Family: Wife, Nancy, three began coordinating/aligning children ages 7, 6 and 2 reform efforts with the state of Occupation: Current senior health policy adviser to Gov. John Washington; HealthMatters of Kitzhaber, former vice president at Central Oregon board of directors meeting St. Charles Health System Hobbies: Family, skiing, Central Oregon connections: tennis, reading, biking Co-founder and president of Last book read: “The Big HealthMatters of Central Oregon, Short,” by Michael Lewis a nonprofit that works to improve health care locally, former senior — Lauren Dake, The Bulletin

Roll call Senate

House

• BANNING THE USE OF A SUSPECTED TOXIC SUBSTANCE IN CHILDREN’S BEVERAGE CONTAINERS

• EXEMPTING CITIES OF 10,000 OR FEWER FROM HAVING A TRANSPORTATION FINANCING PROGRAM

Passed 20-9 on Thursday. Senate Bill 695 would ban the use of bisphenol A, or BPA, in baby bottles, infant formula containers, sippy cups and other children’s beverage containers. A similar effort failed two years ago, but this time advocates who cite federal health concerns about the substance won out.

Passed 60-0 on Monday. The House of Representatives approved House Bill 3029, which would carve out an exemption from the state’s controversial regulation requiring transportation improvements be funded upfront to offset growth impacts that wouldn’t occur until later. This bill would make it easier for Madras and other small cities to grow.

Sen. Ted Ferrioli, R ...........No Sen. Chris Telfer, R ...........No Sen. Doug Whitsett, R.......No

Rep. Jason Conger, R.......Yes Rep. John Huffman, R ......Yes Rep. Mike McLane, R .......Yes Rep. Gene Whisnant, R ....Yes — Nick Budnick, The Bulletin

What’s ahead • KEEPING VIDEO AND AUDIO DISCIPLINARY RECORDS SECRET Monday, 1 p.m.: The House Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote on House Bill 3251, prohibiting the disclosure of a video or audio recording made during a police officer disciplinary investigation.

• REQUIRING APPRAISAL MANAGEMENT COMPANIES TO REGISTER WITH THE STATE Tuesday, 8 a.m.: The House General Government and Consumer Protection Committee will consider HB 2086, which would require a new type of firm called an appraisal management company to register with the Department of Consumer and Business Services. See Ahead / B2

On the blog Read updates throughout the week from our reporters in Salem at www.bendbulletin.com/politicsblog.

Scott Hammers / The Bulletin

From left: Pono Haitsuka, Donovan Tuisano and Maika Mataele, all from the Hui O Hawaii club at Oregon State University in Corvallis, perform a medley of Polynesian dances at the Asian/ Pacific Islander Festival on Saturday at Central Oregon Community College.

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Washington Week Here’s how Oregon’s lawmakers voted last week.

U.S. House • REACHING AGREEMENT TO STOP A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN Passed 348-70 on Saturday. With only two hours before a federal government shutdown would have gone into effect, lawmakers reached an agreement to cut about $38 billion from federal spending late Friday night. Funding for government agencies would have run out at midnight. The two sides had a difficult time reaching a compromise on how much to cut. Republicans had been pushing to stop the flow of funding to Planned Parenthood and other places that perform abortions. Sen. Harry Reid, the Democratic majority leader, said in a statement on his website that the two sides agreed to “an historic amount of cuts for the remainder of this fiscal year.” The agreement will bleed about $40 billion from the day-to-day budgets of domestic agencies over just the next six months, the biggest rollback of such government programs in history, according to The Associated Press. For more coverage, see Page A2. Rep. Greg Walden, R .....................................................................................Yes Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D ................................................................................No Rep. Peter DeFazio, D ...................................................................................Yes Rep. Kurt Schrader, D ...................................................................................Yes Rep. David Wu, D ..........................................................................................Yes

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C OV ER S T OR I ES

B2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Titanic embarks on this date in 1912 The Associated Press Today is Sunday, April 10, the 100th day of 2011. There are 265 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On April 10, 1912, the RMS Titanic set sail from Southampton, England, on its ill-fated maiden voyage. ON THIS DATE In 1925, the novel “The Great Gatsby,” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, was first published. In 1947, Brooklyn Dodgers President Branch Rickey purchased the contract of Jackie Robinson from Montreal.

Layoffs Continued from B1 Another unknown is how much property tax revenue — which makes up a majority of the city’s general fund — Bend should expect to receive over the next two years. Current projections show a 4 percent decrease in property taxes in the next fiscal year,

Health Continued from B1 “The pilot project in Central Oregon showed some very interesting progress,” he said. However, he added, the Central Oregon pilot “took two years to develop (and) we have two years to conduct a statewide transformation.” In other words, even as lawmakers rely on experiments like Central Oregon’s to show that savings can be found, they reject the Central Oregon experience as taking too long to show results. The reason for haste is simple. To present a balanced budget, Kitzhaber needs to squeeze $290 million in savings out of the Oregon Health Plan. He intends to do so by integrating traditional health services for physical ailments offered by the OHP with county public mental health and dental programs, merging them into centralized clinics. And he needs those savings to kick in by July 2012, slightly over a year from now. Put simply, the Central Oregon Demonstration Project set up a different approach for the region’s most expensive patients — those who use the region’s emergency rooms for conditions that don’t qualify as emergencies. These “frequent utilizers” of ERs typical have both physical health problems and a diagnosed mental health issue, officials say. And frequently they go to emergency rooms unnecessarily, simply because there they can find a friendly and familiar face, said Megan Haase, executive director of Mosaic Medical, who oversaw the Bend clinic that was ground zero for the experiment. She said the idea was to set up a clinic, or “medical home,” to provide these frequent emergency room users with a different and far less expensive support system. There, workers would establish relationships with the patients so they were less likely to go to the emergency room for services. The project, she says, was surprisingly doable. And it returned

Ahead Continued from B1 The new companies, or AMCs, have been controversial among appraisers, including many in Central Oregon, who say they’ve led to cut-rate, shoddy appraisal practices.

• REQUIRING SEPTIC REPORTS FOR HOME SALES Tuesday, 3 p.m.: The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee is scheduled to vote on SB 707, which would require would-be sellers of property to obtain a septic system inspection report, then provide copies to the state Department of Environmental Quality as well as to each buyer who makes a written offer to purchase the land. The bill would allow buyers to withdraw their offer within three days after receiving the septic system inspection report.

• EXTENDING GUEST RANCH LAW Wednesday, 3 p.m.: The House

T O D AY IN HISTORY TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actor Max von Sydow is 82. Actor Steven Seagal is 60. Actor-comedian Orlando Jones is 43. Rapper Q-Tip (AKA Kamaal) is 41. Singer Mandy Moore is 27. Actor Haley Joel Osment is 23. THOUGHT FOR TODAY “Work is something you can count on, a trusted, lifelong friend who never deserts you.” — Margaret Bourke-White, American photojournalist (1904-1971)

and the city is projecting a zero percent growth the year after that. Bend is planning to spend about $34 million in each of the next two years from its general fund. Of that, about 80 percent will be allocated to police and fire services. Nick Grube can be reached at 541-633-2160 or at ngrube@bendbulletin.com.

How to contact your legislators Find an easily searchable list of contact information for Central Oregon’s delegation at www. bendbulletin.com/officials. about $900,000 in savings over one year, based on an investment of less than $100,000. But in Central Oregon, where the project has morphed into a regional health authority, they’re still working out the details. And in Central Oregon, conditions were ideal. That’s because there were very few health providers that needed to coordinate, as opposed to the many that serve the Portland metropolitan area. Last November a state project manager who worked with the Central Oregon project and a similar one in Southern Oregon summarized the experiments for the Legislature’s budget-writing Joint Ways and Means Committee in a letter. “It has been difficult ... to address governance, financing and services simultaneously. Projects seem to be able to focus on one or two areas at any given time. Additionally, regulations on the use of federal funding have made it difficult to integrate funding fully.” Jane-ellen Wiedanz, the state project manager, added in the letter that “the first two years of the demonstration ... have shown that changes of this magnitude will take longer than a biennium. Additional work will be needed in the coming biennium to redesign a regional health care delivery system that can meet the needs of the individuals in the region, control costs and provide better outcomes.” The estimated $300 million in savings from efficiencies is crucial to the state budget because another $500 million in cuts will be of a more traditional kind. The efficiencies Kitzhaber is going for are intended to take the edge off those cuts. Already, Kitzhaber’s budget assumes that the providers of health care to Oregon Health

Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee is scheduled to hear HB 2753, which would push the expiration date on the state’s guest ranch law from 2012 to 2018. The state’s guest ranch law was established in 1997 and allows the establishment of guest or dude ranches on farmland adjacent to livestock operations.

• ALLOWING THE KILLING OF ENDANGERED GRAY WOLVES IN CERTAIN SITUATIONS; COMPENSATING OWNERS OF ANIMALS KILLED BY WOLVES Wednesday, 3 p.m.: The House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee is scheduled to hear two bills pertaining to gray wolves in Oregon. HB 3560 would set up a fund to compensate owners who suffer a loss due to “wolf depredation.” HB 3562 would allow the killing or “taking” of a gray wolf to save one’s life or the life of another. — Nick Budnick, The Bulletin

Festival Continued from B1 Yasuko Jackson, a member of the Japanese American Society of Central Oregon, said she’s been amazed by the outpouring of support and concern for the Japanese people demonstrated by local residents. Jackson spent the day selling handmade chopsticks and soliciting cash donations, in order to raise money for the Red Cross relief efforts in Japan. At her booth, Jackson displayed a series of pictures of the destruction that had been taken by family and friends back home, images that she said are much more emotional for her than those shot by professional photographers. Pointing to one, the foundation of what used to be her friends’ house, Jackson related the story of how her friends were able to flee for higher ground before the tsunami arrived, only to return to find their house had been destroyed, as had the fish market where everyone in the family worked. “So they lost a house, and they lost a job. Now they’re living in a temple with another 100 people,” Jackson said. “They don’t know when they’ll have a place to live, but at least

Plan members will accept 19 percent cuts in reimbursement rates — a level of hardship that lawmakers describe as unacceptable. Mike Bonetto, the top Kitzhaber aide who is spearheading the health care reforms, says that if the $300 million in savings do not materialize, the cuts in reimbursement could reach 25 percent — which he called “untenable.” He acknowledges that the challenges involved in implementing changes statewide will be far greater than faced in Central Oregon. If the changes don’t happen quickly enough, some lawmakers are already talking about an increase in the hospital or provider tax to help cushion the health care cuts the state would otherwise face.

the community is taking care of them.” Taran Underdal, student activities coordinator at COCC, said the campus population of Asian students is still relatively small, but growing. The annual festival is a way of giving the school’s Asian population an opportunity to share their heritage with other students and Central Oregon residents, she said. “It’s important, because we do have a lot of students who are from one of the Asian cultures, Japan, Guam, Hawaiian,” Underdal said. “This is a great way to get students involved and acknowledge their culture.” The college’s Asian population is set to jump fairly soon, Underdal said. Starting this year, OSU-Cascades Campus has joined with the Corvallis campus to be part of INTO, a program for international students looking to study in the United States. Among the visitors to Saturday’s festival was a group of 20 Chinese students, now in their first year of the program in Corvallis. The students will be spending their first two years attending classes in Corvallis, then move to the Bend campus to complete their studies. Scott Hammers can be reached at 541-383-0387 or at shammers@bendbulletin.com.

But Bonetto said that Kitzhaber would accede to such an increase only if it were a temporary “bridge.” Haase said the state has an advantage that Central Oregon did not — an imminent budget cut to provide a sense of urgency. She said that making drastic cuts and failing to pursue the reforms will only make the system more expensive. “If we don’t do something, it’s going to be cuts that decrease access and push care back into the emergency room,” she said. “So I think we’re at a point where people are understanding doing nothing is just going to lead us down this path that is not very appealing.” Nick Budnick can be reached at 503-566-2839 or at nbudnick@bendbulletin.com.

N R REUNIONS USS Iwo Jima (LPH2/LHD7) shipmates will hold a reunion June 1-5 at Marriott City Center Hotel, 740 Town Center Drive, Newport News, Va. Contact Robert G. McAnally at 757-7230317 or yujack@megalink.net. • USS Maddox Destroyer Association (DD731, DD622 and DD168) will hold a reunion Aug. 25-28 in Branson, Mo. Contact Dennis Stokhaug at 262679-9409 or maddox64@aol.com. • Redmond High School Class of 1991 will hold its 20th class reunion July 22-23. Contact 541-316-0491 or rhs1991classreunion@gmail.com. • Bend High School Class of 1961 will hold its 50th class reunion Sept. 16-17. Contact Carol Still at 541-3509612 or carolstill14@yahoo.com.

MILITARY NOTES Air Force Airman Rebecca Lisk has graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio. She is a 2010 graduate of Valley Center High School, Valley Center, Calif., and the daughter of Michelle Skoglund, of Bend, and Clayton Lisk Sr., of Temecula, Calif. • Air Force Airman Lindsey Alexander has graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio. She is a 2007 graduate of Clayton Valley High School, Concord, Calif., and the daughter of Nancy Alexander, of Prineville, and Dave Alexander, of Concord, Calif. • Air Force Airman Brett Bascom has graduated from basic military training at Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio. He is a 2007 graduate of Mountain View High School, and the son of Steve Bascom, of Bend.

COLLEGE NOTES The following local students have been named to the winter 2010 Dean’s List at Eastern Washington University in Cheney, Wash.: Adriana Teagle and Kevin Brannan, both of Bend. • The following local students have been named to the winter 2010 honor roll at Oregon State University: Straight-A average: Casey Anderson, Ann Archer, Candace Baker, Michael Barry, Justin Biel, Sean Brogan, Lucas Estabrook, Torey Fletcher, Christopher George, Emily Geurts, Alicia Haynes, Kailie

Haynes, Jessica Hopper, Cody Hyman, Chad Koepfle, Laurence Lindenmaier, Kieran McKinnell, Scott Mellinger, Vanessa Morrell, Eli Odegaard, Kirk Pederson, Candice Randall, Dustin Stewart, Breanne Uriz, Nicholas Vora and Katie Wicks, all of Bend; Emily Pickering, of La Pine; Mark Alward, Zachary Baker, David Gamboa and Macy Holmes, all of Redmond; Gaith Bedaywi and Thomas Shepherd, both of Sisters. 3.5 grade-point average or better: Rachel Archuleta, Trede Bailey, Scott Barton, Angela Benton, Matthew Bishop, Lauren Boyd, Jake Brown, Joshua Brown, Louie Buckles, Andrew Burke, Patrick Byfield, Scott Campbell, Samantha Cant, Caralyn Chamberlen, Daniel Coil, Julie Craig, Sarah Creedican, Kathryn Daucsavage, Eric Davis, Laura Degalla, Conrad Dickinson, Noelle Ensz, Kelly Ervin, Andrea Farrin, Jaime Faulkner, Dan Fischer, Lauren Fletcher, Frederick Fletcher VII, Erica Frank, Alisha Friesen, Katie Geurts, Amber Gomes, Kyle Grech, Nicole Grenier, Jordan Grund, Dustin Harris, Sarah Haselip, Sierra Hayden, Kalah Heacock, Karri Heacock, Jaclyn Hill, Olivia Hood, Erica Hughes, Vanessa Hughes, Kazden Ingram, Greg Jacobs, Britton Johnston, Ryan Jones, Rya Kaiding, Wesley Kebler, Jason Kingrey, Chloe Knievel, Ellen Koebel, Kim Kosko, Zachary Lammers, Kaylee Landry, Brandon Luzier, Jenny Marks, Jessica Martin, Molly McCracken, David Merrick, Daniel Miller, Jaimason Miller, Christopher Minar, Jessica Mooney, Zachery Morgan-Owens, Sarah Myers, Kristen Neibauer, Marta Nelson, Logan Olsen, Jacob Owen, Sara Persons, Riley Peters, Joshua Philips, Cathrine Phillips, Rachel Phillips, Waylon Phillips, Alison Plant, Paige Pledger, Haley Polis, Connor Price, Taylor Reynolds, Lauren Robbins, Hailey Roberts, Cassidy Root, Emily Rucker, Samuel Scharf, Sara Schroeder, Ellisse Steed, Laura Steiger, Elise Steinhauff, Landon Steward, Thomas Stumpfig, Gary Tharp, Jeremy Thompson, Taelor Trueblood, Clayton Tyler, Joseph Valceschini, Kim Ward, Stacee Wells, Kimberly Wesseler, Emily Woody, Geoffrey Zath and Kelsey Zimmerman, all of Bend; Elizabeth Blackwood, Leigha Little and Eric North, all of La Pine; Elizabeth Bierman, Justin Blumer, Annie Bollard, Travis Cook, Christina Dodini-Marquez, Hanna Durighello, Jacob Evan, Jeremy Evan, Taylor Garr, Philip Glover, Jeremy Heyer, Kendra Hodgson, Stefanie Huffer, Lauren Nelson, Jeremy Osterkamp, Ishan Patel, Eric Steensen, Elijah Thibodeau, Kellie Tippett, Sean Van Hatten, Matthew Weber, Jesse Wilson, Megan Windom and Thomas Windom, all of Redmond; Christina Holler, Elizabeth Noack, Alexa Orr and Thomas Schantz, all of Sisters; Renee Gillson and Christine Walker, both of Sunriver; Jordan Zistel, of Culver; Samantha Blann, Spencer Ellsbury, Alison Kovari, Josriel Pasikatan and Taylor Reeves, all of Madras; and Tegan Emerson and Colby Whitaker, both of Terrebonne.


THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 B3

O Intense captain to helm ‘Deadliest Catch’ vessel By Kathy Ahey The East Oregonian

Photos by Shannon Dininny / The Associated Press

Cars buzz down a street in Pendleton, which is offering no-interest loans to spark interest in solar power.

Calves, broncos and solar — Pendleton pursues panels By Shannon Dininny The Associated Press

PENDLETON — A cowboy grasping the reins of a bucking bronco has long been the image of this farm and ranch town. It’s the emblem of the annual Pendleton Roundup, a celebration of the city’s colorful past, when pioneers on the Oregon Trail settled the prairie. Today, solar panels might just outnumber cowboys. Rural Pendleton is blazing an unlikely renewable energy trail, offering no-interest loans to spark interest in solar power and a group-buy philosophy to get better prices. More than 50 residents installed systems last year, and the program was expanded to more residents and to include businesses this year. Oregon earned a reputation for being a green leader years ago, with adoption of the first bottle bill in 1971 to encourage recycling and efforts to keep its beaches public. However, many green efforts stem from the state’s populated — and more liberal — west side. They’re less likely to be found in Oregon’s ruggedly conservative agricultural country. “We’re a Western community, and we’re proud of that, but we’re also in the 21st century,” city manager Larry Lehman said. “There are people here who are interested in renewable energy, and we wanted to make it easy for them.” The cost of solar systems — even small ones — runs in the thousands of dollars, and having the cash up front is a substantial impediment. Metropolitan Portland also has pursued solar power in recent years, but other states and communities had long since taken the lead. Some have issued bonds, then used the money to issue clean energy loans that are tied to property taxes. In San Jose, Calif., city employees bought into solar projects through their credit union. Meanwhile, Pendleton had two pots of money sitting in sewer-related reserve accounts. Why not put that money to better use, Lehman said. “Way out here, if you want to have solar power, who do you call?” he asked.

Pushing solar Industry has grown in recent years, but state and local government, agriculture and tourism remain the biggest economic drivers. The city borrowed from the sewer account to offer no-interest loans of $9,000 each. The repayment schedule, over four years, is tied to residents’ tax returns each spring, when they receive refunds of state and federal renewable energy tax credits. All told, Lehman estimates the program will cost the city only $10,000 in lost interest over four years. In addition, some residents signed on to programs with their power company to receive credits toward their bills or direct checks for any extra energy they produce.

Ken and Sally Abbott are among dozens of residents in Pendleton to invest in solar power. Community-based approaches like this are a wonderful solution for residents who struggle to come up with the cash needed to go solar, said Monique Hanis, spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Industries Association, an industry trade group. “Many people don’t know how to get started and many face challenges with financing, so these kinds of programs make it as easy as buying a car,” she said. “And the price point for some folks is about the same.”

Knowles of LiveLight Energy, the solar contractor hired by the city. “It’s crazy that a rural community with conservative agricultural roots would take this on,” he said. “Or maybe it isn’t crazy in a community where they make their living on nature and the power of the sun.” Knowles estimates each residential system will provide about one-quarter of a home’s power, but the savings will increase as power rates go up. Ford wishes she could say the decision was purely the responsible choice for the environment, but acknowledged that money was a big factor. She said the system will have more than paid itself off in 15 years when her contract ends with Pacific Power Co., which is paying her for energy she produces. “It’s not very often that you do things that are good for the environment and benefit you,” Ford said. “Normally it costs you money to do things the responsible way. I would say that’s a nice benefit.”

“Service You Can Depend On!”

10

Proof is in the bill Amy Ford, a state employee, said the loan program made installation of solar power possible for her century-old home, because she otherwise didn’t have the upfront money. Ken Abbott, a retired postal employee, didn’t use the loan program but took advantage of the lower installation prices that resulted from the large number of buyers. For him, the proof is in his power bills — three months last year at $9.40 each, just the basic service charge. “That looks nice, when you get a bill like that,” he said. Abbott estimates the $14,500 system will end up costing him about $3,000 total after tax credits and savings on his power bills. The city is making 75 more loans available to residents in 2011 and recently set aside $1 million for businesses interested in pursuing solar energy. In the first two weeks after that announcement, 45 businesses signed up for assessments to determine their energy needs and how much a system would cost. Not everyone is sold on the idea. Kirt Skinner owns the building across the street from the cowboy outfitters. The 75-yearold wheat farmer and retired insurance man equates installing solar panels to adding an elevator to his aging building, where the retail space is already rented. “Why would I spend $300,000 if it’s not going to help me in my lifetime,” he asked. “Solar is fine, if I could see it’s going to make it better for me in the long run, but who has that kind of money?” The biggest question anyone asks is how the program will affect their wallets, said Keith

PENDLETON — One of the fresh faces on Discovery Channel’s “Deadliest Catch” is billed as a take-no-prisoners captain possessing youth, steely confidence and a fast-paced fishing style. One of Captain Scott Campbell Jr.’s mottos is “Leave no crab behind.” Campbell, who spent much of his boyhood in the landlocked city of Milton-Freewater, captains the Seabrooke, a speedy vessel branded by Discovery Channel as “the Corvette of the Bering Sea.” Viewers will get to form their own opinions when the newest season starts Tuesday. Campbell, home in Walla Walla after filming the first eight episodes, talked about life on the Seabrooke. His father, Scott Campbell Sr. (aka Senior) sat close by. The men, who jointly own the Seabrooke, are obviously close. After years spent at sea together, they seem able to read each other’s minds. The family lived in Kodiak, Alaska, until Campbell was around 8 and then moved to a small farm in Milton-Freewater. Campbell said he has loved the fishing life from the time he was small. “While most kids played with cars and trucks, he played with salmon and crab,” said his father. As a 4-year-old, the boy pushed fish on a tender. By the time he was 12, he spent summers fishing on his dad’s boat. Senior, retired after 34 years as a fishing boat captain, says he did his best to funnel his son toward a less-dangerous career on land, one that wouldn’t take him away from family for months at a stretch. But, when Junior insisted on fishing, Senior devised a plan to convince him otherwise. He invited his teenage son to spend 2½ months at sea on his boat, before spending another three months on a longliner owned by his best friend. “I figured 5½ months would change his mind,” Senior said, “but he was more stubborn than me.” Now Campbell, 36, is competing against four other Dead-

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“You can’t fabricate 20-foot waves coming over the side of the boat.” — Scott Campbell Jr. liest Catch captains, each hoping to outcrab the other. The Seabrooke crew manipulates 700-pound, 7-by-7-foot crab pots, about 125 of them each trip. The crew separates their catch using hydraulic sorting tables. Big crabs go in a holding tank, while juveniles go quickly back into the water. Campbell’s fishing style is intense. Rather than placing his crab pots in systematic patterns in “the flat,” he searches for concentrated pockets of crab on the fringe. “I like to fish the edges and the currents,” he said. “When you find them, you go like hell.” The captains maintain a friendly, yet focused, rivalry. Campbell is always cognizant of the other

boats in the fleet, vowing to work harder and faster. Two videographers and four stationary cameras capture every moment of action aboard the Seabrooke. Dramatic moments caught on film are all real, he said. “You can’t fabricate 20-foot waves coming over the side of the boat,” Campbell said. “It doesn’t matter what camera angle you use.”

April 15, 16 & 17

541-322-CARE

Co-Presented by The Source and E2 Solar

Central Oregon Chapter

of OSU Master Gardeners™

Presents the Annual

Spring Gardening Seminar & Garden Market Special General Session Featuring Amy Jo Detweiler, Associate Professor of Horticulture at Oregon State University

“In A Galaxy Beyond Juniper and Aspen” Also Featuring a Garden Market Books Plant material Worm castings Landscape products Seeds Silent Auction

Other Classes • Cold Climate Gardening • Collecting Seeds • Building a Cloche • Vegetable Gardening • Irrigation • Landscape Design • Pruning • Native Plants and more

Saturday, April 16, 2011 • 8:00 am - 4:30 pm $10.00 per Class (pre-registration deadline April 8) ($15.00 per class on event day) For information and registration visit: www.goCOMGA.com or http://extension.oregonstate.edu/deschutes or call Rocky at 541-548-0789 or pick up a registration packet at the OSU Extension Office, Redmond

Title Sponsors Coombe & Jones Dentistry

Location Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Middle Sister Building 3800 SW Airport Way Redmond, OR


H

B4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

OR I ZONS

Local student finagles prom on the cheap in ’86 100 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 9, 1911

Mark Harrison / The Seattle Times

Leland Davidson, 95, of Centralia, Wash., was among 59 people awarded certificates of citizenship at a special immigration ceremony last week in Tukwila, Wash. Davidson was born in Canada to American parents but never had to prove his U.S. citizenship until he tried to get documents to travel to Canada last summer. Here, great-granddaughter Sophia Hunt, 3, greets her grandpa as he comes off the stage.

At 95, proof of citizenship at last By Lornet Turnbull and Brittney Wong The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — For all his life, 95-year-old Leland Davidson had been what you might call an undocumented American. Until now. Born in Canada to American parents who moved him to the United States when he was 5, Davidson grew up and lived his life like any other American. He started voting as soon as he could, obtained a Social Security number when he was 21 and served in the U.S. Navy during World War II. Yet his U.S. citizenship, automatically derived from his parents, came into question last summer — as it has been for a growing number of Canadianborn Americans — when he was planning a trip to British Columbia and applied for an enhanced Washington driver’s license. The licenses are for U.S. citizens only — allowing re-entry into the United States from Canada. Davidson was shocked when Department of Licensing staff told him: “You’re still a Canadian.” After months untangling his status, the Centralia, Wash., man Tuesday received a longoverdue recognition of his U.S. citizenship, when he and 51 others — most of them children — were granted certificates of citizenship. Receiving the certificate didn’t make Davidson feel too different, but he said it was comforting to his family. “They’re probably relieved that I wasn’t deported as an illegal alien,” he said, which elicited chuckles from his relatives. Twenty-eight family members came to see Davidson at the ceremony. To be clear, those receiving certificates at a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services ceremony in Tukwila, Wash., were already U.S. citizens — having derived it in some fashion from their parents. They simply had nothing to show for it. Most came to this country with their parents, who later became citizens. Those younger than 18 automatically derive citizenship from them, and the certificate they receive at the ceremony serves as proof of that. Others receiving the certificate were either adopted by American parents or, like Davidson, born abroad to American parents.

Born under the maple leaf In the years since the United States began requiring proof of citizenship to re-enter the country from Canada, untold numbers of Americans born in Canada have scrambled to sort out their citizenship. Many of them were born on Canadian soil to American parents working along the border, said Blaine, Wash., immigration attorney Len Saunders, who has had many such clients. They’d lived most of their lives in the United States believing — rightly — that they were American, but never having to prove it until now. “It’s very common for someone to have lived here their entire lives ... without ever documenting their U.S. citizenship,” Saunders said. For his part, Davidson never

had much reason to. Before he enlisted in the Navy in 1940, he inquired about his eligibility and was told his place of birth was not a hindrance. He never got a passport because he never traveled overseas. But over the years, he and his wife would go to Canada, where he still has relatives, using a driver’s license to get back and forth. “I don’t recall anyone asking me about my citizenship,” he said. That all changed two years ago when the U.S. government began requiring a passport or other proof of citizenship for those coming into the United States from Canada. Last summer, he and his wife applied for an enhanced Washington driver’s license; Davidson still drives. His wife, born in Yakima, was approved but Davidson was denied. State licensing officials say they anticipated similar problems when they first introduced enhanced licenses and ID cards, including from those born at a time in this country when birth records were not strictly kept. They created an exception for those born on or before 1935, who may produce alternate proof of citizenship such as a parent’s marriage certificate or school records. But having presented his Canadian birth certificate, Davidson wasn’t granted that option.

Chopping the red tape When he told licensing staff his parents were American, they told him he needed proof they had registered his birth abroad. His family couldn’t find the evidence. His daughter, Rose Schoolcraft, recalls the frustration as the family searched futilely for a solution, discovering that one form after another that might recognize his citizenship either required the signature of his long-dead parents or that the time for completing the form had long passed. “At one point, we were told to leave it alone because he could possibly be deported or lose his Social Security benefits,” she said. It wasn’t until Davidson told his story to the local newspaper that they began seeing results. Sharon Rummery, spokeswoman for Immigration Services, contacted Davidson to tell him he needed to complete a special form, called an N-600, to obtain a certificate of citizenship. Along with the form, Davidson mailed copies of U.S. census forms from 1880, 1910 and 1920 that included his parents’ names, as well as proof they were U.S. citizens born in this country. Davidson said his family has been talking again about going to Canada this summer. He’ll probably go: “I didn’t know how much longer I was gonna be around,” he said. He’s most looking forward to visiting his cousin Chuck, also 95, in Vanderhoof, B.C. Davidson waited to receive his certificate of citizenship with his wife, Irene, by his side. They’ve been married 51 years. Irene Davidson, 89, thought it was “grand” that her husband went through the ceremony. But even when his citizenship status was unclear, it didn’t change anything to her. “It didn’t matter to me,” she said. “I loved him anyway.”

BEND IS BIGGER Coe, Aune, Sellers, O’Neil, Allen and Kelly were present at the council meeting held Monday afternoon to pass upon last Thursday’s election on the question of enlarging the city’s boundaries. The vote as canvassed showed 59 for enlargement, 3 opposed. A certified copy of the resolution accepting the vote as canvassed and the new city boundaries was sent to the County Clerk. The city now includes everything between the Deschutes River on the west, 10th Street in Center Addition on the east; on the south along a line from the river as far as the southeast corner of Deschutes Addition, thence to the northeast corner of Deschutes, thence east along the south line of Bend and Center Addition to 11th Street; on the north bounded by K Avenue in Riverside Addition. On Allen’s motion, Street Committee was instructed to purchase necessary tolls for street improvement, the same to be given into the charge of the police force. Sellers’ motion that Police Committee buy shackles, etc., to care for four prisoners was passed. On Sellers’ motion, the salary of policemen was raised from $75 to $90 a month, the change to date from March 14. TRAINS NEARER Commencing next Monday, the Oregon Trunk Railway will receive freight to Opal City, four miles north of Crooked River, the point nearest to the river to which the trains will come until the completion of the big bridge permits traffic to advance southward toward Bend. Passenger service will be extended to Opal City beginning Sunday. NEW COMPANY FORMED On March 23, articles of incorporation of The Bend Company were filed at Salem. The company is capitalized at $360,000. The incorporators are J.M. Lawrence, Franklin T. Griffith and Clyde M. McKay. In the property that has been acquired by The Bend Company is included 3,000 acres of timberland, 2,000 acres of agricultural land, 1,400 acres adjacent to town, 1,300 platted lots, the P.B.D. Co. sawmill, the power and light plants, city water system, and various water power and irrigation rights.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 9, 1936 BEND VISITOR RECALLS VISIT OF 36 YEARS AGO Farewell Bend of 36 years ago, marked in those days only by a stopping place, was recalled this morning by O.L. Wilson, of Spokane, Wash., who is visiting here with relatives. Wilson recalls that he was a member of a party of five that came to the Farewell Bend country over the McKenzie Pass in the fall of 1900 to do a bit of fishing and hunting, and stopped here one night at a place believed to be the Sisemore home. Fishing in streams and lakes here 36 years ago was exceptionally good, Wilson mentioned — but he added that in those days people fished and hunted at their leisure. He and members of his party came over the pass from Eugene in a horsedrawn wagon, established camp where they saw fit and enjoyed meals prepared by a hired cook. Wilson and his companions were in the field two months and got plenty of deer and an abundance of fish, although they had to do considerable road repairing work to get their wagon into Odell Lake.

Y E S T E R D AY PINBALL MACHINES IN MIDSTATE ARE RAIDED Using cleverly manufactured slugs, nearly exact duplicates of nickels, unknown persons yesterday and last night took a heavy toll of pinball machine receipts in Central Oregon, it was learned here today. It is estimated that 1,800 of these slugs were passed in Bend. So cleverly made were the slugs that even machines guaranteed not to pay off unless real coins are used “accepted” the false tokens. In Redmond and Prineville over the weekend, there was also a heavy use of slugs, according to information reaching here. HAUPTMANN IS EXECUTED FOR BABY MURDER Bruno Richard Hauptmann’s last cry of “innocent” before he walked to the electric chair recorded the Lindbergh case today as the most controversial mystery of the century. Hauptmann died calmly, almost indifferently, with his thin lips sealed against the slightest hint of a confession. And with the deadly surge of electricity through his body, there died, too, perhaps the only chance that the world will ever know the factual story of the abduction and murder of the infant son of Col. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh in the Sourland mountains four years ago.

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 9, 1961 POUNDING BALL BRINGS DOWN OLD BUILDING Memories of 45 years ago took shape from the dust this morning when a tall brick building in Brooks-Scanlon, Inc., was demolished with a 1,700-pound ball swung pendulum-like from a high crane. In less than an hour and a half, the swinging ball had demolished the two-story-high building that stood just south of the Brooks-Scanlon office since 1916. The building was used for fuel storage, originally in connection with the operation of Mill “A.” The building has not been used for years, and, like other structures on the grounds already torn down, was outmoded by plant modernization. The building was wrecked as part of the ground-clearing program. A great cloud of dust, mostly from mortar and bricks, billowed into a cloud over the building as the giant ball swung

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

into the side of the structure. First blows of the demolition ball were into the west side of the building. The demolition task was not difficult, and in about an hour and a half only a huge pile of bricks remained to mark the site of the fuel storage building. The massive ball, borrowed from the Central Oregon Iron Works (now Mid-Oregon Iron Works), broke through the brick walls as if they were papier-mâché. The tall, windowless brick structure was one of the original buildings erected on the Brooks-Scanlon grounds when the big plant prepared for operation 45 years ago. In that year, the Shevlin-Hixon Company was taking massive shape on the west bank of the Deschutes while BrooksScanlon was forming on the east shore. Actually both plants were in the field in 1915. Through the years, the Brooks-Scanlon operations have greatly changed, with the old Mill “A” and Mill “B” operations giving way to the modernization program at a cost of several million dollars. In recent years, old structures on both sides of the Deschutes have been demolished. BrooksScanlon, Inc., acquired the Shevlin-Hixon Company plant in 1950. Spectacular demolition scenes on the grounds in earlier years included demolition of towering smokestacks.

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 9, 1986 SENIOR PROMOTES HIS WAY TO PROM The weeks before the annual prom are usually filled with excitement for most teenagers, but this year Rory Barrett had a problem. “I was just basically broke,” said Barrett, a senior at Mountain View High School. He didn’t know how he was going to afford it, but then: “It just hit me — clicked,” he said. His plan was to get local businesses to subsidize his expenses in return for publicity. His idea was to pose for a picture in his prom finery with his date, Juli Purchase, a sophomore at Bend High School, who also was to be dressed in prom garb. The couple would be photographed in a boat on Mirror Pond. Barrett talked Bend Florist and Wedding Shop Ltd. into donating his tuxedo, Donner Flower Shop into donating the corsage and Sandi’s Soups and Catering into providing the food.

The picture was taken Monday afternoon as Barrett’s parents, a few quizzical ducks and bystanders watched. “The best things in life are free,” Barrett said, while getting ready to sail away with his date and a tray of finger food. LIBYA FINGERED AS TERROR SOURCE President Reagan, hinting at plans for U.S. retaliation, said today that Libya’s Moammar Khadafy is “a definite suspect” in the recent acts of terrorism. “We’re not just going to sit here and hold still,” Reagan told reporters. “We are investigating so that we can get solid evidence (and) “we can point a finger,” Reagan added. Asked if the finger would be pointed at Khadafy, Reagan said: “Let’s say he is definitely a suspect.” KHADAFY THREATENS HITS ON UNITED STATES Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy today threatened to attack the United States and U.S. targets around the globe if President Reagan orders more military strikes against the North African nation. Khadafy emphasized that Libya would attack U.S. targets only if attacked first by the United States. Khadafy made his threats during a news conference in the Bab al-Azizia barracks, where he lives in Tripoli, after U.S. officials voiced their suspicions of Libyan involvement in two recent bombings. Khadafy said the Soviet Union, Libya’s ally and principal weapons supplier, would not stand “with its hands tied” if Libya and the United States became involved in war.

Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

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THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 B5

O D N Anna Maria Ferrara, of Bend

Hugh Wardlaw Greer, Jr., of Prineville

May 2, 1928 - April 5, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, (541) 318-0842, www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Her request, no services will be held.

April 8, 1914 - April 6, 2011 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: Services will be held at a later date.

Contributions may be made to:

Prineville 1st Christian Church, 1685 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville, OR 97754.

Hospice House/Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701.

Barbara Leona Severance, of Prineville Sept. 26, 1922 - April 7, 2011 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 185 N.E. 4th Street Prineville, OR. 541-416-9733. Services: 2:00 P.M., Wednesday, April 27, 2011, at Our Saviors Lutheran Church, 695 N.W. 3rd Street, Prineville, Oregon. Pastor Barbara Punch will officate. A luncheon will be held after the memorial service in the Fireside Room. Contributions may be made to:

May be made in Barbara's name to : PMH Hospice 1201 N.E. Elm Street, Prineville, OR 97754. 541-447-2510 or to a charity of ones choice.

Donnamae Klotz, of Bend June 20, 1927 - April 4, 2011 Arrangements: Carlson Funeral Services, Inc., Rhinelander, WI 715-369-1414 Services: 1:00 pm, April 17, 2011, at Trinity Lutheran Church, Bend, OR.

Marilyn Carol Barnes, of Bend April 21, 1944 - April 5, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: Services will be held in California at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

Partners in Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701.

Grace Mae Gitchell, of Bend Sept. 16, 1951 - Mar. 24, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at the La Pine American Legion Hall on Sunday, April 17, 2011 from 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM.

William “Bill” Marion Frazor of La Pine April 25, 1935 - April 5, 2011 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Funeral service will be held at the First Baptist Church of Crescent, 136463 Main St., Crescent, OR, 9:00 a.m. Wednesday, April 13, 2011. Graveside service to follow, 2:00 p.m., at Eagle Point National Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:

Contributions to help the family with burial expenses would be appreciated, through the South Valley Bank and Trust.

Contributions may be made to:

John Kent Haywood, of Bend June 1, 1938 - April 6, 2011 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine, 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A memorial service will be scheduled for a later date. Contributions may be made to:

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

Lela Dell Bohn, of Tumalo, June 4, 1923 - April 4, 2011 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No services are planned at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Linda Sturza, of Redmond April 13, 1946 - April 8, 2011 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219 Services: Graveside service will be held at 1:00 PM, Friday April 15, 2011, at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, Reception at VFW Hall to follow. Contributions may be made to:

Redmond Sisters Hospice.

Frances Helene Johnson, of Bend May 8, 1923 - April 6, 2011 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Funeral Services will be held on Monday, April 11, 2011, at 11:00 AM, at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2555 NW Shevlin Park Rd., Bend. Graveside services will be held on Tuesday, April 12, 2011, at 1:00 PM, at Lincoln Memorial Park, 11801 SE Mount Scott Blvd., Portland, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Aileen Josephine Bachman, of La Pine Feb. 2, 1917 - April 7, 2011 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Thursday, April 14, 2011, at 11:00 AM, at St. Peters Catholic Church, 8623 Southeast Woodstock Blvd., Portland, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:

Memorial contributions may be made in Aileen's name to any charity of ones choosing.

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

Frances Johnson

Anna Maria Ferrara

May 8, 1923 - April 6, 2011

May 2, 1928 - April 5, 2011

Frances Helene Johnson of Bend, Oregon, passed away peacefully, with her family at her side on Wednesday, April 6, 2011, at Hospice House in Bend. She was 87. Funeral Services will be held on Monday, April 11, 2011 at 11:00 a.m., with public Frances Helene viewing/visit Johnson ation at 10:00 a.m. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, located at 2555 NW Shevlin Park Rd. in Bend, Oregon. Graveside services will be held on Tuesday, April 12, 2011, at 1:00 p.m. at Lincoln Memorial Park, located at 11801 SE Mount Scott Blvd., in Portland, Oregon. Frances was born May 8, 1923, in Sweet, Idaho, to Parley and Florence (Hallcroft) Grigg. Frances married Raymond C. Johnson in Reno, Nevada on November 25, 1974. Frances' true passion was to help and teach others. She enjoyed cooking, gardening and quilt making and was an active member of the LDS Church and involved with the Lions Club. Frances is survived by her husband of 36 years, Raymond C. Johnson of Bend, Oregon, and her sons, Frank Taylor and Les Judd, both of Phoenix, Arizona; eight grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made in Frances' memory to Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701. Baird Funeral Home of Bend is in charge of the arrangements, (541) 382-0903. www.bairdmortuaries.com

Anna Maria Ferrara passed away very peacefully on April 5, with her family at her side. Anna was born May 2, 1928, in Germany. There she met her loving and devoted husband, Jerry. He moved her to America, where they lived in New Jersey & Southern California prior to Anna Maria moving to Ferrara Bend in 1992. Anna had an athletic youth participating in track events and many sports. She was primarily a homemaker and accomplished seamstress. She enjoyed entertaining family and friends, gardening, knitting, needlepoint and trips to Las Vegas. Anna is survived by her husband, Jerry; daughter and her spouse, Jane & Gary Grimm of Bend; sisters, Rita, Mary and Rosa; and brother, Adolf; three grandchildren, Michelle, Andre, Thomas; and great-grandchildren, Mark, Alisha and Taylor. No formal service will be held at her request. Donations may be made to Partners In Care, Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend OR, 97701. A special thank you to Hospice House for the compassionate care they provided for Anna and Autumn Funerals for meeting our special requests.

Bosko Radonjic, Gambino family ally, dies at 67 By Dennis Hevesi New York Times News Service

Bosko Radonjic, a Serbian nationalist emigre who participated in the bombing of a Yugoslavian diplomat’s home in suburban Chicago in 1975 and who later became an associate of the Gambino crime family boss John Gotti, died March 31 in Belgrade, Serbia. He was 67. He died after a brief illness, his family told Agence FrancePresse. Radonjic was one of six Serbians who were convicted or pleaded guilty in 1979 in the bombing of the Yugoslav consul’s home four years earlier, as well as a plot to bomb a Yugoslavian club in Chicago. Like the others, Radonjic was said to have been motivated by hatred for the Yugoslav dictator Josip Broz Tito and his Communist government. In a terrifying and bizarre twist to the case, on June 20, 1979, four days before his sentencing, the leader of the group, Nikola Kavaja, commandeered a jetliner just before it landed in Chicago from New York by threatening to blow it up with a homemade bomb. After freeing the other passengers and most of the crew members, Kavaja forced the remaining crew to fly back to New York, where he demanded and received another plane capable of flying him to Ireland. There, for reasons only he knew, he surrendered to the Irish police. Kavaja, who served 20 years in prison, died in 2008. Radonjic served three years in prison while his co-conspirators received sentences of three to 12 years. Born in Uzice, Serbia, then part of Yugoslavia, on May 17, 1943, Radonjic came to the United States in 1970. His father, a teacher, had been executed by Tito’s partisans during World War II. Information about survivors was not available.

Director Sidney Lumet told tales of conscience By Robert Berkvist

resuscitates his fading career by launching on-air tirades NEW YORK — Sidney Lu- against what he perceives as met, a director who preferred the hypocrisies of American the streets of New York to the society. back lots of Hollywood and “Network” was nominated for whose stories of conscience 10 Academy Awards, including — “12 Angry Men,” “Serpico,” best film and best director, and “Dog Day Afternoon,” “The won four, including best actor Verdict,” “Network” — became (Finch), best actress (Dunmodern American film clas- away), best original screenplay sics, died Saturday (Chayefsky) and best morning at his home supporting actress in Manhattan. He was (Beatrice Straight). 86. Yet for all the critical His stepdaughter, success of his films Leslie Gimbel, said the and despite the more cause was lymphoma. than 40 Academy Social issues set Award nominations his own mental juices they drew, Lumet flowing, and his best Sidney Lumet himself never won an films not only probed Oscar, though he was the consequences of nominated four times prejudice, corruption and be- as best director. trayal but also celebrated indiOnly in 2005 did the Acadvidual acts of courage. emy of Motion Picture Arts In his first film, “12 Angry and Sciences present him with Men” (1957), he took his cam- an honorary Oscar. In 2007, in eras into a jury room where the an interview videotaped to acpressure mounted as one tena- company this obituary online, cious and courageous juror, Lumet was asked how it felt played by Henry Fonda, slowly to finally win. He replied, “I convinced the others that the wanted one, damn it, and I felt defendant on trial for murder I deserved one.” was innocent. He marked his 83rd year Lumet’s moral sense re- with the 2007 release of his mained acute when he ven- last feature film, “Before the tured into satire with “Net- Devil Knows You’re Dead,” the work” (1976), perhaps his bleakly riveting story of two most acclaimed film. Based brothers (Philip Seymour Hoffon Paddy Chayefsky’s biting man and Ethan Hawke) proscript, the film portrays a tele- pelled by greed into a relentless vision anchorman who briefly cycle of mayhem. New York Times News Service

L.J. Davis, journalist and novelist, is dead at 70 New York Times News Service L.J. Davis, a journalist and novelist who wrote about money and business, real estate and home renovation, the Industrial Revolution and his beloved Brooklyn, often with wry or sardonic humor, was found dead in his Brooklyn home on Wednesday. He was 70. A prolific magazine journalist who wrote largely about business for Harper’s, where he was a contributing editor, The New York Times Magazine, New York and The New Republic, Davis was the author of four nonfiction books. “Bad Money” (1982) traced the stories of several business calamities; “Onassis: Aristotle and Christina” (1986), was partly a family biography and partly a business story about the Greek shipping magnate and his daughter; “The Billionaire Shell Game” (1998) took a critical look at the evolution of cable television; and “Fleet Fire: Thomas Edison and the Pioneers of the Electric Revolution” (2003) chronicled the harnessing of electricity.

Raymond B. “Mike” Krumvieda July 23, 1927- March 27, 2011 Raymond B. “Mike” Krumvieda of Sisters, Oregon, passed away peacefully at home with his family at his side on Sunday, March 27, 2011. He was 83. A Celebration of Mike’s Life with full military honors will take place on Saturday, May 14, 2011, at 1:00 PM at the Krumvieda family home in Junipine Acres in Sisters, Oregon. Mike was born July 23, 1927, in Canistota, South Dakota, to John and Helena (Visser) Krumvieda. At age 17, Mike enlisted in the United States Navy and proudly served during WWII, earning the rank of Pharmacist’s Mate Second Class. Shortly after he left the service, Mike entered the building profession and maintained his contractor’s license for over 50 years. His life’s work took him to projects in California, Arizona, Nevada, Washington, British Columbia, Costa Rica and throughout the state of Oregon. Mike was a man who found happiness in many places. He and his wife Joy were enthusiastic RVers who usually detoured to Texas to visit family. Elk hunting trips with his son, John were a great source of contentment and pride. He was a sturdy thread in the fabric of the Junipine Acres community and shined at neighborhood get-togethers, where he regaled his eager audiences with intriguing stories. He defined reliability and always gave freely of his time and expertise to his neighbors. There was always a feeling of relief when Mike drove up on his tractor with his faithful companion Sydney. Mike was a member of the Redmond VFW, Sisters American Legion, Prineville Elks and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. Mike is survived by his loving wife Joy; his daughter, Karen (Tom) Olsen and his sons, John (Suzanne) Krumvieda and Kevin (Tonya) Krumvieda. Other survivors include his stepdaughter, Marcy (Ken) Ball; ten grandchildren; three greatgrandchildren; numerous nieces and nephews. He is preceded in death by his parents and brothers Kenny and Alvin. Mike is now in his true home, where everyone smiles, where laughing comes easily and he can dance with the angels for all eternity. Happy Trails to “The Give a Damn Man.” Memorial contributions in Mike’s name can be made to Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 or the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Post 4108, 1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond, OR 97756. Baird Funeral Home of Bend is in Charge of the Arrangements, (541) 382-0903 – www.bairdmortuaries.com


W E AT H ER

B6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

THE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST

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

TODAY, APRIL 10

MONDAY

Today: Mostly cloudy.

Ben Burkel

Bob Shaw

FORECASTS: LOCAL

57

32

STATE

Western Ruggs

Condon

Maupin

Government Camp

LOW

61/39

56/37

63/42

43/25

Warm Springs

Marion Forks

51/30

44/30

Willowdale

Mitchell

Madras

Camp Sherman 43/20 Redmond Prineville 48/23 Cascadia 45/21 47/34 Sisters 46/22 Bend Post 57/32

45/32

36/11

45/20

Hampton

Crescent

Crescent Lake

44/18

46/21

43/20

Fort Rock

58/40

Bend

60/41

Idaho Falls Elko

69/44

52/30

49/33

61/39

San Francisco Partly cloudy and mild 60/48 conditions will be the rule today.

40/28

56/35

59/42

Reno

Helena Boise

57/32

Grants Pass

47/22

53/33

Crater Lake

52/35

Redding

Silver Lake

44/17

Missoula

Eugene

Christmas Valley

Chemult

City

Portland

47/21

39/13

53/45

Salt Lake City

47/39

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

LOW

HIGH

Moon phases First

Full

Last

New

April 11 April 17 April 24 May 2

Sunday Hi/Lo/W

LOW

HIGH

Astoria . . . . . . . .51/43/trace . . . . . 52/41/sh. . . . . . 49/38/sh Baker City . . . . . . 52/30/0.00 . . . . . 55/36/pc. . . . . . 48/26/sh Brookings . . . . . . 55/38/0.00 . . . . . 53/44/sh. . . . . . 51/43/sh Burns. . . . . . . . . . 49/27/0.00 . . . . . 57/33/sh. . . . . . 48/26/sh Eugene . . . . . . . . 58/39/0.00 . . . . . 58/40/sh. . . . . . 51/33/sh Klamath Falls . . .46/19/trace . . . . . 54/33/pc. . . . . . 45/27/rs Lakeview. . . . . . . 45/21/0.00 . . . . . 53/33/sh. . . . . . 46/27/sh La Pine . . . . . . . . 45/19/0.00 . . . . . .46/19/rs. . . . . . 42/23/rs Medford . . . . . . . 60/34/0.00 . . . . . 61/43/pc. . . . . . 51/34/sh Newport . . . . . . . 50/45/0.00 . . . . . 52/41/sh. . . . . . 49/38/sh North Bend . . . . . 52/43/0.00 . . . . . 53/44/sh. . . . . . 50/36/sh Ontario . . . . . . . . 58/40/0.00 . . . . . 59/42/sh. . . . . . 57/34/sh Pendleton . . . . . . 56/31/0.00 . . . . . 64/42/pc. . . . . . 59/32/sh Portland . . . . . . . 57/42/0.00 . . . . . 57/42/sh. . . . . . 51/38/sh Prineville . . . . . . . 45/21/0.00 . . . . . . 45/21/r. . . . . . 51/25/sh Redmond. . . . . . .50/22/trace . . . . . 58/32/pc. . . . . . 50/23/sh Roseburg. . . . . . . 59/37/0.00 . . . . . 60/42/sh. . . . . . 51/33/sh Salem . . . . . . . . . 57/42/0.00 . . . . . 57/41/sh. . . . . . 52/34/sh Sisters . . . . . . . . . 46/27/0.00 . . . . . .46/22/rs. . . . . . . 47/21/r The Dalles . . . . . . 59/44/0.00 . . . . . 63/44/pc. . . . . . 57/34/pc

TEMPERATURE

SKI REPORT

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

LOW 0

MEDIUM 2

4

HIGH 6

V.HIGH 8

10

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level and road conditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key: T.T. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions I-5 at Siskiyou Summit . . . . . . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires I-84 at Cabbage Hill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No report Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass . . . . . . . Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Government Camp. . . . . . . . . . . . . No report Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No report Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake . . . . . . . . . . . No restrictions Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass . . . . . . . . .Closed for season For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.tripcheck.com or call 511

PRECIPITATION

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44/24 24 hours ending 4 p.m.. . . . . . . . 0.00” Record high . . . . . . . . . . . . .81 in 1996 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.17” Record low. . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 in 1945 Average month to date. . . . . . . . 0.21” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.93” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 Average year to date. . . . . . . . . . 4.02” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.. . . 29.90 Record 24 hours . . . . . . . 0.22 in 1941 *Melted liquid equivalent

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . . . .6:13 a.m. . . . . . .7:26 p.m. Venus . . . . . . . .5:26 a.m. . . . . . .4:49 p.m. Mars. . . . . . . . .6:04 a.m. . . . . . .6:27 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . . . .6:28 a.m. . . . . . .7:19 p.m. Saturn. . . . . . . .6:46 p.m. . . . . . .6:33 a.m. Uranus . . . . . . .5:52 a.m. . . . . . .5:57 p.m.

1

LOW

52 30

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX Monday Hi/Lo/W

Chance of showers.

48 24

PLANET WATCH

OREGON CITIES

Calgary 55/30

57/42

Burns

46/19

48/41

45/20

43/20

La Pine

Vancouver

Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:31 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 7:43 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 6:29 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 7:44 p.m. Moonrise today . . . 11:11 a.m. Moonset today . . . . 1:53 a.m.

THURSDAY

Partly cloudy.

52 25

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Seattle

Expect increasing clouds with a chance of showers late. Eastern

HIGH

Rain will return to western parts of the region today, but dry weather should prevail in the east.

Paulina

Brothers

Sunriver

LOW

48 18

BEND ALMANAC

Central

44/21

Light rain showers.

NORTHWEST

48/25

49/28

Oakridge Elk Lake

Mostly cloudy skies with showers becoming likely.

50/29

HIGH

Yesterday’s regional extremes • 61° Hermiston • 16° Meacham

WEDNESDAY

Chance of showers and cooler.

Tonight: Mostly cloudy.

HIGH

TUESDAY

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 . . . . . . 36-89 Hoodoo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 . . . . . 38-109 Mt. Ashland. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 . . . . 106-167 Mt. Bachelor . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-0 . . . . 155-175 Mt. Hood Meadows . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . . . 144 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . 85-100 Timberline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . . . . . 191 Warner Canyon . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 . . . no report Willamette Pass . . . . . . . . . . . 12 . . . . . 55-120 Aspen, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 Mammoth Mtn., California . .7-12 Park City, Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Squaw Valley, California . . . . .4-0 Sun Valley, Idaho. . . . . . . . . . .3-0 Taos, New Mexico . . . . . . . . . . 0.0 Vail, Colorado . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0

. . . . . . 64-65 . . . . 175-270 . . . . . . . 128 . . . . . . . 225 . . . . . . 46-86 . . . no report . . . . . . 75-77

For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html

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

• 7° Stanley, Idaho

• 2.26” Effingham, Ill.

Honolulu 85/72

S

Boise 59/42

S

Saskatoon 49/30

Billings 58/36

Portland 57/42

• 105° Laredo, Texas

S

Vancouver 48/41 Calgary 55/30 Seattle 53/45

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

S

S

S

Winnipeg 49/34

Bismarck 48/34 St. Paul 72/44

Rapid City 49/36

S

S

S

S

S S

Quebec 59/43

Thunder Bay 49/41 Green Bay 77/53 Detroit 77/60

To ronto 66/57

Buffalo

71/59

Halifax 54/39 Portland 51/46 Boston 57/49 New York 56/54 Philadelphia 64/58

Des Moines Columbus Chicago 82/49 Cheyenne 84/67 83/57 Omaha 46/30 San Francisco Washington, D. C. Salt Lake 75/43 60/48 City 71/63 Las Denver Louisville 47/39 Kansas City Vegas 53/32 88/66 81/49 St. Louis 68/49 Charlotte 85/58 86/61 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville 55/32 65/54 83/46 86/68 Atlanta Phoenix 87/61 Little Rock 69/51 Birmingham 84/60 Dallas Tijuana 88/67 87/54 63/52 HoustonNew Orleans 84/71 Orlando 85/68 92/68 Chihuahua 81/44 Miami 89/72 Anchorage 40/26

La Paz 80/57 Juneau 42/28

Mazatlan 85/54

FRONTS

Monterrey 96/70

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . . .99/69/0.00 . 85/49/pc . . . 81/54/s Akron . . . . . . . . .57/42/0.00 . . .80/63/t . . . .71/44/t Albany. . . . . . . . .63/28/0.00 . .57/52/sh . . . .80/57/t Albuquerque. . . .69/48/0.00 . 55/32/pc . . . 71/40/s Anchorage . . . . .43/30/0.00 . . .40/26/c . . . 41/25/c Atlanta . . . . . . . .86/67/0.00 . . .87/61/s . . . .80/54/t Atlantic City . . . .55/42/0.08 . . .57/56/c . . 75/50/pc Austin . . . . . . . . .93/68/0.00 . 91/60/pc . . . 84/51/s Baltimore . . . . . .52/42/0.00 . . .69/60/c . . . .87/56/t Billings. . . . . . . . .41/30/0.00 . 58/36/pc . . 61/32/pc Birmingham . . . .89/69/0.00 . 88/67/pc . . . .81/52/t Bismarck . . . . . . .50/37/0.00 . .48/34/sh . . 59/37/pc Boise . . . . . . . . . .54/37/0.01 . 59/42/pc . . 57/33/sh Boston. . . . . . . . .61/35/0.00 . . .57/49/c . . 74/57/pc Bridgeport, CT. . .53/35/0.00 . .50/49/sh . . . .67/51/t Buffalo . . . . . . . .65/36/0.00 . . .71/59/t . . . .71/43/t Burlington, VT. . .62/29/0.00 . . .58/50/c . . . .79/51/t Caribou, ME . . . .49/24/0.00 . 47/36/pc . . . .54/44/t Charleston, SC . .90/65/0.00 . 83/66/pc . . . 81/61/s Charlotte. . . . . . .74/57/0.33 . 86/61/pc . . . .86/54/t Chattanooga. . . .88/62/0.00 . 88/62/pc . . . .77/51/t Cheyenne . . . . . .55/37/0.00 . . 46/30/rs . . 59/34/pc Chicago. . . . . . . .66/44/0.00 . . .83/57/t . . 57/41/sh Cincinnati . . . . . .64/50/0.43 . 85/67/pc . . . .70/45/t Cleveland . . . . . .56/44/0.00 . . .80/64/t . . . .69/44/t Colorado Springs 71/41/0.00 . .48/31/sh . . . 62/37/s Columbia, MO . .89/59/0.01 . . .82/52/t . . 63/43/pc Columbia, SC . . .90/65/0.00 . 90/65/pc . . 87/58/pc Columbus, GA. . .88/68/0.00 . . .90/63/s . . 83/57/pc Columbus, OH. . .64/48/0.00 . . .84/67/t . . . .70/43/t Concord, NH . . . .63/23/0.00 . . .57/42/c . . 77/48/pc Corpus Christi. . .88/72/0.00 . 86/73/pc . . 84/64/pc Dallas Ft Worth. .89/69/0.00 . . .87/54/t . . . 81/53/s Dayton . . . . . . . .62/50/0.19 . 84/66/pc . . . .68/42/t Denver. . . . . . . . .75/37/0.00 . .53/32/sh . . . 66/37/s Des Moines. . . . .84/50/0.00 . . .82/49/t . . 60/41/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . .49/35/0.00 . . .77/60/t . . . .68/42/t Duluth . . . . . . . . .55/38/0.00 . . .50/39/t . . 52/35/sh El Paso. . . . . . . . .86/61/0.00 . . .66/42/s . . . 76/49/s Fairbanks. . . . . . .35/23/0.00 . . .37/12/c . . . 36/11/c Fargo. . . . . . . . . .55/42/0.00 . .52/38/sh . . 55/36/pc Flagstaff . . . . . . .34/23/0.65 . 42/19/pc . . . 55/22/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . .62/36/0.00 . . .81/60/t . . . .63/38/t Green Bay. . . . . .52/37/0.00 . . .77/53/t . . 55/34/sh Greensboro. . . . .55/47/0.35 . 84/62/pc . . 86/57/pc Harrisburg. . . . . .51/41/0.00 . . .65/56/t . . 82/54/pc Hartford, CT . . . .61/30/0.00 . .58/51/sh . . . .80/55/t Helena. . . . . . . . .51/27/0.00 . 56/35/pc . . 57/30/sh Honolulu . . . . . . .86/74/0.00 . . .85/72/r . . 84/71/pc Houston . . . . . . .87/71/0.00 . 85/68/pc . . 83/59/pc Huntsville . . . . . .89/67/0.00 . 86/66/pc . . . .74/49/t Indianapolis . . . .71/53/0.31 . 82/63/pc . . . .65/46/t Jackson, MS . . . .88/69/0.00 . 86/67/pc . . . .79/53/t Madison, WI . . . .64/46/0.00 . . .82/52/t . . 55/35/sh Jacksonville. . . . .92/64/0.00 . . .90/65/s . . 90/66/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . .39/35/0.09 . . 42/28/rs . . . 43/31/c Kansas City. . . . .87/57/0.01 . . .81/49/t . . 65/44/pc Lansing . . . . . . . .58/32/0.00 . . .81/61/t . . . .63/38/t Las Vegas . . . . . .57/41/0.00 . . .68/49/s . . . 73/55/s Lexington . . . . . .75/54/0.56 . 85/66/pc . . . .74/49/t Lincoln. . . . . . . . .89/53/0.00 . .74/43/sh . . 64/41/pc Little Rock. . . . . .87/69/0.00 . . .84/60/c . . 75/50/pc Los Angeles. . . . .59/44/0.00 . . .65/54/s . . 63/54/pc Louisville . . . . . . .82/62/0.65 . 88/66/pc . . . .72/50/t Memphis. . . . . . .88/72/0.00 . 86/63/pc . . 74/53/pc Miami . . . . . . . . .89/73/0.00 . . .89/72/s . . 88/72/pc Milwaukee . . . . .52/42/0.00 . . .81/54/t . . 56/37/sh Minneapolis . . . .58/48/0.00 . . .72/44/t . . 56/40/sh Nashville . . . . . . .91/65/0.00 . 86/68/pc . . . .75/49/t New Orleans. . . .85/73/0.00 . 84/71/pc . . . .83/63/t New York . . . . . .58/40/0.00 . .56/54/sh . . . .80/54/t Newark, NJ . . . . .58/38/0.00 . .57/55/sh . . . .78/55/t Norfolk, VA . . . . .52/48/0.00 . . .69/62/c . . . 90/58/s Oklahoma City . .92/67/0.00 . 83/46/pc . . 77/50/pc Omaha . . . . . . . .88/52/0.00 . .75/43/sh . . 63/40/pc Orlando. . . . . . . .91/65/0.00 . . .92/68/s . . 90/67/pc Palm Springs. . . .68/46/0.00 . . .77/52/s . . . 79/54/s Peoria . . . . . . . . .79/48/0.10 . . .85/55/t . . 60/42/pc Philadelphia . . . .58/41/0.00 . . .64/58/c . . . .83/57/t Phoenix. . . . . . . .58/45/0.22 . . .69/51/s . . . 80/57/s Pittsburgh . . . . . .58/42/0.00 . 82/63/pc . . . .77/46/t Portland, ME. . . .55/25/0.00 . 51/46/pc . . 66/45/pc Providence . . . . .54/30/0.00 . . .56/49/c . . . .74/53/t Raleigh . . . . . . . .57/48/0.28 . 81/63/pc . . . 87/59/s

Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Rapid City . . . . . .44/37/0.03 . . .49/36/c . . . 65/39/s Savannah . . . . . .91/69/0.00 . 84/66/pc . . 86/62/pc Reno . . . . . . . . . .51/30/0.00 . 61/39/pc . . 60/35/pc Seattle. . . . . . . . .55/42/0.00 . .53/45/sh . . 49/39/sh Richmond . . . . . .57/45/0.00 . 76/64/pc . . 90/58/pc Sioux Falls. . . . . .57/48/0.01 . .63/39/sh . . 60/36/pc Rochester, NY . . .62/32/0.00 . . .70/60/t . . . .77/46/t Spokane . . . . . . .53/31/0.00 . . .53/40/c . . 50/31/sh Sacramento. . . . .65/34/0.00 . 66/45/pc . . 65/46/pc Springfield, MO. .86/61/0.06 . . .80/49/t . . . 66/41/s St. Louis. . . . . . . .88/59/0.69 . . .85/58/t . . 65/47/pc Tampa . . . . . . . . .88/69/0.00 . . .89/71/s . . 88/71/pc Salt Lake City . . .36/33/0.24 . 47/39/pc . . 58/42/pc Tucson. . . . . . . . .58/42/0.22 . . .64/41/s . . . 78/49/s San Antonio . . . .92/66/0.00 . 94/63/pc . . . 85/57/s Tulsa . . . . . . . . . .90/72/0.00 . . .85/50/t . . 74/46/pc San Diego . . . . . .61/47/0.19 . . .65/52/s . . 65/55/pc Washington, DC .51/42/0.01 . . .71/63/c . . . .87/58/t San Francisco . . .58/45/0.00 . 61/48/pc . . 58/46/pc Wichita . . . . . . . .89/63/0.00 . 77/46/pc . . . 69/44/s San Jose . . . . . . .64/39/0.00 . 64/46/pc . . 63/44/pc Yakima . . . . . . . .61/55/0.00 . 60/36/pc . . 57/30/sh Santa Fe . . . . . . .63/45/0.00 . 48/25/pc . . . 64/28/s Yuma. . . . . . . . . .66/47/0.00 . . .76/55/s . . . 85/56/s

INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam. . . . .61/41/0.00 . . .64/48/s . . 63/45/pc Athens. . . . . . . . .72/59/0.00 . . .64/50/s . . . 65/48/s Auckland. . . . . . .68/55/0.00 . . .67/62/c . . 69/63/pc Baghdad . . . . . . .81/61/0.00 . . .86/66/s . . . 85/63/s Bangkok . . . . . . .91/73/0.03 . . .95/77/t . . . 94/79/c Beijing. . . . . . . . .79/43/0.00 . 66/41/pc . . . 68/43/s Beirut. . . . . . . . . .70/61/0.00 . . .72/62/s . . . 71/59/s Berlin. . . . . . . . . .59/41/0.00 . . .63/41/s . . . 68/46/c Bogota . . . . . . . .64/52/0.86 . .64/51/sh . . 63/50/sh Budapest. . . . . . .61/43/0.00 . . .57/39/s . . . 59/37/s Buenos Aires. . . .73/43/0.00 . . .77/60/s . . 76/61/pc Cabo San Lucas .79/63/0.00 . . .84/60/s . . . 86/62/s Cairo . . . . . . . . . .75/61/0.00 . . .85/67/s . . . 84/63/s Calgary . . . . . . . .48/30/0.00 . 55/30/pc . . 50/23/pc Cancun . . . . . . . .84/73/0.00 . 87/73/pc . . 85/72/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . .63/41/0.00 . . .57/46/c . . 54/36/pc Edinburgh . . . . . .59/41/0.00 . 63/48/pc . . 54/41/pc Geneva . . . . . . . .77/48/0.00 . 73/45/pc . . . 68/43/s Harare . . . . . . . . .68/57/0.00 . .80/56/sh . . 79/57/pc Hong Kong . . . . .81/70/0.00 . 75/64/pc . . . 77/66/s Istanbul. . . . . . . .64/45/0.07 . .52/45/sh . . 53/43/sh Jerusalem . . . . . .62/51/0.00 . . .68/47/s . . . 67/49/s Johannesburg . . .70/50/0.00 . . .74/54/s . . 72/52/pc Lima . . . . . . . . . .79/64/0.00 . 73/63/pc . . 72/61/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . .70/59/0.00 . 73/59/pc . . . 81/61/s London . . . . . . . .66/46/0.00 . . .70/45/s . . 66/39/pc Madrid . . . . . . . .84/48/0.00 . . .79/48/s . . . 73/46/s Manila. . . . . . . . .84/72/0.03 . 86/70/pc . . 88/72/pc

Mecca . . . . . . . . .99/73/0.00 100/68/pc . . 99/74/pc Mexico City. . . . .88/57/0.00 . 85/61/pc . . 87/59/pc Montreal. . . . . . .59/37/0.00 . .57/52/sh . . 64/54/sh Moscow . . . . . . .36/32/0.90 . .43/37/sh . . .42/32/rs Nairobi . . . . . . . .81/61/0.00 . . .81/61/s . . 80/62/pc Nassau . . . . . . . .88/70/0.00 . 86/73/pc . . 84/74/pc New Delhi. . . . . .93/68/0.00 . 94/71/pc . . . 96/73/c Osaka . . . . . . . . .64/57/0.83 . 68/43/pc . . 64/34/sh Oslo. . . . . . . . . . .57/37/0.00 . 57/37/pc . . 56/38/pc Ottawa . . . . . . . .61/34/0.00 . .55/51/sh . . 70/50/sh Paris. . . . . . . . . . .72/45/0.00 . 72/52/pc . . 64/48/pc Rio de Janeiro. . .91/77/0.00 . . .82/72/t . . 86/73/sh Rome. . . . . . . . . .64/52/0.00 . .72/50/sh . . . 70/46/s Santiago . . . . . . .70/50/0.00 . . .77/50/s . . . 78/49/s Sao Paulo . . . . . .82/63/0.00 . .73/63/sh . . . 79/64/s Sapporo. . . . . . . .46/46/0.00 . 54/34/pc . . 48/28/sh Seoul . . . . . . . . . .57/36/0.00 . . .61/41/s . . . 62/39/s Shanghai. . . . . . .72/54/0.00 . 64/48/pc . . . 57/41/s Singapore . . . . . .90/75/1.49 . . .86/75/t . . . .88/73/t Stockholm. . . . . .52/39/0.00 . . .46/39/s . . . 55/41/c Sydney. . . . . . . . .81/59/0.00 . . .75/60/s . . . .71/58/r Taipei. . . . . . . . . .73/64/0.00 . 79/68/pc . . 77/63/sh Tel Aviv . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . . .67/57/s . . . 71/58/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . .64/54/0.00 . 64/57/pc . . 68/46/pc Toronto . . . . . . . .55/32/0.00 . . .66/57/t . . . .67/43/t Vancouver. . . . . .52/43/0.00 . . .48/41/r . . 49/42/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . .63/48/0.00 . . .61/43/s . . 63/46/pc Warsaw. . . . . . . .46/39/0.15 . .52/30/sh . . 53/41/pc


CL

COMMUNITY LIFE

FACES AND PLACES OF THE HIGH DESERT Inside

150 years of glee Yale singers past and present converge for anniversary, Page C8

C

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

www.bendbulletin.com/communitylife

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2011

Finding romance, history in Oregon’s covered bridges State boasts the most in western U.S. By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

DRAIN — There’s a romance about covered bridges that doesn’t extend to more modern spans of concrete or steel. Maybe it’s inspired by 19thcentury Currier and Ives prints of horse-drawn carriages crossing bridges in the snow. Perhaps the poems of Longfellow or Robert Frost are to blame. Childhood memories of family vacations could be responsible. Whatever the reason, the scene I observed on Drain’s Pass Creek Bridge likely wouldn’t have been repeated on a contemporary structure. A young couple stepped softly onto the old covered bridge, pausing to study the fading paint on its brown-painted slat walls and the speckled moss on its shingled roof. Then they took each other’s hands and virtually waltzed through the span, stopping once or twice to snap photographs along the way. A covered bridge has crossed this Umpqua River tributary since the 1870s, when Drain was a key road junction along the Overland Stage Route linking the Willamette Valley with Southern Oregon. Rebuilt in 1925, it was closed in 1981 and replaced by a more permanent concrete bridge

Learn more

VOLCANO COUNTRY

High Desert Museum’s new exhibit puts spotlight on Cascades’ active geology

If you go

By David Jasper The Bulletin

With Lava Butte cinder cone and Newberry Volcano just an obsidian stone’s throw away, High Desert Museum now has a volcano to call its own, stretching from the floor to the ceiling of the museum. You can walk inside this volcano, which includes magma tubes for children to crawl through and was designed by Sisters artist Kimry Jelen in conjunction with museum staff. You needn’t worry about getting singed by magma here: It was warmer in the gallery when the heat was turned up for “Butterflies” until a couple of weeks ago. Now, much like Central Oregon itself, the gallery is home to “Volcano Country,” a new exhibit that explores the geographic forces that shaped the Cascades Range and Central Oregon (see “If you go”). There’s a high level of interest in earthquakes and tsunamis since the recent events in Japan, making “Volcano Country” timely, says Dana Whitelaw, vice president of programs. “Obviously, the earthquake/tsunami in Japan is linked, geologically, to plates across the Pacific,”

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

A’a (pronounced “ah-ah”), a Hawaiian term for lava flows that have a rough surface, is among the many lava rocks on display in “Volcano Country,” an exhibit at the High Desert Museum through June 19. Whitelaw says. The Cascades, situated at the edge of the North American continental plate, are on the edge of the Pacific Ring of Fire, she adds. The exhibit will also help visitors better understand our compelling local geology. The evidence of our Central Oregon’s volcanic past is particularly abundant at Newberry National Volcanic Monument. See Volcano / C7

Wh a t: “Volcano Country” at High Desert Museum When: Through June 19; open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. through April 30; summer hours of 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. begin May 1 Where: High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend Cost: Adults $10, seniors (65-plus) $9, ages 5-12 $6, ages 4 and younger free (Summer rates begin May 2: Adults $15, seniors $12, ages 5-12 $9, ages 4 and younger free) Contact: www.highdesert museum.org or 541-382-4754

Photo courtesy Michael Collier

ABOVE: “Volcano Country” features aerial photos by Michael Collier, including this photo of Mount St. Helens in Washington.

• The Covered Bridge Society of Oregon. c/o Bill Cockrell, 3940 Courtney Lane S.E., Salem; 503-399-0436, www.coveredbridges.org • Oregon Tourism Commission. 670 Hawthorne Ave. S.E., Suite 240, Salem; 503-378-8850, 800-547-7842, www.travel oregon.com

NORTHWEST TR AVE L Next week: Glass blowing in Lincoln City over Pass Creek. But like many Oregon towns that are keenly aware of their heritage, Drain wasn’t willing to say farewell to the Pass Creek Bridge. In the fall of 1987, a 90-ton crane lifted its trusses and moved the structure one block east — to a quiet, park-like area behind the Drain Civic Center on West A Street — where its roof and siding were reassembled. While covered bridges are generally associated with the northeastern United States, especially New England, no Western state has more than Oregon’s 51. Nineteen of those are in Lane County, just over the Cascade summit from Central Oregon. Only one official covered bridge east of the Cascades is acknowledged by the Covered Bridge Society of Oregon, and it’s on the north side of Bend. The privately owned Rock o’ the Range Bridge, built in 1963, is on Bowery Lane immediately west of U.S. Highway 97. Shevlin Park, meanwhile, boasts the Hixon Crossing Covered Bridge over Tumalo Creek. Built in the early 1990s by a movie company, the pedestrian-only bridge rests on the footings of a rail trestle dismantled in 1957. Many of the state’s covered bridges are no longer used for vehicular traffic, having been bypassed by modern steel or concrete spans. But more than half of Oregon’s bridges — 31 by my count — continue to accommodate cars, albeit with posted height and weight restrictions. See Bridges / C4

John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

A young couple walk across the Pass Creek Bridge in Drain, 35 miles south of Eugene in Douglas County. Built in 1925, the bridge was relocated in 1987 to a quiet, parklike area behind the Drain Civic Center, where it remains a lure for those seeking history and romance.

MountainStar to host 10th anniversary event MountainStar Family Relief Nursery, a nonprofit organization that helps families throughout Deschutes County, will celebrate its 10th anniversary with a party, and the public is invited. The event will take place April 20, at the agency’s office, 2125 N.E. Daggett Lane in Bend, from 4:30 to 6 p.m. There will be refreshments and mingling for adults, and activities for children, including an inflatable bounce house. The event will also include a presentation and the unveiling of MountainStar’s new 14-passenger Angel Transport bus, which replaces an ailing van and ensures that children needing the nonprofit’s services will have transportation. MountainStar Relief Nursery provides crisis intervention and a therapeutic classroom for children at serious risk of abuse or neglect. It serves about 300 chil-

SPOTLIGHT dren annually. Contact: www.mountainstar .org or 541-322-6820.

Free presentation on Social Security The Bend Senior Center will host a Social Security 101 presentation from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Thursday at the Senior Center, at 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road. The presentation is free and open to the public. Alan Edwards with the Social Security Administration will cover topics including retirement benefits and eligibility, what early retirement does to benefits and how to understand and get the most from your program. Light refreshments will be served. RSVP to 541-388-1133. — From staff reports


T E L E V ISION

C2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Soldier attending Networks begin rethinking lineups senior prom should To keep or not to keep? watch what he says By Gail Pennington

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Dear Abby: I am currently deployed in Afghanistan. My best friend’s little sister, “Brittany,” has had a crush on me for years. She has been straightforward about what she wants — marriage, kids, white picket fence, etc. She has always been like a little sister, so it has been awkward. I thought it was weird for a 15-year-old (at the time) to say that to an older soldier on R&R. During my deployment, Brittany has sent me care packages loaded with cookies. Maybe I should have kept my mouth shut about my weakness for homemade cookies, but hindsight is 20/20. Brittany has now called in the bribe by inviting me to her senior prom. Not wanting to mess with the steady supply of baked goods, I said yes. I figure it’s an appropriate way to say thanks for the cookies. I intend to make sure Brittany enjoys her prom with her medalcovered arm candy, but I need to let her know that while I’m flattered she thinks so highly of me, I’m not interested in dating her. I love her like a sister. I don’t want to break her heart. Any suggestions for a guy who’s about as subtle as a tank rolling down a cobblestone road on a Sunday? — Medal-Covered Eye Candy Dear Eye Candy: How long has it been since you’ve seen Brittany? When you return for that prom, she will no longer be that precocious 15-year-old you remember. By all means show her a nice evening. But don’t say anything you might regret or you may have to eat your words instead of those cookies. If you’re not romantically interested, you’ll date other women and Brittany will catch on soon enough. And you may find that

DEAR ABBY after her glamorous evening with her medal-covered war hero, she sets her sights on someone other than you. Stranger things have happened. Dear Abby: Spring is here, and with it comes the wedding season. Would you please inform your readers about the importance of answering wedding RSVPs? A lot of people appear to need reminding about the need to respond. Thanks! — Mother of a Bride and Groom Dear Mother: I’m glad to oblige — and congratulations on the double blessing that’s coming your way in gaining both a daughter and a son! Readers: When a formal invitation is received, you should immediately return the RSVP card that’s enclosed with it. RSVP is the abbreviation for the French phrase “Repondez s’il vous plait,” which means “Please reply.” It’s important for the people planning the affair to know how many guests will attend so they can be properly provided for — for obvious reasons. So please be polite and don’t keep them wondering. 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.

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ST. LOUIS — If you ran a TV network, you’d renew your favorite shows and cancel all the stupid ones. Me, too. The problem is, your favorite shows probably aren’t my favorite shows, and we could argue “stupid” all night. A network programmer who made decisions this way, from the heart and not the head, would soon be out of a job, and the network would go bust. Network television (we’re talking ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox and the CW here) depends on mass audiences to survive, and that means attracting the broadest swath of viewers. Every year about this time, it also means disappointing millions of fans whose favorite shows don’t make the cut for another season. The process of putting together a network schedule is already well under way. The bosses of the networks’ entertainment divisions have heard pitches, read scripts and ordered pilot episodes of those shows they believe have the most promise. In the next month, those pilots will come in, and the networks will decide which are good enough to earn a place on the fall schedule. For every new show, an old show has to go. Or, to put it another way, every failed show leaves a place for a new series that will become someone’s favorite. In the TV business, failure isn’t defined just by ratings, unless those ratings are as low as the ones for Fox’s “Lone

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NBC “Chuck” (as always, on the bubble) “Harry’s Law” (bubble) “Outsourced” (bubble) CBS “Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior” (bubble) “CSI: NY” (bubble) “CSI: Miami” (bubble) “The Mentalist” (likely to return) “The Defenders” (unlikely to return) “Mad Love” (unlikely to return) ABC “Better With You” (bubble) “Brothers and Sisters” (bubble)

performers to make room for anything new. (CBS is in that position.) On the other hand, a network that’s struggling (think NBC) might keep a low-rated show with good buzz — or might decide to clean house, starting fresh. The broadcast networks have already made some decisions, but other shows remain “on

“Mr. Sunshine” (bubble) “No Ordinary Family” (unlikely to return; stars have new pilots) “Off the Map” (unlikely to return) “V” (unlikely to return) Fox “Bob’s Burgers” (bubble) “Chicago Code” (bubble) “Lie to Me” (bubble) “Human Target” (unlikely to return) “Traffic Light” (unlikely to return) The CW “Hellcats” (bubble) “Nikita” (bubble) “One Tree Hill” (bubble)

the bubble” (a carpenter’s term meaning “could go either way”). Schedules will be set by the third week in May.

May 21, 2011

Pole Pedal Paddle Volunteers Needed!

NO

BLUE Like a fine aged wine, so is Blue. Blue is a sweet 7 year old Chow Chow that was brought to the shelter because his previous owner was moving and couldn’t take him along. He has mainly been an indoor dog and would like to find a home where he can remain this way. Due to the nature of his breed, he needs to go to a home where there are no children under the age of 16 years old. Chows are intelligent dogs, but can be very independent. If you have room in your heart and your home, come down and meet Blue today!

W Over 100 Local OPEN!! Vendors Art

Go to:

www.pppbend.com to sign up Click on Volunteers, find the available positions at the bottom of the page, click on your choice and sign up.

Crafts Jewelry & More!

Or call Patty at: 541-414-4PPP or email her at:

patty.neumann@ advantagebend.com

Open Daily 10-5

Sponsored by

Off Robal Rd. across from Cascade Village

541-322-0496 • www.bendhardwoodoutlet.com

Is your favorite on the “bubble” list? If you feel the need to lobby, go to the network’s website (NBC.com, etc.) and look for the “contact us” section. Here is an incomplete list of some shows still in limbo:

HUMANE SOCIETY OF CENTRAL OREGON/SPCA 61170 S.E. 27th St. BEND (541) 382-3537

2

sq. ft.

Star,” the first show canceled last fall. Many factors come into play. • How many people are watching? The networks measure viewership via Nielsen People Meters, counting those who watch live or on the DVR up to seven days later. • Are those people young? Educated? Upper-income? All those things are good, especially if the show “skews young” (1849 is the age group preferred by advertisers). • Is viewership rising or declining? Does the show lose viewers delivered by the show ahead of it? How does the show do vs. the show that previously aired in the time slot? • Does the network own the show or buy it from a studio? Are production costs high? If the show is aging, all costs (including salaries and fees) rise. For an aging show, contracts also expire and must be renegotiated. • What other sources of income does the show provide, such as international sales? (CBS’ new “Hawaii Five-0” isn’t the best-rated show of the year, but it’s popular around the world.) • What else does the network have on its schedule? A network with too many successful shows will have to cancel marginal

Central Oregon Animal Hospital

740 NE 3rd St. OPEN EVERY DAY!

Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation www.mbsef.org

BD-Bend/Redmond/Sisters/Black Butte (Digital); PM-Prineville/Madras; SR-Sunriver; L-La Pine; * Sports programming may vary

SUNDAY PRIME TIME 4/10/11 BROADCAST/CABLE CHANNELS

BD PM SR L ^ KATU KTVZ % % % % KBNZ & KOHD ) ) ) ) KFXO * ` ` ` , , KPDX KOAB _ # _ # ( KGW # KTVZDT2 , CREATE 3-2 3-2 173 3-2 OPB HD 3-1 3-1 3-1 3-1

5:00

5:30

KATU News at 5 ABC World News Grey’s Anatomy ‘14’ Å Trollz ‘Y7’ Å The Insider ‘PG’ Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ ‘PG’ NUMB3RS First Law ’ ‘PG’ Å (4:00) ›› “Alfie” (2004) Jude Law. History Detectives ’ ‘G’ Å Newschannel 8 at 5PM (N) Å (3:00) Rain Man Smash Cuts ‘PG’ Cooking Class Scandinavian History Detectives ’ ‘G’ Å

6:00

6:30

KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Å News Nightly News KOIN Local 6 at 6 Evening News ABC World News Made Hollywood Bones ’ ‘14’ Å Without a Trace Odds or Evens ‘14’ Oregon Art Beat Ore. Field Guide Nightly News Chris Matthews Smash Cuts ‘PG’ King of Queens Steves Europe Equitrekking ‘G’ Oregon Art Beat Ore. Field Guide

7:00

7:30

America’s Funniest Home Videos Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å 60 Minutes (N) ’ Å America’s Funniest Home Videos Cleveland Show American Dad (N) Criminal Minds ’ ‘14’ Å Antiques Roadshow Dallas ‘G’ Å Dateline NBC (N) ’ Å Heartland After the Storm ‘PG’ Å Garden Home This Old House Antiques Roadshow Dallas ‘G’ Å

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

10:00

10:30

11:00

11:30

Secret Millionaire (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Brothers & Sisters Olivia’s brother tries to gain custody. (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å KATU News at 11 Treasure Hunters America’s Next Great Restaurant (N) The Celebrity Apprentice Marketing event for sun-care products. (N) ‘PG’ News Love-Raymond Amazing Race: Unfinished Business Undercover Boss Baja Fresh (N) ’ CSI: Miami Caged (N) ’ ‘14’ Å News (11:35) Cold Case Secret Millionaire (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Brothers & Sisters Olivia’s brother tries to gain custody. (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Inside Edition Made Hollywood The Simpsons (N) Bob’s Burgers (N) Family Guy ‘14’ Cleveland Show News Channel 21 Two/Half Men TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Criminal Minds ’ ‘PG’ Å The Closer Flashpoint ‘14’ Å The Closer Fantasy Date ‘14’ Å Oregon Sports Whacked Out Nature Cuba’s biodiversity. ’ ‘G’ Masterpiece Classic (N) ‘PG’ Å Atchafalaya Independent Lens Pushing the Elephant ’ ‘PG’ Å America’s Next Great Restaurant (N) The Celebrity Apprentice Marketing event for sun-care products. (N) ‘PG’ News Sports Sunday ›››› “Rain Man” (1988) Dustin Hoffman, Tom Cruise. Å Meet the Browns Meet the Browns Cheaters ’ ‘14’ Å For Your Home Katie Brown Lap Quilting ‘G’ Grand View ‘G’ Cook’s Country Lidia’s Italy ‘G’ Cooking Class Scandinavian Nature Cuba’s biodiversity. ’ ‘G’ Masterpiece Classic (N) ‘PG’ Å Atchafalaya Independent Lens Pushing the Elephant ’ ‘PG’ Å

BASIC CABLE CHANNELS

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

Criminal Minds Revelations ‘14’ Criminal Minds ’ ‘PG’ Å Criminal Minds Slave of Duty ’ ‘14’ Criminal Minds ’ ‘14’ Å (DVS) Breakout Kings (N) ‘14’ Å Breakout Kings ‘14’ Å 130 28 18 32 Criminal Minds The Big Game ‘14’ (3:00) ›› “The Bone ›› “The Recruit” (2003, Suspense) Al Pacino, Colin Farrell, Bridget Moynahan. A CIA rookie must ferret out The Killing Pilot; The Cage Sarah Linden is drawn into a new case. ’ ‘14’ Å The Killing El Diablo Sarah tracks down a (11:02) The Killing El Diablo Sarah tracks 102 40 39 down a potential witness. ‘14’ Collector” a mole within the agency. Å potential witness. (N) ’ ‘14’ River Monsters Congo Killer ’ ‘PG’ Wild Kingdom (N) ’ ‘PG’ River Monsters The Giants ’ ‘PG’ River Monsters: The Deadliest ‘PG’ River Monsters The Mutilator ‘PG’ River Monsters The Mutilator ‘PG’ 68 50 26 38 River Monsters Demon Fish ’ ‘PG’ Housewives/OC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC What Happens Housewives/OC 137 44 (6:15) ›››› “Driving Miss Daisy” (1989, Comedy-Drama) Morgan Freeman, Jessica Tandy. ’ Å The Comedy Awards (N) ’ ‘14’ Å The Singing Bee ’ ‘PG’ 190 32 42 53 (4:00) ›› “Grumpier Old Men” ’ How I, Millions How I, Millions Made-Millions How I, Millions Target: Inside the Bullseye American Greed Remington Under Fire Sexier-90 Days! Easy Clean 51 36 40 52 The Facebook Obsession Piers Morgan Tonight Newsroom Murder in Mexico: Falcon Lake Piers Morgan Tonight Newsroom Murder in Mexico: Falcon Lake 52 38 35 48 Murder in Mexico: Falcon Lake Jeff Dunham: Arguing With Myself Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å The Comedy Awards (N) ’ ‘14’ Å The Comedy Awards ’ ‘14’ Å 135 53 135 47 (3:30) ›› “The Heartbreak Kid” Desert Paid Program Ride Guide ‘14’ The Buzz Joy of Fishing Epic Conditions Outside Film Festival Word Travels ’ Paid Program Joy of Fishing Ride Guide ‘14’ City Edition 11 Programming American Politics Q&A Programming American Politics C-SPAN Weekend 58 20 12 11 Q & A Wizards-Place Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Good-Charlie Shake It Up! ‘G’ Sonny-Chance Good-Charlie Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck Suite/Deck 87 43 14 39 Wizards-Place Deadliest Catch: Best of Season 5 Deadliest Catch: Best of Season 5 Human Planet (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Human Planet (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Deadliest Catch ’ ‘14’ Å Human Planet ’ ‘PG’ Å 156 21 16 37 Deadliest Catch: Best of Season 4 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter Å SportsCenter Å 21 23 22 23 MLB Baseball New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox From Fenway Park in Boston. (N) (Live) 30 for 30 Å 30 for 30 Å NBA Basketball Chicago Bulls at Orlando Magic (N) Å MLB Baseball 22 24 21 24 30 for 30 Å SportsCentury Å Babe Ruth: The Man, the Myth and Boxing: 1998 Lewis vs. Mavrovic Boxing Boxing Ringside Å 23 25 123 25 Babe Ruth: The Man, the Myth and ESPNEWS (Live) ESPNEWS (Live) ESPNEWS (Live) ESPNEWS (Live) ESPNEWS (Live) ESPNEWS (Live) Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express 24 63 124 ›› “The Wedding Date” (2005) Debra Messing, Dermot Mulroney. “My Future Boyfriend” (2011) Sara Rue, Barry Watson. Premiere. ‘14’ (9:52) “My Future Boyfriend” (2011) Sara Rue. ‘14’ Funny Videos 67 29 19 41 (3:30) ››› “Grease” (1978) Freedom Watch Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Å Huckabee Freedom Watch Geraldo at Large ’ ‘PG’ Å Fox News Sunday 54 61 36 50 Huckabee Ice Brigade Outrageous Food Chopped All-Stars (N) Challenge Donut Champions (N) Challenge (N) Iron Chef America (N) Cupcake Wars Four bakers battle. 177 62 98 44 Cupcake Wars Four bakers battle. (4:00) ›› “The International” (2009) Clive Owen. ››› “Wanted” (2008, Action) James McAvoy, Morgan Freeman, Angelina Jolie. › “Max Payne” (2008, Action) Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis, Beau Bridges. Two/Half Men Two/Half Men 131 The Unsellables Designed to Sell Designed to Sell Hunters Int’l House Hunters Holmes/Homes Holmes/Homes Holmes Inspection Soaked (N) ‘G’ House Hunters Hunters Int’l Income Property Income Property 176 49 33 43 For Rent ’ ‘G’ Larry the Cable Guy Ax Men This Means War ‘PG’ Å Ax Men ‘PG’ Å Ax Men Blast Off (N) ‘PG’ Å Mounted in Al. Mounted in Al. MonsterQuest ‘PG’ Å 155 42 41 36 Larry the Cable Guy “Sins of the Mother” (2010, Drama) Jill Scott, Nicole Beharie. ‘PG’ Å Army Wives Walking Wounded ‘PG’ Coming Home Finding Dad (N) ‘PG’ Army Wives Walking Wounded ‘PG’ 138 39 20 31 › “Because I Said So” (2007) Diane Keaton, Mandy Moore. Å The House on Murder Mountain (N) The Longest Night Austrian Predator Raw: The Unseen Tapes Predator Raw: The Unseen Tapes Criminal Mindscape Ron Luff. Meet the Press ‘G’ Å 56 59 128 51 Caught on Camera Thrills and Spills Teen Mom 2 Kailyn signs a custody agreement. ’ ‘PG’ Teen Mom 2 Check Up With Dr. Drew The cast reflects. ’ ‘PG’ America’s Best Dance Crew The Real World ’ ‘14’ Å RJ Berger Fantasy Factory 192 22 38 57 My Life as Liz ’ Victorious ’ ‘G’ Victorious ’ ‘G’ iCarly ‘G’ Å iCarly ‘G’ Å Big Time Rush My Wife and Kids My Wife and Kids Hates Chris Hates Chris George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ The Nanny ‘PG’ The Nanny ‘PG’ 82 46 24 40 SpongeBob Ball Up Streetball (N) World Poker Tour: Season 9 MLB Baseball Cleveland Indians at Seattle Mariners From Safeco Field in Seattle. World Poker 20 45 28* 26 (4:30) MLS Soccer Chicago Fire at Seattle Sounders FC Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die Ways to Die The Comedy Awards (N) ’ ‘14’ Å “American Pie: Book of Love” 132 31 34 46 Ways to Die ›› “Category 7: The End of the World” (2005, Suspense) Gina Gershon, Cameron Daddo. Massive storms wreak havoc around the globe. ‘PG’ › “NYC: Tornado Terror” ‘14’ Å 133 35 133 45 (3:00) ›› “Category 6: Day of Destruction” (2004) Thomas Gibson. ‘PG’ Joel Osteen ‘PG’ Taking Authority K. Copeland Changing-World ›› “Peter and Paul” (1981, Drama) Anthony Hopkins. ›› “Peter and Paul” (1981, Drama) Anthony Hopkins. Secrets of Bible Kim Clement ›› “God’s Outlaw” (1986, Drama) 205 60 130 ›› “Yes Man” (2008, Comedy) Jim Carrey, Zooey Deschanel. ›› “Meet the Fockers” (2004, Comedy) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. Å (10:12) ›› “Meet the Fockers” (2004) Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller. Å 16 27 11 28 (3:30) ››› “Spanglish” (2004) ›› “Butterfield 8” (1960, Drama) Elizabeth Taylor, Laurence Harvey, Eddie Fisher. A ›››› “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” (1966, Drama) Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, George Segal. A ›››› “Giant” (1956, Drama) Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson, James Dean. George Stevens’ Oscar-winning 101 44 101 29 Manhattan call girl falls in love with a married man. Å (DVS) professor and his wife host an all-night drinking party. Å portrait of feuding Texans. Å Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Å Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Å Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Å Sister Wives ‘PG’ Extreme Coupon Strange Sex ‘MA’ Strange Sex ‘MA’ Sister Wives ‘PG’ Extreme Coupon 178 34 32 34 Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Å ›› “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Burt Reynolds. Å ›› “50 First Dates” (2004) Adam Sandler, Rob Schneider. Premiere. Å Leverage The Big Bang Job ‘PG’ 17 26 15 27 (4:15) ›› “Sahara” (2005) Matthew McConaughey. Regular Show Adventure Time “Scooby-Doo! Camp Scare” (2010), Frank Welker Regular Show Young Justice Star Wars: Clone Baby Blues ‘PG’ King of the Hill King of the Hill Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ Robot Chicken 84 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations Man v. Food ‘G’ Bert-Conqueror Bert-Conqueror Bert-Conqueror When Vacations Attack ‘PG’ Å When Vacations Attack ‘PG’ Å When Vacations Attack ‘PG’ Å 179 51 45 42 Ghost Adventures ‘PG’ Å Sanford & Son Sanford & Son All in the Family All in the Family All in the Family Love-Raymond Love-Raymond The Comedy Awards (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Love-Raymond Love-Raymond 65 47 29 35 Sanford & Son 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 “I Now Pronounce You” 15 30 23 30 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit 40 Funniest Fails Clips of human behaviors going wrong. ’ ‘PG’ The Comedy Awards ’ ‘14’ Å Beverly Hills Beverly Hills 191 48 37 54 40 Greatest Pranks 3 Practical jokes from television and the Internet. ‘PG’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(4:05) ››› “Hellboy” 2004 Å (6:10) ›› “Dumb & Dumber” 1994, Comedy Jim Carrey. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å ››› “The Long Kiss Goodnight” 1996, Action Geena Davis. ’ ‘R’ Å (10:05) ›› “Surrogates” 2009 Bruce Willis. ‘PG-13’ (11:40) Gun Shy Fox Legacy (5:22) “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” 1969 Fox Legacy ››› “The Verdict” 1982 Paul Newman. A lawyer’s career hinges on a controversial lawsuit. ››› “The War of the Roses” 1989, Comedy Michael Douglas. ‘R’ Å Stnd. Snowboard Stnd. Snowboard Built to Shred Built to Shred Moto: In Out Stealth Rider ‘14’ Stnd. Snowboard Stnd. Snowboard Built to Shred Built to Shred Moto: In Out Stealth Rider ‘14’ Dare the Devil ‘14’ (4:00) Live From the Masters (N) Top 10 (N) Live From the Masters Live From the Masters Live From the Masters Frasier ‘G’ Å Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ‘G’ Å Frasier ‘14’ Å Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ‘G’ Å Frasier ‘G’ Å Frasier ‘PG’ Frasier ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ (4:45) ›› “Daredevil” 2003, Action Ben Affleck. A blind attorney › “Jonah Hex” 2010, Action Josh Brolin. A supernatural gunTrue Blood Beautifully Broken Eric reMildred Pierce (Series Finale) Mildred expands her Glendale eatery; Mildred and Veda have an emotional (11:35) ›› “Sex and HBO 425 501 425 10 fights crime at night. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å slinger faces an old enemy. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å members his past. ’ ‘MA’ Å argument. (N) ’ (Part 3 of 3) ‘MA’ Å the City 2” ››› “Apocalypto” 2006, Adventure Rudy Youngblood. The end of the Mayan civilization draws near. ‘R’ Onion News Portlandia ‘14’ Freaks and Geeks ’ ‘PG’ Å Undeclared ‘PG’ Mr. Show-Bob (11:05) ›› “Bamboozled” 2000 ‘R’ IFC 105 105 (4:50) ››› “First Blood” 1982 Sylvester Stallone. A Vietnam vet › “Sniper 2” 2002, Suspense Tom Berenger. A former Marine › “Repo Men” 2010, Science Fiction Jude Law, Forest Whitaker. Agents repossess ›› “Fighting” 2009, Drama Channing Tatum. A young man “Co-ed ConfidenMAX 400 508 7 is hounded by a brutal small-town sheriff. tries to assassinate a rogue general. ’ ‘R’ Å transplanted organs for nonpayment. ’ ‘R’ Å becomes a champion street brawler. ‘PG-13’ Å tial 2” Alaska Wing Men Deadly Skies ‘PG’ Shark Men Murky Waters The team travels to the Farallon Islands. (N) ‘PG’ Alaska Wing Men Deadly Skies ‘PG’ Shark Men Murky Waters The team travels to the Farallon Islands. ‘PG’ Naked Science ‘G’ NGC 157 157 Planet Sheen ‘Y7’ Planet Sheen ‘Y7’ Power Rangers Speed Racer SpongeBob SpongeBob OddParents OddParents Speed Racer: The Next Generation Glenn Martin Wolverine-XMn Wolverine-XMn Wolverine-XMn NTOON 89 115 189 Hunt Adventure Wildgame Nation Realtree Outdoor Bone Collector Hunt Masters Friends of NRA Wardens Fear No Evil Hunt Adventure Realtree Outdoor The Crush Wildgame Nation Mathews Zumbo Outdoors OUTD 37 307 43 (4:55) ›› “Twilight” 2008, Romance Kristen Stewart, Billy Burke. iTV. A teen is caught The Borgias The Poisoned Chalice; The Assassin Rodrigo Bor- The King’s Speech Nurse Jackie ’ United States of The Borgias The Moor Rodrigo seeks The Borgias The Moor Rodrigo seeks SHO 500 500 gia becomes pope. ’ ‘MA’ Å up in an unorthodox romance with a vampire. ’ ‘PG-13’ ‘MA’ Å funds. (N) ’ ‘MA’ Å funds. ’ ‘MA’ Å Tara ‘MA’ Å NASCAR Victory Lane (N) Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain My Classic Car Car Crazy ‘G’ SPEED Center NASCAR Victory Lane Wind Tunnel With Dave Despain Rolex Sports Car Series Racing SPEED 35 303 125 (4:20) “Race to Witch Mountain” ’ (6:10) ›› “The Last Song” 2010, Drama Miley Cyrus. ’ ‘PG’ Å (8:10) › “Law Abiding Citizen” 2009, Suspense Jamie Foxx. ’ ‘R’ Å Camelot Guinevere ’ ‘MA’ Å ›› “Blade II” 2002 Wesley Snipes. STARZ 300 408 300 (4:15) ››› “The Other Man” 2008 Liam “Shadowheart” 2009, Drama Angus Macfadyen, William Sadler. James Connor returns ››› “Bandslam” 2009, Musical Comedy Aly Michalka, Gaelan Connell. Young mem- ›› “Youth in Revolt” 2009 Michael Cera. A teen goes on a car- “High Life” 2009 TMC 525 525 Neeson. ’ ‘R’ Å home in 1865 to kill Will Tunney. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å bers of a rock band prepare for a musical battle. ’ ‘PG’ Å nal quest to lose his virginity. ’ ‘R’ Å Timothy Olyphant. (4:00) Cycling Paris Roubaix Adv. Sports Adv. Sports FullTiltPoker.net Aussie Millions Sports Jobs Bull Riding PBR US Bank Invitational From Kansas City, Mo. Adv. Sports VS. 27 58 30 Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘14’ Å Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å Amazing Wedding Cakes (N) ‘PG’ Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å My Fair Wedding With David Tutera My Fair Wedding With David Tutera Amazing Wedding Cakes ‘PG’ Å WE 143 41 174 ENCR 106 401 306 FMC 104 204 104 FUEL 34 GOLF 28 301 27 HALL 66 33 103 33


THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 C3

CALENDAR TODAY LIFE SKILLS SCURRY: 5K and onemile run/walks benefit the life skills department at Bend High School; registration required; $10; 8:45 a.m. registration, 10 a.m. race; High Desert Middle School, 61111 S.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-678-3405 or jmail@ bendbroadband.com. CHARITY BINGO: Proceeds benefit Crook County High School senior scholarships; $5; 2 p.m.; Eagles Lodge & Club, 235 N.E. Fourth St., Prineville; 541-447-7659. EXPRESS YOURSELF: Lynn Santelmann talks about what it means to know a language, and the joys and pitfalls of learning a new one; part of “A Novel Idea ... Read Together”; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SECOND SUNDAY: Jawad Khan talks about the poetic nature of the Quran and its influence on literature; followed by an open mic; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1037 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar.

MONDAY BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss “Kapitoil” by Teddy Wayne; part of “A Novel Idea ... Read Together”; free; 1 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. BOOK DISCUSSION: Discuss “Kapitoil” by Teddy Wayne; part of “A Novel Idea ... Read Together”; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. OK SWEETHEART: The throwback pop-rock band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Bo Restobar, 550 N.W. Franklin Ave, #118, Bend; 541-617-8880.

TUESDAY “SISSY”: A screening of the film about a girl who faces abuse from a family friend; followed by a discussion of the film; free; 6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412 or kroth1@cocc.edu. SIERRA CLUB HIKE PREVIEW: A preview of scenic hikes offered by the club, with slides; donations accepted; 7 p.m., 6:30 p.m. social; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-389-0785. ROLLER RUMBLE RACE SERIES: Competitors race 400 meters on bikes attached to fork-mounted rollers; $5 to race, $3 spectators; 7:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m. sign-up; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-610-7460 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com.

WEDNESDAY DINNER & A MOVIE: Featuring a nutrientdense meal, followed by a film selected by attendees; registration requested; $17, $8 children; 5:30 p.m.; Common Table, 150 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-639-5546 or www. centraloregonlocavore.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick reads from her book “The Daughter’s Walk”; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. MOVIE NIGHT AND POTLUCK: A screening of “The Real Dirt on Farmer John,” with a soup potluck; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Grandview Hall,

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.

Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; slowfoodhighdesert@gmail.com. YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND: The newgrass band performs; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com.

THURSDAY RV, BOAT SHOW AND ATV SALE: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2011; free; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-322-2184. GOOD CHAIR, GREAT BOOKS: Read and discuss “Kapitoil” by Teddy Wayne; bring a lunch; free; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. FAMOUS/INFAMOUS TRIALS — LIZZIE BORDEN: Carolyn Hill talks about the facts of the Lizzie Borden murders, the investigation and its outcome; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-617-4663, wwick@uoregon.edu or http://osher.uoregon.edu. STEP INTO SPRING FASHION SHOW: A fashion show, with live and silent auctions and food; ages 21 and older; proceeds benefit the Bend Area Habitat for Humanity’s women’s build; $30 in advance, $35 at the door; 5:30 p.m. auction, 6:30 p.m. show; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-9480447, pmageau@remax.net or www.centraloregonwcr. org. MANY BORDERS TO CROSS: Elaine Replogle provides historical perspective for immigration admissions and rights; free; 6:30 p.m.; Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1037 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. THE B FOUNDATION: The Los Angelesbased reggae-rock band performs, with Katastro; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com.

FRIDAY RV, BOAT SHOW AND ATV SALE: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2011; free; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-322-2184. BEND SPRING FESTIVAL: A celebration of the new season with art, live music and food and drinks; free; 4-10 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives; valerie@brooksresources.com or www.nwxevents.com. EAT, PLAY, LOVE!: Dinner, play and learning activities and live music for families with young children; donations of nonperishable food encouraged; 4:30-7 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-410-1974 or www. deschutescountykids.com. VFW DINNER: A dinner of spaghetti and meatballs; proceeds benefit local veterans; $7; 5-7 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. WALK THE ART BEAT YOUTH SHOW: A spring showcase of local youth art and music at participating businesses; free; 5-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; 541-923-2411.

“CRASH”: A screening of the 2004 R-rated film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org.

SATURDAY GOAT JAMBOREE: Featuring classes, shopping and a raffle; $5 or $15 per family before April 11, $7 or $20 per family after April 11; 8 a.m.3:15 p.m.; Wind Ridge Farms, 60535 Bobcat Road, Bend; 541-5482226 or COGA2010@ aol.com. EARTH DAY CELEBRATION AND GARDEN WORK PARTY: Help prepare the Common Table Community Garden, located behind the church; bring a dish to share and a shovel; free; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 S.E. Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541598-6029. RV, BOAT SHOW AND ATV SALE: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2011; free; 9 a.m.-7 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-322-2184. BEND SPRING FESTIVAL: A celebration of the new season with art, live music and food and drinks; free; 11 a.m.-10 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives; valerie@ brooksresources.com or www. nwxevents.com. COW PIE BINGO: Watch cows wander a grid set on the school’s soccer field, marking squares with droppings; with face painting, a petting zoo and more; proceeds benefit the Bend FFA Alumni; $5 per square; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-3185778. OREGON OLD TIME FIDDLERS: Listen to fiddle music; a portion of proceeds benefits the community center; $5 suggested donation; 1-3 p.m.; Bend’s Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-312-2069. “HOT FLASHES”: A presentation of the musical comedy about a five-woman band in their 40s to 70s; proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society and Bend Relay for Life; $35 or $40; 7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. COMEDYCORE UNDERGROUND: Central Oregon comedians perform; ages 21 and older; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; ryan@thewhitebull.com or www. bendticket.com. ANDRE NICKATINA: The San Francisco-based hip-hop artist performs, with Mumbls, Endr Won, Maintain and Logy B; $23 plus fees in advance, $28 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-7882989 or www.randompresents.com. GREGORY ALAN ISAKOV: The Colorado-based folk musician performs; ages 21 and older; proceeds benefit PoetHouse Art; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 9 p.m.; PoetHouse Art, 55 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com.

SUNDAY April 17 LIGHT OF HOPE: Court Appointed Special Advocates of Central Oregon

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THE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:25, 5, 7:35 ARTHUR (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25 I AM (no MPAA rating) 11:55 a.m., 2:30, 5:05, 7:40 THE KING’S SPEECH (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:10, 4:45, 7:20 THE LINCOLN LAWYER (R) 11:25 a.m., 2, 4:35, 7:10 SOURCE CODE (PG-13) Noon, 2:40, 5:10, 7:50

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THE ADJUSTMENT BUREAU (PG-13) 1:50, 4:50, 7:40, 10:15 ARTHUR (PG-13) 1:25, 4:25, 7:25, 10:05 BATTLE: LOS ANGELES (PG-13) 12:25, 6:55 DIARY OF A WIMPY KID: RODRICK RULES (DP — PG) 1:40, 4:40, 7:15, 9:35 HANNA (PG-13) 12:55, 3:55, 6:25, 9:25 HOP (DP — PG) 1:05, 4:05, 7:05, 9:50

HOP (PG) Noon, 3, 6, 9 INSIDIOUS (PG-13) 1:15, 4:15, 7:35, 10 LIMITLESS (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:15 THE LINCOLN LAWYER (DP — R) 12:20, 3:20, 6:20, 9:55 PAUL (DP — R) 1:55, 4:55, 7:50, 10:25 RANGO (PG) 12:35, 3:35, 6:35, 9:05 RED RIDING HOOD (PG-13) 3:25, 9:40 SOUL SURFER (PG) 12:10, 3:10, 6:10, 9:10 SOURCE CODE (PG-13) 2, 5, 8, 10:20 SUCKER PUNCH (PG-13) 12:05, 3:05, 6:05, 9:30 YOUR HIGHNESS (R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:55, 10:30 EDITOR’S NOTE: Movie times in bold are open-captioned showtimes. EDITOR’S NOTE: Digitally projected shows (marked as DP) use one of several different technologies to provide maximum fidelity. The result is a picture with clarity, brilliance and color and a lack of scratches, fading and flutter.

April 18 SPOKEN WORD SHOWCASE: Students from Pilot Butte Middle School perform poetry, emceed by Jason Graham; free; 7 p.m.; Common Table, 150 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233 or www.thenatureofwords.org.

By Melissa Maerz Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK — By 2012, Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira will both have departed the “Today” show, leaving no big stars on NBC’s No. 1-rated morning show, according to reports from Entertainment Tonight and TV Guide on Wednesday. Lauer reportedly plans to resign when his contract expires in December 2012, while Vieira’s contract could free her in September of this year. (NBC did not respond to requests for comment.) The timing of this news is interesting, since Lauer’s former “Today” co-anchor Katie Couric is also said to be preparing her exit from “CBS Evening News” later this year and has been in discussions with various networks,

as well as former “Today” show producer Jeff Zucker. Some are already speculating that Lauer is considering reuniting with Couric and Zucker on a new project. For several months, Vieira has been discussing extending her deal with NBC News, but TV Guide reports that she’s getting tired of the early morning hours and wants to move on. She has said that she wants to focus on the health of her husband, who has battled multiple sclerosis and cancer, when making decisions about her future. Ann Curry is considered a leading candidate for her replacement. All three anchors are currently in talks about their contracts, so if rumors happen to be circulating about their departure, it might work in their favor.

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hosts a 10K, 5K and 1K run/walk; proceeds benefit CASA; $30 or $20 for the 10K and 5K races, $10 for the 1K; 9 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-389-1618 or www. casaofcentraloregon.org. RV, BOAT SHOW AND ATV SALE: See new floor plans and technology advances for 2011; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-3222184. BEND SPRING FESTIVAL: A celebration of the new season with art, live music and food and drinks; free; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives; valerie@brooksresources. com or www.nwxevents.com. ECONOMIC MORALITY AND “KAPITOIL”: Timothy Duy talks about economic morality in “Kapitoil,” by Teddy Wayne, using the works of Adam Smith; part of “A Novel Idea ... Read Together”; free; 2 p.m.; Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121037 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. REDMOND COMMUNITY CONCERT ASSOCIATION PERFORMANCE: Il Voce performs a vocal popera concert; $50 season ticket, $105 family ticket; 2 and 6:30 p.m.; Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-350-7222 or http:// redmondcca.org. SAPIENT: The Northwest-based hip-hop artist performs, with IAMe and Northern Lights; free; 9 p.m.; MadHappy Lounge, 850 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-388-6868.

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COV ER S T ORY

C4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Oregon’s covered bridges

The Currin Bridge was built in 1925 to replace the original 1883 Row River Bridge, but it was closed in 1987 and renovated for pedestrian use only. It is Lane County’s only covered bridge with white portals and red sides.

26

Covered bridge 101 6

Tillamook

Washingon

Tillamook

Multnomah

Portland

Yamhill 18

Clackamas

Grand Ronde

Lincoln City

Salem

Marion

Polk

22

Newport

Albany

20

Lincoln

Linn 20

Benton

Yachats

36

101

126

Florence Reedsport

Corvallis

34

Eugene

126

Lane

38

Cottage Grove Drain

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

Oakridge 58

Coos Bay

Built in 1936, the Unity Bridge crosses Fall Creek two miles north of Lowell, on the Lowell-Unity Road.

Sutherlin Coos

Roseburg

Bandon

Douglas

Myrtle Creek 5

Port Orford

62

Jackson

Gold Beach Grants Pass Curry

Eagle Point

Josephine

101

Medford Ashland

Brookings

O REG O N C ALIFO RN IA Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Bridges Continued from C1 Other bridges are preserved as heritage landmarks and accommodate pedestrian traffic. Two-thirds of Oregon’s covered bridges were built in the 1920s and 1930s, many of them replacing late-19th-century structures. While construction techniques varied, the most commonly used was the “Howe truss,” according to the Covered Bridge Society. By this method, support beams were latticed and placed at angles in a series of “X” patterns between the bridge’s upper and lower beams, and held by iron rods.

Westfir, Lowell bridges on state Highway 58 Two of my favorite Oregon covered bridges — those at Westfir and Lowell — are easily accessible from state Highway 58, the Willamette Pass road that links Eugene with U.S. Highway 97 between Bend and Klamath Falls. The history of Westfir’s Office Bridge is inextricably bound to that of the company lumber town in which it is located. Oregon’s longest covered bridge — 180 feet over the North Fork of the Middle Fork of the Willamette River — was built in 1944 by the Westfir Lumber Co. Linking the sawmill to company offices on the east side of the river, it featured a covered walkway separate from the roadway, so that pedestrians could share the bridge with logging trucks. Its lumber mills long ago closed after a series of 1984 fires, Westfir is now home to fewer than 300 people and is primarily a residential suburb of Oakridge, four miles east. Lane County took ownership of the bridge in 1992, did extensive work to stabilize its condition, and 10 years later added a new roof. Today, the Office Bridge crosses to a small county park with hiking and bicycling trailheads, and its deep red color, recently touched up with a new coat of paint, makes it a regional landmark. To reach the Office Bridge, turn north off state Highway 58 near milepost 31 just west of Oakridge. Cross the steel bridge and turn left on Westfir Road. The bridge and mill site are about 2½ miles ahead. To get to Lowell, continue northwest on state Highway 58 about 21 miles beyond the Westfir turnoff (or 19 miles east of Eugene). A new interpretive wayside makes the Lowell Bridge — built on the Middle Fork of the Willamette River, but now crossing a section of Dexter Reservoir — one of Oregon’s most intriguing stops for curious travelers. The first wooden bridge at this site was built in 1907 in place of a river ferry. It was replaced in 1945 after being damaged by a truck accident, and raised six feet in 1953 as the Dexter Dam was being constructed. When Dexter Reservoir inundated the area in 1955, the bridge remained two feet above the high-water level. Traffic was rerouted over a modern concrete bridge in 1981. But the original covered bridge, 24 feet wide, was preserved as a historic landmark. In 2006, a partnership between state and federal agencies established the Lowell Covered Bridge Interpretive Center on the north side of the bridge, featuring extensive outdoor displays that tell the history of the Lowell area, Lane

County’s covered bridges and, in particular, the Lowell Bridge. Three other historic covered bridges are within a 10-minute drive of Lowell Bridge. The 1936 Unity Bridge over Fall Creek is located two miles north of Lowell on the Lowell-Unity Road. The 1938 Pengra Bridge is located about halfway between Jasper and Lowell on Fall Creek. And the 1921 Parvin Bridge, now being rebuilt, takes traffic over Lost Creek on Parvin Road, about two miles south of Dexter.

Other bridges in Lane County Two covered bridges are easily seen by McKenzie Highway travelers. Opened in 1966 to replace a predecessor destroyed in a 1964 flood, the Belknap Bridge is the fourth bridge to cross the McKenzie River in its same location since 1890. It’s on King Road West off McKenzie River Drive, between Rainbow and the town of McKenzie Bridge. Oregon’s second-longest covered bridge (165 feet), the Goodpasture Bridge crosses the McKenzie River just west of Vida. Built in 1938, it was renovated in 1987 to handle crossings by heavy logging trucks. The bridge is situated off state Highway 126 about 25 miles east of Springfield. Two more bridges are in the Mohawk River Valley northeast of Springfield. During the filming of the 1965 movie “Shenandoah,” starring James Stewart, the 1938 Earnest Bridge was altered by

the film company to more closely resemble Civil War-era design. When filming was completed, the producers restored the bridge to its previous condition. It is a couple of miles northeast of Marcola on Paschelke Road, just off Marcola Road. Nearby Wendling Bridge, which crosses Mill Creek, is three miles northeast of Marcola on Wendling Road. Cottage Grove fancies itself the “Covered Bridge Capital of Oregon,” according to its Chamber of Commerce literature. The miniature Centennial Bridge, threeeighths actual scale, was built for the town’s 100th birthday in 1997. It presents a charming pedestrian walkway crossing the Coast Fork of the Willamette River on Main Street. Two miles south, the only covered railroad bridge west of the Mississippi River, the Chambers Bridge, is under reconstruction, with completion scheduled for November. The Mosby Creek Bridge and Stewart Bridge are less than 1½ miles apart on Mosby Creek, a

Row River tributary east of Cottage Grove. Built in 1920, the Mosby Creek Bridge is Lane County’s oldest. Flooding and heavy snowfall took their toll in the 1960s on the 1930 Stewart Bridge, which was bypassed by a concrete span in 1987. Today it welcomes visitors to the popular swimming hole beneath the bridge. Two miles north of the Mosby Creek Bridge on Layng Road is the Currin Bridge, erected in 1925 to replace the original Row River Bridge. It now serves only pedestrians. Dorena Bridge was built in 1950 to span the Row River when the old mining camp of Dorena was flooded by the creation of Dorena Reservoir. A new road bypassed the bridge in 1974, but it was reconstructed in 1996. Today it is the centerpiece of a wayside park at the junction of Government and Row River roads, 12 miles east of Cottage Grove. Eugene-area winery visitors cross the picturesque Coyote Creek Bridge as they travel on

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Lane County’s original 1851 Territorial Highway. Also known as the Swing Log Bridge, this structure over Coyote Creek was erected in 1922, one mile south of the community of Crow. Three of the Lane County bridges are in the Oregon Coast Range. Built in 1925, the Wildcat Creek Bridge was on the original Stagecoach Road that connected Eugene with Swisshome. Today it stands along state Highway 126 beside the Siuslaw River, near the Austa boat launch popular with fishermen. The Lake Creek Bridge, built in 1928 and refurbished in 1984, is located on Nelson Mountain Road near Greenleaf. The Deadwood Bridge in Siuslaw National Forest was once closed because of its poor condition, but it was fully restored in 1986. Its unique, original 1932 construction features a slanted floor, designed for greater safety for traffic rounding the corner onto the bridge. Both bridges are off state Highway 36 west of Junction City. Continued next page

The Centennial Bridge, a threeeighths replica of the nearby Chambers Railroad Bridge, was built for Cottage Grove’s 100th birthday in 1997. The pedestrian bridge over the Coast Fork of the Willamette River symbolizes the town’s claim as the “Covered Bridge Capital of Oregon.”

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C OV ER S T ORY

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 C5

The interior construction of Sweet Home’s open-sided Weddle Bridge displays the Howe truss style of bridge construction popular in Oregon in the 1920s and 1930s. Support beams were latticed and placed at angles in a series of “X” patterns between the main beams.

Oregon’s longest covered bridge, the 180-foot Office Bridge, spans the North Fork of the Middle Fork of the Willamette River at Westfir, four miles from Oakridge. Built in 1944, the bridge features a covered walkway to enable pedestrians to share the way with logging trucks. Two young bicyclists play in the road beside the Wendling Bridge, which crosses Mill Creek three miles northeast of Marcola. Two-thirds of Oregon’s 51 covered bridges were built in the 1920s and 1930s. Photos by John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

From previous page

Linn County bridges There are eight bridges in Linn County, three of them along the Santiam Pass-to-Brownsville highway corridor and five more in the Scio area. Just past tiny Cascadia, on High Deck Road off westbound U.S. Highway 20 from Central Oregon, is the Short Bridge. The last remaining covered bridge of several that once crossed the South Fork of the Santiam River, it was built in 1945 with a wooden shingle roof. The open-sided Weddle Bridge spans Ames Creek in Sweet Home’s Sankey Park, where it stands as a source of community pride. Originally built in 1937, the bridge stood across Thomas Creek, near Scio, for half a century. When it was scheduled for demolition in 1987, Linn County bridge activists vehemently protested. The state Legislature created the Oregon Covered Bridge Program to fund maintenance and rehabilitation programs around the state, and the Weddle Bridge became the first grantee. It was rebuilt in Sweet Home in 1990. Grant funds have also helped with the upkeep of the 1932 Crawfordsville Bridge, which crosses the Calapooia River eight miles west of Sweet Home, just off state Highway 228. Not used by traffic since 1963, the bridge is maintained by the Linn County Parks and Recreation Department and volunteers from the Covered Bridge Society. Five charming bridges surround Scio in all directions, none of them more than 11 miles outside of the little town. Nearest is the 130-foot-long Shimanek Bridge, three miles northeast on Richardson Gap Road. Built in 1966, it is the fifth bridge since 1891 to cross Thomas Creek at this location; all of its predecessors were destroyed by high water or wind damage. Others are the 1936 Hannah Bridge, spanning Thomas Creek seven miles east of Scio on Camp Morrison Drive; the 1939 Gilkey Bridge, also crossing Thomas

Creek, four miles southwest on Goar Road; the 1936 Hoffman Bridge, over Crabtree Creek eight miles southwest on Hungry Hill Road; and the 1939 Larwood Bridge, 11 miles southeast on Fish Hatchery Drive. All are open to vehicular traffic, but the Larwood Bridge is the most intriguing of the group. It crosses the Roaring River, which according to “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” is the only U.S. river to flow into a creek (Crabtree Creek), rather than vice versa.

Willamette Valley There are eight other bridges in the Willamette Valley. None is more accessible than Irish Bend Bridge on the Oregon State University campus. Built in 1954 across the Willamette Slough, 15 miles south of Corvallis on Irish Bend Road, it was dismantled in 1988 and reconstructed on the west side of campus, off 53rd Street near the Benton County Fairgrounds. Also in Benton County are the Harris and Hayden bridges. The 1936 Harris Bridge, 12 miles west of Corvallis near Wren, is just off U.S. Highway 20. Hayden Bridge, constructed in 1918 and rebuilt in 1945, is two miles west of Alsea via state Highway 34. A mile north of Silverton, the 1917 Gallon House Bridge over Abiqua Creek was so named for its use as a liquor drop: A nearby dispensary made the bridge its station for selling gallons of whiskey to Silverton residents. A 1990 restoration returned the bridge to mint condition. Drivers can reach the bridge via state Highway 214 and Hobart Road. Marion County’s only other covered bridge rests in Stayton’s Pioneer Park. Built in 1998, the Stayton-Jordan Bridge was constructed in response to heartbreak. Ten years earlier, Stayton residents had rebuilt the historic Jordan Bridge, which for 50 years had spanned Thomas Creek near Scio. Dedicated in 1988, it burned to the ground six years later when Christmas

lights ignited the roof. Citizens responded with the new bridge. Polk County’s Ritner Creek Bridge was the last covered bridge to be situated on an Oregon state highway. It was constructed in 1927 and moved a short distance downstream in 1976 when a modern concrete bridge replaced it on state Highway 223, south of Pedee. Multnomah County’s Cedar Crossing Bridge, built in 1982 over Johnson Creek in southeast Portland, has a five-foot walkway that separates pedestrian and bicycle lanes from the 24-foot roadway. Five large windows illuminate a knotty-pine interior. To reach it, turn east on Foster Road off Interstate 205, then south on 134th Street to Deardorf Road.

Coast Range bridges In the foothills of the Oregon Coast Range, there are four bridges in Lincoln County. Most northerly of the quartet is the Drift Creek Bridge, one mile south of state Highway 18 on Bear Creek Road, just east of Lincoln City. Built south of Lincoln City in 1914, it was closed in 1988 and dismantled in 1997. The Sweitz family resurrected the bridge eight miles north, in a small, parklike setting on Bear Creek, and opened it to the public in 2000. The Chitwood Bridge, which crosses the Yaquina River 17 miles east of Newport off U.S. Highway 20, was built in 1926 and reopened after restoration in 1986. Farther south, seven miles east of Yachats, the restored North Fork Yachats Bridge was built in 1938 on the North Yachats River Road. The Fisher Bridge, further east at the remote hamlet of Fisher, was built in 1919 and later restored. It is most easily reached off state Highway 34, turning south on Forest Service Road 141 about 20 miles west of Alsea. The only covered bridge in Coos County, the 1921 Sandy Creek Bridge, is located in a wayside park near the one-shop village of Remote, just off state Highway 42 between Roseburg

and Myrtle Point. No traffic has crossed the bridge since 1949.

Southern Oregon The Pass Creek Bridge is the most northerly of Douglas County’s six covered bridges. The Rochester Bridge, three miles northwest of Sutherlin via state Highway 138 and Sterns Lane, was built across Calapooya Creek in 1933. The 1943 Cavitt Creek Bridge, seven miles south of Glide on Little River Road, was built to handle heavy usage by logging trucks. The Horse Creek Bridge, built in 1930 near Cottage Grove, was relocated in 1987 to cross Mill Site Park in downtown Myrtle Creek. The 1929 Neal Lane Bridge, south of the town off Riverside Drive, is a mere 42 feet long. The Milo Academy Bridge, owned by a Seventh-day Adventist academy, is the state’s only steel bridge to be housed in wood. Located 20 miles east of Canyonville on state Highway 227, it was built in 1962. The Grave Creek Bridge at Sunny Valley, 16 miles north of Grants Pass, can be seen by travelers on Interstate 5. Josephine County’s only covered bridge was built in 1920 and reopened to traffic in 2001 after repairs. The bridge features six Gothic-style windows on each side.

After the 1927 Wimer Bridge, Jackson County’s only covered vehicular bridge, collapsed in 2003 under the weight of cars and trucks, a community group mobilized and rebuilt the structure in 2008. Wimer is seven miles north of Rogue River on East Evans Creek Road. The 1922 Little Butte Creek Bridge was renamed the Antelope Creek Bridge when it was moved in 1987 to Eagle Point, where it now stands at Main Street and Royal Avenue in Eagle Point. Sixteen miles east near Lake Creek is Oregon’s shortest covered bridge, the 39-foot Lost Creek Bridge. Closed to traffic since 1979, it may have been built as early as 1878, although it was partially reconstructed in 1919. Crossing the Applegate River only eight miles from the California border, the McKee Bridge served mainly logging and mining traffic from 1917 to 1956. Since being declared unsafe for vehicles, it has remained open for Rogue National Forest hikers. A

riverside picnic ground is at the west end of the bridge, 8½ miles south of Ruch off state Highway 238 near Jacksonville. John Gottberg Anderson can be reached at janderson@ bendbulletin.com.

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C6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M E

Ahead of royal wedding, rumors fly By Sarah Lyall New York Times News Service

Jessica Williams, left, and Neal Colburn

Williams-Colburn Jessica Williams and Neal Colburn, both of Bend, plan to marry Aug. 13 at Lake Billy Chinook in Culver. The future bride is the daughter of Kevin and Sherri Williams, of Bend. She is a 2003 graduate of Bend High School and a 2007 graduate of Linfield College,

where she studied biology. She works as a technical lab assistant at St. Charles Bend. The future groom is the son of Paul and Patti Jo Colburn, of Bend. He is a 2002 graduate of Bend High School and a 2007 graduate of Oregon State University, where he studied graphic design. He works as a freelance graphic designer.

A

Helen, left, and Harold Lovell

Lovell Harold and Helen (Cotton) Lovell, of La Pine, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary March 25 with a family dinner at the restaurant where they first met in 1948, Tad’s Chicken ’N Dumplins in Troutdale, and a vow renewal ceremony and reception with family and friends at the Lucky Labrador in Portland. The couple were married March 25, 1951, in Bingen, Wash., on Easter Sunday at the home of Helen’s sister, Kay. They have three children, Debra

Reyes, of Portland, the late Stanley Lovell and the late Kathryn Lovell; six grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Mr. Lovell served in the U.S. Army during World War II and was awarded a Purple Heart for injuries sustained in Anzio, Italy. He worked for the U.S. Post Office in Portland until his retirement in 1973. He is a member of the Disabled American Veterans. Mrs. Lovell is a homemaker and a volunteer at the La Pine Public Library. They have lived in Central Oregon for 38 years.

Gloria, left, and Rod Elliott

Elliott Rod and Gloria (McCollum) Elliott, of Bend, celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary in early February with a trip to Disneyland. The couple were married Feb. 2, 1951, in Pullman, Wash., while students at Washington State University-Pullman. They have two children, Nancy Crossan, of

Bend, and Charlotte (and Kris) Knutson, of Gilroy, Calif., and two grandchildren. Mr. Elliott worked as an engineer at Lockheed Missiles and Space in Sunnyvale, Calif., until his retirement in 1989. The couple enjoy traveling, golf and bridge. They have lived in Central Oregon for 21 years.

Milestones guidelines and forms are available at The Bulletin, or send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to: Milestones, The Bulletin, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. To ensure timely publication, The Bulletin requests that notice forms and photos be submitted within one month of the celebration.

LONDON — A flurry of excitement broke out in the pages of The Daily Mail last week when Carole and Pippa Middleton, the mother and sister of Prince William’s future bride, Kate, entered a store in broad daylight. “Pippa arrived in her BMW Z4 just minutes ahead of Carole on Thursday afternoon and made no attempt at subterfuge,� the paper reported. A witness added that Pippa was “carrying what appeared to be a shoe bag.� No one knows what happened inside the store — the London boutique of the dress designer Alice Temperley — although the two women apparently spent three hours there. While it is of course possible that they were merely going shopping for no particular reason, speculation mounted that Pippa was perhaps having a fitting for her maid-of-honor dress. Or even better, that Temperley was being outed as the designer of the wedding gown itself. (Unlikely.) Good luck trying to find out. “It’s nothing I can comment on,� a spokesman for the designer told The Daily Mail. At Clarence House, the home of Prince William, a spokeswoman said: “We’re not saying anything at all about the wedding dress.� And so it goes in these final weeks before the wedding, on April 29, when everyone wants to find out but no one wants to tell. Sarah Haywood, a wedding planner and the author of “The Wedding Bible,� said that even in normal weddings, it is hard to keep so many things veiled in mystery. Of the royal wedding, she said, “What I’m most impressed by is that I generally know what’s going on in the British bridal industry, and even I don’t know.� That has not stopped the rumors and the innuendo. Nor has it stopped manufacturers of wedding-related paraphernalia — the traditional, the crazy and the ugly — from doing their best to capitalize on one of the few bright spots in a sea of economic grimness here. Among the items for sale are Kate-and-William teacups, spoons, dishcloths, beer, costume party face masks, life-size cardboard cutouts, candle extinguishers, stamps, comic books, coins, vases, photo frames, toilet paper, golf caps and teddy bears (just $398, complete with gown and tiara). There are garden gnomes, dressthe-royal-couple paper dolls, “Crown Jewels� condoms, and a kit wherein you can knit your own tiny bride and groom. The explosion of such items has to do in part with the royal family’s decision, in the face of the sluggish economy, to allow a temporary relaxation of the rules governing the use of royal symbols and imagery, said Kirsten Gilbert, a copyright attorney. “Ordinarily you wouldn’t be able to use the royal emblems or the names of Prince William and his coat of arms,� Gilbert said in an interview.

What we know Of the wedding itself, it is wrong to say that the public is wholly ignorant of every detail, thanks to the canniness of the royal family’s press operation. “They’ve been very

smart in releasing little bits of information at a time,� Haywood said. We know, for instance, that the couple plan to serve two cakes at their reception: a traditional, dried-and-candied-fruitladen fruit cake, almost certainly covered with a thick, tough layer of marzipan; and a cake whose main ingredient is something akin to chocolate graham crackers. We know, because he said so, that Prince William is feeling a little nervous. We know that the groom will wear an as-yet-unrevealed military uniform during the service, and that he will not wear a wedding ring. We know that the Middleton family is contributing an unspecified amount of money toward the whole thing. We know that at the post-wedding reception for 650 guests at Buckingham Palace, hosted by Queen Elizabeth, some sort of food will be served. As Patrick Harrison, press secretary to Prince Charles, observed at a recent news briefing, “There will be some things that we can’t share with you at the moment.�

What we don’t know Right he was. The dress, for instance, will remain a state secret until Miss Middleton arrives at Westminster Abbey, at which point every detail you might want to know, and more, will be posted on the royal wedding website. What title, if any, will Miss Middleton and Prince William take when they get married? That is a secret, too. So too is what kind of car will transport Miss Middleton and her father

Food, Home & Garden In AT HOME Every Tuesday

to the ceremony; what wedding vows the couple will use; who exactly will be among the guests; who will wear what jewels; and where the couple will spend their honeymoon. One thing that is not a secret, said Miguel Head, Prince William’s press secretary, is that the prince will not be arriving on horseback. For now, anyone pining for romance and unhappy about having to wait so long might find

solace in her (or his) very own “Princess Ring� ($80), a replica of Miss Middleton’s engagement ring that is, according to its manufacturer, a “physical manifestation of absolute love.� Those for whom it is a physical manifestation of something else entirely, meanwhile, can purchase a special commemorative airsickness bag printed with pictures of the couple. “Keep this handy on April 29th,� the bags say.

MILESTONES GUIDELINES If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: Bend Wedding & Formal Set in Your Way Rentals The Old Stone The Oxford Hotel Riverbend String Quartet Rock Springs Weddings Sunriver Resort The Lodge at Suttle Lake Cascade Praise Christian Center The Wedding Room My Life Films Kellie’s Cakes Tetherow Star Productions Star Limousines McMenamin’s Old St. Francis School Getaways Travel The Sweet Tooth Oasis Spa Broken Top Club Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center Black Butte Ranch

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Daniel Gonzales and Jessica Ruby, a boy, Kalen William Gonzales, 6 pounds, 9 ounces, March 30. Michael Knox and Olivia Dubisar, a girl, Emrey Taylor Knox, 8 pounds, 1 ounce, March 30.

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C OV ER S T ORY

Do-it-yourselfers wield ingenuity to craft workshops on a budget By Roland Wilkerson

Filling a tight space Gilbert, 58, had to get creative when the only space available was a tight garage. So he bought a cheap pair of 36-inch-high kitchen cabinets, screwed them together,

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.

Davie Hinshaw Charlotte Observer

bench for tools. He’s a handy guy — skilled enough to make a wood storage chest and futon, but this simple table does the trick. And by the way, his table saw and router table are on wheels, too.

Workspace tips • Storing tools on pegboard hooks is far easier than digging through a toolbox. Plastic clips that keep hooks in place when you pull tools are a must. White pegboard makes for a cleanerlooking shop. • Make a good workbench from a flat, solid core door set on 4x4 posts, with 2x4s as a reinforcing border on the door. You can find doors at salvage yards for as little as $10. • To keep your work surfaces clear, attach power strips to table legs or cabinet sides. Consider an overhead retractable extension cord, ($30 or so) to keep chaos at bay. • While a basic fluorescent shop light takes care of business, consider adding a clamp-style desk light.

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C8

added a little reinforcement, and then some locking casters. He attached ¾-inch particle board (32x52 inches) for the top. The overhang leaves room for clamps. The cabinets themselves provide storage. When he’s got work to do, Gilbert rolls the cart to the center of the garage. He runs a heavy-duty extension cord from a wall outlet to the power strip on the side of his

DeVito, 56, started with an existing 4-foot-high cave under his deck, a common arrangement in many homes. He dug out the dirt floor by hand — a digging party would have gotten it done a lot quicker, he concedes — and proceeded from there. His project, which is more ambitious than some might want to attempt, shows you can do a lot with a little space. There was lots of trial and error, but even the mistakes provided moments of enlightenment. “It was sort of ‘Zen and the Art of Workshop Building,’” he said. DeVito had some steps built from the deck to the workspace below. Then he added simple corrugated roofing that drained rainwater coming through the deck into a gutter. DeVito said he didn’t have a lot of carpentry skills, but he enclosed the area and added a basic workbench. Like many who wrote us, DeVito said his shop is a work in progress. He may never actually “finish.” Which is fine by him. Making it better is half the fun.

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Digging out the cave

Volcano Continued from C1 Lava Butte, which last erupted about 7,000 years ago, has a lava flow containing 380 million cubic yards of rock, according to Deschutes National Forest. Newberry Crater is a 17-square-mile caldera at the summit of an active, 500square-mile volcano. According to Deschutes National Forest’s website, “Newberry Volcano is not an extinct volcano. It will erupt again both passively (lava flows) and explosively (ash and pumice).” Lava Cast Forest, another feature in Newberry National Volcanic Monument, has a paved trail through tree molds that resulted from an eruption about 7,000 years ago. The vertical and horizontal molds — which are not technically casts, according to the Forest Service — result when pahoehoe (a smooth, fluid lava), flows around a tree base, then cools and solidifies. And of course there’s Lava River Cave, with its mile-long lava tube. At a brisk 42 degrees, it’s one of the better places in the area to cool off on a summer day, particularly if you’re averse to bright light. The museum’s “Volcano Country” explains the volcanic forces that shape such geologic features with interactive components such as a Caldera Simulator and Magma Elevator, the latter of which will use lights to show the upward journey of magma to the surface. The Caldera Simulator will show how a magma chamber

SUDOKU

Nathan Gilbert didn’t have any room in his garage for a permanent workbench, so he screwed together a couple of kitchen cabinets and put them on casters.

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — You don’t need a vast wall of screwdrivers or a herd of pricey power tools to have a great workshop. We learned clever ways some handy folks outfitted their home workshops, with smart ideas that even the least-handy homeowner can copy. The biggest theme: If you have a space to place a solid table, you’re in business. We saw some impressive workshops, but these two impressed us with their ingenuity. Sales rep Nathan Gilbert, of South Charlotte, N.C., created a handy, portable workbench that can be rolled out when needed. Physician assistant Tom DeVito, of Raleigh, N.C., took advantage of underused space below a deck and converted it into a nifty hideaway. Both men show a knack for conquering clutter, which is often the first step. “A lot of people don’t know how to get started,” said Billy Gandy, merchandising vice president for cleaning and storage products for Lowe’s. One easy way to manage hand tools, paint cans and the like is to make the most of wall space. The classic pegboard-hook setup still works wonders for tools, he said. And garage wall rail systems, which screw into studs and let you clip on yard tools and storage baskets, are also popular. Basic utility shelves are big, too, he said, because you can stack a lot on them and create order in short order. The less stuff that’s on the floor, the more options you have for creating a good workspace, Grand said.

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 C7

BY JACQUELINE BIGAR HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, April 10, 2011: This year, you juggle many diverse interests. A partnership could test your commitment. If you hang in there, chances are, given time, all will settle down. Your finances will benefit from June on. Use discretion with spending. If you are single, meeting someone could happen with ease. Choosing the right person might take talent. CANCER can drag you down. 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 Your irritation reflects a deep fatigue and a need for a break, meaning a vacation. If you cannot swing some time off, take a break from your routine for one day. Doing for yourself might sound selfish, but easily could be a necessity. Tonight: Yawn ... get extra R and R. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You might want to mask your grumpiness, but still this mood pops out. Try it this way — what would it take to put you in a positive mood? Not only for your sake but also for others, go off and do just that. You smile, and so will those around you. Tonight: Hanging out is fun. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HH Your expenses are out of whack. Listen to your inner voice and follow through on

what works. You might not be too happy with what you are seeing. You can change your direction. Tonight: As you like it. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You are moody by nature, but events could be helping you along. Reframe, and a negative will transform into a positive. You will smile from ear to ear. In the afternoon, go to the movies. Enjoy. Tonight: Phew — all smiles. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Know when to bail out of a situation and move forward. Right now is the time to think about the best way to do just that. A conversation proves to be enlightening and allows greater give-and-take. Tonight: Make it your choice. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Zero in on what you want. If there is a problem, learn to skip right over the issue. You give situations power by overthinking and/or reacting. By the afternoon, a friend or loved one makes suggestions. Tonight: Where the action is. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH Pressure builds around a responsibility, older relative or friend. Fatigue marks your actions. Know that you need to ask for some other person’s help. Stop going it alone so much. Tonight: Make it early, if possible. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You might want to approach a situation differently. Provide a mental escape for your mind, allowing greater

flow. Join friends at the movies or go for a drive. Remember, there is always a tomorrow. Tonight: Live for the moment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Relate directly to a friend or loved one. Listen to news with a grain of salt, but be willing to celebrate. Your finances continue to be an issue. Your fiery side emerges with a child or loved one. Tonight: Chat over dinner. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Listen to what is being said. Also note what isn’t being said. To many people, you seem far more powerful than in the past. A family member could delight you with his or her suggestions. Enjoy the moment. Tonight: Follow another person’s lead. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH Get into a game of baseball, whether you are the player or the observer. Realize what is possible and what your limits might be in a discussion. Knowing these boundaries and being clear about them can only help your communication. Tonight: Put your feet up. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Your imagination not only saves your day but also the day of those who are fortunate enough to be around you. What could be difficult becomes a laughable event. Allow yourself to be more spontaneous and kidlike. Tonight: Fun.

© 2010 by King Features Syndicate

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Kimry Jelen, a contract artist for the High Desert Museum, prepares to drape a large piece of fabric from the ceiling while constructing the walls of a volcano Wednesday morning at the High Desert Museum. creates a caldera, first filling up and then collapsing. “That’s a common formation around here,” Whitelaw says. “People call them craters, but they’re actually calderas. Newberry Crater is actually a caldera; Crater Lake is actually a caldera.” Along with these new displays created by the museum, the exhibit includes informative panels from the Oregon Historical Society, part of a traveling exhibit called “150 years of Statehood; 150 Million Years in the Making.” Visitors will also see examples of pumice, obsidian and other igneous rocks, and a small theater to the rear features a 15-minute video about volcanoes and lava flows. While the interpretive panels

are not the museum’s to keep, original interactive components, such as the Caldera Simulator and Magma Elevator, will remain at the museum for use with school programs. On Saturday at 2 p.m., Larry Berrin, director of conservation education for Newberry National Volcanic Monument and Discover Your Northwest, will present “From Volcano Country.” On April 23 at 2 p.m., U.S. Forest Service Geologist Bart Wills will discuss the ways glaciers and volcanoes shaped the High Desert landscape. Both programs are included with museum admission. David Jasper can be reached at 541-383-0349 or at djasper@bendbulletin.com.

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C8 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

It’s Yale Glee Club’s year to look back, and ahead By Kathryn Shattuck New York Times News Service

They came in bow ties and crimson gowns, spry of step or aided by walkers, their college memories more or less intact. On Feb. 12, nearly 650 members of the Yale Glee Club, past and present, poured into Woolsey Hall on the university’s campus in New Haven, Conn., with a singular purpose: to celebrate the ensemble’s 150th anniversary. And naturally, to sing. Sing they did, from the stage and the balconies: the full-throated men’s alumni chorus with its boyish 93-year-old soloist, Stowe Phelps, and yodelers from the class of ’62; the mixed alumni chorus, 450 strong in rafter-rattling spirituals; and the 84 tender undergraduate voices of the glee club itself. After the boola boolas died down and the rivalry dimmed (“We’ll leave poor Harvard behind so far, they won’t want to play us anymore”), after the last white handkerchief — waved high to the strains of “Bright College Years,” the unofficial alma mater — was tucked away, the choristers wedged themselves at long tables in the cavernous Commons, their reminiscences interrupted by outbursts of glee club favorites. Some were certain they heard the ghosts of alumni like Cole Porter, Charles Ives and Vincent Price singing along. Harvard can breathe easy when the Yale Glee Club performs at Carnegie Hall in a concert intentionally devoid of old school standards. Intended instead to highlight the ensemble’s contemporary role in collegiate choral music, the program will feature Vaughan Williams’ “Dona Nobis Pacem” and works by Dominick Argento, James MacMillan, Robert Vuichard and Michael Gilbertson, commissioned by the glee club’s current director, Jeffrey Douma. “This 150th-anniversary year has been primarily about looking back,” Douma said, “but I wanted there to be one event that really looked to the future.” Ted Hearne’s “Partition” will receive its New York premiere, accompanied by the Yale Symphony Orchestra. It was based on a text by Edward Said “in which he discusses music’s power to transcend boundaries that we otherwise wouldn’t be able to cross,” said Hearne, who earned a master’s degree in composition. It explores the relationship between Yale students and greater New Haven, a city he called “as studied in segregation as it is segregated.” “There is a certain kind of academic focus on these issues that, even while aggrieving the socioeconomic divisions within a city, nonetheless serves to strengthen them,” he wrote in the program notes for “Partition.”

others can claim the devotion of the glee club, the third-oldest such group in the nation, behind Harvard (which isn’t about to let Yale forget it) and the University of Michigan. Some loves never fade away. In 1937 Prescott Bush — the father of George H.W. Bush and the glee club alumnus Jonathan Bush, and a grandfather of George W. Bush — forged the Yale Glee Club Associates, whose official capacity is to advise the undergraduate ensemble. Other graduates loath to give up the bonhomie of the college a cappella experience formed the Yale Alumni Chorus in 1998. “There’s something really spectacular about singing together, about creating harmony,” said Clay Kaufman, the associates’ president. “It’s similar to being on a sports team, to accomplishing something as a group that you can’t do on your own.”

History and music

“Do you sing?”: The question is barked out each year at the Freshman Bazaar, where students are lured into extracurricular activities, including more than a dozen choirs. But perhaps none of the

Born in 1861 on the Yale Fence where 13 crooners serenaded passers-by, the club became an international sensation under Marshall Bartholomew, its director from 1921 to 1953. In 1928 the American collegians embarked on their first European tour, bowling over audiences with folk songs and spirituals collected and arranged by the director they called Barty. In 1939, on the choir’s fourth tour, the men sailed to and from Europe on the Queen Mary, crossing the continent on trains whose shades were drawn by soldiers in Germany so that military preparations were not visible. In Oslo, their escorts were ladies-inwaiting to the Queen of Norway; in Helsinki, they drank tea with the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius at his home. “We were aware that Hitler was feeling ambitious and had invaded Czechoslovakia,” said Phelps, the 93-year-old, but “at 21 or 22, we were not terribly concerned.” During World War II, the club’s compass was pointed toward South America, thrilling Brazilians with “Away to Rio!” and inspiring the formation of a choir in La Plata, Argentina. Returning to Europe in 1949, it edited German works out of its programs after audience members found the songs too painful. In 1969, during Fenno Heath’s four-decade tenure as conductor, the club emulated the Beatles and the Rolling Stones and appeared on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” That year, the university went coed and the next year, so did the group. The backlash from alumni, who were met with a sound and a repertory that were distinctly different, was enormous. “I was not altogether overjoyed but knew it was obviously inevitable,” Phelps said. “It’s not that I didn’t like girls. It was the opposite: I loved them. It’s that I felt that a men’s chorus had a particular strength, a particular resonance that was unique.” In the fall of 2003, Douma, now 39, became only the seventh director in the ensemble’s

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ANSWER TO TODAY’S JUMBLE

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Plenty to sing about

CROSSWORD IS ON C7

history: a legacy that sometimes causes him to gulp, he said, as he walks between portraits of Bartholomew and Heath hanging on either side of his office door in Hendrie Hall. “The glee club has always been at the vanguard of new choral music in the United States,” Douma said. “We think of Barty’s arrangements now as old standbys, but when they were produced, they were new and fresh.” “The glee club has absolutely been the core of my undergraduate experience,” said Emily Howell, the reigning president. “And of any particular memory, I would probably say the reunion was the highlight of the last four years: sharing the traditions that we still celebrate, and seeing how they’ve maintained the social dynamic that is just as much a part of glee club now as it was then.” Recently, Howell and a few of her fellow choristers made some resolutions. “One of them was, in 25 years to be able to afford to go to the 175th reunion,” she said. “And in 50 years to be able to walk on stage for the 200th.”

Harold Shapiro via New York Times News Service

Past and present members of the Yale Glee Club perform in Woolsey Hall at Yale University on Feb. 12. The collaborative performance of nearly 650 members was in celebration of the club’s 150th anniversary.


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Auto Racing Inside Matt Kenseth wins NASCAR race in Texas, see Page D2.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2011

CYCLING

GOLF: THE MASTERS LOCAL SPORTS

Bend’s Horner second overall at Basque race

McIlroy pushes lead to four strokes heading into final round

MADRID — Professional road cyclist Chris Horner, of Bend, was back in the international spotlight this week at the Tour of the Basque Country, a six-day World Tour stage race in Spain, where he placed second overall. The overall race victory went Chris Horner to Horner’s RadioShack teammate, German rider Andreas Kloden, who won with a time of 22 hours, 12 minutes. Horner, 39, finished 47 seconds back and claimed runner-up honors. As the 2010 Basque champion, Horner wore bib No. 1 heading into this week’s race. He entered Saturday’s final stage — a 24-kilometer individual time trial — in fourth place, one second behind Kloden. Horner is coming off the most successful season of his career, which included an America’s-best top-10 finish at the 2010 Tour de France. —Bulletin staff report

The 21-year-old continues his mastery of Augusta, while Tiger Woods falls off the pace By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

AUGUSTA, Ga. — It was a roar that defines the Masters, so loud it startled even Tiger Woods. Rory McIlroy, who already dazzled the crowd with a shot through the pines to the back of the 17th green, raised the putter in his left hand as the birdie putt turned toward the hole, then slammed his right fist when the ball disappeared into the cup. The cheer was so clamorous that Woods, who Leaders had settled over his shot Through the third round in the 18th fairway, had of the Masters: to back away. After all these years of crushing 1. Rory McIlroy .......... -12 the hopes of so many others, the four-time Masters T2. Jason Day ..............-8 champ finally felt what it T2. Charl Schwartzel ...-8 was like on the other end. T2. K.J. Choi................-8 That moment — and T2. Angel Cabrera .......-8 right now, this Masters T6. Luke Donald .......... -7 — belongs to McIlroy. “I had been waiting on a T6. Adam Scott ............ -7 putt to drop all day,” McIlroy said Saturday. “And for it to drop there, it was great timing.” It sent the 21-year-old from Northern Ireland to a 2-under 70 and gave him a four-shot lead going into today, the largest 54-hole lead at the Masters since a 21-year-old Woods led by nine in 1997. Woods is not close to him after a 74 to finish seven shots behind. Chasing after McIlroy are former Masters champion Angel Cabrera, Charl Schwartzel, K.J. Choi and Jason Day. See Masters / D6

INSIDE MLB Yankees .........9 Red Sox .........4

Giants ............3 Cardinals .......2

White Sox ......4 Rays ...............2

Marlins ..........7 Astros ............5

Royals ............3 Tigers ............1

Rockies ..........6 Pirates ...........4

Orioles ........5-1 Rangers ....0-13

Brewers..........6 Cubs ..............0

A‘s ..................1 Twins .............0

Mets...............8 Nationals .......4

Indians ...........2 Mariners ........1

Phillies......... 10 Braves............2

Angels ...........6 Blue Jays .......5

Dodgers ..... 4-4 Padres ....... 2-0 Reds...............6 D’backs ..........1

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Matt Korte reaches to catch a disc over the fingertips of James Wilson while playing a game of Ultimate Frisbee during the Gandy Goose XV tournament Saturday at Pine Nursery Community Park in Bend.

Disc fever Ultimate and disc golf tournaments invade Bend By Amanda Miles The Bulletin

Roundup, see Page D3

NHL Rangers .........5 Devils.............2

Blues..............2 Predators .......0

Lightning .......6 Hurricanes .....2

Canucks.........3 Flames ...........2

Bruins ............3 Senators ........1

Sabres ...........5 Blue Jackets ..4

Flyers .............7 Islanders ........4

Sharks ...........3 Coyotes .........1

Canadiens......4 Maple Leafs ...1

Ducks.............3 Kings .............1

Panthers ........1 Capitals .........0

Ducks win battle of Los Angeles Roundup, see Page D4

Despite the wind, the discs were flying fast and furious at Pine Nursery Community Park in Bend on Saturday. More than 300 participants braved gusty winds and cool temperatures to take part in the first day of an early-spring celebration of disc sports — the Gandy Goose XV Ultimate Frisbee tournament and the Disc Go Ball disc golf competition. “Some of it’s just crossing your fingers and

hoping for the best,” Chris Quinn admitted with a chuckle Saturday afternoon as he described playing disc golf in such intermittently breezy conditions. A little more than midway through the 27hole, par-85 course, Quinn described his play to that point as “very uneventful. I’m playing good but not great.” Quinn was one of a field of 72 entrants competing in seven divisions in the Disc Go Ball, which is in its inaugural year. See Disc / D6

SNOWRIDING

PREP BOYS TENNIS

Locals take top spots in Big Air contest at Bachelor

Summit second, Bend third at local tourney Bulletin staff report

Bulletin staff report Los Angeles’ Kevin Westgarth, left, and Anaheim’s George Parros fight during the first period Saturday.

INDEX Scoreboard ................................D2 Auto racing ................................D2 MLB ...........................................D3 NHL .......................................... D4 NBA .......................................... D4 College baseball ....................... D4 Prep sports ................................D5

Chris O’Meara / The Associated Press

Rory McIlroy reacts after making a birdie putt on the 17th hole during the third round of the Masters Saturday in Augusta, Ga.

MOUNT BACHELOR — A pair of Bend snowriders took first place in the Big Air competition on Saturday. Bend’s Josh Dodson won the men’s snowboard open class. Two other Bend snowboarders filled out the top three, as Ryan Linnert placed second, and Colin Clarke took third place. In the men’s ski open class, Bend’s Conner Bennett took first place. Jake Rouches, of Washington, took second, and Hood River’s Tommy Ellingson finished in third place. More than $5,000 in cash and prizes were up for grabs on Saturday, and winners earned money plus a 2011-2012 season pass for Mount Bachelor. There were no female competitors in the contest.

Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

Skier Erik Stai flies down the main jump during the Big Air competition at Mount Bachelor on Saturday.

In a match of tournament unbeatens, Class 6A Sprague easily knocked off Bend 8-0 on Saturday morning en route to winning the two-day boys tennis Summit Tournament held at the Athletic Club of Bend. Sprague went 4-0 at the tourney to grab first place, while Summit finished 3-1 and took second, falling only to the Olympians. After winning both their matches Friday, the Lava Bears lost to Sprague and Summit on Saturday and finished third at the six-team tournament with a 2-2 record. Storm junior Paxton Deuel finished 4-0 on the weekend at No. 1 singles, which included a win Friday over Sprague’s Brent Wheeler, a Class 6A state semifinalist in 2010. On Saturday, Deuel dispatched Bend’s Jeff Windsor 6-0, 6-0 and also topped Hermiston’s Dan Lloyd in straight sets. Wheeler was the only player all weekend to steal a game from Deuel. “He’s playing as good right now as anyone I’ve ever seen play in high school,” Summit coach Josh Cordell said about Deuel. Brothers Bo and Liam Hall won a pair of matches in doubles play Saturday for the Storm, as did Sterling Dillingham and Scott Parr. Mountain View’s Matt Larraneta notched a win at No. 1 singles over Hood River Valley’s Josh Ziegner but lost in doubles play against Sprague when paired with teammate Matt Van Hemelryck. Sprague swept Mountain View Saturday, but the Cougars (1-3) did the same to Hood River Valley, besting the Eagles 8-0 for their lone win of the weekend. Mountain View took fourth, Hermiston (0-3) finished fifth and Hood River Valley (0-3) rounded out the tournament in sixth.


D2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

O A

SCOREBOARD

TELEVISION TODAY

ON DECK

MOTORSPORTS

Monday Baseball: Bend at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; Madras at Gladstone, 5 p.m. Softball: Perrydale at Culver, 4:30 p.m.; Gladstone at Madras, 4:30 p.m. Boys tennis: Cascade at Madras, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Madras at Cascade, 4 p.m. Boys lacrosse: Summit at Sisters, 5 p.m.

9 a.m. — Motorcycle racing, AMA Supercross FIM World Championship, CBS (taped). 10 a.m. — IndyCar, Firestone Indy Lights, VS. network (taped). Noon — IndyCar, Honda Indy Grand Prix of Alabama, VS. network.

HOCKEY 9:30 a.m. — NHL, Detroit Red Wings at Chicago Blackhawks, NBC.

BASKETBALL 10 a.m. — NBA, Chicago Bulls at Orlando Magic, ABC. 12:30 p.m. — NBA, Boston Celtics at Miami Heat, ABC.

TENNIS 10 a.m. — Women’s Tennis Association, Family Circle Cup, final, ESPN2.

BASEBALL 10:30 a.m. — MLB, Philadelphia Phillies at Atlanta Braves, TBS. 1 p.m. — MLB, Cleveland Indians at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports. 1 p.m. — College, Washington Huskies at Oregon Ducks, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 5 p.m. — MLB, New York Yankees at Boston Red Sox, ESPN.

GOLF 11 a.m. — The Masters, final round, CBS.

RODEO Noon — Bull Riding, PBR Tour, NBC.

CYCLING 4 p.m. — Paris Roublaix, VS. network (taped).

MONDAY SOCCER 11:55 a.m. — English Premier League, Liverpool vs. Manchester City, ESPN2. 3 p.m. — English Premier League, Manchester United vs. Fullham (same-day tape), Root Sports.

BASKETBALL Noon — WNBA Draft, ESPN.

BASEBALL 4 p.m. — MLB, Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox, ESPN. 7 p.m. — MLB, Toronto Blue Jays at Seattle Mariners, Root Sports.

RADIO TODAY BASEBALL 1 p.m. — College, Arizona State at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940, KRCOAM 690. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

S B Hockey • Minnesota Duluth tops Michigan in OT for NCAA title: Kyle Schmidt scored 3:22 into overtime to lift Minnesota Duluth to a 3-2 victory over Michigan in the NCAA championship game Saturday night in St. Paul, Minn., the first national title for the Bulldogs. Travis Oleksuk pulled Wolverines goalie Shawn Hunwick to the side and, from behind the net, fed Schmidt for a tap-in to hand Michigan coach Red Berenson his first loss in a championship game.

Horse racing • Toby’s Corner stuns Uncle Mo to win Wood Memorial: Uncle Mo is unbeaten no longer. Toby’s’ Corner surged past Uncle Mo and Arthur’s Tale in the stretch to post a stunning upset in the $1 million Wood Memorial at Aqueduct in New York on Saturday. • Midnight Interlude wins Santa Anita Derby: Midnight Interlude won the Santa Anita Derby in Arcadia, Calif., giving Bob Baffert another Kentucky Derby contender after his other horse was scratched because of a foot injury. Midnight Interlude rallied in the stretch under Victor Espinoza to beat Comma to the Top by a head on Saturday in the $1 million race.

Tennis • Nishikori, Sweeting reach Clay Court final: Japanese star Kei Nishikori held off Uruguay’s Pablo Cuevas 6-3, 7-5 on Saturday in the U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championships in Houston to reach the second final of his ATP career. Nishikori, the winner in 2008 at Delray Beach, will face American Ryan Sweeting today. Sweeting, a wildcard entry, advanced to his first ATP final with a 7-6 (3) 6-3 victory over Croatia’s Ivo Karlovic. • No. 1 Wozniacki into final of Family Circle Cup: Topranked Caroline Wozniacki moved into the Family Circle Cup finals in Charleston, S.C., with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Jelena Jankovic. Wozniacki broke Jankovic’s serve five times, including in the final game of the match. She’ll play in today’s championship against Elena Vesnina, who defeated China’s Peng Shuai 7-6 (4), 6-3 in the second semifinal.

Tuesday Track: La Pine at Sisters, 4 p.m. Softball: Burns at Culver (DH), 1 p.m.; Cottage Grove at Sisters, 4:30 p.m.; La Pine at Elmira, 4:30 p.m. Baseball: Santiam at Culver, 4:30 p.m.; Sisters at Cottage Grove, 4:30 p.m.; Elmira at La Pine, 4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Bend, Summit, Redmond at Pronghorn, 10 a.m.; Mountain View at Crook County, 1 p.m.; Girls golf: Summit, Bend, Redmond, Crook County at Pronghorn, 10 a.m. Boys tennis: Mountain View at Summit, 4 p.m.; Redmond at Crook County, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Summit at Mountain View, 4 p.m.; Crook County at Redmond, 4 p.m.; Sisters at Junction City, 4 p.m. Boys lacrosse: Redmond at Harney County, 5 p.m.. Wednesday Track: Crook County at Bend, TBA; Mountain View at Summit 4 p.m. Baseball: Bend at Summit, 4:30 p.m.; Redmond at Mountain View (DH), 1 p.m. Softball: Mountain View at Summit (DH), 3 p.m.; Redmond at Crook County (DH), 3 p.m. Boys tennis: Madras at North Marion, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Madras at North Marion, 4 p.m. Boys lacrosse: Summit at Mountain View, 5 p.m.; Bend at Sisters, 5 p.m. Thursday Track: Culver at Scio, 4 p.m. Baseball: Gladstone at Madras, 5 p.m. Softball: Madras at Gladstone, 4:30 p.m. Boys tennis: Bend at Mountain View, 4 p.m.; Crook County at Summit, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Mountain View at Bend, 4 p.m.; Summit at Crook County, 4 p.m. Boys lacrosse: Redmond at Bend, 5 p.m. Friday Baseball: Regis at Culver, 4:30 p.m.; Mountain View at Bend, 4:30 p.m.; Summit at Crook County, 4:30 p.m.; Sisters at Elmira, 4:30 p.m.; Sweet Home at La Pine, 4:30 p.m. Softball: Regis at Culver, 4:30 p.m.; Crook County at Bend (DH), 3 p.m.; Summit at Redmond (DH), 3 p.m.; Elimra at Sisters, 4:30 p.m.; La Pine at Sweet Home, 4:30 p.m. Boys golf: Redmond hosts Bend, Crook County, Madras at Eagle Crest, Ridge Course, 9 a.m. Girls golf: Summit hosts Bend, Mountain View, Redmond at Broken Top, noon Boys tennis: Summit at Jesuit, 4 p.m. Girls tennis: Mountain View, Redmond, Summit, Crook County at Bend Invitational, TBA Girls lacrosse: Bend United at Crescent Valley, TBA; Bend United at West Salem, TBA Boys lacrosse: Hermiston at Summit, 8 p.m. Saturday Track: Redmond, Summit, Madras, Culver, Gilchrist at La Pine Invitational, 11 a.m.; Bend, Mountain View, Summit at Crater Classic in Central Point, 10:45 a.m.; Crook County at Lower Columbia Invitational in St. Helens, Wash., 12:30 p.m.; Culver at Meet of Champions in Salem, TBA Baseball: Culver at Burns (DH), 1 p.m.; Marshall at Crook County (DH), 1 p.m. Boys golf: Redmond hosts at Eagle Crest Challenge Course, TBA Softball: Marshall at Crook County (DH), 1 p.m. Boys tennis: Summit at Jesuit, 10 a.m.; Sisters at Central, noon Girls tennis: Mountain View, Redmond, Summit, Crook County at Bend Invitational, TBA; Sisters at Madras, 8:30 p.m. Girls lacrosse: Bend United at Marist, TBA; Bend United at Corvallis, TBA Boys lacrosse: Hermiston at Bend, 1 p.m.

ALPINE SKIING PACIFIC NORTHWEST SKI ASSOCIATION Master Championships At Mt. Bachelor, Cliffhanger Friday’s Results Super-G First Race Men Class 1 (age 21-19) — 1, Nicolas Yopp, 1:17.90. Class 4 (age 40-44) — 1, Griffith Williams, 1:16.01. 2, David Schreitmueller, 1:24.06. 3, Jery Fitzpatrick, 1:25.33. Class 5 (age 45-49) — 1, Robert Cravens, 1:14.57. 2, Timothy Hill, 1:15.94. 3, Rob Von Rohr, 1:17.50. 4, Tim Aid, 1:23.27. 5, Tom Cansler, 1:26.50. Class 6 (age 50-54) — 1, Jesse Scroggins, 1:16.06. 2, Dave Kornish, 1:16.18. 3, Hugh Mitchell, 1:18.00. 4, Richard Lindsay, 1:21.20. 5, Michael Kvietkus, 1:23.20. 6, Mark Crawford, 1:24.90. 7, Kurt Wold, 1:26.95. Class 7 (age 55-59) — 1, Roger Johanson, 1:18.21. 2, Jim Doudna, 1:19.11. 3, John Bruchard, 1:19.19. 4, Edward Sickels, 1:20.00. 5, Bradley Scott, 1:20.66. 6, Jim Bickler, 1:20.70. 7, Ladislav Konstacky, 1:21.12. 8, David Russell, 1:22.58. 9, Robert Galasso, 1:28.38. Class 8 (age 60-64) — 1, Gerry Pruss, 1:20.68. 2, George Dorris, 1:21.55. 3, James Ragan, 1:22.10. 4, Jeff Stier, 1:23.65. 5, Rauli Karjalainen, 1:24.12. Class 9 (age 65-69) — 1, Bob Sarchett, 1:20.52. 2, David Stonington, 1:23.87. 3, Michael Bansmer, 1:25.03. 4, Ward Buckingham, 1:28.82. Class 10 (age 70-74) — 1, Rich Robertson, 1:24.83. 2, Jim Phillips, 1:25.13. 3, Oliver Lajoie, 1:43.11. Class 11 (age 75-79) — 1, Charles Evans, 1:49.86. Women Class 1 (age 21-29) — 1, Melissa Dettmer, 1:35.55. Class 3 (age 35-39) — 1, Lori Fruci, 1:30.07. Class 4 (age 40-44) — 1, Jennifer Aspaas, 1:31.90. Class 5 (age 45-49) — 1, Linda Shallow, 1:32.08. Class 6 (age 50-54) — 1, Nancy Riley, 1:24.89. 2, Teresa Cravens, 1:28.83. 3, Beth Paraskeva, 1:33.77. 4, Nancy Bouchard, 1:40.16. Class 7 (age 55-59) — 1, Cheryl Puddy, 1:24.68. 2, Debbie Coleman, 1:29.12. 3, Jill Trulsen, 1:34.50. Class 10 (age 70-74) — 1, Carolyn Phillips, 1:33.58. Super-G Second Race Men Class 4 (age 40-44) — 1, Griffith Williams, 1:13.77. 2, David Schreitmueller, 1:20.49. 3, Jerry Fitzpatrick, 1:21.91. Class 5 (age 45-49) — 1, Robert Cravens, 1:13.34. 2, Timothy Hill, 1:14.84. 3, Rob Von Rohr, 1:15.45. 4,

Tim Aid, 1:20.56. 5, Tom Cansler, 1:23.94. Class 6 (age 50-54) — 1, Jesse Scroggins, 1:13.60. 2, Dave Kornish, 1:14.44. 3, Hugh Mitchell, 1:15.98. 4, Richard Lindsay, 1:17.74. 5, Michael Kvietkus, 1:21.33. 6, Mark Crawford, 1:23.11. 7, Kurt Wold, 1:23.37. Class 7 (age 55-59) — 1, Jim Doudna, 1:15.91. 2, Roger Johanson, 1:17.21. 3, John Bouchard, 1:17.58. 4, Edward Sickels, 1:18.32. 5, Ladislav Konstacky, 1:18.36. 6, Bradley Scott, 1:18.47. 7, Jim Bickler, 1:18.89. 8, David Russell, 1:18.90. 9, Robert Galasso, 1:27.31. Class 8 (age 60-64) — 1, Rauli Karjalainen, 1:17.95. 2, James Ragan, 1:18.41. 3, Gerry Pruss, 1:19.54. 4, George Dorris, 1:19.90. 5, Jeff Stier, 1:21.11. Class 9 (age 65-69) — 1, Bob Sarchett, 1:18.76. 2, David Stonington, 1:21.76. 3, Michael Bansmer, 1:23.17. 4, Ward Buckingham, 1:23.69. Class 10 (age 70-74) — 1, Rich Robertson, 1:20.42. 2, Jim Phillips, 1:21.89. 3, Oliver Lajoie, 1:40.38. Class 11 (age 75-79) — 1, Charles Evans, 1:37.90. Women Class 1 (age 21-29) — 1, Melissa Dettmer, 1:33.56. Class 3 (age 35-39) — 1, Lori Fruci, 1:26.93. Class 4 (age 40-44) — 1, Jennifer Aspaas, 1:30.32. Class 5 (age 45-49) — 1, Linda Shallow, 1:31.66. Class 6 (age 50-54) — 1, Nancy Riley, 1:20.95. 2, Karen Kilian, 1:27.66. 3, Teresa Cravens, 1:27.99. 4, Beth Paraskeva, 1:31.02. 5, Nancy Bouchard, 1:36.52. Class 7 (age 55-59) — 1, Cheryl Puddy, 1:20.86. 2, Debbie Coleman, 1:25.82. 3, Jill Trulsen, 1:33.14. Class 10 (age 70-74) — 1, Carolyn Phillips, 1:32.27.

GOLF PGA Tour The Masters Saturday At Augusta National Golf Club Augusta, Ga. Purse: TBA Yardage: 7,435; Par: 72 Third Round (a-amateur) Rory McIlroy 65-69-70—204 Angel Cabrera 71-70-67—208 Charl Schwartzel 69-71-68—208 K.J. Choi 67-70-71—208 Jason Day 72-64-72—208 Adam Scott 72-70-67—209 Luke Donald 72-68-69—209 Bo Van Pelt 73-69-68—210 Bubba Watson 73-71-67—211 Ross Fisher 69-71-71—211 Fred Couples 71-68-72—211 Geoff Ogilvy 69-69-73—211 Tiger Woods 71-66-74—211 Matt Kuchar 68-75-69—212 Martin Laird 74-69-69—212 Ryan Palmer 71-72-69—212 a-Hideki Matsuyama 72-73-68—213 Edoardo Molinari 74-70-69—213 Phil Mickelson 70-72-71—213 Steve Stricker 72-70-71—213 Brandt Snedeker 69-71-73—213 Lee Westwood 72-67-74—213 Alvaro Quiros 65-73-75—213 Miguel Angel Jimenez 71-73-70—214 Ian Poulter 74-69-71—214 David Toms 72-69-73—214 Jim Furyk 72-68-74—214 Ricky Barnes 68-71-75—214 Yong-Eun Yang 67-72-73—212 Justin Rose 73-71-71—215 Ryan Moore 70-73-72—215 Charley Hoffman 74-69-72—215 Ryo Ishikawa 71-71-73—215 Dustin Johnson 74-68-73—215 Trevor Immelman 69-73-73—215 Sergio Garcia 69-71-75—215 Rickie Fowler 70-69-76—215 Robert Karlsson 72-70-74—216 Gary Woodland 69-73-74—216 Steve Marino 74-71-72—217 Jeff Overton 73-72-72—217 Camilo Villegas 70-75-73—218 Bill Haas 74-70-74—218 Alexander Cejka 72-71-75—218 Paul Casey 70-72-76—218 Aaron Baddeley 75-70-74—219 Nick Watney 72-72-75—219 Ernie Els 75-70-76—221 Kyung-Tae Kim 70-75-78—223 Tee Times Today All Times PDT a-amateur 7:30 a.m. — Kyung-Tae Kim 7:40 a.m. — Nick Watney, Ernie Els 7:50 a.m. — Paul Casey, Aaron Baddeley 8 a.m. — Bill Haas, Alexander Cejka 8:10 a.m. — Steve Marino, Camilo Villegas 8:20 a.m. — Gary Woodland, Jeff Overton 8:30 a.m. — Rickie Fowler, Robert Karlsson 8:40 a.m. — Trevor Immelman, Sergio Garcia 8:50 a.m. — Ryo Ishikawa, Dustin Johnson 9 a.m. — Ryan Moore, Charley Hoffman 9:10 p.m. — Ricky Barnes, Justin Rose 9:20 p.m. — Brandt Snedeker, Jim Furyk 9:30 p.m. — Ian Poulter, David Toms 9:50 p.m. — Alvaro Quiros, Miguel Angel Jimenez. 10 a.m. — Steve Stricker, Lee Westwood 10:10 a.m. — Edoardo Molinari, Phil Mickelson 10:20 a.m. — Y.E. Yang, Hideki Matsuyama 10:30 a.m. — Matt Kuchar, Ryan Palmer 10:40 a.m. — Tiger Woods, Martin Laird 10:50 a.m. — Fred Couples, Geoff Ogilvy 11 a.m. — Bubba Watson, Ross Fisher 11:10 a.m. — Luke Donald, Bo Van Pelt 11:20 a.m. — Jason Day, Adam Scott 11:30 a.m. — Charl Schwartzel, K.J. Choi 11:40 a.m. — Rory McIlroy, Angel Cabrera

AUTO RACING NASCAR SPRINT CUP ——— SAMSUNG MOBILE 500 Saturday At Texas Motor Speedway Fort Worth, Texas Lap length: 1.5 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (4) Matt Kenseth, Ford, 334 laps, 144.7 rating, 48 points, $525,886. 2. (3) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 334, 123.6, 43, $353,883. 3. (2) Carl Edwards, Ford, 334, 116, 42, $269,791. 4. (9) Greg Biffle, Ford, 334, 111.7, 41, $206,975. 5. (19) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 334, 100.2, 39, $162,625. 6. (7) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 334, 105.5, 39, $176,341.

7. (1) David Ragan, Ford, 334, 115.5, 38, $166,375. 8. (6) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 334, 92, 36, $179,761. 9. (28) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 334, 93.8, 36, $140,525. 10. (10) Kurt Busch, Dodge, 334, 100, 35, $167,125. 11. (12) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 334, 86.1, 33, $132,325. 12. (26) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 334, 83, 33, $168,308. 13. (14) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 333, 79.9, 31, $156,583. 14. (16) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 333, 76.7, 30, $155,125. 15. (23) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 333, 82, 29, $160,850. 16. (11) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 333, 96.7, 28, $157,791. 17. (18) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 333, 72.9, 0, $120,550. 18. (27) Brad Keselowski, Dodge, 333, 88.9, 27, $137,458. 19. (15) A J Allmendinger, Ford, 332, 84.3, 25, $146,186. 20. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 332, 65.2, 24, $153,861. 21. (13) Kasey Kahne, Toyota, 332, 61.5, 23, $130,308. 22. (17) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 332, 75.4, 22, $139,564. 23. (32) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 332, 60.3, 22, $140,936. 24. (8) Joey Logano, Toyota, 331, 56.8, 20, $109,450. 25. (34) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 331, 52.6, 19, $126,720. 26. (22) Casey Mears, Toyota, 331, 50.8, 18, $98,250. 27. (30) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 330, 56.8, 17, $123,839. 28. (24) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, 330, 49.4, 0, $110,183. 29. (25) David Reutimann, Toyota, 329, 49.9, 15, $121,733. 30. (38) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 329, 40.2, 15, $105,833. 31. (39) Robby Gordon, Dodge, 328, 42.7, 14, $99,797. 32. (43) Andy Lally, Ford, 324, 37.1, 12, $96,150. 33. (41) Ken Schrader, Ford, 319, 34, 11, $86,500. 34. (42) Tony Raines, Ford, 319, 30.9, 10, $84,450. 35. (31) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, accident, 213, 63.8, 9, $91,325. 36. (21) Mark Martin, Chevrolet, accident, 213, 60.4, 8, $90,175. 37. (5) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, accident, 212, 57.5, 7, $107,420. 38. (33) David Starr, Ford, accident, 122, 41.4, 0, $79,925. 39. (37) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, clutch, 60, 30.7, 0, $79,800. 40. (20) Michael McDowell, Toyota, electrical, 56, 33.5, 4, $79,650. 41. (35) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, electrical, 52, 31.9, 3, $79,490. 42. (40) David Gilliland, Ford, accident, 44, 32.5, 2, $79,395. 43. (36) Mike Skinner, Toyota, rear gear, 36, 24.9, 0, $79,724. ——— Race Statistics Average Speed of Race Winner: 149.231 mph. Time of Race: 3 hours, 21 minutes, 26 seconds. Margin of Victory: 8.315 seconds. Caution Flags: 5 for 24 laps. Lead Changes: 31 among 13 drivers. Lap Leaders: D.Ragan 1-10; Ku.Busch 11-14; B.Keselowski 15-46; Ku.Busch 47; R.Gordon 48; D.Blaney 49; M.Kenseth 50-51; G.Biffle 52-58; M.Kenseth 59-94; C.Bowyer 95; C.Edwards 96; D.Earnhardt Jr. 97-98; M.Kenseth 99-114; D.Ragan 115; Ku.Busch 116-123; M.Kenseth 124-162; C.Edwards 163-164; J.Gordon 165; M.Kenseth 166-199; C.Bowyer 200-204; M.Kenseth 205-213; C.Bowyer 214-248; M.Kenseth 249; C.Bowyer 250; M.Ambrose 251; T.Stewart 252-256; Ku.Busch 257-269; T.Stewart 270-276; M.Kenseth 277-294; C.Bowyer 295-296; Ku.Busch 297-320; M.Kenseth 321-334. Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): M.Kenseth, 9 times for 169 laps; Ku.Busch, 5 times for 50 laps; C.Bowyer, 5 times for 44 laps; B.Keselowski, 1 time for 32 laps; T.Stewart, 2 times for 12 laps; D.Ragan, 2 times for 11 laps; G.Biffle, 1 time for 7 laps; C.Edwards, 2 times for 3 laps; D.Earnhardt Jr., 1 time for 2 laps; M.Ambrose, 1 time for 1 lap; J.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap; D.Blaney, 1 time for 1 lap; R.Gordon, 1 time for 1 lap. Top 12 in Points: 1. C.Edwards, 256; 2. Ky.Busch, 247; 3. M.Kenseth, 243; 4. J.Johnson, 243; 5. Ku.Busch, 240; 6. D.Earnhardt Jr., 235; 7. R.Newman, 233; 8. J.Montoya, 232; 9. K.Harvick, 228; 10. T.Stewart, 213; 11. P.Menard, 209; 12. C.Bowyer, 201.

8. Vitaly Petrov, Russia, Renault, 1:36.324. 9. Nico Rosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 1:36.809. 10. Kamui Kobayashi, Japan, Sauber, 1:36.820. Eliminated after second session 11. Michael Schumacher, Germany, Mercedes, 1:37.035. 12. Sebastien Buemi, Switzerland, Toro Rosso, 1:37.160. 13. Jaime Alguersuari, Spain, Toro Rosso, 1:37.347. 14. Paul di Resta, Scotland, Force India, 1:37.370. 15. Rubens Barrichello, Brazil, Williams, 1:37.496. 16. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Sauber, 1:37.528. 17. Adrian Sutil, Germany, Force India, 1:37.593. Eliminated after first session 18. Pastor Maldonado, Venezuela, Williams, 1:38.276. 19. Heikki Kovalainen, Finland, Team Lotus, 1:38.645. 20. Jarno Trulli, Italy, Team Lotus, 1:38.791. 21. Timo Glock, Germany, Virgin, 1:40.648. 22. Jerome d’Ambrosio, Belgium, Virgin, 1:41.001. 23. Vitantonio Liuzzi, Italy, HRT, 1:41.549. 24. Narain Karthikeyan, India, HRT, 1:42.574.

HOCKEY NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Philadelphia 82 47 23 12 106 259 223 x-Pittsburgh 81 48 25 8 104 233 197 x-N.Y. Rangers 82 44 33 5 93 233 198 New Jersey 81 37 39 5 79 171 207 N.Y. Islanders 82 30 39 13 73 229 264 Northeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Boston 81 46 24 11 103 244 192 x-Montreal 82 44 30 8 96 216 209 x-Buffalo 82 43 29 10 96 245 229 Toronto 82 37 34 11 85 218 251 Ottawa 82 32 40 10 74 192 250 Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Washington 82 48 23 11 107 224 197 x-Tampa Bay 82 46 25 11 103 247 240 Carolina 82 40 31 11 91 236 239 Atlanta 81 34 35 12 80 221 264 Florida 82 30 40 12 72 195 229 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-Detroit 81 46 25 10 102 257 238 x-Nashville 82 44 27 11 99 219 194 Chicago 81 44 28 9 97 255 221 St. Louis 82 38 33 11 87 240 234 Columbus 82 34 35 13 81 215 258 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA z-Vancouver 82 54 19 9 117 262 185 Calgary 82 41 29 12 94 250 237 Minnesota 81 38 35 8 84 201 230 Colorado 81 29 44 8 66 223 285 Edmonton 81 25 45 11 61 190 265 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA y-San Jose 82 48 25 9 105 248 213 x-Anaheim 82 47 30 5 99 239 235 x-Phoenix 82 43 26 13 99 231 226 x-Los Angeles 82 46 30 6 98 219 198 Dallas 81 42 28 11 95 224 228 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference Saturday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 5, New Jersey 2 Boston 3, Ottawa 1 Montreal 4, Toronto 1 Philadelphia 7, N.Y. Islanders 4 Tampa Bay 6, Carolina 2 Florida 1, Washington 0 Buffalo 5, Columbus 4 St. Louis 2, Nashville 0 Vancouver 3, Calgary 2, OT Anaheim 3, Los Angeles 1 San Jose 3, Phoenix 1 Today’s Games Detroit at Chicago, 9:30 p.m. Boston at New Jersey, noon Pittsburgh at Atlanta, noon Edmonton at Colorado, noon Dallas at Minnesota, 3 p.m.

SOCCER MLS

IRL HONDA INDY GRAND PRIX OF ALABAMA After Saturday qualifying; race today At Barber Motorsports Park Birmingham, Ala. Lap length: 2.38 miles (Car number in parentheses) All cars Dallara chassis, Honda engine 1. (12) Will Power, 115.878 mph. 2. (6) Ryan Briscoe, 115.423. 3. (9) Scott Dixon, 115.188. 4. (3) Helio Castroneves, 114.801. 5. (22) Justin Wilson, 114.509. 6. (2) Oriol Servia, 114.302. 7. (10) Dario Franchitti, 115.467. 8. (06) James Hinchcliffe, 115.291. 9. (26) Marco Andretti, 115.213. 10. (38) Graham Rahal, 115.046. 11. (5) Takuma Sato, 114.734. 12. (77) Alex Tagliani, 114.446. 13. (78) Simona de Silvestro, 114.593. 14. (17) Raphael Matos, 114.35. 15. (4) J.R. Hildebrand, 114.573. 16. (27) Mike Conway, 114.177. 17. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, 114.464. 18. (59) E.J. Viso, 113.958. 19. (14) Vitor Meira, 114.1. 20. (19) Sebastien Bourdais, 113.909. 21. (83) Charlie Kimball, 114.072. 22. (7) Danica Patrick, 113.852. 23. (24) Simon Pagenaud, 114.065. 24. (82) Tony Kanaan, 113.597. 25. (18) James Jakes, 113.87. 26. (34) Sebastian Saavedra, 113.292.

Formula One MALAYSIAN GRAND PRIX After Saturday qualifying; race today At Sepang International Circuit Sepang, Malaysia Lap length: 3.44 miles Third Session 1. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Red Bull, 1 minute, 34.870 seconds. 2. Lewis Hamilton, England, McLaren, 1:34.974. 3. Mark Webber, Australia, Red Bull, 1:35.179. 4. Jenson Button, England, McLaren, 1:35.200. 5. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari, 1:35.802. 6. Nick Heidfeld, Germany, Renault, 1:36.124. 7. Felipe Massa, Brazil, Ferrari, 1:36.251.

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

GA 1 6 2 6 3 5 8 8 3 GA 1 5 6 7 4 6 5 5 6

FC Dallas at Portland, 3 p.m. New England at Houston, 4 p.m.

TENNIS ATP Tour ASSOCIATION OF TENNIS PROFESSIONALS ——— Grand Prix Hassan II Saturday Casablanca, Morocco Singles Semifinals Pablo Andujar, Spain, def. Albert Montanes (1), Spain, 6-4, 6-4. Potito Starace (5), Italy, def. Victor Hanescu (8), Romania, 6-1, 6-7 (3), 7-6 (2). U.S. Men’s Clay Court Championships Saturday Houston Singles Semifinals Ryan Sweeting, United States, def. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia, 7-6 (3), 6-3. Kei Nishikori (6), Japan, def. Pablo Cuevas (7), Uruguay, 6-3, 7-5.

WTA Tour WOMEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION ——— Andalucia Tennis Experience Saturday Marbella, Spain Singles Semifinals Victoria Azarenka (1), Belarus, def. Sara Errani (8), Italy, 6-2, 6-1. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, def. Svetlana Kuznetsova (2), Russia, 3-6, 7-6 (3), 6-4. Family Circle Cup Saturday Charleston, S.C. Singles Semifinals Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark, def. Jelena Jankovic (3), Serbia, 6-4, 6-4. Elena Vesnina, Russia, def. Peng Shuai (11), China, 7-6 (4), 6-3.

BASEBALL College Pacific-10 Conference ——— Conference W L UCLA 7 1 Oregon St 4 1 California 5 2 Arizona State 5 3 Stanford 3 2 Arizona 3 4 USC 3 5 Washington 2 3 Washington St 1 7 Oregon 0 5 Saturday’s Games Oregon State 7, Arizona State 6 Washington 3, Oregon 0 (10 innings) UCLA 10, Washington State 3 USC 3, Stanford 1 Today’s Games UCLA at Washington State, noon California at Arizona, noon Stanford at USC, 1 p.m. Washington at Oregon, 1 p.m. Arizona State at Oregon State, 1:05 p.m.

Overall W L 16 10 23 7 19 8 22 8 15 8 21 10 12 19 9 19 12 14 14 14

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHP Brad Bergesen to Norfolk (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Chris Jakubauskas from Norfolk. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed RHP Kevin Slowey on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Alex Burnett from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Agreed to terms with RHP Carlos Silva on a minor league contract. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Recalled RHP Casey Coleman from Iowa (PCL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Placed RHP Ross Ohlendorf on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Daniel McCutchen from Indianapolis (IL). BASKETBALL Women’s National Basketball Association MINNESOTA LYNX — Traded F/C Nicky Anosike to Washington for a 2012 first-round draft pick. HOCKEY National Hockey League ATLANTA THRASHERS — Recalled LW Carl Klingberg from Chicago (AHL). MINNESOTA WILD — Reassigned F Jed Ortmeyer to Houston (AHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Signed D Shane Sims. OTTAWA SENATORS—Fired Cory Clouston coach, Greg Carvel assistant coach and Brad Lauer assistant coach. Recalled F Cody Bass from Binghamton (AHL). COLLEGE GEORGE MASON — Announced sophomore men’s basketball G Rashad Whack will transfer. GEORGIA TECH — Named Chad Dollar men’s assistant basketball coach. SAINT LOUIS—Announced sophomore men’s basketball C Willie Reed will transfer. VIRGINIA — Named Joanne Boyle women’s basketball coach.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 84 0 47 16 The Dalles 14 0 61 32 John Day 11 0 126 84 McNary 5 0 131 81 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead, and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 522 1 2,898 1,235 The Dalles 82 0 693 404 John Day 72 0 1,480 566 McNary 43 1 1,189 730

Auto racing • Power takes second straight pole at Alabama: Will Power is on the pole again for the IndyCar Grand Prix of Alabama. Power claimed his second pole in two races this season and second straight at Barber Motorsports Park on Saturday in Birmingham, Ala., posting a fast lap of 1 minute, 11.46 seconds in the Fast Six competition. He’ll start on the inside of the front row today, next to Penske teammate Ryan Briscoe. Scott Dixon and Penske’s Helio Castroneves start on the second row. Justin Wilson and Oriol Servia will share the third row.

Baseball • Yankees sign ex-Cub RHP Silva to minor-league deal: The New York Yankees have signed right-hander Carlos Silva to a minor-league contract, bringing in another option for their suspect rotation. The move Saturday came 13 days after Silva was released by the Chicago Cubs. In 21 starts with them last year, he was 10-6 with a 4.22 ERA. He is expected to report Wednesday to the Yankees’ minor league complex in Tampa, Fla.

Swimming • Phelps takes 100 back in Michigan, Wu wins fly: Michael Phelps won his third event at the Michigan Grand Prix Saturday night, beating Ryan Lochte in the 100 backstroke in a pool record 54.15 seconds Saturday night in Ann Arbor, Mich. Saturday’s victory came after Phelps struggled in the 200 butterfly, finishing fourth in 1:57.79. Wu Peng, who trains with Ann Arbor-based Club Wolverine won in 1:56.62. — The Associated Press

AUTO RACING: NASCAR

Kenseth ends 76-race drought with Texas win By Step hen H aw kins The Associated Press

FORT WORTH, Texas — Matt Kenseth had a dominating run at Texas, breaking a 76-race NASCAR Sprint Cup winless streak Saturday night. Kenseth led 169 of 334 laps at the 1½-mile, high-banked track for his 19th career victory, his first since California in February 2009. Since his other win at Texas in 2002, Kenseth had four runner-up finishes, including last fall behind Denny Hamlin, and six other top-10 finishes at the track. This time, the No. 17 Roush Fenway Ford was only trailing late behind Tony Stewart and Kurt Busch when both of those drivers were out of sequence on stops and trying to stretch fuel in hopes of catching a caution. Lucky for Kenseth, there were no yellow flags at the wrong time.

Kenseth went back ahead to stay with 13 laps to go when Busch had to make his final stop and give up a 8.2second lead. Kenseth finished 8.315 seconds ahead of Clint Bowyer. “Over two years, I didn’t know if I’d get a chance to get here again,” Kenseth said in Victory Lane. Kenseth led nine different times and won with an average speed of 149.234 mph. The race featured 31 lead changes among 13 drivers. It was a weekend sweep at Texas Motor Speedway for car owner Jack Roush after Carl Edwards won the Nationwide race Friday night. Roush has 16 NASCAR wins in Texas — eight in Cup, seven in Nationwide and one in Trucks. All four of Roush’s drivers finished in the top seven. Edwards finished third, 17 seconds back, with Greg Biffle fourth and polesitter David Ragan seventh.

Edwards, bothered during the race by an upset stomach for something he ate earlier in the day, took over the season points lead by nine over Kyle Busch, who finished 16th. Stewart had gone 58 laps since his last stop with 58 laps to go, and had nearly a 17-second lead over Kenseth and more than 19 seconds over Bowyer when he made his stop. Any chance for a victory ended when Stewart got penalized for speeding on pit road. He finished 12th, the last driver on the lead lap even though he coasted across the finish line after running out of fuel. While Kenseth had led only five laps in the first six races this season, he got to Texas coming off three consecutive finishes in the top six and had been in the top 12 for every race since an accident in the season-opening Daytona 500 led to a 34th-place finish.

Larry Papke / The Associated Press

Matt Kenseth celebrates following his win in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series auto race at Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday in Fort Worth, Texas.


THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 D3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AL BOXSCORES Indians 2, Mariners 1 Cleveland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Brantley cf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .321 A.Cabrera ss 4 1 2 0 0 0 .273 Choo rf 4 1 2 0 0 0 .161 C.Santana c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .300 Hafner dh 3 0 1 0 1 0 .370 1-Everett pr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 0 .333 O.Cabrera 2b 3 0 1 1 0 0 .357 T.Buck lf 4 0 0 0 0 3 .158 LaPorta 1b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .273 Hannahan 3b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .292 Totals 30 2 7 1 3 3 Seattle AB R H BI BB SO Avg. I.Suzuki rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .281 Figgins 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .147 Bradley lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .250 Cust dh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .172 Smoak 1b 4 1 1 0 0 2 .250 Olivo c 3 0 0 0 1 0 .250 A.Kennedy 2b 2 0 1 0 0 1 .333 a-L.Rodriguez ph-2b 1 0 0 0 1 1 .200 Ryan ss 3 0 0 0 0 2 .143 b-Langerhans ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 M.Saunders cf 3 0 1 1 0 1 .154 Totals 33 1 6 1 2 13 Cleveland 000 200 000 — 2 7 1 Seattle 000 000 100 — 1 6 1 a-walked for A.Kennedy in the 7th. b-struck out for Ryan in the 9th. 1-ran for Hafner in the 9th. E—Brantley (1), Bradley (1). LOB—Cleveland 5, Seattle 7. 2B—Figgins (2), Smoak (4), A.Kennedy (2). RBIs—O.Cabrera (7), M.Saunders (4). SF—O.Cabrera. Runners left in scoring position—Cleveland 3 (T.Buck, C.Santana 2); Seattle 4 (M.Saunders, Cust, I.Suzuki, Smoak). Runners moved up—C.Santana, Ryan. GIDP— A.Cabrera, O.Cabrera, Hannahan. DP—Seattle 3 (Fister, Ryan, Smoak), (Smoak, Ryan, Smoak), (Ryan, L.Rodriguez, Smoak). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Mastrsn W, 2-0 6 1-3 4 1 1 1 9 111 1.35 R.Perez H, 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 16 0.00 Sipp H, 4 1 1 0 0 0 1 18 0.00 C.Perez S, 3-3 1 0 0 0 0 2 13 0.00 Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Fister L, 0-2 6 6 2 1 2 3 105 2.31 Lueke 1 0 0 0 1 0 14 13.50 Ray 2 1 0 0 0 0 15 8.10 Inherited runners-scored—R.Perez 1-1. IBB—off Fister (Hafner). WP—Masterson. T—2:44. A—30,309 (47,878).

Orioles 5, Rangers 0 (First Game) Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .208 Andrus ss 3 0 0 0 1 0 .217 Hamilton lf 4 0 2 0 0 0 .308 A.Beltre 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .107 Mi.Young dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .241 N.Cruz rf 2 0 1 0 1 0 .364 Napoli 1b 2 0 0 0 1 0 .400 Torrealba c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .273 Borbon cf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .286 Totals 29 0 5 0 3 3 Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. B.Roberts 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .241 Markakis rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 .292 D.Lee 1b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .192 Guerrero dh 4 1 1 0 0 0 .241 Scott lf 1 1 1 0 2 0 .182 1-Pie pr-lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .273 Ad.Jones cf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .192 Mar.Reynolds 3b 3 1 2 3 0 1 .292 Wieters c 3 0 0 0 0 0 .217 C.Izturis ss 3 0 0 0 0 1 .167 Totals 30 5 7 5 2 4 Texas 000 000 000 — 0 5 1 Baltimore 131 000 00x — 5 7 0 1-ran for Scott in the 8th. E—Napoli (1). LOB—Texas 5, Baltimore 4. 2B—Torrealba (2). HR—Markakis (1), off C.Lewis; Mar.Reynolds (1), off C.Lewis. RBIs—Markakis (3), Ad.Jones (4), Mar. Reynolds 3 (8). CS—Scott (1). Runners left in scoring position—Texas 3 (Andrus, Kinsler, Mi.Young); Baltimore 1 (Mar.Reynolds). Runners moved up—Napoli, Borbon. GIDP—A.Beltre 2, Napoli, Ad.Jones. DP—Texas 2 (Torrealba, Torrealba, Kinsler), (A.Beltre, Napoli); Baltimore 3 (C.Izturis, B.Roberts, D.Lee), (B.Roberts, C.Izturis, D.Lee), (C.Izturis, B.Roberts, D.Lee). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA C.Lewis L, 1-1 6 6 5 4 1 4 95 5.25 Tobin 2 1 0 0 1 0 21 6.00 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Britton W, 2-0 7 2-3 4 0 0 3 2 103 0.66 Berken 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 26 0.00 Inherited runners-scored—Berken 2-0. HBP—by C.Lewis (Scott). WP—C.Lewis. T—2:22. A—0 (45,438).

Rangers 13, Orioles 1 (Second Game) Texas AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Kinsler dh 4 1 1 1 1 0 .214 Andrus ss 5 1 1 2 0 0 .214 Hamilton cf 5 2 2 2 0 2 .323 A.Beltre 3b 5 3 3 3 0 1 .182 Mi.Young 2b 5 1 2 0 0 1 .265 N.Cruz rf 3 1 1 4 1 2 .360 Dav.Murphy lf 3 0 0 0 2 2 .417 Napoli c 4 2 2 1 1 0 .429 Moreland 1b 3 2 1 0 2 0 .313 Totals 37 13 13 13 7 8 Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. B.Roberts 2b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .219 C.Izturis ss 0 0 0 0 1 0 .167 Markakis rf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .259 D.Lee 1b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .172 Guerrero dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .242 Fox c 4 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Ad.Jones cf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .233 Mar.Reynolds 3b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .259 Andino lf-ss-2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Hardy ss 1 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Pie lf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .308 Totals 31 1 4 1 4 6 Texas 006 200 104 — 13 13 0 Baltimore 010 000 000 — 1 4 1 E—B.Roberts (2). LOB—Texas 5, Baltimore 7. 2B—Kinsler (2), A.Beltre (1). HR—A.Beltre (2), off Arrieta; Napoli (3), off Arrieta; N.Cruz (5), off Jakubauskas; Ad.Jones (2), off Harrison. RBIs—Kinsler (5), Andrus 2 (7), Hamilton 2 (6), A.Beltre 3 (7), N.Cruz 4 (10), Napoli (5), Ad.Jones (5). SB—Andrus (1), Dav.Murphy (2). SF—N.Cruz. Runners left in scoring position—Texas 2 (Hamilton, Napoli); Baltimore 4 (Fox, D.Lee 2, Andino). Runners moved up—Andrus. GIDP—Kinsler, Andrus, Mi.Young. DP—Baltimore 3 (Andino, B.Roberts, D.Lee), (B.Roberts, Andino, D.Lee), (C.Izturis, Andino, D.Lee). Texas IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Harrison W, 2-0 7 2 1 1 1 3 109 1.29 Strop 1 1 0 0 2 3 27 0.00 M.Lowe 1 1 0 0 1 0 19 10.80 Baltimore IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Arrieta L, 1-1 3 1-3 6 8 8 2 5 77 8.68 Rupe 2 2-3 1 0 0 3 1 50 2.70 Jakubauskas 3 6 5 5 2 2 51 15.00 Inherited runners-scored—Rupe 1-1. Balk—Strop 2. T—2:47. A—36,243 (45,438).

White Sox 4, Rays 2 Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fuld rf 5 0 1 0 0 1 .222 Damon lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .107 B.Upton cf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .321 D.Johnson dh 2 1 0 0 2 0 .100 Zobrist 2b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .167 F.Lopez 3b 4 1 1 1 0 0 .250 E.Johnson ss 4 0 1 0 0 2 .273 Kotchman 1b 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 a-S.Rodriguez ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .308 Jaso c 2 0 0 0 1 0 .067 b-Shoppach ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .250 Totals 33 2 6 2 4 7 Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Pierre lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .278 Beckham 2b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .343 Rios cf 3 1 0 0 1 0 .194 Konerko 1b 4 2 1 0 0 0 .375 Quentin rf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .400 Pierzynski c 3 0 2 2 1 0 .267 Al.Ramirez ss 2 0 0 0 2 0 .281 Teahen dh 3 0 1 0 1 1 .455 Morel 3b 4 1 2 1 0 1 .290 Totals 29 4 7 4 6 4 Tampa Bay 010 000 001 — 2 6 0 Chicago 001 100 20x — 4 7 0 a-grounded out for Kotchman in the 9th. b-singled for Jaso in the 9th. LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Chicago 10. 2B—Zobrist (2), E.Johnson (1), Konerko (1), Pierzynski (2), Teahen (1), Morel (2). HR—F.Lopez (1), off Sale. RBIs—Zobrist

(2), F.Lopez (1), Beckham (5), Pierzynski 2 (4), Morel (5). SB—Fuld (5), Beckham (1), Rios (1). S—Pierre. SF—Beckham. Runners left in scoring position—Tampa Bay 4 (Kotchman 2, D.Johnson, B.Upton); Chicago 7 (Teahen 3, Pierre 2, Morel 2). Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA W.Davis L, 0-2 6 5 2 2 3 4 103 4.38 J.Cruz 2-3 1 2 2 1 0 21 7.36 McGee 1-3 1 0 0 2 0 15 6.75 A.Russell 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 2.70 Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Humber W, 1-0 6 4 1 1 2 4 85 3.38 Ohman H, 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 19 12.46 Santos H, 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 12 0.00 Sale S, 1-2 1 2 1 1 0 1 13 5.06 Inherited runners-scored—McGee 2-2. HBP—by W.Davis (Quentin). WP—J.Cruz. T—2:43. A—26,378 (40,615).

Royals 3, Tigers 1 Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Getz 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .346 Me.Cabrera cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .275 Gordon lf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .378 Butler dh 3 1 2 0 1 0 .414 Ka’aihue 1b 3 0 0 0 1 3 .167 Francoeur rf 3 1 1 1 0 1 .265 Betemit 3b 3 0 1 1 1 0 .235 B.Pena c 2 0 0 0 1 0 .333 A.Escobar ss 3 0 0 1 0 0 .171 Totals 28 3 5 3 5 8 Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .176 Rhymes 2b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .200 Ordonez dh 4 0 1 0 0 0 .238 Mi.Cabrera 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .333 V.Martinez c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .250 Raburn lf 4 1 1 1 0 1 .263 Jh.Peralta ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .320 Inge 3b 3 0 0 0 0 3 .269 C.Wells rf 2 0 1 0 0 0 .333 a-Boesch ph-rf 0 0 0 0 1 0 .364 Totals 31 1 5 1 3 10 Kansas City 020 000 001 — 3 5 0 Detroit 000 000 001 — 1 5 0 a-walked for C.Wells in the 8th. LOB—Kansas City 4, Detroit 6. 2B—Butler (2), Ordonez (1). HR—Raburn (1), off Soria. RBIs—Francoeur (5), Betemit (3), A.Escobar (3), Raburn (2). CS—Butler (1). SF—Francoeur. Runners left in scoring position—Kansas City 2 (Getz, Betemit); Detroit 2 (Ordonez 2). GIDP—Me.Cabrera, Betemit. DP—Detroit 2 (Jh.Peralta, Rhymes, Mi.Cabrera), (Inge, Rhymes, Mi.Cabrera). Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Chen W, 1-0 6 3 0 0 1 7 82 4.09 Crow H, 1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 18 0.00 Collins H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 16 0.00 Tejeda H, 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 1 4.15 Soria S, 2-3 1 1 1 1 0 1 12 7.50 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Coke L, 0-2 6 2-3 3 2 2 4 7 91 4.00 Weinhardt 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 19 6.75 Thomas 1 0 0 0 1 0 8 16.20 Weinhardt pitched to 2 batters in the 9th. Inherited runners-scored—Collins 1-0, Tejeda 3-0, Weinhardt 1-0, Thomas 2-1. T—2:29. A—33,810 (41,255).

Yankees 9, Red Sox 4 New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Gardner lf 5 0 0 0 0 1 .192 Jeter ss 4 0 1 0 1 1 .233 Teixeira 1b 5 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Al.Rodriguez 3b 5 1 2 0 0 0 .321 Cano 2b 5 2 3 1 0 1 .324 Swisher rf 4 1 1 1 1 0 .241 Granderson cf 3 2 1 2 2 2 .192 Chavez dh 5 1 3 1 0 0 .500 Martin c 4 2 2 4 0 0 .321 Totals 40 9 13 9 4 6 Boston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crawford lf 5 1 1 0 0 0 .152 Pedroia 2b 4 1 3 2 1 0 .355 Ad.Gonzalez 1b 4 0 0 0 1 0 .281 Youkilis 3b 4 0 1 1 1 2 .125 Ortiz dh 5 0 0 0 0 1 .226 J.Drew rf 2 1 1 0 1 1 .316 Lowrie ss 4 0 3 0 0 1 .364 Saltalamacchia c 4 0 1 0 0 2 .182 Ellsbury cf 4 1 0 1 0 0 .156 Totals 36 4 10 4 4 7 New York 020 321 100 — 9 13 0 Boston 001 300 000 — 4 10 1 E—Lowrie (1). LOB—New York 8, Boston 10. 2B— Cano (4), Chavez 2 (2), Pedroia 3 (3). HR—Martin (2), off C.Buchholz; Granderson (2), off Doubront; Cano (2), off Aceves; Martin (3), off Aceves. RBIs—Cano (5), Swisher (6), Granderson 2 (3), Chavez (1), Martin 4 (8), Pedroia 2 (5), Youkilis (2), Ellsbury (4). CS—Jeter (1). Runners left in scoring position—New York 3 (Gardner, Swisher, Cano); Boston 6 (Ortiz 2, Crawford 2, Ad.Gonzalez, Saltalamacchia). Runners moved up—Swisher, Ad.Gonzalez 2, Youkilis. GIDP—Ortiz. DP—New York 1 (Ayala, Cano, Jeter, Teixeira). New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Nova 4 1-3 7 4 4 3 3 87 6.10 Rbrtsn W, 1-0 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 16 0.00 Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 0 2 17 1.80 Ayala 2 3 0 0 1 1 24 3.60 Boston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Buchhlz L, 0-2 3 2-3 8 5 4 3 2 92 7.20 Doubront 1 1-3 3 2 2 0 1 29 13.50 Aceves 2 2 2 2 1 2 34 6.00 Wakefield 2 0 0 0 0 1 27 3.00 Inherited runners-scored—Robertson 2-0, Doubront 2-0. HBP—by Nova (J.Drew). T—3:26. A—37,488 (37,493).

Athletics 1, Twins 0 Oakland AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Crisp cf 5 0 1 0 0 1 .265 Barton 1b 3 0 1 0 2 1 .222 DeJesus rf 5 0 1 0 0 0 .214 Willingham lf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .241 Matsui dh 3 0 0 0 1 1 .160 K.Suzuki c 4 1 1 0 0 0 .185 M.Ellis 2b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .231 Kouzmanoff 3b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .185 Pennington ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .190 Totals 34 1 6 0 5 6 Minnesota AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Span cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .290 Mauer c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .231 Morneau 1b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .185 D.Young lf 3 0 0 0 1 0 .179 Cuddyer rf 2 0 1 0 2 1 .125 Kubel dh 4 0 0 0 0 2 .308 Valencia 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .148 L.Hughes 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .143 A.Casilla ss 2 0 1 0 0 0 .188 a-Thome ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 Tolbert ss 0 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Totals 32 0 5 0 3 8 Oakland 000 001 000 — 1 6 0 Minnesota 000 000 000 — 0 5 2 a-struck out for A.Casilla in the 7th. E—Span (1), A.Casilla (1). LOB—Oakland 11, Minnesota 8. 2B—Barton (4). SB—Crisp (4). Runners left in scoring position—Oakland 6 (Kouzmanoff 2, DeJesus, Pennington, K.Suzuki 2); Minnesota 4 (Kubel, Mauer 2, D.Young). Runners moved up—Morneau, A.Casilla. Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gonzalz W, 2-0 6 4 0 0 2 4 106 0.69 Balfour H, 1 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 3 19 6.00 Fuentes S, 2-2 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 30 4.91 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Blackbrn L, 1-1 6 5 1 0 3 2 106 0.77 Perkins 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 15 0.00 Al.Burnett 0 0 0 0 1 0 8 D.Hughes 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 9 7.36 Capps 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 1.80 Mijares 1 0 0 0 0 1 13 0.00 Al.Burnett pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Fuentes 1-0, Al.Burnett 2-0, D.Hughes 3-0. WP—Blackburn, Perkins. T—3:05. A—39,936 (39,500).

Angels 6, Blue Jays 5 (14 innings) Toronto AB R.Davis cf 8 A.Hill 2b 7 Bautista rf 4 Lind 1b 6 J.Rivera dh 5 1-McCoy pr-dh 1 b-Y.Escobar ph-dh 0 Arencibia c 6 Snider lf 5 Encarnacion 3b 7 J.Nix 3b 0 Jo.McDonald ss 5 Totals 54 Los Angeles M.Izturis ss

R H 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 2 3 5 13

AB R 7 1

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

BB 0 1 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 2 9

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

Avg. .167 .206 .421 .343 .154 .364 .474 .368 .154 .167 .286 .417

H BI BB SO Avg. 3 2 0 2 .361

T—2:49. A—42,420 (42,691).

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

W 6 5 5 1 1 W 6 5 5 3 3 W 7 4 3 2

L 2 3 3 7 7 L 2 3 3 5 5 L 1 4 5 6

Pct .750 .625 .625 .125 .125 Pct .750 .625 .625 .375 .375 Pct .875 .500 .375 .250

Brewers 6, Cubs 0

NATIONAL LEAGUE GB WCGB — — 1 — 1 — 5 4 5 4 GB WCGB — — 1 — 1 — 3 2 3 2 GB WCGB — — 3 1 4 2 5 3

Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 9, Boston 4 Kansas City 3, Detroit 1 Chicago White Sox 4, Tampa Bay 2 Baltimore 5, Texas 0, 1st game Oakland 1, Minnesota 0 Texas 13, Baltimore 1, 2nd game L.A. Angels 6, Toronto 5 (14 innings) Cleveland 2, Seattle 1

L10 6-2 5-3 5-3 1-7 1-7 L10 6-2 5-3 5-3 3-5 3-5 L10 7-1 4-4 3-5 2-6

Str Home Away L-1 3-2 3-0 W-1 4-2 1-1 L-1 4-2 1-1 L-1 1-1 0-6 L-1 0-5 1-2 Str Home Away W-6 4-2 2-0 W-1 2-1 3-2 W-1 4-2 1-1 L-1 1-1 2-4 L-1 1-1 2-4 Str Home Away W-1 6-0 1-1 W-1 1-1 3-3 W-1 1-2 2-3 L-6 0-2 2-4

Today’s Games Kansas City (Hochevar 0-1) at Detroit (Porcello 0-1), 10:05 a.m. Texas (Holland 1-0) at Baltimore (Jakubauskas 0-0), 10:35 a.m. Oakland (McCarthy 0-0) at Minnesota (S.Baker 0-1), 11:10 a.m. Tampa Bay (Niemann 0-1) at Chicago White Sox (Floyd 0-0), 11:10 a.m. Toronto (Jo-.Reyes 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 2-0), 12:35 p.m. Cleveland (Tomlin 1-0) at Seattle (Bedard 0-1), 1:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 0-0) at Boston (Beckett 0-1), 5:05 p.m.

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

W 6 5 4 4 3 W 6 5 4 4 2 1 W 5 5 4 3 3

L 2 3 4 5 5 L 2 4 4 5 6 7 L 2 3 4 4 4

Pct .750 .625 .500 .444 .375 Pct .750 .556 .500 .444 .250 .125 Pct .714 .625 .500 .429 .429

Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 10, Atlanta 2 L.A. Dodgers 4, San Diego 2, 11 innings, comp. of susp. game Colorado 6, Pittsburgh 4 Florida 7, Houston 5 Milwaukee 6, Chicago Cubs 0 N.Y. Mets 8, Washington 4 Cincinnati 6, Arizona 1 L.A. Dodgers 4, San Diego 0 San Francisco 3, St. Louis 2

GB WCGB — — 1 — 2 1 2½ 1½ 3 2 GB WCGB — — 1½ ½ 2 1 2½ 1½ 4 3 5 4 GB WCGB — — ½ — 1½ 1 2 1½ 2 1½

L10 6-2 5-3 4-4 4-5 3-5 L10 6-2 5-4 4-4 4-5 2-6 1-7 L10 5-2 5-3 4-4 3-4 3-4

Str Home Away W-1 5-1 1-1 W-2 3-3 2-0 W-1 1-1 3-3 L-1 1-1 3-4 L-1 1-2 2-3 Str Home Away W-1 5-1 1-1 L-1 1-2 4-2 L-1 3-3 1-1 W-1 4-2 0-3 L-3 2-4 0-2 L-2 0-2 1-5 Str Home Away W-1 3-1 2-1 W-2 3-1 2-2 W-3 2-0 2-4 L-1 1-1 2-3 L-3 1-3 2-1

Today’s Games Washington (Marquis 0-0) at N.Y. Mets (C.Young 1-0), 10:10 a.m. Colorado (Chacin 1-0) at Pittsburgh (Ja. McDonald 0-0), 10:35 a.m. Philadelphia (Hamels 0-1) at Atlanta (D.Lowe 1-1), 10:35 a.m. Florida (Ani.Sanchez 0-0) at Houston (Happ 0-1), 11:05 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Coleman 0-0) at Milwaukee (Gallardo 1-0), 11:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers (Ely 0-0) at San Diego (Harang 1-0), 1:05 p.m. St. Louis (Lohse 0-1) at San Francisco (Zito 0-0), 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Leake 1-0) at Arizona (J.Saunders 0-1), 1:10 p.m.

American League roundup

National League roundup

• Indians 2, Mariners 1: SEATTLE — Justin Masterson took a shutout into the seventh inning, striking out nine, and streaking Cleveland won its sixth straight and are alone in first place in the AL Central for the first time since May 2008. • Yankees 9, Red Sox 4: BOSTON — Russell Martin hit two of New York’s four homers and the Yankees rebounded for a win over Boston, one day after becoming the only team to lose to the Red Sox this season. • Orioles 5-1, Rangers 0-13: BALTIMORE — Adrian Beltre homered to cap a six-run third inning and Texas routed Baltimore to earn a doubleheader split. In the first game, Orioles rookie Zach Britton (2-0) took a two-hitter into the eighth and Baltimore got homers from Nick Markakis and Mark Reynolds in a victory that ended the Rangers’ run as the last unbeaten team in the majors. • White Sox 4, Rays 2: CHICAGO — A.J. Pierzynski hit a two-run double and Phil Humber pitched a career-high six innings to lead Chicago over sputtering Tampa Bay in a game that got a little testy at the end. • Royals 3, Tigers 1: DETROIT — Bruce Chen allowed three hits over six impressive innings to lead Kansas City past Detroit. • Athletics 1, Twins 0: MINNEAPOLIS — Gio Gonzalez pitched six sharp innings and Oakland edged Minnesota. • Angels 6, Blue Jays 5: LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles’ Maicer Izturis had a game-winning single in the 14th inning to lift the Angels over the Blue Jays.

• Giants 3, Cardinals 2: SAN FRANCISCO — Miguel Tejada hit a two-run double that glanced off the glove of center fielder Colby Rasmus with two outs in the ninth inning and San Francisco rallied late for the second straight day. • Dodgers 4-4, Padres 2-0: SAN DIEGO — Hiroki Kuroda came within one out of his third career shutout to lead Los Angeles over San Diego in the regularly scheduled game. Earlier in the day, Tony Gwynn Jr. singled in the go-ahead run against his former team with two outs in the 11th inning and the Dodgers won a game that had been suspended at 1:40 a.m. • Brewers 6, Cubs 0: MILWAUKEE — Prince Fielder drove in four runs with a career-high three doubles, Chris Narveson pitched seven shutout innings and Milwaukee beat the Chicago Cubs. • Phillies 10, Braves 2: ATLANTA — Carlos Ruiz hit a pinch-hit grand slam and drove in five runs, and Phillies pitcher Roy Oswalt earned his first career victory over Atlanta. • Marlins 7, Astros 5: HOUSTON — Greg Dobbs homered and drove in three runs for Florida in place of Donnie Murphy, who moved to shortstop in place of injured All-Star Hanley Ramirez. • Rockies 6, Pirates 4: PITTSBURGH — Ty Wigginton hit a tiebreaking, three-run double in the eighth inning to keep the Rockies atop the NL West four straight days for the first time since 2006. • Mets 8, Nationals 4: NEW YORK — Carlos Beltran hit two early home runs, Ike Davis hit a long two-run triple in the sixth and the Mets got several clutch hits while beating the Nationals. • Reds 6, Diamondbacks 1: PHOENIX — Bronson Arroyo allowed one run — unearned because of his own throwing error — in six innings, Jonny Gomes doubled in two runs in the ninth to beat Arizona.

H.Kendrick 2b 6 1 2 1 0 0 .412 Abreu dh 6 1 3 1 0 1 .387 Tor.Hunter rf 6 0 3 0 0 1 .316 V.Wells lf 5 0 1 1 1 1 .111 Callaspo 3b 4 1 1 0 2 0 .370 Trumbo 1b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .276 a-Conger ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .222 B.Wood 1b 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Mathis c 6 1 1 0 0 4 .217 Bourjos cf 3 1 1 1 1 1 .231 Totals 49 6 16 6 4 13 Toronto 011 300 000 000 00 — 5 13 2 Los Angeles 103 100 000 000 01 — 6 16 3 Two outs when winning run scored. a-grounded into a fielder’s choice for Trumbo in the 11th. 1-ran for J.Rivera in the 9th. E—Encarnacion (4), Snider (2), Callaspo (1), M.Izturis (1), Trumbo (1). LOB—Toronto 18, Los Angeles 8. 2B—Arencibia (2), Jo.McDonald (1), M.Izturis (3), Bourjos (1). 3B—Arencibia (2). HR—H.Kendrick (4), off Cecil. RBIs—R.Davis 2 (2), A.Hill (6), Lind (8), Snider (7), M.Izturis 2 (5), H.Kendrick (4), Abreu (4), V.Wells (2), Bourjos (2). SB—Snider 2 (2). CS—Jo.McDonald (1), Abreu (1). S—Bourjos. SF—Lind, Bourjos. Runners left in scoring position—Toronto 11 (Encarnacion 2, J.Rivera, Snider 2, A.Hill 2, Arencibia 2, Bautista 2); Los Angeles 3 (M.Izturis, Mathis 2). Runners moved up—R.Davis, Lind, Snider 2, H.Kendrick. GIDP—H.Kendrick 2, Tor.Hunter, Callaspo. DP—Toronto 5 (Jo.McDonald, A.Hill, Lind), (A.Hill, Jo.McDonald, Lind), (Jo.McDonald, A.Hill, Lind), (Jo. McDonald, A.Hill, Lind), (Snider, Jo.McDonald, Lind). Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cecil 5 10 5 5 1 3 81 7.20 Villanueva 2 0 0 0 1 3 27 0.00 Rzepczynski 2 0 0 0 0 1 18 0.00 Frasor 1 0 0 0 0 2 20 4.15 Dotel 1 1 0 0 1 2 21 0.00 Camp 2 3 0 0 1 0 19 0.00 Rauch L, 0-1 2-3 2 1 1 0 2 17 4.15 Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Palmer 4 2-3 10 5 4 1 2 70 7.71 Thompson 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 18 1.93 Jepsen 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 15 6.75 Takahashi 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 10 9.00 Rodney 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 5.40 Walden 1 1 0 0 0 0 25 0.00 Kohn 1 2-3 0 0 0 2 2 38 4.91 Bulger 2 1-3 1 0 0 4 2 55 0.00 Haren W, 2-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 12 1.15 Frasor pitched to 1 batter in the 11th. Inherited runners-scored—Dotel 1-0, Thompson 1-0, Takahashi 1-0, Bulger 1-0. IBB—off Dotel (Callaspo), off Camp (Callaspo), off Takahashi (Arencibia). HBP—by Kohn (Snider). WP—Jepsen 2. T—5:03. A—43,513 (45,389).

NL BOXSCORES Phillies 10, Braves 2 Philadelphia Victorino cf Polanco 3b Rollins ss Howard 1b B.Francisco rf Ibanez lf Schneider c a-Mayberry ph Herndon p d-M.Martinez ph J.Romero p Baez p Valdez 2b Oswalt p b-Ruiz ph-c Totals Atlanta Prado lf McLouth cf C.Jones 3b McCann c Boscan c Uggla 2b Heyward rf Ale.Gonzalez ss Freeman 1b Beachy p

AB 5 5 5 4 5 4 2 1 0 1 0 0 3 2 2 39 AB 4 4 4 2 1 3 4 4 3 1

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

H 4 0 2 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 15 H 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 1 0

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

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

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

Avg. .375 .353 .333 .406 .333 .258 .167 .667 --.400 ----.333 .250 .304 Avg. .282 .219 .333 .406 .000 .176 .259 .242 .172 .000

Sherrill p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Linebrink p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Ma.Young ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .143 C.Martinez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 2 6 1 2 3 Philadelphia 100 200 520 — 10 15 1 Atlanta 002 000 000 — 2 6 0 a-singled for Schneider in the 7th. b-homered for Oswalt in the 7th. c-grounded out for Linebrink in the 7th. d-singled for Herndon in the 8th. E—B.Francisco (2). LOB—Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 5. 2B—Victorino (2), Rollins 2 (2), Howard (4), Ibanez (2), Ruiz (2), Heyward (1), Ale.Gonzalez 2 (3). HR—Schneider (1), off Beachy; Ruiz (1), off Linebrink. RBIs—Victorino (7), Howard (10), B.Francisco (7), Schneider 2 (2), Ruiz 5 (7), Freeman (2). SB—Victorino (2). S—Beachy. Runners left in scoring position—Philadelphia 3 (Ibanez 2, B.Francisco); Atlanta 4 (Beachy, Heyward 2, Ale.Gonzalez). Runners moved up—Rollins, Howard. GIDP—Rollins. DP—Philadelphia 1 (Rollins, Howard); Atlanta 2 (Ale. Gonzalez, Uggla, Freeman), (Uggla, C.Jones). Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Oswalt W, 2-0 6 5 2 1 2 2 90 2.25 Herndon 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 4.50 J.Romero 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 2.25 Baez 1 1 0 0 0 1 14 0.00 Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Beachy L, 0-1 6 7 4 4 2 2 80 3.75 Sherrill 0 1 2 2 1 0 9 10.80 Linebrink 1 3 2 2 0 2 23 6.75 C.Martinez 2 4 2 2 0 2 40 3.60 Beachy pitched to 1 batter in the 7th. Sherrill pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. Inherited runners-scored—Sherrill 1-0, Linebrink 33. IBB—off Beachy (Howard). WP—C.Martinez. T—2:44. A—36,256 (49,586).

Dodgers 4, Padres 2, 11 innings (ends Friday’s game) Los Angeles AB R H Furcal ss 4 0 0 d-Carroll ph-ss 0 0 0 Blake 3b 5 2 1 Ethier rf 4 0 1 Kemp cf 4 0 3 Uribe 2b 5 1 1 Loney 1b 5 0 1 Thames lf 2 0 0 Paul lf 2 0 1 Hawksworth p 0 0 0 e-Miles ph 0 1 0 Broxton p 0 0 0 Barajas c 5 0 0 Lilly p 2 0 0 MacDougal p 0 0 0 Jansen p 0 0 0 b-H.Gimenez ph 1 0 0 Guerrier p 0 0 0 Kuo p 0 0 0 Gwynn lf 2 0 2 Totals 41 4 10

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

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

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

Avg. .208 .333 .375 .320 .391 .150 .179 .182 .429 --.182 --.250 .000 ----.143 ----.333

San Diego AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Venable rf 4 1 1 0 2 0 .176 Bartlett ss 5 0 1 0 1 1 .160 O.Hudson 2b 4 1 2 1 1 1 .250 Cantu 1b 5 0 1 0 0 0 .231 Ludwick lf 5 0 0 1 0 0 .091 Headley 3b 3 0 0 0 2 2 .238 Maybin cf 5 0 3 0 0 1 .261 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Hundley c 5 0 1 0 0 3 .435 Richard p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Luebke p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Qualls p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-C.Hunter ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .333 Gregerson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Adams p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Hawpe ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .067 Bell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Frieri p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Denorfia cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .182 Totals 41 2 9 2 6 9 Los Angeles 000 101 000 02 — 4 10 1 San Diego 000 020 000 00 — 2 9 1 a-popped out for Qualls in the 6th. b-struck out for Jansen in the 7th. c-flied out for Adams in the 8th. dsacrificed for Furcal in the 10th. e-was hit by a pitch for

Inherited runners-scored—Belisle 1-1, D.McCutchen 1-0. HBP—by Veras (Jo.Lopez). T—3:07. A—25,398 (38,362).

Hawksworth in the 11th. E—Kemp (1), Hundley (1). LOB—Los Angeles 10, San Diego 12. 2B—Kemp (4), Uribe (1), Cantu (1). RBIs—Kemp (4), Gwynn (1), O.Hudson (2), Ludwick (2). SB—Carroll (1), Blake (1), Kemp (2), Venable (1), Bartlett 2 (3), Maybin 3 (3). S—Carroll. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 7 (Thames, Loney 2, Barajas, Kemp, Blake 2); San Diego 8 (Ludwick, Luebke 3, Maybin, Bartlett, Hawpe, Cantu). Runners moved up—Uribe, Bartlett, Ludwick. GIDP—Uribe, Denorfia. DP—Los Angeles 1 (Carroll, Loney); San Diego 1 (O.Hudson, Bartlett, Cantu). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lilly 4 1-3 7 2 2 2 3 85 6.00 MacDougal 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 14 0.00 Jansen 1 0 0 0 1 2 19 9.00 Guerrier 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 23 0.00 Kuo 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 4.50 Hwkwrth W, 1-0 2 0 0 0 1 3 34 3.60 Broxton S, 4-4 1 1 0 0 1 0 16 4.50 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Richard 1 1 0 0 0 0 16 3.86 Luebke 4 0 1 0 2 5 65 3.38 Qualls BS, 1-1 1 3 1 0 0 1 26 0.00 Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 1 10 2.25 Adams 1 0 0 0 0 0 14 3.00 Bell 1 3 0 0 0 0 21 0.00 Frieri L, 0-1 1 1-3 2 2 2 1 1 32 4.91 Neshek 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 20 5.40 Richard pitched to 1 batter in the 2nd. Inherited runners-scored—MacDougal 2-1, Kuo 1-0, Luebke 1-0, Neshek 2-2. IBB—off MacDougal (Headley), off Frieri (Ethier). HBP—by Frieri (Miles). WP—Luebke, Neshek. PB—Hundley. T—4:19 (Rain delay: 3:08). A—32,585 (42,691).

Dodgers 4, Padres 0 (second game) Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Gwynn lf 5 2 2 0 0 0 .353 Blake 3b 3 0 1 1 1 0 .364 Ethier rf 5 1 3 2 0 2 .367 Kemp cf 5 1 3 0 0 0 .429 Uribe 2b 5 0 0 0 0 0 .120 Loney 1b 3 0 0 0 2 1 .161 A.Ellis c 3 0 0 0 2 0 .250 Carroll ss 5 0 3 0 0 1 .400 Kuroda p 5 0 1 0 0 0 .143 Broxton p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 39 4 13 3 5 4 San Diego AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Venable rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .143 Bartlett ss 2 0 0 0 1 0 .148 Alb.Gonzalez ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .333 O.Hudson 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Hawpe 1b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .158 Headley 3b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .280 Denorfia lf 2 0 0 0 2 0 .154 Maybin cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .222 Ro.Johnson c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .200 Moseley p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .500 a-C.Hunter ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .250 Deduno p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Cantu ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .214 Qualls p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 0 6 0 3 4 Los Angeles 100 020 010 — 4 13 0 San Diego 000 000 000 — 0 6 1 a-fouled out for Moseley in the 6th. b-popped out for Deduno in the 8th. E—Denorfia (1). LOB—Los Angeles 14, San Diego 7. 2B—Gwynn (2), Carroll (1), Ro.Johnson (1). HR—Ethier (1), off Moseley. RBIs—Blake (2), Ethier 2 (4). SB—Gwynn 2 (2), Kemp 3 (5). S—Blake. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 8 (Uribe 2, Kuroda 2, A.Ellis, Blake, Carroll 2); San Diego 5 (Denorfia 2, Venable, Maybin 2). GIDP—Kemp, Denorfia. DP—Los Angeles 2 (Kemp, Kemp, Uribe), (Carroll, Loney); San Diego 1 (Headley, Hawpe). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Kuroda W, 2-0 8 2-3 6 0 0 2 4 117 1.72 Broxton S, 5-5 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 11 4.15 San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Moseley L, 0-2 6 8 3 2 3 1 107 2.08 Deduno 2 4 1 1 2 3 42 3.00 Qualls 1 1 0 0 0 0 14 0.00 Inherited runners-scored—Broxton 2-0. IBB—off Moseley (Loney), off Deduno (Loney). WP—Deduno.

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Je.Baker 2b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .421 Mateo p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Samardzija p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --S.Castro ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .353 Byrd cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .314 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 1 0 0 1 .276 Soto c 2 0 1 0 2 1 .231 C.Pena 1b 4 0 1 0 0 3 .222 A.Soriano lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .267 Re.Johnson rf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Garza p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Grabow p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --a-Barney ph-2b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .286 Totals 32 0 6 0 2 10 Milwaukee AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Weeks 2b 3 1 1 0 2 2 .270 Morgan cf-rf 3 1 1 1 1 2 .474 Braun lf 4 3 2 1 1 1 .367 Fielder 1b 4 0 3 4 0 0 .355 McGehee 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .206 Y.Betancourt ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .200 Kotsay rf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .200 1-Gomez pr-cf 0 1 0 0 0 0 .207 Nieves c 2 0 0 0 2 2 .231 Narveson p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Green p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Reed ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Estrada p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Totals 30 6 8 6 7 12 Chicago 000 000 000 — 0 6 0 Milwaukee 202 010 01x — 6 8 0 a-popped out for Grabow in the 7th. b-struck out for Green in the 8th. 1-ran for Kotsay in the 8th. LOB—Chicago 7, Milwaukee 9. 2B—Byrd (4), Braun (1), Fielder 3 (4). 3B—Morgan (2). RBIs—Morgan (1), Braun (6), Fielder 4 (9). SB—Gomez 2 (3). S—Morgan, Narveson. Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 4 (C.Pena 2, A.Soriano, Byrd); Milwaukee 7 (Y.Betancourt 2, McGehee, Morgan 2, Braun 2). GIDP—A.Soriano 2. DP—Milwaukee 2 (Y.Betancourt, Weeks, Fielder), (Y.Betancourt, Weeks, Fielder). Chicago IP H R ER BB Garza L, 0-1 5 2-3 8 5 5 3 Grabow 1-3 0 0 0 0 Mateo 1 0 0 0 0 Samardzija 1 0 1 1 4 Milwaukee IP H R ER BB Narvesn W, 1-0 7 6 0 0 1 Green 1 0 0 0 0 Estrada 1 0 0 0 1 Inherited runners-scored—Grabow Garza (Weeks). WP—Narveson. T—2:45. A—42,478 (41,900).

SO NP ERA 8 107 5.68 1 5 3.38 2 14 3.86 1 31 9.00 SO NP ERA 9 96 0.00 0 8 2.08 1 16 5.14 3-0. IBB—off

Marlins 7, Astros 5 Florida AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Coghlan cf 5 1 1 1 0 3 .222 Infante 2b 5 0 2 1 0 0 .265 Morrison lf 5 1 2 0 0 0 .333 Stanton rf 3 2 1 1 1 2 .286 Hensley p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --L.Nunez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --G.Sanchez 1b 3 1 0 0 1 0 .375 Dobbs 3b 4 1 3 3 0 0 .600 J.Buck c 4 0 0 0 0 1 .258 Do.Murphy ss 4 0 0 1 0 1 .174 Vazquez p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 b-Helms ph 1 1 1 0 0 0 .333 Choate p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --R.Webb p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Cousins ph-rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .125 Totals 37 7 10 7 2 8 Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 4 1 1 0 1 1 .222 Ang.Sanchez ss 4 1 2 1 1 0 .321 Pence rf 5 0 2 2 0 0 .281 Ca.Lee lf 4 1 1 0 0 0 .200 Wallace 1b 4 0 1 1 0 0 .241 C.Johnson 3b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .200 Hall 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .172 Towles c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .375 Norris p 2 1 1 1 0 1 .333 a-Inglett ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Abad p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --W.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Del Rosario p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Bourgeois ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .333 Totals 37 5 11 5 2 6 Florida 010 003 210 — 7 10 0 Houston 120 010 010 — 5 11 1 a-flied out for Norris in the 6th. b-doubled for Vazquez in the 7th. c-flied out for R.Webb in the 8th. d-singled for Del Rosario in the 9th. E—C.Johnson (3). LOB—Florida 5, Houston 7. 2B—Coghlan (5), Infante (1), Morrison (3), Stanton (2), Dobbs (1), Helms (2), Ang.Sanchez (1), Pence (3), Ca.Lee (1), Hall (2), Norris (1). HR—Dobbs (1), off Norris. RBIs—Coghlan (3), Infante (3), Stanton (1), Dobbs 3 (5), Do.Murphy (3), Ang.Sanchez (4), Pence 2 (4), Wallace (5), Norris (1). Runners left in scoring position—Florida 5 (Vazquez 2, Stanton 2, Cousins); Houston 3 (Wallace 2, Pence). Runners moved up—G.Sanchez, Do.Murphy, Ca.Lee 2. GIDP—Wallace. DP—Florida 1 (Infante, Do.Murphy, G.Sanchez). Florida IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Vazquez W, 1-1 6 8 4 4 2 4 92 8.64 Choate H, 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 8 0.00 R.Webb H, 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 6.23 Hensley H, 3 1 2 1 1 0 1 20 1.50 L.Nunez S, 3-3 1 1 0 0 0 1 16 3.00 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Norris 6 5 4 4 2 6 95 8.10 Abad L, 1-1 2-3 3 2 2 0 0 18 5.40 W.Lopez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 6 5.40 Del Rosario 2 2 1 0 0 1 23 3.86 Inherited runners-scored—W.Lopez 1-0. T—3:05. A—25,421 (40,963).

Rockies 6, Pirates 4 Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Fowler cf 3 2 0 0 2 0 .233 Herrera 2b 2 1 1 0 3 0 .444 C.Gonzalez lf 4 1 3 1 0 0 .333 Tulowitzki ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .192 S.Smith rf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .304 Jo.Lopez 3b 3 1 0 0 0 0 .240 Wigginton 1b 4 0 1 3 0 0 .227 J.Morales c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .000 G.Reynolds p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 a-Spilborghs ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .214 Mat.Reynolds p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Belisle p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --R.Betancourt p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Stewart ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Lindstrom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 30 6 7 5 6 4 Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Tabata lf 3 1 1 1 1 0 .343 Walker 2b 3 0 0 0 1 2 .306 A.McCutchen cf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .258 Overbay 1b 3 1 1 0 1 0 .235 Alvarez 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .184 Correia p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Doumit c 3 1 2 2 0 0 .273 1-Cedeno pr-ss 1 1 0 0 0 0 .192 G.Jones rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 .185 b-Diaz ph-rf 2 0 2 1 0 0 .214 J.Rodriguez ss 3 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Jaramillo c 1 0 1 0 0 0 .357 Morton p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .000 c-Bowker ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Veras p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --D.McCutchen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Pearce 3b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .400 Totals 33 4 8 4 3 5 Colorado 101 001 030 — 6 7 0 Pittsburgh 020 000 110 — 4 8 1 a-grounded out for G.Reynolds in the 7th. b-singled for G.Jones in the 7th. c-popped out for Morton in the 7th. d-grounded out for R.Betancourt in the 9th. 1-ran for Doumit in the 7th. E—Doumit (1). LOB—Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Wigginton (2), Overbay (3), Doumit (2). HR— S.Smith (1), off Morton; Doumit (1), off G.Reynolds; Tabata (2), off R.Betancourt. RBIs—C.Gonzalez (4), S.Smith (2), Wigginton 3 (3), Tabata (3), Doumit 2 (3), Diaz (2). SB—Fowler (1), Tabata (4). S—G.Reynolds. Runners left in scoring position—Colorado 2 (Tulowitzki, J.Morales); Pittsburgh 2 (Overbay, Pearce). GIDP—C.Gonzalez, Jo.Lopez, Overbay, Pearce. DP—Colorado 2 (Herrera, Tulowitzki, Wigginton), (Tulowitzki, Herrera, Wigginton); Pittsburgh 2 (Walker, J.Rodriguez, Overbay), (Alvarez, Walker, Overbay). Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA G.Reynolds 6 3 2 2 2 2 88 3.00 Reynolds H, 1 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 10 9.00 Belisle W, 1-0 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 8 1.93 Betancourt H, 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 21 1.80 Lindstrom 1 2 0 0 0 0 12 2.45 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Morton 7 5 3 2 5 1 92 2.08 Veras L, 0-1 2-3 2 3 3 1 2 28 7.36 D.McCutchen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 4 0.00 Correia 1 0 0 0 0 0 9 1.29

Mets 8, Nationals 4 Washington AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Desmond ss 4 1 1 1 1 1 .219 Werth rf 4 0 0 0 1 2 .226 Zimmerman 3b 5 0 2 0 0 1 .357 Morse 1b-lf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .130 W.Ramos c 3 1 2 0 1 1 .412 Ankiel cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .259 Espinosa 2b 4 1 1 3 0 3 .304 Hairston Jr. lf 3 0 0 0 0 1 .000 c-Stairs ph-1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Gorzelanny p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Broderick p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Slaten p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --e-Cora ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .167 Totals 34 4 8 4 4 11 New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jos.Reyes ss 4 1 1 2 1 0 .297 Pagan cf 4 0 0 0 1 0 .167 D.Wright 3b 3 1 0 0 1 2 .303 Beltran rf 4 3 2 3 0 0 .240 Hairston lf 3 1 0 0 0 2 .077 I.Davis 1b 3 1 2 2 0 1 .345 Hu 2b 2 0 0 0 0 2 .143 a-Dan.Murphy ph 1 0 1 1 0 0 .273 Emaus 2b 0 1 0 0 0 0 .200 Nickeas c 3 0 1 0 0 0 .125 d-Thole ph-c 1 0 0 0 0 0 .350 Capuano p 2 0 1 0 0 1 .500 b-Duda ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .143 T.Buchholz p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Parnell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --F.Rodriguez p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .000 Totals 32 8 8 8 3 10 Washington 030 010 000 — 4 8 1 New York 200 103 02x — 8 8 0 a-singled for Hu in the 6th. b-struck out for Capuano in the 6th. c-grounded out for Hairston Jr. in the 8th. dgrounded into a fielder’s choice for Nickeas in the 8th. e-walked for Slaten in the 9th. E—Hairston Jr. (1). LOB—Washington 8, New York 6. 2B—W.Ramos (1), Jos.Reyes (3), Capuano (1). 3B—I.Davis (1). HR—Espinosa (1), off Capuano; Desmond (1), off Capuano; Beltran 2 (2), off Gorzelanny 2. RBIs—Desmond (4), Espinosa 3 (5), Jos.Reyes 2 (2), Beltran 3 (5), I.Davis 2 (9), Dan.Murphy (3). SB—Jos. Reyes (3), Pagan (4). CS—Nickeas (1). Runners left in scoring position—Washington 6 (Ankiel 4, Stairs, Zimmerman); New York 4 (Pagan 3, Beltran). Runners moved up—D.Wright. GIDP—Werth. DP—Washington 1 (W.Ramos, W.Ramos, Desmond); New York 1 (Jos.Reyes, Emaus, I.Davis). Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gorzlany L, 0-1 5 1-3 4 6 5 2 8 98 8.44 Broderick 1 2-3 3 2 2 1 1 48 23.14 Slaten 1 1 0 0 0 1 13 0.00 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Capuano W, 1-0 6 7 4 4 1 8 97 6.75 T.Buchholz H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 1.80 Parnell H, 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 28 2.70 Rodriguz S, 1-2 1 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 25 2.70 Broderick pitched to 3 batters in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Broderick 1-1, Slaten 3-2, F.Rodriguez 2-0. HBP—by Gorzelanny (I.Davis), by Broderick (Hairston, Emaus), by Capuano (Morse). T—3:20. A—31,696 (41,800).

Reds 6, Diamondbacks 1 Cincinnati AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Stubbs cf 4 0 0 0 1 2 .265 Phillips 2b 4 1 1 0 0 1 .375 Votto 1b 1 2 0 0 3 0 .393 Rolen 3b 4 1 1 1 0 1 .250 Gomes lf 3 1 1 2 1 1 .167 Cordero p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Bruce rf 3 0 0 1 0 2 .241 Hanigan c 4 1 1 1 0 2 .353 Janish ss 4 0 1 0 0 0 .423 Arroyo p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .250 Bray p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-J.Francisco ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Chapman p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Heisey ph-lf 1 0 1 1 0 0 .273 Totals 31 6 6 6 5 10 Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. K.Johnson 2b 4 0 1 0 0 2 .194 S.Drew ss 4 0 1 0 0 1 .250 J.Upton rf 4 0 1 0 0 0 .233 Branyan 1b 4 0 2 0 0 2 .444 C.Young cf 4 1 1 0 0 1 .258 Montero c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .500 Mora 3b 4 0 1 1 0 1 .176 G.Parra lf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .273 D.Hudson p 2 0 1 0 0 0 .500 a-R.Roberts ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .273 D.Hernandez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --J.Gutierrez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Demel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Miranda ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .231 Totals 36 1 9 1 0 9 Cincinnati 200 000 004 — 6 6 1 Arizona 000 001 000 — 1 9 3 a-grounded out for D.Hudson in the 7th. b-grounded out for Bray in the 8th. c-singled for Chapman in the 9th. d-grounded out for Demel in the 9th. E—Arroyo (1), Montero (3), J.Gutierrez (1), S.Drew (1). LOB—Cincinnati 4, Arizona 8. 2B—Gomes (1), Branyan (1). RBIs—Rolen (9), Gomes 2 (5), Bruce (2), Hanigan (5), Heisey (5), Mora (2). SB—K.Johnson (2), S.Drew (1), J.Upton (1). CS—Janish (1). SF—Bruce. Runners left in scoring position—Cincinnati 1 (Stubbs); Arizona 4 (C.Young 2, G.Parra, J.Upton). DP—Arizona 2 (C.Young, C.Young, Branyan, Mora), (Branyan). Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Arroyo W, 2-0 6 8 1 0 0 6 94 2.08 Bray H, 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 17 0.00 Chapman H, 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 10 0.00 Cordero 1 0 0 0 0 0 16 3.00 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Hudson L, 0-2 7 3 2 2 3 8 99 3.46 D.Hernandez 1 0 0 0 1 1 18 0.00 J.Gutierrez 1-3 2 4 2 1 1 21 6.00 Demel 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 11 6.75 Inherited runners-scored—Demel 1-1. T—2:54. A—20,719 (48,633).

Giants 3, Cardinals 2 St. Louis AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Schumaker 2b 3 1 0 0 1 0 .250 Jay lf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .273 Pujols 1b 2 0 0 0 2 0 .167 Berkman rf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .214 Rasmus cf 4 1 2 1 0 1 .370 Y.Molina c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .160 Descalso 3b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .214 J.Garcia p 2 0 0 0 0 1 .000 a-Craig ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .227 Batista p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --c-Freese ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .150 Franklin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Greene ss 3 0 1 0 0 1 .286 Totals 30 2 5 1 4 5 San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Torres cf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .286 Schierholtz rf 3 0 3 0 0 0 .364 F.Sanchez 2b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .290 Huff 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .250 Posey c 4 1 1 0 0 1 .281 Burrell lf 2 1 0 0 1 2 .160 1-Belt pr 0 1 0 0 0 0 .179 Rowand rf-cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .429 Tejada ss 3 0 2 2 1 0 .273 DeRosa 3b 3 0 1 1 0 1 .300 R.Ramirez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Cain p 2 0 0 0 0 2 .000 Runzler p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-P.Sandoval ph-3b1 0 0 0 0 0 .423 Totals 31 3 7 3 2 12 St. Louis 000 001 100 — 2 5 0 San Francisco 000 010 002 — 3 7 1 Two outs when winning run scored. a-reached on error for J.Garcia in the 7th. b-flied out for Runzler in the 8th. c-grounded out for Batista in the 9th. 1-ran for Burrell in the 9th. E—DeRosa (1). LOB—St. Louis 6, San Francisco 5. 2B—Y.Molina (2), Tejada (3). 3B—Schierholtz (1). HR—Rasmus (1), off Cain. RBIs—Rasmus (1), Tejada 2 (5), DeRosa (3). SB—Greene (1). CS—Jay (1). S—Descalso. Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis 2 (Jay, Schumaker); San Francisco 3 (Cain, Posey, F.Sanchez). Runners moved up—Schumaker, Jay, Pujols. GIDP—Y.Molina, Huff, DeRosa. DP—St. Louis 2 (Descalso, Schumaker, Pujols), (Pujols, Greene, J.Garcia); San Francisco 1 (F.Sanchez, Tejada, Huff). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA J.Garcia 6 4 1 1 1 9 82 0.60 Batista H, 1 2 1 0 0 0 3 26 0.00 Franklin L, 0-1 2-3 2 2 2 1 0 20 9.82 S. Francisco IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cain 7 5 2 2 2 4 99 1.38 Runzler 1 0 0 0 2 1 19 8.31 Ramirez W, 1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 8 0.00 HBP—by J.Garcia (Burrell). WP—J.Garcia, Cain. T—2:32. A—41,742 (41,915).


D4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

NHL ROUNDUP

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Ducks beat Kings, seize No. 4 seed Bases-loaded walk The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Just two days ago, the Anaheim Ducks didn’t know whether their sixweek sprint to the regular season’s finish line would even get them into the playoffs. With two bruising victories over their crosstown rivals this weekend, these remarkable Ducks are in, all right — and they even get to stay home for their first two postseason games next week. Saku Koivu had a goal and an assist, Dan Ellis made 43 saves and Anaheim rocketed to the fourth seed in the Western Conference playoffs with a seasonending 3-1 victory over the Los Angeles Kings. Brandon McMillan and Francois Beauchemin also scored for the Ducks, who didn’t even clinch a playoff spot until Friday’s 2-1 home win over the Kings. After sweeping the weekend to cap their 15-5-0 finish in the logjammed West, the Ducks will host a postseason series — and they’re just as surprised about it as their fans. “It just shows you this league is crazy tough, but we came through,” said Teemu Selanne, who capped his 80-point season with a third-period fight with Los Angeles’ Brad Richardson. “We kept believing that we could make it, and we kept grinding, and it turned out amazing for us.” Nashville and Phoenix both lost Saturday before Anaheim won, leaving all three clubs with 99 points. The Ducks own the tiebreakers against both clubs and even Chicago — if the Blackhawks beat Detroit today to finish with 99 as well. Ryan Smyth scored and Jonathan Quick stopped 17 shots for the playoff-bound Kings, who outshot Anaheim 44-20 but couldn’t crack Ellis, the latest goalie to excel in Anaheim’s net

Mark J. Terrill / The Associated Press

Anaheim Ducks center Saku Koivu, left, scores on Los Angeles Kings goalie Jonathan Quick during the first period of Saturday’s game in Los Angeles. at a key moment. “It’s unbelievable the way the season went this year,” said Ellis, who beat the Kings twice after sitting out the previous 5½ games behind Ray Emery. “We could have been anywhere, even out of the playoffs. We managed to put together a few games here, and our confidence is just growing.” Corey Perry had an assist to finish with 50 goals and 48 assists in his breakthrough season for the Ducks. The All-Star right wing will win his first Richard Trophy as the NHL’s top goalscorer, and his MVP credentials will be boosted by the Ducks’ stellar finish. Anaheim has been clawing to get back in the playoff picture for roughly three months, never getting a firm foothold in the competitive West race until this week. In other games on Saturday: Canucks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Flames . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 CALGARY, Alberta — Chris-

tian Ehrhoff scored at 2:31 of overtime to help playoff-bound Vancouver wrap up the best regular season in franchise history. After rallying from a 2-0 deficit in the third, the Canucks got the victory when Ehrhoff’s slapshot from the blue line beat Henrik Karlsson between his pads. Sharks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Coyotes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 SAN JOSE, Calif. — Joe Pavelski scored his 20th goal of the season and Antti Niemi made 35 saves as San Jose wrapped up the No. 2 seed in the West. The Sharks will not know their first-round opponent until after Chicago’s season finale against Detroit today. Bruins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Senators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 BOSTON — Nathan Horton scored a tiebreaking goal early in the second period, Tim Thomas stopped 31 shots and Boston won its regular season home finale over Ottawa.

Rangers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Devils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 NEW YORK — Captain Chris Drury scored his first goal of the season in a surprise return to the lineup and Ryan McDonagh netted the first of his career during a three-goal second period as New York rallied, then got some help to clinch a playoff spot. Fylers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Islanders. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 PHILADELPHIA — Scott Hartnell and Andrej Meszaros each scored two goals, and Philadelphia clinched the Atlantic Division and the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference with a win over the New York Islanders. Lightning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Hurricanes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 RALEIGH, N.C. — Vincent Lecavalier had a goal and an assist, and quick-starting Tampa Bay eliminated Carolina from playoff contention. Panthers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Capitals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 SUNRISE, Fla. — Bill Thomas scored with 6:05 remaining and Tomas Vokoun made 28 saves to help Florida close the season by snapping a 10-game losing streak. Blues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Predators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ST. LOUIS — Jaroslav Halak shut out playoff-bound Nashville for the third time this season and T.J. Oshie scored from his knees early in the second for St. Louis. Sabres. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Blue Jackets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 COLUMBUS, Ohio — Paul Gaustad scored the winner late on a power play, and four other Buffalo players scored in the season finale for both teams. Canadiens . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Maple Leafs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 TORONTO — Brian Gionta scored two goals and Carey Price made 27 saves to help Montreal close the season as the No. 6 seed in the Eastern playoffs.

Lawson hits 10 threes as Nuggets roll NBA ROUNDUP

The Associated Press DENVER — Ty Lawson made his first 10 three-pointers Saturday night and scored a career-high 37 points in leading the shorthanded Denver Nuggets to a 130-106 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves. Lawson, who was banged up from Denver’s rough-and-tumble loss at Oklahoma City one night before, didn’t score until sinking a pair of free throws at the six-minute mark of the second quarter. He then hit 10 of 11 from beyond the arc, including six during a nine-minute stretch spanning halftime that turned a tight game (41-39) into a laugher. “I just got hot,” Lawson said before walking off the court. He sank two more three-pointers during a 10-0 spurt that made it 92-62 late in the third quarter. After Lawson’s ninth three, the public address announcer simply said, “Wow.” Next time downcourt, Lawson did it again, making it 100-66. Lawson missed a running 28-foot heave, though, as the third quarter ended with Den-

ver ahead 101-69. Had he not tried the buzzer-beater and finished 10 for 10, it would have been an NBA record for most three-point conversions without a miss. Latrell Sprewell went nine for nine from behind the arc for the New York Knicks in a game against the Los Angeles Clippers in 2003. Lawson did manage to outscore the Timberwolves by himself, 24-18, in the third quarter. Denver’s 19 three-pointers in 38 attempts was a franchise record. J.R. Smith (18 points) was six for 12 from three-point range. “We just found our rhythm,” Lawson said. Lawson’s previous career high was 28 points, set just five nights earlier in a loss to Oklahoma City. “I’m celebrating this one,” Lawson said. The Nuggets improved to 17-6 since trading away All-Star Carmelo Anthony, although two of those losses came in a four-day span against the Thunder, including a 104-89 loss

Friday night at Oklahoma City. Also on Saturday: Bucks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108 Cavaliers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 MILWAUKEE — Drew Gooden had his first career triple-double and John Salmons scored 32 points for Milwaukee. Rockets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 Clippers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 HOUSTON — Chase Budinger, Kevin Martin and Brad Miller scored 16 points apiece and Chuck Hayes had 12 points and 13 rebounds to lead Houston. Wizards. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115 Hawks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 WASHINGTON — Andray Blatche scored 23 points, John Wall had 19, and Washington dealt playoff-bound Atlanta its fourth straight loss. Spurs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111 Jazz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 SAN ANTONIO — Richard Jefferson scored 20 points and San Antonio began resting up with the No. 1 seed in the Western Conference secured.

NBA SCOREBOARD SUMMARIES

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Saturday’s Games

Spurs 111, Jazz 102 UTAH (102) Miles 1-5 0-0 2, Millsap 7-12 1-1 16, A.Jefferson 10-15 3-6 23, Harris 3-11 6-8 13, Hayward 4-7 0-0 9, Favors 8-13 1-1 17, Watson 4-7 0-0 9, Evans 4-6 0-0 8, Weaver 2-4 1-2 5. Totals 43-80 12-18 102. SAN ANTONIO (111) R.Jefferson 6-10 4-4 20, Duncan 4-9 2-2 10, Blair 6-9 0-4 12, Parker 5-8 3-4 13, Ginobili 4-6 4-4 12, Bonner 3-8 0-2 7, Hill 3-6 3-3 9, Neal 4-7 2-2 12, Novak 1-1 0-0 3, Splitter 5-7 3-6 13. Totals 41-71 21-31 111. Utah 22 24 30 26 — 102 San Antonio 25 32 32 22 — 111 3-Point Goals—Utah 4-12 (Hayward 1-2, Watson 1-2, Harris 1-3, Millsap 1-3, Miles 0-1, Weaver 0-1), San Antonio 8-20 (R.Jefferson 4-7, Neal 2-4, Novak 1-1, Bonner 1-6, Hill 0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Utah 42 (A.Jefferson 8), San Antonio 41 (Splitter 8). Assists—Utah 27 (Harris 9), San Antonio 29 (Parker 7). Total Fouls—Utah 23, San Antonio 21. A—18,802 (18,797).

Rockets 99, Clippers 78 L.A. CLIPPERS (78) Moon 2-5 0-0 5, Griffin 6-18 1-2 13, Jordan 4-7 0-0 8, M.Williams 1-6 0-0 3, Gordon 7-20 3-3 19, Aminu 2-11 0-0 5, Foye 3-13 1-3 8, Smith 3-7 0-0 6, Cook 3-4 0-0 7, Diogu 2-4 0-2 4. Totals 33-95 5-10 78. HOUSTON (99) Budinger 7-15 1-1 16, Patterson 3-5 0-0 6, Hayes 6-9 0-0 12, Dragic 5-13 2-3 14, Martin 617 1-2 16, Hill 2-4 1-2 5, Lee 3-8 4-4 10, Miller 5-6 2-2 16, Harris 1-3 2-4 4, Carroll 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 38-81 13-18 99. L.A. Clippers 18 19 18 23 — 78 Houston 25 28 21 25 — 99 3-Point Goals—L.A. Clippers 7-18 (Gordon 2-5, Moon 1-2, Cook 1-2, Aminu 1-3, M.Williams 1-3, Foye 1-3), Houston 10-24 (Miller 4-4, Martin 3-7, Dragic 2-5, Budinger 1-5, Lee 0-3). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—L.A. Clippers 52 (Jordan 11), Houston 63 (Hayes 13). Assists—L.A. Clippers 18 (Gordon 6), Houston 29 (Dragic 7). Total Fouls—L.A. Clippers 16, Houston 17. Technicals—Griffin, Martin. A—18,089 (18,043).

Wizards 115, Hawks 83 ATLANTA (83) Williams 3-7 1-2 8, Horford 10-15 1-1 21, Pachulia 0-2 0-0 0, Hinrich 1-5 0-0 3, Johnson 7-15 0-0 16, Armstrong 1-4 0-0 2, Ja.Crawford 5-10 2-2 13, Teague 2-10 3-4 7, Wilkins 0-0 2-2 2, Thomas 0-0 0-0 0, Powell 2-4 0-0 4, Sy 2-4 3-3 7. Totals 33-76 12-14 83.

z-Chicago y-Boston y-Miami x-Orlando x-Atlanta x-New York x-Philadelphia x-Indiana Milwaukee Charlotte Detroit New Jersey Washington Toronto Cleveland

W 59 55 55 50 44 41 41 37 33 32 28 24 22 21 17

L 20 24 24 29 36 38 39 43 47 47 51 55 58 58 63

Pct .747 .696 .696 .633 .550 .519 .513 .463 .413 .405 .354 .304 .275 .266 .213

GB — 4 4 9 15½ 18 18½ 22½ 26½ 27 31 35 37½ 38 42½

L10 9-1 5-5 8-2 7-3 5-5 6-4 5-5 7-3 5-5 4-6 3-7 2-8 5-5 1-9 4-6

Str W-6 W-1 W-1 W-2 L-4 W-6 W-1 W-2 W-1 L-5 W-2 L-2 W-1 L-3 L-2

Home 35-5 32-8 29-11 28-11 24-16 23-17 26-13 24-16 21-19 20-19 21-19 17-21 19-21 15-24 11-29

Away 24-15 23-16 26-13 22-18 20-20 18-21 15-26 13-27 12-28 12-28 7-32 5-34 3-37 6-32 6-34

Conf 36-13 36-13 35-14 34-15 31-19 27-22 25-25 28-22 25-26 20-29 20-29 13-36 15-35 13-36 13-37

WESTERN CONFERENCE W z-San Antonio 61 y-L.A. Lakers 55 x-Dallas 54 y-Oklahoma City 53 x-Denver 49 x-Portland 47 x-New Orleans 46 x-Memphis 45 Houston 42 Phoenix 38 Utah 37 Golden State 35 L.A. Clippers 31 Sacramento 23 Minnesota 17 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division z-clinched conference

L 19 24 25 26 31 33 33 34 38 41 43 44 50 56 63

Pct .763 .696 .684 .671 .613 .588 .582 .570 .525 .481 .463 .443 .383 .291 .213

GB — 5½ 6½ 7½ 12 14 14½ 15½ 19 22½ 24 25½ 30½ 37½ 44

L10 4-6 6-4 6-4 8-2 8-2 7-3 7-3 8-2 6-4 3-7 1-9 5-5 4-6 6-4 0-10

Str W-4 L-4 W-1 W-3 W-1 W-2 W-3 W-1 W-1 L-1 L-2 W-3 L-3 L-2 L-13

Home 36-5 29-10 27-12 30-10 32-8 29-11 28-12 29-11 25-15 21-18 20-20 25-14 22-18 11-28 12-28

Away 25-14 26-14 27-13 23-16 17-23 18-22 18-21 16-23 17-23 17-23 17-23 10-30 9-32 12-28 5-35

Conf 38-12 34-15 32-17 31-19 29-21 29-21 27-22 29-20 24-26 21-28 19-31 20-29 18-33 14-35 7-43

Houston 99, L.A. Clippers 78 San Antonio 111, Utah 102 Today’s Games

Chicago at Orlando, 10 a.m. New Orleans at Memphis, 3 p.m. New Jersey at Toronto, 3 p.m. Phoenix at Dallas, 4:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m.

Boston at Miami, 12:30 p.m. Detroit at Charlotte, 3 p.m. New York at Indiana, 4 p.m. Sacramento at Golden State, 6 p.m. Monday’s Games

Miami at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Orlando at Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Utah at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 6 p.m. Oklahoma City at Sacramento, 7 p.m.

Charlotte at New Jersey, 4 p.m. Boston at Washington, 4 p.m. Toronto at Milwaukee, 5 p.m. Dallas at Houston, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Phoenix, 7 p.m. All Times PDT

WASHINGTON (115) Evans 5-5 0-0 10, Blatche 9-15 5-6 23, McGee 5-9 2-6 12, Wall 8-15 3-3 19, Jo.Crawford 3-9 0-0 6, Jeffers 4-7 5-6 13, Seraphin 2-3 0-0 4,

Bucks 108, Cavaliers 101 CLEVELAND (101) Gee 5-5 2-2 14, Hickson 3-7 5-6 11, Hollins 5-8 0-1 10, Davis 8-17 1-1 19, Parker 0-2 0-0 0, Harangody 2-5 0-0 5, Erden 2-4 2-2 6, Gibson 3-8 3-4 10, Sessions 6-11 3-3 15, Harris 2-6 1-1 5, Graham 0-1 1-2 1, Eyenga 1-3 2-2 5. Totals 37-77 20-24 101. MILWAUKEE (108) Delfino 2-5 0-0 6, Mbah a Moute 5-10 2-4 12, Gooden 6-12 3-4 15, Jennings 4-10 4-4 14, Salmons 14-18 2-2 32, Dooling 1-4 0-0 2, Sanders 1-3 0-0 2, Ilyasova 4-7 1-2 11, Maggette 0-3 44 4, Redd 4-9 0-0 10. Totals 41-81 16-20 108. Cleveland 18 26 34 23 — 101 Milwaukee 30 30 25 23 — 108 3-Point Goals—Cleveland 7-17 (Gee 2-2, Davis 2-6, Eyenga 1-1, Harangody 1-2, Gibson 1-4, Harris 0-1, Parker 0-1), Milwaukee 10-23 (Ilyasova 2-3, Salmons 2-4, Delfino 2-4, Jennings 2-4, Redd 2-5, Dooling 0-1, Gooden 0-2). Fouled Out—Gooden. Rebounds—Cleveland 43 (Hickson 12), Milwaukee 45 (Gooden 13). Assists— Cleveland 19 (Davis 6), Milwaukee 31 (Gooden 13). Total Fouls—Cleveland 18, Milwaukee 18. Technicals—Salmons. A—18,717 (18,717).

Nuggets 130, T’wolves 106

——— Saturday’s Games Washington 115, Atlanta 83 Milwaukee 108, Cleveland 101 Denver 130, Minnesota 106

3-Point Goals—Atlanta 5-9 (Johnson 2-4, Williams 1-1, Hinrich 1-2, Ja.Crawford 1-2), Washington 2-5 (Owens 2-3, Wall 0-1, Shakur 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds—Atlanta 38 (Horford 10), Washington 55 (Jeffers 11). Assists—Atlanta 20 (Teague 5), Washington 20 (Jo.Crawford 8). Total Fouls—Atlanta 20, Washington 16. Technicals—Washington Coach Saunders. A—19,771 (20,173).

Owens 4-8 0-0 10, Shakur 1-2 1-2 3, Yi 5-13 5-6 15. Totals 46-86 21-29 115. Atlanta 18 28 26 11 — 83 Washington 29 32 27 27 — 115

MINNESOTA (106) Beasley 5-12 3-4 14, Tolliver 2-5 0-0 5, Pekovic 2-3 0-0 4, Ridnour 3-11 0-0 7, Johnson 412 2-2 13, Webster 5-11 3-3 15, Ellington 2-6 4-4 10, Randolph 5-9 3-4 13, Flynn 5-6 0-1 10, Hayward 6-10 2-2 15. Totals 39-85 17-20 106. DENVER (130) Gallinari 1-6 0-1 3, Martin 5-7 2-2 12, Nene 5-5 0-8 10, Lawson 11-16 5-6 37, Forbes 2-8 6-6 10, Felton 4-10 1-1 11, Smith 6-16 0-0 18, Harrington 4-9 4-4 12, Koufos 5-6 1-6 11, Ely 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 46-88 19-34 130. Minnesota 23 28 18 37 — 106 Denver 25 40 36 29 — 130 3-Point Goals—Minnesota 11-32 (Johnson 38, Webster 2-3, Ellington 2-4, Beasley 1-3, Tolliver 1-4, Hayward 1-4, Ridnour 1-6), Denver 19-38 (Lawson 10-11, Smith 6-13, Felton 2-4, Gallinari 1-3, Forbes 0-3, Harrington 0-4). Fouled Out— None. Rebounds—Minnesota 44 (Tolliver 7), Denver 62 (Martin, Smith 8). Assists—Minnesota 22 (Flynn 9), Denver 35 (Felton 14). Total Fouls— Minnesota 24, Denver 19. Technicals—Minnesota defensive three second. A—19,155 (19,155).

leads Beavers to 7-6 win over Sun Devils From wire reports

CORVALLIS — Brian Stamps drew a bases-loaded walk with one out in the bottom of the ninth to send the No. 19 Oregon State baseball team to a 7-6 comeback victory over No. 5 Arizona State Saturday afternoon at Goss Stadium. Tied at six entering the ninth, the Beavers loaded the bases when Parker Berberet was walked intentionally. Stamps, who had entered the game earlier as a pinch runner, worked a 3-0 count from ASU reliever Mitchell Lambson. With the 2,729 in attendance on their feet, Stamps took his fourth pitch of at the at bat for a ball, scoring pinch runner Max Gordon and sending the Beavers to their fifth consecutive win and a series victory over the Sun Devils. The series concludes today, as the Beavers will be going for their first ever sweep of Arizona State in Corvallis starting at 1:05 p.m. The Sun Devils have

not been swept in a Pac-10 series since 1999. “What a comeback,” Oregon State head coach Pat Casey said. “Everything went right for us toward the end and we pulled it out. This a testament to the drive this team has this season.” The run capped off a five-run comeback for Oregon State as the Beavers found themselves down 6-2 after five innings. Arizona State’s (22-8 overall, 53 Pacific-10 Conference) Deven Marrero hit a three-run home run off OSU reliever Scott Schultz in the fifth as ASU scored four runs in the frame. Oregon State’s Josh Osich worked four innings in the start. He allowed four hits and four runs while striking out two. Oregon State tallied 14 hits to just six for Arizona State. All 14 of the Beavers’ hits were singles, with Michael Miller, Jared Norris, Kavin Keyes, Ryan Dunn, Tyler Smith and Carter Bell all posting two apiece.

Washington takes 3-0 victory over Oregon From wire reports EUGENE — Oregon junior right-hander Madison Boer suffered the loss after nine innings as Oregon’s offense couldn’t support his effort, and Washington scored three runs in the top of the 10th as UO’s defense faltered and the Ducks fell 3-0. The Ducks (14-14, 0-5 Pac10) have now lost five consecutive games and dropped their second straight series, while Washington (9-19, 2-3) has clinched its first Pac-10 series win of the year. Oregon and Washington played their second straight extra-inning game, and for the second straight night the Ducks came up short. Boer (2-1) tossed nine innings of shutout baseball and fanned nine, allowing just four hits and issuing two walks. Boer’s nine innings and nine strikeouts were both career bests, as he recorded his seventh quality start of the year. His counterpart on the evening, Aaron West (1-5), had similar numbers, allowing five hits and issuing one walk

while striking out five in nine innings on the mound. After nine scoreless innings of baseball, Scott McGough took over on the hill for Boer, and UW’s Chase Anselment reached on a fielding error by Shawn Peterson at first. B.K. Santy then put a sacrifice bunt in play, and McGough tried to get pinch runner Will Sparks out at second, but his throw to second was off the mark, allowing runners on first and second with no outs. Ty Afenir then sacrificed both runners to second and third, and McGough loaded the bases by hitting Spencer Rogers. With the bases loaded and one out, Washington successfully executed the suicide squeeze as Lindsey Meggs’ sacrifice bunt scored Sparks and broke the scoreless tie. Santy then scored on a passed ball, and Troy Scott’s one-run single plated Rogers as Washington took a 3-0 advantage.

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THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 D5

PREP ROUNDUP

Cougars sweep Panthers in baseball Bulletin report REDMOND — Mountain View scored 24 runs in two games against Redmond on Saturday, defeating the Panthers 10-7 and 14-5 in an Intermountain Hybrid baseball doubleheader. In the opener, the Cougars (94 overall) trailed 6-1 after five innings but scored nine runs in their final two at-bats. The Panthers did not help themselves late in the game, committing five errors in the last two innings. John Carroll earned the win in relief for Mountain View. Mountain View pounded out 15 hits in the second game, a 145 victory for the Cougars. John Carroll went three for four with a double and a home run to pace the Mountain View offense. Jo Carroll and Kyler Ayers each added a double and two hits for the Cougars. Mountain View recorded seven extra-base hits in the late game against Redmond. Cougar pitchers Sam Peters and Matt Miller scattered six hits over seven innings in the second game. Conner Lau and Noah Westerhuis each recorded a double for the Panthers in the later game. The two teams meet again Wednesday at Mountain View. In other prep events Saturday: BASEBALL Crook County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Roosevelt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 ——— Crook County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16 Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 PORTLAND — Crook County amassed 31 hits in two games and easily swept its Class 4A Special District 1 opponents on the road. In the first game, the Cowboys (3-4 overall) jumped to a 5-1 first-inning lead over Roosevelt. Clay McCarty blasted a solo home run in the fourth inning for Crook County, which

sparked a three-run inning. The Cowboys added three more runs in the sixth inning and five in the seventh. Sophomore pitcher Brandon Alexander posted the win in the early game. In the second contest at Marshall, Jerren Larimer tossed a complete game and posted the win as the Cowboys charged to another Special District 1 victory. McCarty was four for five at the plate with a double, while Larimer, Alexander and Cody Pfau also doubled for Crook County. The Cowboys return to action Friday with a home game against Summit. Burns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 - 9 La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 - 2 BURNS — La Pine faltered on the road as Burns piled on the runs in the nonleague doubleheader. In the first game, the Hilanders led 7-4 after three innings before tacking on two runs in fourth, two in the fifth and four in the sixth to force an early end to the game due to the 10-run rule. In the second contest, Austin Manley, Coby Ayers and Jon Ebner all recorded doubles but the Hawks (1-9 overall) failed to keep pace with their hosts, who notched seven runs in the first two innings. La Pine, which committed five errors in the road loss, resumes Sky-Em League play Tuesday by hosting Elmira. Culver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 - 18 Central Linn. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 - 8 CULVER — Scoring in every turn at bat, Culver outlasted Central Linn for an 11-10 Class 2A/1A Special District 2 victory in the first game of the doubleheader. Blake Wilda’s two-run single capped a four-run first inning for the host Bulldogs in the opener, and Jason Hooper was two for two with two runs batted in. In the nonleague second game, Wilda was two for two with three RBIs and Luke Fisher contributed

two hits as Culver completed the sweep. Freshman Kyle Bender was the complete-game winning pitcher in the second game, which ended in the bottom of the fifth inning when the Bulldogs stretched their lead to 10 runs. Culver (2-1 league, 5-9 overall) plays at home Tuesday against Santiam in a league game originally scheduled for Monday. SOFTBALL La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 - 5 Burns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 - 1 BURNS — The Hawks split their nonleague doubleheader with the Hilanders, rallying back after losing the opener to defeat Burns 5-1 in the late game. Freshman Jocelyen Gerdau struck out five and held the Hilanders to five hits in the second game to earn the win for La Pine. Offensively, Keara Parrish went three for three at the plate and Gerdau, Casandra Roes and Brittnee Welker each recorded an RBI in the second game. The Hawks (3-7 overall) are at Elmira on Tuesday. Central Linn. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 - 2 Culver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 - 5 CULVER — Bulldog pitcher Megan McKinney recorded six strikeouts to win the second game of the doubleheader 5-2 after dropping the opener 7-5. Sam Donnelly hit a pair of doubles in the first game, but Central Linn tallied five runs in the fifth inning to push past its Bulldog hosts. In the second game, Kymber Wofford led off the fourth inning with a home run, sparking a three-run inning for Culver. Ashley Wilda posted a double for the Bulldogs in the late game. Culver (2-2 Special District 3, 7-3 overall) hosts Perrydale on Monday. TRACK & FIELD Panther girls post three wins at Sandy Invite SANDY — Tefna Mitchell (100), Dakota Steen (300 hurdles)

and Redmond’s 400-meter relay team all posted wins for the Panthers at the 16-team Sandy Invitational. Team scores were not available. Leading the Redmond boys were Matt Miyamoto, who finished second in the pole vault, and Travis Simpson, who was the runner-up in the triple jump. Additionally, Tanner Manselle placed third in the boys javelin and Jeff Bierman ended the day third in the pole vault. Redmond athletes are off until next Saturday, when the track team will send competitors to the Barlow Relays in Gresham, as well as to the La Pine Invitational. Summit sets records in Roseburg ROSEBURG — At the 21-team Jim Robinson Twilight Invitational, in which six of the teams were Class 6A schools, Summit grabbed a number of wins in both girls and boys events. The Storm’s boys 400-meter relay team posted a season-best time of 43.03 seconds to win the event, Cole Thomas raced to first in the 200, Alex Needham notched a win and new personal best in the 300 hurdles (40.29) and Travis Neuman took the 3,000 in 9 minutes, 4.92 seconds. On the girls side, Megan Fristoe’s winning 3,000 time (10:29) marks a new 2011 best among Class 5A girls. Ashley Maton won the 1,500 in 4:40, which is also the best 5A girls time of the year. Lucinda Howard broke Summit’s previous school record by an inch in the girls high jump, clearing 5 feet, 4 inches. Annie Sidor also tallied a win, taking the pole vault with a mark of 9-06. Complete team scores and results were unavailable. Culver and Madras record individual wins at Burns BURNS — Madras’ Laura Sullivan paced the White Buffa-

loes with wins in the high jump and 100-meter hurdles, as well a second-place result in the 300 hurdles at the eight-team Burns Lions Invitational. Alicia Serris finished second in the 800, and teammate April Forman took third. Culver’s boys made a strong showing as Preston Quinn took first in the 1,500 and second in the 800. Tyler Funk cleared 13 feet to capture first in the pole vault, and Chris Sledge followed him with a second-place effort. On the girls side, Chantelle Seehawer placed second in the triple jump and Anna Badillo managed third in the 400. Complete team scores and results were unavailable. BOYS TENNIS Panthers tops at Madras tourney MADRAS — Luke Maxwell and Zack Powell won the No. 2 doubles tournament and Aaron Chris and Zack Jackson placed second in the No. 1 doubles category to lead Redmond to a team victory at the White Buffalo Invitational. Crook County’s Trevor Brown placed first in the No. 1 singles category and Estacada’s Martin Sasek won the No. 2 singles tourney. Competitors played seven games against every one in their category in the round-robin format, with the winner being the tennis player with the most total wins. Redmond won the team event with 134 games won, with Estacada (120) and Crook County (109) placing second and third. Sisters placed fourth and host Madras finished eighth. BOYS LACROSSE Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Roseburg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Colton Raichl scored six goals and Tyler Simpson added a pair of scores as the Lava Bears improved to 3-3 overall with the nonleague win over the Indians at Bend’s Hal Puddy Field. Bend

Saturday’s results ——— INTERMOUNTAIN HYBRID ——— First game Mountain View 100 004 5 — 10 7 1 Redmond 200 130 1 — 7 9 10 Deadmond, John Carroll (6) and Miller; Lau, Abbas (6), Anderson (7) and Branham. W — Carroll. L — Anderson. 2B — Mountain View: J. Hollister; Redmond: Abbas, Anderson. ——— Second game Mountain View 014 510 2 — 14 15 1 Redmond 211 100 0 — 5 6 2 Peters, Miller (4) and Ayers; Lucas, Anderson (4), Hanks (6) and Branham. W — Peters. L — Lucas. 2B — Mountain View: C. Hollister, Jo Carroll, Robinett, John Carroll, Peters, Ayers; Redmond: Lau, Westerhuis. HR — Mountain View: John Carroll. Class 4A SPECIAL DISTRICT 1 Crook County 410 303 5 — 16 15 1 Roosevelt 102 010 1 — 5 2 6 Alexander, Buss (6) and Cleveland; Johnson and Bergstrom. W—Alexander. L—Johnson. 2B—Crook County: Cleveland, Pfau. 3B—Crook County: Brown, Pfau. HR—Crook County: McCarty; Roosevelt: Hart. Class 4A SPECIAL DISTRICT 1 (Five innings)

Crook County 661 03 — 16 16 2 Marshall 000 00 — 0 2 6 Larimer and Cleveland; Fletcher, Juntkeit (2), Loffelt (4) and Thomlinson. W—Larimer. L—Fletcher. 2B—Crook County: Larimer, McCarty, Alexander, Pfau. 3B-Crook County: Buss. ——— NONCONFERENCE ——— First game (Six innings) La Pine 112 100 — 5 2 3 Burns 214 224 — 15 8 5 Manley, Friton (3), Brusseau (6) and Carpenter; Stampke, Sim (4) and Piper. W—Stampke. L—Manley. 2B—Burns: Piper. HR—Burns: Cooper 4th. ——— Second game La Pine 000 020 0 — 2 5 5 Burns 430 002 x — 9 6 1 Sullivan, Siauw (3) and Manley; Coloham and Stampke. W— Coloham. L—Sullivan. 2B—Burns: Stampke; La Pine: Manley, Ayers, Ebner. 3B—Burns: Coloham. Class 2A/1A SPECIAL DISTRICT 2 First game Central Linn 102 430 0 — 10 6 4 Culver 412 121 x — 11 6 4 Williams, Heiss (3) and Champ; Gonzalez, Fisher (4), Gibson (4) and Fisher, Gonzalez (4), Fisher (4). W—Gibson. L—Williams. 2B—Central Linn: Miller 2, Barrett; Culver: Fisher, Gonzalez, Hooper.

NONCONFERENCE Second game (Five innings) Central Linn 042 11 — 8 6 7 Culver 642 51 — 18 8 3 Putney, (relievers not available) and Miller; Bender and Fisher. W—Bender. L—Putney. 2B—Central Linn: Williams.

SOFTBALL Saturday’s results ——— NONCONFERENCE ——— First game La Pine 011 02 — 7 11 7 Burns 421 207 — 16 9 2 B. Owen, Gerdau (5) and Maxfield, Terrell (5); Bodenn and Hodge. W — Bodenn. L — B. Owen. 2B — La Pine: Maxfield, B. Welker. HR — Burns: Modge. ——— Second game La Pine 001 210 1 — 5 14 1 Burns 100 000 0 — 1 5 2 Gerdau and Maxfield; Bodenn and Hodge. W — Gerdau. L — Bodenn. 2B — La Pine: Welker, Michael.

Central Linn Culver

——— Class 2A/1A SPECIAL DISTRICT 3 000 105 1 — 211 001 0 —

7 10 0 5 11 3

Marchabanks and Buckridge; McKinney and Donnelly. W— Marchbanks. L—McKinney. 2B—Central Linn: Sloan; Culver: Donnelly 2, McKinney. 3B—Central Linn: Bag. ——— NONCONFERENCE Central Linn 200 000 0 — 2 5 1 Culver 001 310 x — 5 6 1 Bag and Buckridge; McKinney and Donnelly. W—McKinney. L—Bag. 2B—Central Linn: Bag; Culver: Wilda. 3B—Culver: Wofford. HR—Culver: Wofford. Crook County 11, Marshall 5

TENNIS Boys Saturday’s Results ——— SUMMIT TOURNAMENT At Athletic Club of Bend Summit 7, Bend 1. Summit 7, Hermiston 1 Sprague 8, Bend 0 Sprague 8, Mountain View 0 Mountain View 8, Hood River Valley 0 ——— WHITE BUFFALO INVITATIONAL At Madras Team scores — Redmond 134, Estacada 120, Crook County

109, Sisters 101, Central 94, Cascade 90 No. 1 Singles (games won in parentheses) First Place: Trevor Brown, Crook County, 44 Second Place: Ben Fullhart, Sisters, 33 Third Place: Chase Stalcup, Estacada, 28 No. 2 Singles First place: Martin Sasek, Estacada, 35 Second place: Paul Fullhart, Sisters, 33 Third place: Jared Anderson, Crook County, 32 No. 1 Doubles First place: Paul Spivey/Bryce Martin, Vale, 40 Second place: Aaron Chris/Zack Jackson, Redmond, 38 Third place: Alexsis Penaloza/Caleb Freshour, Madras, 23 No. 2 Doubles First place: Luke Maxwell/Zack Powell, Redmond, 40 Second place: Trevor Standen/J.T. Harris, Sisters, 26 Third place: Eliceo Garcia/Jordan Gemelas, Madras, 20 (head to head win) Fourth place: Gabe Alvarez/Dakota Umbarger, Crook County, 20

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The camera is affectionately known as WALLE, its two lenses reminiscent of the eyes on the animated movie robot. It shoots sports in 3-D, a scifi sight that’s the product of the newest way fans can watch games on TV. Few are doing so for now. In fact ESPN, which launched a 3D network last summer, doesn’t even have exact numbers on how many people are putting on their glasses and tuning in. But the focus is on working out the kinks of broadcasting sports in 3-D, so the network will be ready when the audience starts to grow. Research firm DisplaySearch estimated that fewer than 1.6 million 3-D capable sets were sold in the U.S. last year, and not all those owners are necessarily taking advantage of 3-D programming. Yet television manufacturers and movie studios are committed to the medium, and sales are expected to increase exponentially in the next few years. At last month’s Big East men’s basketball tournament, ESPN personnel in their 3-D production truck outside Madison Square Garden celebrated a particularly nifty shot from an overhead angle that captured the ball bouncing straight up from the rim and then down through the net. Cameraman Eric Grubb, who’s worked for the network

Research firm DisplaySearch estimated that fewer than 1.6 million 3-D capable sets were sold in the U.S. last year, and not all those owners are necessarily taking advantage of 3-D programming. Yet television manufacturers and movie studios are committed to the medium, and sales are expected to increase exponentially in the next few years. for a quarter-century, has had to relearn many of his instincts developed over the years. For 2D TV, he tends to zoom a lot. For 3-D, he has to remind himself to stay wide, to “let the shot speak for itself.” “You try to create a human experience,” coordinating producer Phil Orlins said. “Eyes don’t zoom.” In the truck, they try to cut between shots at a slower pace. Viewers say that when a 3-D program switches from one shot to another, it sometimes looks out of focus. It’s not, but that’s how the brain perceives the shift. In other cases, 3-D is more susceptible to technical difficulties that really will give you a headache. Unlike filming a movie, sports are live and have to be shot right the first time — and the need for two cameras to create the 3-D image greatly increases the odds something will go awry. If the color is slightly different in the right camera than the left, the viewer’s brain will sense

the picture is wrong. If the two transmissions are off by a split second, the broadcast appears as though it’s underwater. Even when the technology is working perfectly, some sports just look better in 3-D than others. Orlins says the three keys are proximity, predictability, and a three-dimensional playing surface. The X Games are a 3-D producer’s dream. Proximity: When Shaun White is snowboarding down the halfpipe, the camera can capture him in a tight shot. Predictability: The director knows ahead of time the basic path of his run. Playing surface: The steepness and enormity of

the halfpipe come to life in 3-D. Conversely, Orlins said, “if the court is flat, it still looks flat.” A very different sort of competition — golf — also thrives in 3-D. Last year, the Masters was the first major sports event broadcast live internationally on TV and the Internet in 3-D. ESPN 3D aired two hours from each round this week. “That commitment and embracing technology will just enhance the enjoyment for the fans of the Masters,” ESPN executive vice president John Wildhack said. Baseball isn’t anywhere near as good a fit because it requires too wide a shot. “People think it will pop out at you,” Orlins said of the ball flying off the bat. “But it travels too far.” Some sports also allow for more cost-efficient 3-D productions. For the kinds of shots needed for boxing and X Games, ESPN could use the same camera setup for 2-D and 3-D, which requires fewer personnel. Orlins estimated he needed 14 extra people at the Big East tournament to do a separate 3-D

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jumped ahead early, grabbing a 3-1 lead by the end of the first quarter and held a 7-2 advantage at halftime. The Lava Bears resume High Desert League play Wednesday with a home game against Sisters. Sisters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Riverdale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 SISTERS — Beau Sitzke scored three goals and Jacob Akaka added two as the Outlaws won their fifth straight game and improved to 5-1 on the season. Sisters’ goalkeeper Brennan Layne led the Outlaw defense, holding Riverdale to its secondlowest goal total of the season. “He makes us all look good,” Sisters coach Bill Rexford said. The Outlaws host Summit on Monday. Friday’s result BOYS LACROSSE Riverdale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Tyler Simpson scored three goals and Colton Raichl added two, but the Lava Bears fell in the nonleague matchup at home. Riverdale led 8-3 at halftime, and while Bend got within three goals in the second half, the Bears did not catch up to the visiting Mavericks.

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D6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Masters Continued from D1 “It’s a great position to be in,” McIlroy said. “I feel comfortable with my game, comfortable with the way I prepared, and all of a sudden I’m finally feeling comfortable on this golf course. With a combination like that, you’re going to feel pretty good.” He is making it look easy. That bounce in his step turned into a swagger as he walked to the 18th tee, ripped another drive and walked toward the green to a loud ovation — perhaps a preview to a coronation. Following him around Augusta National was U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell, who missed the cut but didn’t want to miss out on his countryman having a chance to give Europe another major. “He just texted me and told me he loves me,” McIlroy said. “I don’t know if that’s him or the beer talking. No, it’s great to see him out there and I appreciate his support. He’s going to know how I’m feeling. Here’s a major champion and he got it done last year at Pebble. Hopefully, I can emulate that feeling and get a major myself.” McIlroy was at 12-under 204 and will play in the final group today with Cabrera, who won the Masters two years ago and is the only major champion within six shots of McIlroy. Cabrera has fallen to No. 97 in the world, with only two top 10s in the last year. He didn’t think he had much of a chance when he arrived at Augusta. But he’s starting to believe after a 67. “Now that I see that I’m playing well, I sure think I can do it,” Cabrera said. The group at 8-under 208 also includes Schwartzel (68), Choi (71) and Day, the 23-year-old Australian who took the lead on the front nine with a long birdie on No. 5, but paid for his aggressive putting and had to settle for a 72. “I’m not getting ahead of myself,” McIlroy said. “I know how leads can dwindle very quickly. I have to go out there tomorrow, not take anything for granted, and go out and play as hard as I’ve played the last three days. If I

Scott, Cabrera, Schwartzel rise on moving day at the Masters

Chris O’Meara / The Associated Press

Tiger Woods nearly falls backwards after hitting out of the rough on the 17th hole during the third round of the Masters Saturday in Augusta, Ga. can do that, hopefully things will go my way.” The challenge from Woods, who started the third round only three shots behind, never materialized. He squandered birdie chances with a fairway metal that went too long on the par-5 eighth, a 5foot birdie putt that never had a chance on No. 9, a shocking miss for par from 2 feet on No. 11 and a three-putt par on the 15th after an amazing hook around the trees that barely cleared the water. “The way he played yesterday, you would expect him to come and play well,” McIlroy said. “Sometimes it happens, and sometimes it doesn’t. But as I said, I really don’t care about anyone else in this golf tournament, other than myself.” Woods ended his streak of 16 rounds at par or better at a major

he won four times. The final hole summed up his day, perhaps the tournament, and the state of golf as it prepares for the next generation. For so many years, it was Woods who delivered big birdies that made everyone else take notice. This time, it was McIlroy who forced Woods to back off. He then hit his approach over the green and missed a 6-foot par putt. “I just made nothing,” Woods said. “I hit the ball well all day. That wasn’t the problem. Take away the two three-putts there, a couple of unforced errors and it should have been a pretty good round.” McIlroy didn’t have to make any such excuses. He has made only three bogeys over three rounds, and no three-putts, always a key at the

Disc Continued from D1 Tournament director Ryan Lane said the event is the first Professional Disc Golf Association-sanctioned tournament to take place inside Bend’s city limits. The second — and final — round of the tournament starts today at 9:30 a.m., and division winners will be crowned based on their two-day aggregate score. The disc golf course — whose longest hole is 1,078 feet, or more than 3 1⁄2 football fields from “tee” to “green” — is a temporary feature at the park. The baskets, which serve as the “cups” in disc golf, will be taken down this afternoon at the conclusion of the tournament, but Lane said he has been working with the Bend Park & Recreation District for a number of years to install a permanent course at Pine Nursery. If that dream becomes reality, Lane said it will likely be in the form of an 18-hole course located on the west side of the park. Those holes are numbered accordingly for the tournament, and the other nine holes are labeled A through I. “The purpose of this (tournament) is to demonstrate what we have and get all these folks knowledgeable about the layout and everything,” Lane said. The Gandy Goose is a more established event — this being its 15th edition — but this year is the tournament’s first at Pine Nursery. Eighteen teams started pool play in two divisions Saturday morning. The action resumes today at 8 a.m. to determine bracket winners. The B bracket final starts at 2 p.m., and the A bracket final begins

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Kevin Chow, of Bend, throws his disc at a basket while participating in the Disc Go Ball tournament Saturday at Pine Nursery Community Park in Bend. one hour later. Ultimate, as the sport is commonly known, is played with two opposing teams of seven players each, plus substitutes. Field dimensions are 70 yards

by 40 yards, with end zone areas that are another 25 yards deep. Games at the Gandy Goose are being played to 15 points — teams must win by two — or to a 100-minute time

COMING

Masters. He and Day were tied for the lead at 9 under as they made their way through Amen Corner, and McIlroy seized control on the 13th. A bold tee shot down the left side, where Rae’s Creek winds its way along the azaleas, gave McIlroy a clear shot with a 6-iron on the green and he two-putted for a birdie. Day attacked the flag in the back left corner and went long, into the second cut. His delicate chip rolled back toward him, he putted up the slope about 6 feet below the hole and missed the putt to make bogey. Day fell further behind as McIlroy played well beyond his 21 years. The Australian was saved on the par-5 15th when his shot came up short, but stayed dry because the grass is not shaved as low as it normally is. He was able

limit. Teams advance the disc by passing from player to player. Passes caught in the end zone result in a point, while dropped passes result in a turnover. Gandy Goose tournament director Ryan Bellow said Ultimate games are played without referee oversight, and players are supposed to adhere to the “spirit of the game” regarding fouls and disputes. On Saturday, the teams were a motley menagerie of color and fashion. Various players could be seen competing in, among other things, neckties, metallic jackets and tights, fluorescenthued clothing, grass skirts, military fatigues and “onesies.” Matt Bartolotti helped his squad, Miracle on Ice, to a good start by catching the winning point in a neck-and-neck battle with Krewe Débauche, a squad from Eugene, during the second round of games Saturday. Bartolotti said the average age of his Miracle on Ice teammates, who hail from Bend and Portland, is probably 36 or 37, which was a bit of a concern in matching up with their younger opponents. “We were a little worried about their sheer athleticism and strength,” Bartolotti said of Krewe Débauche. But experience won out in the end when Bartolotti, despite being tightly guarded by his defender, hauled in a cross-wind pass for a 13-11 victory. As with the disc golf, the wind required the Ultimate players to make some style adjustments, but they seemed to manage. “Unless you’re a really skilled player, it’s really difficult to advance any disc into the wind, but you’ll see some people who have worked on it long enough,” Bartolotti said. “And then it causes you to play a lot of inside

AUGUSTA, Ga. — Adam Scott will take a 67 any day at Augusta National. Doing it on moving day at the Masters made it that much better. The Australian made up some serious ground on the Masters leaderboard Saturday after matching Angel Cabrera and Bubba Watson for low round of the day. Tied for sixth at 7-under, Scott is five shots behind leader Rory McIlroy. “I felt like I played OK the first two days, just a little bit off,” Scott said. “But today, everything kind of fell into place. It was nice to get a bit of momentum going and keep it going for most of the round.” Cabrera, Watson, Charl Schwartzel and Bo Van Pelt also made big moves. Cabrera, the 2009 Masters champion, and Schwartzel are tied for second at 8-under with K.J. Choi and Jason Day, while Van Pelt is in eighth place behind Scott and Luke Donald. Going low is one way to climb the leaderboard. But Scott and Co. got a big assist

from the guys who’d been ahead of them, too. The last five groups Saturday were a cumulative 11 over, with only McIlroy and Choi shooting below par. “I think there was a little bit less expectations because those (last groups) are always going to have a little bit more pressure than what we had,” Schwartzel said. “No disrespect to them, but playing out in front there, I don’t think you’re going to go very far a lot of times unless you really get something going. “It was almost nice to tee off where I did and sort of sneak in from behind.” Scott hasn’t finished in the top 10 at the Masters since 2002, his first trip to Augusta National. But he arrived here full of confidence after a tie for sixth at Doral. “They always say the Masters starts on the back nine on Sunday. I’ve got to get myself there first,” Scott said. “I’ve got still at least another solid nine holes to play before I’ve got a real chance.” — The Associated Press

to get up-and-down for birdie to match another two-putt birdie by McIlroy. On the 16th, both were on the bottom shelf. Day gunned his putt about 6 feet past the hole and missed it coming back. McIlroy rolled his with better pace to pick up an easy par, and another stroke. Then came the 17th, where McIlroy hooked his approach around the pines to the back of the green, then holed the slick putt that unleashed his emotions and set off the loudest roar of the day. It was the third straight day for McIlroy and Day to play in the same group. Saturday was different, though, and as both tried to get into position for a green jacket, there was a lot less

chatter. “I still went out there and had fun,” Day said. “Obviously, I made a few disappointing choices. But I’m going to go out there tomorrow and I’ve got a game plan that I want to stick to. And if I can do that and hole some putts, hopefully I can try and chase them down.” Missing from the pack are the Americans. Bo Van Pelt was the low American after a 68 put him in eighth place, six shots behind. Woods was in the group seven shots behind along with 51-yearold Fred Couples and Bubba Watson. If an international player wins, it will be the first time ever that Americans did not own any of the four majors or the Ryder Cup.

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Yellow Lab Pups, males, $250, females $300, ready now, 541-447-1323.

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TV, Stereo and Video

Tools

Heating and Stoves

Beautiful gaming/dining table; overstuffed loveseat (new); lamp table w/ball &claw feet; mannequin; primitive cabinets; contemporary metal chandelier. 541-389-5408

Private collector buying postage stamp albums & collections, world-wide and U.S. 573-286-4343 (local, cell #)

19” Sylvania TV + DVD player, in excellent condition, $40. 541-279-9013 for more info. FREE 35” TV with stand, and it works! Very heavy - You haul. 541-504-4418 Stereo set in solid Oak cabinet, CD, amplifier, dual cassette, $225. 541-419-0613 TC audio speakers (2), solid oak, on pedestals, $150 & Audio Super Bass, on rollers, in solid oak cabinet, $150. 541-419-0613.

Rollaway toolbox, has 8 drawers & cabinet, $180. 503-933-0814, local

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Bed, King size, pilliow top, exc. cond., stored in plastic, $200, Local 503-933-0814. Bed, Queen size, exc. cond., was in guest room, $175, Local 503-933-0814. Furniture

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Crafts and Hobbies Alpaca Yarn, various colors/ blends/sparkle. 175yds/skein $7.50-8.50 ea. 541-385-4989

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Exercise Equipment Weider total Body Works 5000 weight training system. Exc. cond. $50. 541-330-1814.

Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron & 1060 SE 3rd St., Bend • 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com GENERATE SOME excitement in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Genuine lthr king-size recliner, made in USA, perfect, dark green, $100. 541-330-5819 KENMORE White 30” freestanding gas range, new $1,699. Asking $450. 541-549-8626. Liquidating Appliances, new & reconditioned, guaranteed. Lance & Sandy’s Maytag, 541-385-5418

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D . For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

Antiques & Collectibles

Cigar Humidor, Harley Davidson, 14”x10”x6”, $150, 541-420-4279. Circus Barbie, 1st in series 1994, in box, $198, call 541-389-8745. Lord of the Rings postage stamp collection from New Zealand, $50. 541-389-9377 to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

!Appliances! A-1 Quality & Honesty!

A-1 Washers & Dryers $125 each. Full Warranty. Free Del. Also wanted W/D’s dead or alive. 541-280-7355.

B e n d

Coins & Stamps

Furniture & Appliances The Bulletin reserves the right Amish Rocker, like new, $200, please call for more info 541-317-5154.

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Professional Training for Obedi211 ence, Upland & Waterfowl for all breeds. Labrador & PuChildren’s Items delpointer pups & started dogs as well, 541-680-0009. Beautiful white Pottery Barn style crib, exlnt cond, linen Queensland Heelers drawer, $200. 541-385-6760 Standards & mini,$150 & up. 541-280-1537 Peg Perego Primma Papa high http://rightwayranch.wordpress.com/ chair, navy cover, great condition, $100. 541-385-6760 Radio Elec. fence collars for dogs, new, $30 ea., 212 503-933-0814, local. Saint Bernard Rescue Now Adopting! saintrescue.org/oregon.htm Males & Females. Large breed exper. req’d. Foster homes desperately needed, too! Call Jeff: 541-390-1353

C h a n d l e r

Furniture & Appliances

541-598-4643. Pomeranian, 1.5 yr female, very sweet, current shots, great with all ages and all animals! approved home only. $500 firm. Londa @ 541-420-4498

Free Foster Cats, vaccinated & altered, to good homes, Call Sherry, 541-548-5516.

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Labrador Pups, AKC, Choco- Loveseat with sofa, new, light blue and beige, $400. lates & Yellows, $500; Blacks, 541-549-8626. $450. Dew claws, 1st shots & wormed. Call 541-536-5385 NEED TO CANCEL w w w.w elc o m ela b s.c o m YOUR AD? The Bulletin Classifieds Malti-Poos, 2 females, born has an "After Hours" Line 9/9/10, all puppy shots, deCall 541-383-2371 24 hrs. wormed, rabies shots & to cancel your ad! health checked, $375, no shipping call, 541-350-5106, Off-white leather couch, 82” no AM Calls. excellent condition, $250. Call 541-548-7137 MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS two males, 8 weeks old, $300 Queen size Flexsteel hideabed, each. 541-416-3677 dark taupe, lightly used, $95. 541-419-0613 Parti Pomeranian Male puppy ready for a new home! No Refrigerator, Frigidaire apt size, papers. First 2 sets of shots 1 yr old, excellent cond, done. $350. Call Jamie at $175. 503-933-0814 local 541-416-0175 541-390-6053 Rocking Chairs, large pine, arms, PEOPLE giving pets away are $50; small antique pressback, advised to be selective about upholstered,$75,541-480-5274 the new owners. For the Second Hand protection of the animal, a Mattresses, sets & personal visit to the animal's new home is recommended. singles, call

English Mastiff puppies. Males & females, Fawns & 1 Brindle. Shots, health guarantee, ready to go. $1000ea; $1500 for the Brindle. 541-279-1437

German Shepherd Pups, AKC. Health guarantee. $850 Chihuahua Pup, rare, blue 509-406-3717 long haired male, $200 cash, 541-678-7599 Golden Retriever Pups exc. quality, parents OFA, good Dachshund, AKC 2-yr old male, hips, $650. 541-318-3396. $375. DNA, pedigree, red & white piebald. 541-420-6044 Kelpie/Red Heeler Mix, neutered with shots, $100, 541-576-3701,503-310-2514

DACHSHUND MINI Longhaired puppies AKC. $500+ up. 30% off if you spay or neuter. 541-598-7417

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Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

Tower of London Castle, (Lenox porcelain 1995) mint cond. 541-848-8230.

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Golf Equipment 2003 Club Car, full curtains, 2 yr-old batteries, very good cond. $3800. 541-382-3275 Golf: New men’s Dunlop set, $125; Big Bertha driver, $25, 541-389-9045

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Guns & Hunting and Fishing 1957 Marlin lever action 336 SC, 35 REM, mint cond. $450. 541-508-6301 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies. 541-408-6900. DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines $12 or 2 weeks $18! Ad must include price of single item of $500 or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Fly Rod, Portland, w/case, $75. Reel, Pflueger automatic, $75. 503-933-0814, local GUNS Buy, Sell, Trade 541-728-1036. HANDGUN SAFETY CLASS for concealed license. NRA, Police Firearms Instructor, Lt. Gary DeKorte Thur. April 14, 6:30-10:30 pm. Call Kevin, Centwise, for reservations $40. 541-548-4422 Lyman .50 cal Plains Pistol w/ black powder supplies. Pics: http://jalbum.net/a/941951 $300/offer 541-410-8029 OR + UTAH CCW: Required class Oregon and Utah Concealed License. Saturday April 16 9:30 a.m. at Madras Range. $100 includes Photo required by Utah, Call Paul Sumner (541)475-7277 for preregistration and info SIG 226 9MM NIB, $595. Remington 7600 pump 30-06, $385, 541-815-4901. Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, 503-351-2746 Winchesters, Model 1876,1886, 1894, 1892, 64, & more sights & guns, 541-815-4901

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Health and Beauty Items GOT THYROID PROBLEMS? Discover why 90% of women on thyroid replacement hormones are guaranteed to continue suffering with thyroid symptoms.....and what you can do to finally end suffering once and for all!

Call For Free DVD: Thyroid Secrets: What to do when the medication doesn’t work.

866-700-1414 (24 hr recorded message)

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Building Materials

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Computers THE BULLETIN requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

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Photography CANON AE1, with 2 lenses, and accessories, $100. 541-389-3511.

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Cabinet Refacing & Refinishing. Save Thousands! Most jobs completed in 5 days or less. Best Pricing in the Industry.

541-647-8261 REDMOND Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 1242 S. Hwy 97 541-548-1406 Open to the public .

The Hardwood Outlet Wood Floor Super Store

Misc. Items BBQ, electric, with Rotisserie, for patio, clean, $50 OBO, Redmond, 541-526-0897. BBQ’s, Weber, Brinkman smoker, Magic Chef Patio stand up elec, $50 ea., 541-419-0613. BUYING AND SELLING All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fleming, 541-382-9419.

Buying Diamonds /Gold for Cash SAXON'S FINE JEWELERS

541-389-6655 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. Crypt-Lawn, dbl depth for 2 full caskets at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, Bend, Meadow Pond Garden. Lot 2C, space 2, Deed #3664. $1300. 541-848-7600; 541-848-7599 GENERATE SOME EXCITEMENT IN YOUR NEIGBORHOOD. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Home Alarm System, door & window sensors, remote keypad, $100. 503-933-0814 King size 7-pc comforter set, new, was $200, sell $50. 503-933-0814 local Lava Lamp, 4-ft tall, beautiful coral color, $50. Call 503-933-0814, local. Metal shelving in great shape, 20-30 units @ $30 each (assembled). 541-408-7358 The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days • Private Party Only • Total of items advertised must equal $200 or Less • Limit one ad per month • 3-ad limit for same item advertised within 3 months 541-385-5809 • Fax 541-385-5802 Towable BBQ, restaurant grade, made in Texas, cost $12,000, sell $1500, 541-419-0613. Wanted - paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. McIntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

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Commercial / Ofice Equipment &Fixtures 1979 IBM Selectric II, with correcting feature, perfect condition, $225. 541-617-6103

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Tools Chainsaw, Homelite, 20” bar, excellent cond, used little, $150. 503-933-0814 local Hydraulic pump and hydraulic cylinder, both for $135. 541-410-3425.

• Laminate from .79¢ sq.ft. • Hardwood from $2.99 sq.ft. 541-322-0496 266

Heating and Stoves Fireplace, electric, fits in corner, with blower, $150, please call 541-419-0613.

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodFor newspaper delivery , stoves has been limited to call the Circulation Dept. models which have been at 541-385-5800 certified by the Oregon DeTo place an ad, call partment of Environmental 541-385-5809 or email Quality (DEQ) and the fedclassified@bendbulletin.com eral Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A certified woodstove may be identified by its cerSUPER TOP SOIL tification label, which is per- www.hersheysoilandbark.com manently attached to the Screened, soil & compost stove. The Bulletin will not mixed, no rocks/clods. High knowingly accept advertising humus level, exc. for flower for the sale of uncertified beds, lawns, gardens, woodstoves. straight screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you 267 haul. 541-548-3949.

Fuel and Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection.

• A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4’ x 4’ x 8’

Yardman lawn mower, $125. 541-549-8626

Your Backyard Birdfeeding Specialists!

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

All Year Dependable Firewood: Split/dry lodgepole, $90 for 1/2 cord; $160 for 1; or $300 for 2. Bend del. Cash Check Visa/MC 541-420-3484

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Gardening Supplies & Equipment Alpaca Manure - FREE - Great for your garden. You load & haul. 541-977-8013

BarkTurfSoil.com Instant Landscaping Co. BULK GARDEN MATERIALS Wholesale Peat Moss Sales

541-389-9663

Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily Have Gravel Will Travel! Cinders, topsoil, fill material, etc. Excavation & septic systems. Call Abbas Construction CCB#78840, 541-548-6812.

Forum Center, Bend 541-617-8840 www.wbu.com/bend 270

Lost and Found Camera parts, misc jewelry found here at Redmond Airport Terminal Building. Call to identify: 541-504-3499 Found Diamond Ring, Ashley Parking Lot, Wagner Mall, Redmond, around 3/21, call to ID, 541-420-7166. FOUND Toyota keys + 3 additional, on Brookswood 4/6. Call to identify 541-389-1629 Lost: Heirloom Ring, large oval black Onyx, sterling silver, 3/28 or 29?, Tumalo State park or area near Costco? REWARD, 503-829-6208. Maglite, found in Terrebonne area. Call to identify. 541-548-0175 REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society in Bend, 541-382-3537 Redmond, 541-923-0882 Prineville, 541-447-7178; OR Craft Cats, 541-389-8420.


E2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

P U ZZL E A N SWE R O N PAG E E3

PLACE AN AD

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

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.

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)

*Must state prices in ad

A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time

CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. SATURDAY by telephone 10:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.

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.

Farm Market

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Farm Equipment and Machinery

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Hay, Grain and Feed

Farmers Column

Looking for Employment

Custom No-till Seeding

10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1461 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB #173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Barber or Beautician wanted, for established salon, lots of walk-ins, lease only. 541-280-4376.

Computer - IT and Network Administrator

Director of Development Seeking full-time Director of Development to create and implement a comprehensive strategy and annual plans, prepare grant applications, and direct agency outreach. Qualifications: 5 years non-profit experience, bachelor’s, and track record of securing grants and donations. Go to www.heartoforegon.org/jobs.htm for application instructions. Applications are due 4/18/11 at 8am.

Grass, Alfalfa & Grain Crops All of Central Oregon.

Call 541-419-2713

421

The Bulletin Classiieds

Schools and Training

Wheat Straw: Certified & Bedding Straw & Garden Straw; Barley Straw; Compost; 541-546-6171.

Advertise in 30 Daily newspapers! $525/25-words, 3days. Reach 3 million classified readers in Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Montana, Washington & Utah. (916) 288-6019 email: elizabeth@cnpa.com for the Pacific Northwest Daily Connection. (PNDC)

Horses and Equipment

Special Low New Kubota BX 2360 With Loader, 4X4, 23.5 HP, R-4 Industrial Tires, Power Steering.

Sale Price $11,999

COLT STARTING We build solid foundations that stay with the horse forever. No 30 day wonders, 90s rates. Steeldust Stables 541-419-3405 WANTED: Horse or utility trailers for consignment or purchase. KMR Trailer Sales, 541-389-7857 www.kigers.com

Financing on approved credit.

MIDSTATE POWER PRODUCTS 541-548-6744 Redmond Water Tanks, 1500 gallon capacity and less, 4 tanks in all, $400. 541-408-7358

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FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!

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0% APR Financing

Employment

345

Livestock & Equipment 3-A Livestock Supplies • Panels • Gates • Feeders Now galvanized! • 6-Rail 12 ft. panels, $101 • 6-Rail 16 ft. panels, $117 Custom sizes available 541-475-1255

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 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

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) Oregon Contractor License Education Home Study Format. $169 Includes ALL Course Materials Call COBA (541) 389-1058

Phlebotomy classes begin May 2nd. Registration now open: www.oregonmedicaltraining.com 541-343-3100 TRUCK SCHOOL www.IITR.net Redmond Campus Student Loans/Job Waiting Toll Free 1-888-438-2235

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Sales Southwest Bend

Sales Redmond Area

Look What I Found!

Estate Sale-Everything in house must go! No reasonable offers refused. Sat-Sun, 10-5, 59820 Cheyenne (DRW).

Forced 2 Move Sale! Greens at Redmond, 4460 Trevino Ct., Fri-Sat, 2 wkends, 9-4. Lots of everything, new/like new. Fridge/loveseat/pingpong tbl

You'll find a little bit of everything in The Bulletin's daily garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email classified@bendbulletin.com

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Sales Northwest Bend GARAGE SALE: 10-4 Sat-Sun, 65318 85th St., in Tumalo. Tools, some furniture, flatbed trailer, and lots more!

Moving Sale! Sat-Sun, 9-5. 18475 Pinehurst Rd, Tumalo. Freezer, tractor/implements, lawn tractor, paddle boat...

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Sales Northeast Bend

HH FREE HH Garage Sale Kit 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

Moving Sale: Sat. & Sun. 8-2, 1555 SW 17th St, clothes, furniture, misc. tools, and much more!

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Sales Other Areas 400 GARAGE SALES! Portland’s LARGEST Garage Sale. Sat., April 16, 8 to 5 at Portland Expo Center. www.portlandgsale.com

CAUTION

READERS:

Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please investigate thoroughly.

AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Train Seeking a Ranch Job, full or for high paying Aviation part time, 15 years exp. at Maintenance Career. FAA apWillows Ranch. Call Miguel proved program. Financial 541-390-5033. For referaid if qualified - Housing ences, call Judy 541-549-1248 available. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance. 470 1-877-804-5293. (PNDC)

Oregon Medical Training PCS

Estate Sales

I provide housekeeping & caregiving svcs, & have 20+ yrs experience. 541-508-6403

Domestic & In-Home Positions Caregiver for 2: Diabetic man, woman & man memory care. Need compassionate, dedicated, friendly RN or (?): background check, license, current status, dedicated woman. 15-20/hr. (541) 921-1100

Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when responding to ANY online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 503-731-4075

Caregivers Bend Agency has full-time openings for caregivers in group home settings. On the job training provided, must pass criminal, drug & driving checks. $10.70 per hour. Full Time, benefits include health insurance & paid time off. Apply in person at Residential Assistance Program, 1334 NE 2nd St. Bend.

The Bulletin is your Employment Marketplace Call

541-385-5809 to advertise! www.bendbulletin.com

If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Kevin O’Connell Classified Department Manager The Bulletin

Responsible for the company’s networks, servers, network security, telephone and email systems. Responsibilities will include: Windows servers, network servers, firewall, PC setup, IT security and support for over 45 internal users and budgeting and forecasting of IT needs. Monitor and maintain the company’s web site, online sales, and social networks. Provide support at six locations in north Central Oregon. Knowledge of IBM iSeries a plus. Skills DO YOU NEED A should include hands-on GREAT EMPLOYEE knowledge of installation, reRIGHT NOW? pair and modification of IT Call The Bulletin before 11 hardware including wireless, a.m. and get an ad in to and software. Working publish the next day! knowledge of Microsoft 385-5809. Server and related products. VIEW the Classifieds at: Working knowledge of comwww.bendbulletin.com ponents and the ability to configure new systems. Competitive wage, plus excellent benefit package, DOE. Call 541-989-8221 for appli- FIRE CHIEF JOB OPENING! In cation, or mail resume to beautiful Big Sky, Montana. MCGG Box 367, Lexington, Applications accepted OR 97839. through 4/30/11 from experienced EMS/Fire professionNeed Seasonal help? als to lead combination deNeed Part-time help? partment. Visit Need Full-time help? www.BigSkyFire.org for deAdvertise your open positions. tails. (PNDC) The Bulletin Classifieds

Independent Contractor

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809

Part-time CNA, caregiver needed for elderly bedridden woman. Sunday - Tuesday. 541-419-3405.

Advertising Account Executive

The Bulletin is looking for a professional sales and marketing person to help our local customers grow their businesses with an expanding list of broad-reach and targeted products. This full time position requires a demonstrable background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting. 2-4 years of outside advertising sales experience is preferable however we will train the right candidate. The position offers a competitive compensation package including benefits, and rewards an aggressive, customer focused salesperson with unlimited earning potential. Please send your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Sean L. Tate Advertising Manager state@bendbulletin.com You may also drop off your resume in person or mail it to: The Bulletin, Attn: Sean Tate, 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97701. No phone inquiries please. EOE / Drug Free Workplace

541-383-0398

Need Help? We Can Help! REACH THOUSANDS OF POTENTIAL EMPLOYEES EVERY DAY! Call the Classified Department for more information: 541-385-5809 Advertise and Reach over 3 million readers in the Pacific Northwest! 30 daily newspapers, six states. 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) Banking Local Bank that is committed to personal, community-style banking has the following opening in our Bend branch in Bend, OR: Job #11-033 Part-time Teller (25 hrs) Please refer to our website for a complete job description.

Application packets are available at any of our branch locations or on our website: www.premierwestbank.com Please send the completed application packet to P.O. Box 40, Medford, OR 97501. ATTN: H.R. Reference job #. No phone calls please. EOE

H Supplement Your Income H Operate Your Own Business FFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor Join The Bulletin as an independent contractor!

& Call Today & We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:

H Redmond & Madras H Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.

Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 during business hours apply via email at online@bendbulletin.com


To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 E3 476

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Finance & Business

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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NEWSPAPER

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454 - Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions

FINANCE AND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Food Service

General Central Oregon Community College

DON'T MISS OUT on the unique opportunity to work at Central Oregon's finest resort. The Ranch has summer positions available in our food service division as well as our Welcome Center & Spa. Do you enjoy working with people, and have a "customer first" attitude? We are looking for enthusiastic, customer service oriented individuals to join Team BBR. There are just a few openings left in the following areas: •Restaurant/Banquet Servers •Restaurant Bussers •Bartenders •Line Cook •Restaurant Supervisor •Snack Shop Attendants •Beverage Cart Attendants •Guest Service Supervisor •Guest Service Agent •Vacation Sales Agent •Spa receptionist/ Sales Associate Benefits include golf privileges and 30% discount on food and merchandise. Apply on line at www.blackbutteranch.com . BBR is a drug free work place. EOE.

LOOKING FOR A JOB? FREE Job Search Assistance Our experienced Employment Specialists can assist in your search! Serving all of Central Oregon. Call or come see us at:

www.meetgoodwill.org 322-7222 or 617-8946 61315 S. Hwy 97 Bend, OR

Grounds Maintenance, seasonal, 24 hrs/week. $10.50 per hour. Please call Sunriver Nature Center at 541-593-4442 for details.

Hairstylist - Fully licensed for hair, nails & waxing. has openings listed below. Go Recent relevant experience to https://jobs.cocc.edu to necessary. Hourly/commisview details & apply online. sion. Teresa, 541-382-8449 Human Resources, Metolius Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 Hair Stylists, Barbers & Nail Techs: Choose own hrs 7216. For hearing/speech /days. 1 mo. free Rent. Conimpaired, Oregon Relay Sertact John at 503-449-5135. vices number is 7-1-1. COCC The Hair Nook. La Pine. is an AA/EO employer.

MECHANIC Technology Project Lead Ag Mechanic for CenManager tral Oregon alfalfa ranch. (Construction Bond) Newer equipment; 5 years Temporary (2-3 yrs). Lead, plan recent experience; own tools. & manage portfolio of Salary, housing, some benprojects related to delivery of efits. Call 541-576-2236 college technology system solutions & associated techMEDICAL nical support services. InOR RN cludes systems & project planning, estimating, execution, & implementation. Cascade SurgiCenter, ASC lo$49,744-$59,220. Deadline: cated in Bend, is seeking an 4/21/11. OR RN with circulating & scrub exp. This position is Campus Coordinator per diem and CSC is open Madras Campus Mon-Fri daytime hours. ExProvide site coordination & cellent compensation packclass scheduling for COCC age. Fax resume to classes in Madras commu541-322-2286, e-mail to nity. PT from June-Aug, then hr@thecenteroregon.com or FT from Sept 2011 on. apply online at $3,672-$4370/mo for FT www.thecenteroregon.com (prorated to .50 during PT). Deadline:4/27/11. Part-Time Instructor Positions COCC is always looking for talented individuals to teach part-time. Check our web site for details. All positions pay $496 per load unit (1 LU ~= 1 class credit), with additional perks. PT Instructor of French (new!)

Graphic Designer Wanted: Fast-moving, detail-oriented graphic designer with demonstrated alternative weekly sensibility and print experience needed to lay out the Source Weekly. Proficiency in Mac-based Adobe products a must. Web design also helpful. Other responsibilities include cover design, updating website, and laying out inserts and special sections. Must be able to meet tight deadlines and work within our fast-paced, creative environment. Submit resume and a few samples as PDFs via email to: info@tsweekly.com No phone calls.

DESCHUTES COUNTY CAREER OPPORTUNITIES COMMUNITY JUSTICE TECHNICIAN (127-11) – Community Justice Dept, Juvenile Justice Division. On-call positions $17.18 per hour. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL A SUFFICIENT POOL OF ON-CALL STAFF HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED. EMPLOYMENT SPECIALIST, MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I (126-11) – Behavioral Health Division, Community Support Services. Part-time position $2,489 - $3,408 per month for a 129.50 hour work month (30 hr/wk). Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON THURSDAY, 04/21/11. MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II (12411) – Community Justice Dept, Juvenile Justice Division. Full-time position $3,942 - $5,397 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS ON FRIDAY, 04/15/11. MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II (122-11) – Behavioral Health Division, Child & Family Program. Temporary, half-time position $1,971 - $2,698 per month for an 86.34 hour work month, may become regular, full-time dependent upon funding. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II (10311) – Behavioral Health Division, Community Assessment Team. Temporary, full-time position $3,942 - $5,397 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. MENTAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II (116-11) – Behavioral Health Division, Adult Treatment Team. Temporary, full-time position $3,942 - $5,397 per month for a 172.67 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER (145-10) – Adult Treatment Program, Behavioral Health Division. Half-time position $2,804 - $3,838 per month for an 86.34 hour work month. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. TO OBTAIN APPLICATIONS FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS APPLY TO: Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 388-6553. Application and Supplemental Questionnaire (if applicable) required and accepted until 5:00 p.m. on above listed deadline dates. Visit our website at www.co.deschutes.or.us.

The Bulletin Classifieds is your Employment Marketplace Call 541-385-5809 today!

Medical – Scribe

The Oregonian Independent Dealer

As an independent dealer you would be responsible for promotion, delivery and cusResort Night Mgr for small mtn tomer service of The Orresort. Furnished living qtrs egonian for the Sisters, w/utils, salary. Brief resume Redmond, Madras, and & job exp to: PO Box 1176 Prineville area. Prior newsCrescent Lake, OR 97733 paper experience is helpful, but not a requirement. If interested, please call 1-888-569-7006. Nursing

Complex Case Manager PacificSource Health Plans is looking for a Complex Case Manager to screen members to identify needed medical services, modifiable risk factors and educational needs and identify or refer cases for other services as well as conduct comprehensive assessments and develops and updates care plan utilizing clinical expertise. The ideal candidate will be an RN with a current OR license and at least 5 years clinical acute experience in varied health care settings with an expertise in the management of chronic health care conditions (e.g. diabetes, asthma, COPD, heart failure). At least one year of case management experience preferably within an insurance or managed care setting. This is a full-time position - day hours with no weekends or holidays! Excellent benefits and learning opportunities.

For more information and to complete a required application, please visit us online at http://www.pacificsource.com - click on Careers / Job Opportunities.

The Center - Orthopedic and Neurosurgical Care is seek- Office Manager/Personal Asing a Scribe to work in our sistant - 24 hrs/week; future Orthopedic section. This po40 hrs. Requires 2 yrs gensition will be responsible for eral office, MS Office, Quickrecording medical informaBooks; construction/estition during patient visits. mating experience pref’d. Medical terminology desired, Bondable. Pay DOE. transcription exp. helpful. Send resume/references to Strong computer skills John@advsteelsys.com needed. $11-$12 per hour. or fax 541-383-0097 Position will be approx 30 hrs/wk. Apply online at www.thecenteroregon.com Pharmacist position. Need friendly, organized, or fax resume to (541) motivated pharmacist to take 322-2286, may e-mail to care of our patients. Indehr@thecenteroregon.com pendent central Oregon community pharmacy, full or Mig Welder for Manufacturpart-time, no Sundays, no ing in Minot, North Dakota. nights. Competitive wage Year round, full-time inside and benefits. Call Leah work, wage DOE. Contact 541-419-4688. Butch at 701-838-6346.

CAUTION

Preferred qualifications include a demonstrated commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. To review complete position description and apply on-line, go to http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and use posting number 0007173. The closing date is 4/18/11. OSU is an AA/EOE.

Instructor, Half Time, Energy Engineering Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, Oregon, invites applications for a half time (.50 FTE), 9-month Instructor position in Energy Engineering Management. The anticipated start date is in July, 2011. Minimum qualifications include MS in Mechanical Engineering and professional engineering experience. Preferred qualifications include a PhD, university teaching experience, experience in the areas of traditional energy and/or renewable energy systems, and a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. Apply to our Instructor pool at http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and the posting number is 0006025. Closing date is 4/29/11 but the position is open until filled. Apply online with a letter of interest; resume; a statement of career goals; and names and contact information for four references. OSU is an AA/EOE.

Instructor, Part Time, Energy Engineering Mgmt. Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, Oregon invites applications for a part-time (.49 FTE or under), term-to-term Instructor to develop and teach energy related course work in Energy Engineering Management. The anticipated start date is in July, 2011. Minimum qualifications include MS in Electrical Engineering and experience in the energy field. Preferred qualifications include a PhD, university teaching experience and a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. Apply to our Instructor pool at http://oregonstate.edu/jobs and the posting number is 0006025. Closing date is 4/29/11 but the position is open until filled. Apply online with a letter of interest; resume; a statement of career goals; and names and contact information for four references. OSU is an AA/EOE. Medical

Mountain View Hospital Madras, Oregon has the following Career Opportunities available. For more Information please visit our website at www.mvhd.org or email jtittle@mvhd.org

Deschutes County provides reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711.

• Human Resources Director - full time position, day shift • Health Information Manager - full time position, day shift • Facilities Engineer - full time position, day shift • Pharmacy Technician - full time position, day shift • CNA II, Acute Care - per diem positions, various shifts • CNA II, Home Health and Hospice - per diem position, various shifts • Physical Therapist - per diem position, day shifts • Occupational Therapist - per diem position, day shifts • Respiratory Therapist - per diem position, various shifts • Housekeepe - per diem position, various shifts • Medical Assistant - per diem position, day shift • Phlebotomist - per diem position, various shifts

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

Mountain View Hospital is an EOE

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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.

READERS:

Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please investigate thoroughly.

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.

Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme caution when responding to ANY online employment ad from out-of-state.

600 FREE BANKRUPTCY EVALUATION

For Equal Opportunity Laws: Oregon Bureau of Labor & Industry, Civil Rights Division, 503-731-4075

visit our website at www.oregonfreshstart.com

If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Shawn Antoni Classified Dept. The Bulletin

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.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

The Bulletin The High Desert Museum is seeking individuals with an enthusiasm and love for the High Desert Region to join our team. We have the following open positions: • Seasonal Summer Camp Counselor (2 FT seasonal positions/starts June 15th) • Seasonal Wildlife Specialist ( 2 FT seasonal positions/starts May 15th) • Seasonal PT Custodial (starts June 15th) For more information please visit our website at www.highdesertmuseum.org. To apply, e-mail cover letter & resume to jobs@highdesertmuseum.org or fax to 382-5256 Attn: HR No calls, please.

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Business Opportunities WARNING The Bulletin recommends that you investigate every phase of investment opportunities, especially those from out-of-state or offered by a person doing business out of a local motel or hotel. Investment offerings must be registered with the Oregon Department of Finance. We suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-503-378-4320, 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri.

STUDIOS & KITCHENETTES Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro. & fridge. Util. & linens. New owners, $145-$165/wk. 541-382-1885

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Condo / Townhomes For Rent 2 Bdrm townhouse, 2.5 bath, office, fenced yard w/deck, garage. 1244 “B” NE Dawson. $750 dep. $775/mo., W/S/G paid, pets possible. 541-617-8643,541-598-4932 Long term townhomes/homes for rent in Eagle Crest. Appl. included, Spacious 2 & 3 bdrm., with garages, 541-504-7755.

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Apt./Multiplex General

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)

What are you looking for? You’ll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 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

The Bulletin is now offering a MORE AFFORDABLE Rental rate! If you have a home or apt. to rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809

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636

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

3018 NE Canoe

Beautiful updated, cozy, 1 bdrm, 2 bath Condo, A/C, 2 blocks from downtown, along banks of Deschutes, amenities incl., 1 parking spot, indoor pool, hot tub & sauna, serious renters only, credit & refs., check, minimum 1 yr. lease, $675/mo., utils incl., call Kerrie, 541-480-0325.

Newer 2 bdrm, 2.5 bath, all appliances, gas fireplace, 1130 sq. ft. , garage, deck, w/d paid, cat ok. $775 Call 382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

899 NE Hidden Valley #2 2 bdrm, all appliances, gas fireplace, utility room, garage, w/s paid. $650. Call 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

Beautiful 2 Bdrms in quiet complex, park-like setting. No pets/smoking. Near St. Charles.W/S/G pd; both w/d hkup + laundry facil. $595$625/mo. 541-385-6928. Advertise your car! Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds

First Month’s Rent Free 130 NE 6th 1-2 bdrm/ 1 bath, W/S/G paid, onsite laundry, no pets, $450-$525+dep. CR Property Management 541-318-1414

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

Call for Specials! 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.

DOWNTOWN AREA close to library! Small, clean studio, $450+ dep., all util. paid, no pets. 541-330-9769 or 541-480-7870.

Fully furnished loft apt. on Wall Street in Bend. All utilities paid and parking. Call 541-389-2389 for appt. SHEVLIN APARTMENTS Near COCC! Newer 2 Bdrm 1 Bath, granite, wood floors, underground parking/storage area, laundry on site, $675/mo. 541-480-3666 Studio above garage, dishwasher, W/D, nice. $610 incl. gas fireplace, heater, hot water, W/S/G; renter pays elec, 1 small pet OK. 541-382-4868

Westside Village Apts. 1459 NW Albany (1/2 off 1st month rent!) Studio $475 1 bdrm $495 2 bdrm $575 Coin-op laundry. W/S/G paid, cat or small dog OK with dep. 541-382-7727 or 388-3113

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

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Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 562 SE 4th 2 bdrm, all appl., gas heat, w/d hook-up, garage, fenced yard, small pet ok. $650 Call 382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

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Country Terrace

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend !! Spring On In !! $150 off Upstairs Apts. Pet Friendly & No App. Fee! 2 bdrm, 1 bath as low as $495 Carports & Heat Pumps Lease Options Available

Fox Hollow Apts. (541) 383-3152 Cascade Rental Mgmt. Co.

1, 2 and 3 bdrm apts. available starting at $575.

Alpine Meadows Townhomes 541-330-0719 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

NICE 2 & 3 BDRM CONDO APTS! Subsidized Low Rent. All utilities paid except phone & cable. Equal Opportunity Housing. Call Taylor RE & Mgmt at: 503-581-1813 TTY 711

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

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61550 Brosterhous Rd. ½ off first month rent ! 1 Bdrm $425 • 2 Bdrm $495 All appliances, storage, on-site coin-op laundry BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 541-382-7727 www.bendpropertymanagement.com

Need help ixing stuff around the house? Call A Service Professional and ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

SE Duplex, 3 bdrm., 1 bath, garage, small fenced yard, W/D hookup, kitchen appl., $725/ mo., 541-990-0426 or 541-258-5973.

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

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Apt./Multiplex SW Bend

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

1 Month Rent Free 1550 NW Milwaukee W/D hookup. $595/mo. Large 2 Bdrm, 1 Bath, Gas heat. W/S/G Pd. No Pets. Call us at 541-382-3678 or

1065 NE Purcell #2

Visit us at www.sonberg.biz

2 bdrm, 2.5 bath, all appliances, gas fireplace, utility room, garage, w/s paid, cat ok. $650. Call 382-7727

61438 Brookswood "B"

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT 1398 NE Elk #1 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, all appliances, w/d hook-up, garage, w/s paid, cat ok $795. Call 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

2 BDRM., 1 BATH flat near Old Mill, laundry, parking, $600/month. Victoria L. Manahan Real Estate, 541-280-7240.

3 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances w/d hook-up, gas heat, deck, dbl garage, 1254 sq. ft. cat ok $825. 541-382-7727

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds

32’x34’ Shop w/2 roll-up doors, Between Redmond & Terrebonne, $400 per mo., taking applications, Please Call 541-548-6812

No smoking, male preferred, $270/mo. +$50 dep. Kitchen facilities. 541-420-6625.

Need Seasonal help? Need Part-time help? Need Full-time help? Advertise your open positions.

Storage Rentals

Rooms for Rent

541-382-3402

Security See our website for our available Security positions, along with the 42 reasons to join our team! www.securityprosbend.com

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541-383-0386 Sales - Jewelry We are looking for a bright, energetic and motivated person to join our team as a part to full time Sales Associate. If you are dependable and have a good work attitude, please leave your resume at Saxon’s in the Old Mill District, Bend.

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE E2

Rentals

We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320

Office Specialist 2/OS2 Oregon State University - Cascades, Bend has a full time employment opportunity. The ideal applicant functions as member of the OSU-Cascades Enrollment Services team and duties include customer service, prospective student support, admissions processing, clerical support and communication with students, faculty, staff and the general public.

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

541-385-5809 A block from the river! Clean, spacious 3 Bdrm 1½ bath in 4-plex w/large deck, w/d hkups, storage room; w/s/g pd. $750+deps.541-318-1973

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

Deluxe 2 Bdrm 1½ Bath Townhouse apt. W/D hookup, fenced yd. NO PETS. Great location, starting at $545. 179 SW Hayes (past Mike’s Fence Center) Please call 541-382-0162; 541-420-0133

Transportation

Project Manager 3 Bend, Oregon Oregon Dept. of Transportation The Project Manager is to direct and manage the project development related processes and activities associated with highway projects from initiation to completion. This position will organize, oversee, lead and monitor the progress of the interdisciplinary work teams composed of combined ODOT and consultant professionals. Salary: $4,906 $6,889/month plus benefits. For more information, please visit www.odotjobs.com or call 866- ODOT-JOBS (TTY 503-986-3854) for Announcement #ODOT11-0008oc. Closes 11:59 pm PDT, 4/11/11. ODOT is an AA/EEO Employer, committed to building workforce diversity. 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

To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or 541-385-5809


E4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - Roommate Wanted 616 - Want To Rent 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 630 - Rooms for Rent 631 - Condo/Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NE Bend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for Rent General 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652 - Houses for Rent NW Bend 654 - Houses for Rent SE Bend 656 - Houses for Rent SW Bend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 642

682 - Farms, Ranches and Acreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 732 - Commercial/Investment Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condo/Townhomes for Sale 744 - Open Houses 745 - Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest Bend Homes 748 - Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast Bend Homes 750 - Redmond Homes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson County Homes 757 - Crook County Homes 762 - Homes with Acreage 763 - Recreational Homes and Property 764 - Farms and Ranches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond Apt./Multiplex Redmond

ONE MONTH FREE with 6 month lease! 2 bdrm., 1 bath, $550 mo. includes storage unit & carport. Close to schools, parks & shopping. On-site laundry, non-smoking units, dog run. Pet Friendly. 541-923-1907 OBSIDIAN APARTMENTS www.redmondrents.com

Looking for 1, 2 or 3 bedroom? $99 First mo. with 6 month lease & deposit Chaparral & Rimrock Apartments Clean, energy efficient smoking & non- smoking units, w/patios, 2 on-site laundry rooms, storage units available. Close to schools, pools, skateboard park and, shopping center. Large dog run, some large breeds okay with mgr. approval. & dep. 244 SW RIMROCK WAY Chaparral, 541-923-5008 www.redmondrents.com Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Personals & Announcements announcements

personals

Timber Creek, Home Owners Association Architecture Review Committee will be meeting April 11, 2011, 1:30 p.m. @ Ray's Food Place Community Room.

Thank you St. Jude & Sacred Heart of Jesus. j.d. The Family of

Anna Maria Ferrara wishes to thank the caregivers and staff of

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

The Bulletin

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

High Desert Assisted Living for their excellent care for Anna throughout this past year. Your acts of kindness will never be forgotten.

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Houses for Rent General

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652

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671

Houses for Rent General

Houses for Rent NW Bend

Houses for Rent Redmond

Mobile/Mfd. for Rent

Real Estate For Sale

5135 "A" NE 15th St.

On 10 acres, between Sisters & Bend, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, 1484 sq.ft. mfd., family room w/ wood stove, all new carpet & paint, + 1800 sq. ft. shop, fenced for horses, $1095. 541-480-3393, 541-610-7803

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New Listings

Prestigious, fully furnished, 6 bdrm., 3 bath, NW Skyliner, 6 mo. minimum, incl. some utils., $2600/mo, please call 541-951-3058.

654 TERREBONNE $750 3/2 MFD 3 acres, smith rock view, w/d hookup, large deck. 4623 NE Vaughn Ave.

541-923-8222 www.MarrManagement.com 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

Non-smoking 3 bdrm 2 bath, 1800 sq ft home with gas heat & large yard. $925 + deposits. 541-382-8900

18636 Riverwoods Dr.

650

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

3 Bdrm, 1800 sq ft. Very clean! New bathroom, lrg fam rm, sprinklers, attch garage. No smkg; pets poss. 1150 NE 6th St. Avail now! $950/mo, $600 refundable. 541-389-4985

558 NE Lafayette 2 bdrm, appliances., gas heat, w/d hook-up, garage, RV parking, large landscaped lot, pet considered. $650. Call 541-382-7727

652

Houses for Rent NW Bend

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

18839 Tuscarora Lane $850 - Custom home in Deschutes River Woods. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath on large pvt lot; large fenced yard & 2-car garage. The best of country living! Small pets considered ABOVE & BEYOND PROP MGMT - 541-389-8558 www.aboveandbeyondmanagement.com

$850 3/2 dbl garage, w/d hook-ups, central air, fenced, sprinkler system. 2240 NE 5th St. $850 3/2 dbl garage w/opener, w/d hookup, fenced. 400 SW 28th St. $925 3/2 dbl garage, gas forced air heat, w/d hook up, fireplace. 1069 NW Spruce Ave $995 $200 off 1st month! dbl garage w/opener, w/d hookup, family room. 2103 SW 37th St. $1100 4/2 dbl garage w/opener, w/d hookup, forced air heat, fenced, sprinklers. 2209 NW Quince Ct

541-923-8222

19610 Apache, DRW

www.MarrManagement.com

3 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances, fireplace w/insert, utility room, RV Parking, garage, 2.1 acres, additional storage, pet considered. $895 Call 541-382-7727

A nice 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1008 sq.ft., vaulted ceiling, fenced yard, coverd deck, RV parking, dbl garage w/ opener. $795. 480-3393 or 610-7803.

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT www.bendpropertymanagement.com

2 Bdrm 2 bath, in Westridge Subdivision. Newly remodeled, on ½ acre, near Ath. Club of Bend. No smoking. $1195. Call 541-388-8198 2 Bedroom, 1 bath manufactured home in quiet park, W/S/G paid. $575/month, $250 deposit. Please call 541-382-8244.

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Houses for Rent Redmond 3/2 1385 sq. ft., family room, new carpet & paint, nice big yard, dbl. garage w/opener, quiet cul-de-sac. $995 541-480-3393, 541-610-7803 3 Bdrm., 1.75 bath, SW Redmond, 1108 sq. ft., single garage, just remodeled, landscaped, quiet area, no pets/ smoking, $950. 360-901-2342

3 Bdrm+offc, 1 bath, 1800+/sq ft ranch style in Redmond. Gas heat + AC; near Sr. Crooked River Ranch - 1350 3 bdrm 3 bath 3500+ sq. ft. Center & hospital, fenced sq ft custom built ranch, 2 home, all appliances, family yard, new paint & carpet, bdrm 2 bath, double garage. room, office, triple garage, 2 $900/mo, pets considered. Patio, Mtn views, no smokwoodstoves, sunroom, lrg. 541-408-2000; 541-480-4248 ing. $750. 541-548-4225 utility room including w/d, pantry, pet OK. $2500 mo. 4/2 Mfd 1605 sq.ft., family Rented your property? 541-382-7727 room with woodstove, new The Bulletin Classifieds carpet, pad & paint, single BEND PROPERTY has an "After Hours" Line garage w/opener. $895/mo. MANAGEMENT Call 541-383-2371 24 hrs. 541-480-3393,541-610-7803 www.bendpropertymanagement.com to cancel your ad!

Country Home!

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

$695/mo, 3 bdrm 2 bath. New paint inside/outside, new carpet and vinyl. Dbl garage w/ opener. Nice neighborhood. 541-388-8503

Houses for Rent SW Bend DRW 2 bdrm, 2 bath, all appliances, woodstove, dbl. garage, w/d hook-up, RV parking, large lot, small-med. pet considered $895. 541-382-7727

Houses for Rent NE Bend

BEND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

656

Why Rent? When you Can own! For as low as $1295 Down. 541- 548-5511 www.JandMHomes.com

PUBLISHER'S BEND PROPERTY NOTICE MANAGEMENT All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to www.bendpropertymanagement.com the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise When buying a home, 83% of Central Oregonians turn to "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an incall Classified 385-5809 to tention to make any such place your Real Estate ad preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the Looking for your next age of 18 living with parents employee? or legal custodians, pregnant Place a Bulletin help women, and people securing wanted ad today and custody of children under 18. reach over 60,000 This newspaper will not readers each week. knowingly accept any adverYour classified ad will tising for real estate which is also appear on in violation of the law. Our bendbulletin.com which readers are hereby informed currently receives over that all dwellings advertised 1.5 million page views in this newspaper are availevery month at able on an equal opportunity no extra cost. basis. To complain of disBulletin Classifieds crimination call HUD toll-free Get Results! at 1-800-877-0246. The toll Call 385-5809 or place free telephone number for your ad on-line at the hearing impaired is bendbulletin.com 1-800-927-9275. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Houses for Rent SE Bend

2 bdrm, appliances, electric heat, well water, dog ok. $525. Call 541-382-7727

Debris Removal

Electronics

Home Improvement

660

Houses for Rent La Pine 2 Bdrm, 1.5 Bath, gas appls & fireplace. Crescent Creek subdivision, w/Fitness Ctr. No smoking; pets neg. $675/ mo.$775/dep. 541-815-5494

662

Houses for Rent Sisters 3 bdrm, 2 bath manufactured home, all appliances. Free cable. No garage; no dogs/ smoking. $695 month, $650 deposit. 541-815-1523.

(Private Party ads only) 687

Commercial for Rent/Lease ATV - Snowmobile storage etc. Shop 22’x36’ block building w/3 rooms, between Redmond & Terrebonne. $250/mo. 541-419-1917

Office / Warehouse 1792 sq.ft. & 1680 sq.ft. spaces, 827 Business Way, Bend. 30¢/sq.ft.; 1st mo. + $300 dep. 541-678-1404

Ofice/Retail Space for Rent

744

Open Houses Penthouse Condo at the Plaza in the Old Mill.2 Bdrm, 2 bath, double master suites. High-end finishes throughout! 363 SW Bluff Dr. #408. Open Sun., 1-4pm MLS #201101261. Contact: Chris Goffrier, Broker, Cascade Sotheby’s Intl Realty 541-788-8105

745

Homes for Sale Heating the Oustide? Trade in a heat bill for ours! $75/mo. average per month, 541-548-5511 www.JandMHomes.com

NOTICE: All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified Real Estate Auction Nominal Opening Bids Start at $10,000 2235 SW 28TH St, Redmond 4BR 2.5BA 1,636sf+/20724 Nicolette Dr, Bend 3BR 2BA 1,594sf+/All properties sell: 10:00AM Sat., Apr. 16 at 2235 SW28TH St, Redmond williamsauction.com/april 800-801-8003 Many properties now available for online bidding! A Buyer’s Premium may apply. Williams & Williams OR Broker: JUDSON GLEN VANNOY, Williams & Williams Worldwide Real Estate, LLC. Lic.# 200507303.

Acres, Eagle Crest area, very private, gated, 3+ bdrm., 2.75 bath, 3 car garage plus 1600 sq.ft. finished shop, in-ground pool, $795,000. 541-948-5832.

762

Homes with Acreage Not Bank Owned, Not a Short Sale! 17460 Serenity Way, Bend 3 Bdrm 2.5 Bath, 2,338 sq ft home. 2 Garages + 2,160 sq ft shop on 5 ac, Sisters Schl Dist. Move-in ready! Awesome mtn views. $359,900 Call Peter 541-419-5391 for info. www.GorillaCapital.com

763

Recreational Homes and Property 16 acres prime riverfront! North Fork John Day River Steelhead, Bass, 26” Catfish! Bear, Deer, Elk, Pheasants! 1000 sq. ft. cabin. $249,000. 541-934-2091.

771

Lots Bargain priced Pronghorn lot, $89,999, also incl. $115,000 golf membership & partially framed 6000 sq. ft. home, too! Randy Schoning, Princ. Broker, John L. Scott RE. 541-480-3393, 541-389-3354

773

Acreages 10 Acres,7 mi. E. of Costco, quiet, secluded, at end of road, power at property line, water near by, $250,000 OWC 541-617-0613

20 Acres, Christmas Valley, off Oil Dry (paved road), power at road, $15,000 or trade for ??? 541-728-1036. ***

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. R..E Deadlines are: Weekdays 11:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday and Monday. 541-385-5809 Thank you! The Bulletin Classified ***

345 NE Greenwood Great Location, 450 sq. ft., pri- FIND IT! Powell Butte: 6 acres, 360° vate entrance and bath, no views in farm fields, sepBUY IT! smoking. $450. 382-7727 tic approved, power, OWC, SELL IT! BEND PROPERTY 10223 Houston Lake Rd., The Bulletin Classiieds MANAGEMENT $114,900, 541-350-4684.

www.bendpropertymanagement.com

455 Sq.ft. Office Space, high visibility on Highland Ave in Redmond, $400 per mo. incl. W/S/G, Please Call 541-419-1917.

An Office with bath, various sizes and locations from $200 per month, including utilities. 541-317-8717

746

Northwest Bend Homes BROKEN TOP bargain priced. 3 Bdrm, 3 bath, 2403 sq.ft., new slab granite countertops, hrdwd floors, gas fireplace, only $424,900. Randy Schoning, principal Broker, John L. Scott. 541-480-3393

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes Brand New 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, delivered & Set Up, starting at $49,999, financing available, Call 541-548-5511 www.JandMHomes.com

Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Landscaping, Yard Care Painting, Wall Covering 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.

28 years experience in Central Oregon Quality & Honesty From carpentry & handyman jobs, To quality wall covering installations & removal. Senior discounts Licenced, Bonded, Insured, CCB#47120

541-389-1413 or 541-410-2422 Handyman

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

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days

Sunny, Warm So. Oregon! Trade your Bend area home for my 7-yr 4 Bdrm 2.5 Bath Central Point home, in planned development, with nice views. 541-941-6915

Mountain Views 5

(This special package is not available on our website)

Kelly Kerfoot Construction:

Building/Contracting

RV/Trailer Space in NE Redmond, near Crooked River Dinner Train, additional 17x20 finished bldg. w/deck, fenced area, incl. W/S, $450/mo, Call 541-419-1917.

Space, Clean 4 Bdrm + den, 2 bath, Office/Warehouse 14920 SW Maverick Rd, CRR. 6400 sq.ft., (3) 12x14 doors, No smoking; pets negotiable. on Boyd Acres Rd, $900/mo. + deposits. Call 541-382-8998. 541-504-8545; 541-350-1660 Check out the Crooked River Ranch, 4 acres, 3 classiieds online bdrm., 2 bath, 1000 sq. ft., $695/mo. 1st, last. No in- www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily side pets. Mtn. views. 503-829-7252, 679-4495 The Bulletin offers a LOWER, MORE AFFORDABLE Rental 659 rate! If you have a home to Houses for Rent rent, call a Bulletin Classified Rep. to get the new rates and Sunriver get your ad started ASAP! 541-385-5809 VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, Warehouse/Office space, 1235 La Pine. Great Selection. sq ft, large roll-up door. Prices range from 20685 Carmen Lp. No triple $425 - $2000/mo. View our net; $600/mo, 1st + dep. full inventory online at 541-480-7546; 541-480-7541 Village-Properties.com 1-866-931-1061 693

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 Barns

Mobile/Mfd. Space

730

750

Redmond Homes

More Than Service Peace Of Mind.

Spring Clean Up •Leaves •Cones and Needles •Broken Branches •Debris Hauling •Defensible Space •Aeration /Dethatching •Compost Top Dressing

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.

Domestic Services

Carpet Cleaning

I Do Professional Housecleaning: 25 yrs. exp., licenced, exc refs., Senior discounts! 541-420-0366

Drywall

Remodeling, Carpentry

Weed free bark & flower beds

Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

ORGANIC

PROGRAMS

Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing •Edging •Pruning •Weeding •Sprinkler Adjustments Fertilizer included with monthly program

Weekly, monthly or one time service. EXPERIENCED Commercial & Residential

Over 40 Years Experience in Carpet Upholstery & Rug Cleaning Call Now! 541-382-9498 CCB #72129 www.cleaningclinicinc.com

Concrete Construction

Free Estimates Senior Discounts

Painting, Wall Covering

541-390-1466

541-322-7253

Same Day Response

Electrical Services

Tile, Ceramic

Experience & Quality Matter • Remodeling Specialist •Add-ons • Kitchen & Bath •Faux Wall Finishes •Tile & Stone •Window & Door Upgrades No job too small.

Call Scott for Spring Specials! 541-815-1990 Tax Credit & Incentives Avail. CCB#110370

FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classiieds

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809


To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809 Boats & RV’s

800 850

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 E5

870

880

881

882

Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Canopy mount electric boat loader, in good shape $600 OBO. 541-548-3459 GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Winnebago Class C 28’ 2003, Ford V10, 2 slides, 44k mi., A/C, awning, good cond., 1 owner. $37,000. 541-815-4121

Snowmobiles

Last Chance Yamaha 600 Mtn. Max 1997 Now only $895! Sled plus trailer package $1650. Won’t Last Long! 541-548-3443.

Winnebago Class C 28’ 2003, Ford V10, 2 slides, 44k mi., A/C, awning, good cond., 1 owner. $37,000. 541-815-4121

860

Motorcycles And Accessories

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

881

882

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Hitchiker II 32’ 1998 w/solar system, awnings, Arizona rm. great shape! $10,500. 541-589-0767, in Burns.

Black on black, detachable windshield, backrest, and luggage rack. 2200 miles. $13,900. Please call Jack, 541-549-4949, or 619-203-4707

Harley Davidson Heritage Soft Tail 2009, 400 mi., extras incl. pipes, lowering kit, chrome pkg., $15,500 OBO. 541-944-9753

Harley Davidson Police Bike 2001, low mi., custom bike very nice.Stage 1, new tires & brakes, too much to list! A Must See Bike $9800 OBO. 541-383-1782

Harley Davidson Screamin’ Eagle Electric-Glide 2005, 103” motor, 2-tone, candy teal, 18,000 miles, exc. cond. $19,999 OBO, please call 541-480-8080.

Harley Davidson Ultra Classic 2008, clean, lots of upgrades, custom exhaust, dual control heated gloves & vest, luggage access. 15K, $17,000 OBO 541-693-3975.

2009 T@da (Tada) Houseboat 38x10, triple axle trailer, incl. private moorage w/24/7 security at Prineville resort. New Price!!!!! $19,500. 541-788-4844.

Summer Boat Moorage Slips Now Available at Cove Palisades Resort on Lake Billy Chinook, gated entrance, on-site resident, limited spaces avail. Call today, 541-546-9999.

Travel Trailer Excellent condition! 2 refrigerators, Cool Cat AC/Heat Pump, 15" LCD TV/DVD. Too many extras to list. $19,500 OBO Call 541-548-8770

KOMFORT 27’ 2000 5th wheel, fiberglass with 12’ slide. In excellent condition, has been stored inside. Only $13,500 firm. Call 541-536-3916.

875

Everest 32’ 2004, 3 2 Wet-Jet personal water crafts, new batteries & covers, “SHORE“ trailer, incl spare & lights, $2450 for all. Bill 541-480-7930. Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

865

ATVs

Springdale 29’ 2007, slide, Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504 Starcraft 2008 Centennial 3612 tent trailer, like new, sleeps 6, slide-out, Arizona room, range w/oven, micro, toilet & shower, stereo system, heated mattresses, roof rack, new 6-ply tires, twin 6-volt batteries, outside shower, twin propane tanks, BBQ. $10,500. 541-312-9312

Yamaha Grizzly 2008 660 - WARN Winch, Fender Protectors, new winch rope, recent 150/160 hr service, Hunter Green $5,495 541-549-6996 (Sisters).

870

Boats & Accessories 17½’ 2006 BAYLINER 175 XT Ski Boat, 3.0L Merc, mint condition, includes ski tower w/2 racks - everything we have, ski jackets adult and kids several, water skis, wakeboard, gloves, ropes and many other boating items. $11,300 OBO . 541-417-0829 17.5’ Bayliner, 2005, 3.0 Merc, like new, low hrs, $7500 obo. Will consider partial trades. 541-279-1862 after 5 pm. 18’ Hewes 180 Sportsman 2007 Yamaha 115 & 8hp kicker, downriggers Excel cond, low hrs, $22,900. 541-815-3383 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.

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

20.5’ Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO. 541-379-3530

20' Calabria 1998 tournament ski boat / 237 hours. 350ci/ 300hp F.I. GM engine. Nice, too many extras to list. $13,500. Call 541-736-3067 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

Boat Loader, electric, for pickup, with extras, $350 OBO, 541-548-3711.

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, lrg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $39,500. 541-420-3250

Canopies and Campers

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

Pettibone Mercury fork lift, 8000 lb., 2-stage, propane, hard rubber tires. $4000 or Make offer. 541-389-5355.

Truck with Snow Plow!

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809

extended overhead cab, stereo, self-contained,outdoor shower, TV, 2nd owner, exc. cond., non smoker, $7900 541-815-1523.

Uro M&S 185/70R13, 100%, on four hole rims, $170. 541-508-6301

Tires & Chrome Wheels (4), lug nuts, 245/75/16,6-hole, $175, 541-536-3889, 541-420-6215

clean, all original good condition, $5500, call 541-536-2792.

Big Tex Landscaping/ ATV Trailer, dual axle flatbed, 7’x16’, 7000 lb. GVW, all steel, $1400. 541-382-4115, or 541-280-7024.

Chevy

Wagon

1957,

4-dr., complete, $15,000 OBO, trades, please call 541-420-5453.

We Buy Scrap Auto & Truck Batteries, $10 each Also buying junk cars & trucks, (up to $500), & scrap metal! Call 541-912-1467

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 $9000 or Wheels, 2-Sets Mini Cooper, make offer. 541-385-9350. 8x18” Custom “Star”, 1 set $300 no tires, 1 set $550 w/tires, 541-382-8762. Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of 932 Area Real Estate for Sale

Waverider Trailer, 2-place, new paint, rail covers, & wiring, good cond., $495, 541-923-3490.

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through Wilderness 2-person Kayak w/ paddles, like new. $650 new; sell $375. 541-383-8528

880

Motorhomes Beaver Lexington 1994, Anniversary model, Cummins Diesel, 38’, nice, full factory paint, $35,900,541-617-1249

Beaver Patriot 2000, Walnut cabinets, solar, Bose, Corian, tile, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, w/d, $99,000. 541-215-0077

Bounder 34’ 1994.

One owner, low miles, generator, 2 roof airs, clean in and out, rear walk-round queen bed, 2 TV’s, leveling hydraulic jacks, backup camera, awnings, non smoker, no pets, Motivated seller. Just reduced and priced to sell at $10,950, 541-389-3921,503-789-1202

BROUGHAM 23½’ 1981, 2tone brown,perfect cond, 6 brand new tires. eng. perfect, runs great, inside perfect shape, great for hunting, fishing, etc., see to appreciate at 15847 WoodChip Ln off Day Rd in La Pine. $8000. OBO 541-876-5106.

Dodge Brougham Motorhome, 1977, Needs TLC, $1995, Pilgrim Camper 1981, Self contained, Cab-over, needs TLC, $595, 541-382-2335 or 503-585-3240. Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp. diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires, under cover, hwy. miles only, 4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp. propane gen & more! $55,000. 541-948-2310.

Hurricane 2007 35.5’ like new, 3 slides, generator, dark cabinets, Ford V10, 4,650 mi $79,900 OBO. 541-923-3510

Marathon V.I.P. Prevost H3-40 Luxury Coach. Like new after $132,000 purchase & $130,000 in renovations. Only 129k orig. mi. 541-601-6350. Rare bargain at just $104,000. Look at : www.SeeThisRig.com

Winnebago Access 31J 2008, Class C, Near Low Retail Price! One owner, nonsmoker, garaged, 7,400 miles, auto leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, microwave, 3-burner range/oven, (3) TVs, and sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, and very clean! Only $76,995! Extended warranty available! Call (541) 388-7179.

cond. sleeps 8, black/gray interior, used 3X, $29,900. 541-389-9188.

Hitchhiker II 2000 32’ 2 slides, very clean and in excellent condition. Only $18,000! (541) 410-9423, (541) 536-6116.

exc. cond., 4WD, new tires, shocks, interior seat cover, everything works, 121K orig. mi.,original operators manual and line setting ticket incl. $5000 OBO, 503-559-4401

When ONLY the BEST will do! 2003 Lance 1030 Deluxe Cargo Trailer HaulMark 26’ 5th Model Camper, loaded, phewheel, tandem 7000 lb. axle, nomenal condition. $17,500. ¾ plywood interior, ramp and 2007 Dodge 6.7 Cummins double doors, 12 volt, roof Diesel 3500 4x4 long bed, vent, stone guard, silver with 58K mi, $34,900. Or buy as chrome corners, exc. cond., unit, $48,500. 541-331-1160 $7200. 541-639-1031.

Mercury Monterrey 1965, Exc. All original, 4-dr. sedan, in storage last 15 yrs., 390 High Compression engine, new tires & license, reduced to $2850, 541-410-3425.

Monte Carlo 1970, all original, many extras. MUST SELL due to death. Sacrifice $6000. 541-593-3072 OLDS 98 1969 2 door hardtop, $1600. 541-389-5355

Antique and Classic Autos

C-10

Pickup

Plymouth 4-dr sedan, 1948, all orig., new tires, exlnt driver, all gauges work, 63,520 miles, $8500. 541-504-2878

1969,

152K mi. on chassis, 4 spd. transmission, 250 6 cyl. engine w/60K, new brakes & master cylinder, $2500. Please call 503-551-7406 or 541-367-0800.

Corvette 1956, rebuilt 2006, 3 spd., 2, 4 barrel, 225 hp. Matching numbers $62,500, 541-280-1227.

WILLYS JEEP 1956 New rebuilt motor, no miles, Power Take-off winch. Exc. tires.

Asking $3,999 or make offer. 541-389-5355

Cadillac El Dorado 1977, very beautiful blue, real nice inside & out, low mileage, $2500, please call 541-383-3888 for more information. Chevy Corvette 1979, 30K mi., glass t-top, runs & looks great, $10,000,541-280-5677

925

Utility Trailers

Fleetwood Elkhorn 9.5’ 1999,

TERRY 27’ 1995 5th wheel with big slide-out, generator and extras. Great rig in great cond. $9,900 OBO. 541-923-0231 days.

International Travel All 1967,

Sport,

Chevy Corvette 1980, yellow, glass removable top, 8 cyl., auto trans, radio, heat, A/C, new factory interior, black, 48K., exc. tires, factory aluminum wheels, asking $7500, will consider fair offer & possible trade, 541-385-9350.

933

Pickups FIAT 1800 1978 5-spd., door panels w/flowers & hummingbirds, white soft top & hard top, Reduced to $5,500, 541-317-9319,541-647-8483

Ford 2 Door 1949, 99% Complete, $12,000, please call 541-408-7348. Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199

Chevy El Camino 1979,

POLARIS PHOENIX 2005, 2X4, 200cc, new rear end, new tires, runs excellent, $1800 OBO, 541-932-4919.

Mobile Suites, 2007, 36TK3 with 3 slide-outs, king bed, ultimate living comfort, quality built, large kitchen, fully loaded, well insulated, hydraulic jacks and so much more.$59,500. 541-317-9185

885

Watercraft

The Bulletin Classifieds

KTM 400 EXC Enduro 2006, like new cond, low miles, street legal, hvy duty receiver hitch basket. $4500. 541-385-4975

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $150,000. Call 541-647-3718

Chevy Bonanza 1978, runs good. $4800 OBO. Call 541-390-1466. Everest 2006 35' 3 slides/ awnings, island king bed, W/D, 2 roof air, built-in vac, pristine, reduced to $34,000 OBO 541-610-4472; 541-689-1351

Chevy Suburban 1969, classic 3-door, very

Cargo

931

4

GMC Ventura 3500 1986, refrigerated, w/6’x6’x12’ box, has 2 sets tires w/rims., 1250 lb. lift gate, new engine, $5500, 541-389-6588, ask for Bob.

A-Liner pop-up 15-ft 2010, 2-burner stove, frig, freshwater tank, furnace, fantastic fan, $9950. 541-923-3021 JAYCO 31 ft. 1998 slideout, upgraded model, exc. cond. $10,500. 1-541-454-0437.

932

Antique and Classic Autos

12x6, side door, 2 back doors, shelves, exc. cond., $2750, call 541-815-1523.

908

916

Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. cond. for Snowbirds, solid oak cabs day & night shades, Corian, tile, hardwood. $14,900. 541-923-3417. Cedar Creek 2006, RDQF. Loaded, 4 slides, 37.5’, king bed, W/D, 5500W gen., fireplace, Corian countertops, skylight shower, central vac, much more, like new, $39,900, please call 541-330-9149.

932

Antique and Classic Autos

Wells

Aircraft, Parts and Service

Trucks and Heavy Equipment

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28’ 2007, Gen, fuel station,exc.

Harley Ultra Classic 2001, Best of everything. Garage kept. Madras. $9000 call 541-475-7459.

900

925

Utility Trailers

Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories

CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809

HARLEY Davidson Fat Boy - LO 2010

Autos & Transportation

350 auto, new studs, located in Sisters, $3000 OBO, 907-723-9086,907-723-9085

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

The Bulletin

Ford T-Bird 1955, White soft & hard tops, new paint, carpet, upholstery, rechromed, nice! $32,000. 541-912-1833

* * * 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 mis understood 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: 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified ***

CHEVROLET 1970, V-8 automatic 4X4 3/4 ton. Very good condition, lots of new parts and maintenance records. New tires, underdash air, electronic ignition and much more. Original paint, truck used very little. $5700, 541-575-3649


E6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

BOATS & RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890 - RV’s for Rent

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809

Pickups

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Chevrolet Scottsdale 20, 1987. 4WD, 3/4-ton, A/C, Reese 15,000-lb Fifth wheel pin hitch, tilt wheel, deer guard, excellent 10-ply tires, hubs. $3000. For more details & equip, call John Keseley 541-932-4338

FORD Pickup 1977, step side, 351 Windsor, 115,000 miles, MUST SEE! $3800. 541-350-1686

4X4, 20K Miles! Warranty! Power Pkg! Still in the wrapper! Vin #173221

Sale Price $23,888

International Flat Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

975

Automobiles

541-389-1178 • DLR

Special Offer

Vans

Jeep Grand Cherokee LIMITED 2008 Dodge Nitro AWD 2008 Great Fuel Miser! 4X4, Low miles! A Must See! Warranty! VIN #258369

Now Only $16,877

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Jeep Wrangler 2004, right hand drive, 51K, auto., A/C, 4x4, AM/FM/CD, exc. cond., $14,500. 541-408-2111

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Honda S 2000, 2002. Truly like new, 9K original owner miles. Black on Black. This is Honda’s true sports machine. I bought it with my wife in mind but she never liked the 6 speed trans. Bought it new for $32K. It has never been out of Oregon. Price $17K. Call 541-546-8810 8am-8pm.

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MERCEDES C300 2008 New body style, 30,000 miles, heated seats, luxury sedan, CD, full factory warranty. $23,950.

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VW Eurovan MV 1993, seats 7, fold-out bed & table, 5-cyl 2.5L, 137K mi, newly painted white/gray, reblt AT w/warr, AM/FM CD Sirius Sat., new fr brks, plus mntd stud snows. $7500 obo. 541-330-0616

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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

MAZDA MIATA 1992, black, 81k miles, new top, stock throughout. See craigslist. $4,990. 541-610-6150.

convertible, 2 door, Navy with black soft top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929.

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subject 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.

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LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Budget Committee Meeting

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING

A public meeting of the Budget Committee of the Crooked River Ranch Rural Fire Protection District VI-503, Jefferson County, State of Oregon, to discuss the budget for the fiscal year July 01, 2011 through June 30, 2012. The meeting will be held at the Crooked River Ranch Fire Station, 6971 SW Shad Rd., Terrebonne, OR, on the 11th day of April at 6:00 p.m. The purpose is to receive the budget message and receive comment from the public on the budget. A copy of the budget document may be inspected or obtained on or after April 11, 2011, at the Crooked River Ranch Fire Station, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. This is a public meeting where deliberation of the Budget Committee will take place. Any person may appear at the meeting and discuss the proposed budget with the Budget Committee.

A public meeting of the LaPine Rural Fire Protection District Budget Committee will be held on April 19, 2011 at 6:30 P.M. at 51550 Huntington Road, La Pine, Oregon. The purpose of the meeting is to hear the budget message and hear comment from the public on budget matters for fiscal year July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012. The meeting location is accessible to persons with disabilities. Requests for interpreter for the hearing impaired or for other accommodations for persons with disabilities should be made at least 48 hours before the meeting at 51590 Huntington Road, La Pine.

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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:

SUBARUS!!!

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CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005

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Ford Windstar GL1998.

Automobiles 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 Need help ixing stuff around the house? Call A Service Professional and ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

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BUICKS ! LeSabres 1998 and 2004 $3900-$5900.

Ford E350 12-pass., 1993, 5L V8, 166K, runs/drives great. $2300 OBO. 541-410-4757

The Bulletin Classifieds

4X4, Loaded, leather, running boards, Lariat Pkg! Warranty!! Vin #B15268

We will pay CASH for your vehicle. Buying vehicles NOW!

Ford Diesel 2003 16 Passenger Bus, with wheelchair lift. $4,000 Call Linda at Grant Co. Transportation, John Day 541-575-2370

Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Dodge Avenger 2008

Ford F150 SuperCREW 2005

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mileage, full pwr., all leather, auto, 4 captains chairs, fold down bed, fully loaded, $4500 OBO, call 541-536-6223.

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Ford crew cab 1993, 7.3 Diesel, auto, PS, Rollalong package, deluxe interior & exterior, electric windows/door locks, dually, fifth wheel hitch, receiver hitch, 90% rubber, super maint. w/all records, new trans. rebuilt, 116K miles. $6500, Back on the market. 541-923-0411

Chevy Gladiator 1993, great shape, great

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BMW 328IX Wagon 2009, 4WD, white w/chestnut leather interior, loaded, exc. cond., premium pkg., auto, Bluetooth & iPad connection, 42K mi., 100K transferrable warranty & snow tires, $28,500, 541-915-9170.

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Infiniti EX35 2010 Immaculate, only 4000 miles. 297-hp, V6 engine. Journey edition, premium pkg, AWD. Nav system, Blue tooth, Bose stereo w/USB port. Silver exterior, black leather interior. $38,500. 541-306-6564.

AUTOS & TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days

935

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The Deschutes County Hearings Officer will hold a Public Hearing on May 2, 2011, at 6:30p.m. in the Barnes and Sawyer Rooms of the Deschutes Services Center, 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, to consider the following request: FILE NUMBER: PA-11-1, ZC-10-1. SUBJECT: Proposed amendments to change the Comprehensive Plan designation of the subject property from Urban Reserve Area (URA) to Public Facilities (PF), change the zone of the subject property from Urban Area Reserve (UAR10) to Public Facilities (PF), and expand the City of Bend Urban Growth Boundary to include the 26-acre Deschutes National Forest property within the City of Bend. APPLICANT/S: Deschutes County. OWNER/S: Deschutes National Forest. LOCATION: The subject property has an assigned address of 63095 Deschutes Market Road, Bend, and is identified on Assessor's Tax Map 17-12-23, as Tax Lot 1800. STAFF CONTACT: Anthony Raguine, Senior Planner. Copies of the staff report, application, all documents and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and applicable criteria are available for inspection at the Planning Division at no cost and can be purchased for 25 cents a page. The staff report should be made available seven days prior to the date set for the hearing. Documents are also available online at: www.co.deschutes.or.us/cdd /.

Have an item to sell quick? If it’s under $500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classiieds for $ 10 - 3 lines, 7 days $ 16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC AUCTION Public auction to be held Saturday, April 30, 2011 at 10:30 A.M., at Jamison Street Self Storage, 63177 Jamison St., Bend OR 97701. (Unit A-002, Dan Westeren), (Unit C-053, Tony Monroe). LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE CITY OF BEND PLANNING COMMISSION PROJECT NUMBER: 11-60, APPLICANT: Ryan Langhaim, Pinehurst Homes. NATURE OF THE APPLICATION: Deschutes River Design Review for a new 5,638 square foot single family dwelling. The proposed residence is located within the 100 foot Deschutes River Corridor Design Review Combining Zone, but outside of the Flood Plain, the Riparian Corridor and the 40 foot building setback area, and is not in a River Corridor Area of Special Interest. APPLICABLE CRITERIA: Bend Development Code Section Bend Code Chapter 10; City of Bend Development Code, Ordinance NS-2016, Chapter 2.1; Residential Districts, Chapter 2.7; Special Planned Districts , Chapter 3.5; Other Design Standards, Chapter 4.1; Land Use Review and Procedures available in City Hall or at the Community Development Department portion of the City's website. PROPERTY LOCATION: 1448 NW 1st Street; 17-12-32BA Tax Lots 13200 & 13201, DATE, TIME & LOCATION: April 25, 2011 at 5:30 p.m., City of Bend Council Chambers 710 NW Wall Street,. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: The application, all documents and evidence submitted by or on behalf of the applicant and the application criteria are available for inspection at City Hall at no cost and will be provided at a reasonable cost. Seven days prior to the hearing a copy of the staff report will be similarly available. CONTACT PERSON: Amy Barry, AICP, Associate Planner at (541)693-2114, abarry@ci.bend.or.us. Send written testimony to the Planning Commission c/o CDD, 710 NW Wall St. 97702,

or attend the meeting and state your views. The hearing will be conducted in accordance with BDC Section 4.1.800. Any party is entitled to a hearing or record continuance. Failure of an issue to be raised at the hearing, in person or by letter, or failure to provide statements or evidence sufficient to afford the decision maker an opportunity to respond precludes appeal to the Land Use Board of Appeals on that issue.

followed by a Deschutes County Rural Fire Protection District #2 Budget Committee meeting. The meeting location is accessible to persons with disabilities. A request for an interpreter for the hearing impaired or for other accommodations for persons with disabilities should be made at least 48 hours before the meeting to: Tom Fay 541-318-0459. TTY 800-735-2900.

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE The Trustee under the terms of the Trust Deed described herein, at the direction of the Beneficiary, hereby elects to sell the property described in the Trust Deed to satisfy the obligations secured thereby. Pursuant to ORS 86.745, the following information is proLEGAL NOTICE vided: 1. PARTIES: Grantor: Symbiotics LLC, on behalf of SCOTT BERGUM AND AMY Wickiup Hydro Group, LLC BERGUM. Trustee: PACIFIC (PO Box 535, Rigby, ID NORTHWEST TITLE INSUR83442), submitted a Final LiANCE COMPANY Successor cense Application with the Trustee: NANCY K. CARY Federal Energy Regulatory Beneficiary:WASHINGTON Commission for the Wickiup FEDERAL SAVINGS. 2. DEDam Hydroelectric Project SCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: (FERC No. 12965) on March The real property is de25, 2011. The project would scribed as follows: Parcel 2 add a 7.15-MW run-of-river of Partition Plat No. 2007-8, generation facility to the exrecorded February 28, 2007, isting Wickiup Dam in Desin Cabinet 3, Page 392, Deschutes County, Oregon. A chutes County, Oregon 3. copy of the Final License ApRECORDING. The Trust Deed plication is available for pubwas recorded as follows: lic viewing at the La Pine Date Recorded: April 30, Public Library. The docu2007. Recording No.: ment can also be down2007-24595. Official Records loaded at of Deschutes County, Orhttp://www.ferc.gov/docs-fil egon 4. DEFAULT. The ing/elibrary.asp by searchGrantor or any other person ing for the project number. obligated on the Trust Deed and Promissory Note seLEGAL NOTICE cured thereby is in default The regular meeting of the and the Beneficiary seeks to Board of Directors of the Deforeclose the Trust Deed for schutes County Rural Fire failure to pay: Monthly payProtection District #2 will be ments in the amount of held on Tuesday, April 12, $1,677.00 each, due the first 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at the of each month, for the Training Building behind the months of September 2010 North Fire Station, 63377 through January 2011; plus Jamison St., Bend, OR. Items late charges and advances; on the agenda include: an plus any unpaid real propupdate on Project Wildfire, erty taxes or liens, plus interthe fire department report, est. 5. AMOUNT DUE. The and a continued discussion amount due on the Note on a FireFree grant request which is secured by the Trust by Tumalo Rim Property Deed referred to herein is: Owners Association. The Principal balance in the meeting will be immediately amount of $267,939.25; plus

interest at the rate of 6.125% per annum from August 1, 2010; plus late charges of $1,209.30; plus advances and foreclosure attorney fees and costs. 6. SALE OF PROPERTY. The Trustee hereby states that the property will be sold to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed. A Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell Under Terms of Trust Deed has been recorded in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon. 7. TIME OF SALE. Date: June 9, 2011. Time: 11:00 a.m. Place: Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon 8. RIGHT TO REINSTATE. Any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time that is not later than five days before the Trustee conducts the sale, to have this foreclosure 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, by curing any other default that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed and by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with the trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amount provided in ORS 86.753. You may reach the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at 503-684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at 800-452-7636 or you may visit its website at: www.osbar.org. Legal assistance may be available if you have a low income and meet federal poverty guidelines. For more information and a directory of legal aid programs, go to http://www.oregonlawhelp.o rg. Any questions regarding this matter should be directed to Lisa Summers, Paralegal, (541) 686-0344 (TS #15148.30602). DATED: February 4, 2011 /s/ Nancy K. Cary. Nancy K. Cary, Successor Trustee Hershner Hunter, LLP P.O. Box 1475 Eugene, OR 97440

IMPROVING YOUR HEALTH AND WELL-BEING The Greatest Wealth is Health THURSDAYS • Health Datebook keeps you informed on all local health happenings & classes • Nutrition, Fitness, Money & Medicine Look for the Health SectionEvery everyMonday! Thursday! ALSO ON THURSDAYS... Hunting and Fishing in Sports! Look for the Pet Section


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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2011

DAVID BROOKS

A serious proposal to reform budget I

t was a season of fiscal perestroika. Last fall, the Simpson-Bowles deficit commission released a bold report on how to avoid an economic catastrophe. For a few weeks, the think tanks and government offices were alive with ideas to reduce debt and reform entitlements, the tax code and just about every other program. The mood did not last. The polls suggested that voters were still unwilling to accept tax increases or benefit cuts. Smart Washington insiders like Mitch McConnell and President Barack Obama decided that any party that actually tried to implement these ideas would be committing political suicide. The president walked away from the Simpson-Bowles package. Far from tackling fiscal problems, the president’s budget would double the nation’s debt over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But the forces of reform have not been entirely silenced. Over the past few weeks, a number of groups, including the exchairmen of the Council of Economic Advisers and 64 prominent budget experts, have issued letters arguing that the debt situation is so dire that doing nothing is not a survivable option. What they lacked was courageous political leadership — a powerful elected official willing to issue a proposal, willing to take a stand, willing to face the political perils. The country lacked that leadership until now. Tuesday, Paul Ryan, the Republican chairman of the House Budget Committee, released the most comprehensive and most courageous budget reform proposal any of us have seen in our lifetimes. Ryan has leapt into the vacuum left by the president’s passivity. The Ryan budget will not be enacted this year, but it immediately reframes the domestic policy debate. It will become the 2012 Republican platform, no matter who is the nominee. The Ryan proposal will help settle the fight over the government shutdown and the 2011 budget because it will remind everybody that the real argument is not about cutting a few billion here or there. It is about the underlying architecture of domestic programs in 2012 and beyond. The Ryan budget will put all future arguments in the proper context: The current welfare state is simply unsustainable and anybody who is serious, on left or right, has to have a new vision of the social contract. The initial coverage will talk about Ryan’s top number — the cuts of more than $4 trillion over the next decade. But the important thing is the way Ryan would reform programs. He would reform the tax code along the Simpson-Bowles lines, but without the tax increases. The Ryan budget doesn’t touch Medicare for anybody over 55, but for younger people it turns it into a defined contribution plan. The Ryan budget will please governors of both parties by turning Medicaid into a block grant — giving states more flexibility. It tackles agriculture subsidies and other corporate welfare. It consolidates the job-training programs into a single adult scholarship. It reforms housing assistance and food stamps. It dodges Social Security. The GOP still has no alternative to the Democratic health care reform, but this budget tackles just about every politically risky issue with brio and guts. Ryan was a protégé of Jack Kemp’s, and Kemp’s uplifting spirit pervades the document. It’s not sour, taking an austere meat ax approach. It emphasizes social support, social mobility and personal choice. I don’t agree with all of it that I’ve seen, but it is a serious effort to create a sustainable welfare state. It also creates the pivotal moment of truth for Obama. Will he come up with his own counterproposal, or will he simply demagogue the issue by screaming about “savage” Republican cuts and ignoring the long-term fiscal realities? Does he have a sustainable vision, or will he just try to rise above the fray while Nancy Pelosi and others attack Ryan? And what about the Senate Republicans? Where do they stand? Or the voters? Are they willing to face reality or will they continue to demand more government than they are willing to pay for? Paul Ryan has grasped reality with both hands. He’s forcing everybody else to do the same.

David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

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By Trip Gabriel • New York Times News Service MEMPHIS, Tenn. —

Is the growing trend in K-12 education best for students or just cheaper?

J

ack London was the subject in Daterrius Hamilton’s online English 3 course. In a high school classroom packed with computers, he read a brief biography of London with single-

paragraph excerpts from the author’s works. But the curriculum did not require him, as it had generations of English students, to wade through a tattered copy of “Call of the Wild” or “To Build a Fire.” Hamilton, who had failed English 3 in a conventional classroom and was hoping to earn credit online to graduate, was asked a question about the meaning of social Darwinism. He pasted the question into Google and read a summary of a Wikipedia entry. He copied the language, spell-checked it and e-mailed it to his teacher.

Joshua Anderson / New York Times News Service

Madison Burt, 17, logs into her online classwork program under the supervision of Raquel Ratchford, right, at Whitehaven High School, in Memphis, Tenn., March 24. Critics say online education is driven by a desire to spend less on teachers and buildings. They say there is no sound research showing that online courses at the K-12 level are comparable to face-to-face learning.

Hamilton, 18, is among the expanding ranks of students in kindergarten through grade 12 — more than 1 million in the United States, by one estimate — taking online courses. Advocates of such courses say they allow schools to offer not only makeup courses, the fastest-growing area, but also a richer menu of electives and Advanced Placement classes when there are not enough students to fill a classroom. But critics say online education is really driven by a desire to spend less on teachers and buildings, especially as state and local budget crises force deep cuts to education. They note that there is no sound research showing that online courses at the K-12 level are comparable to face-to-face learning. In Memphis, in one of the most ambitious online programs of its kind, every student must take an online course to graduate, beginning with current sophomores. Some study online versions of courses taught in classrooms in the same building. Officials for Memphis City Schools say they want to give students skills they will need in college, where online courses are increasingly common, and in the 21st-century workplace. But it is also true that Memphis is spending only $164 for each student in an online course. Administrators say they have never calculated an apples-to-apples comparison for the cost of online vs. in-person education, but around the country skeptics say online courses are a stealthy way to cut corners. “It’s a cheap education, not because it benefits the students,” said Karen Aronowitz, president of the teachers union in Miami, where 7,000 high school students were assigned to study online in computer labs this year because there were not enough teachers to comply with state class-size caps. See Online / F6

BOOKS INSIDE ‘Bossypants’: Tina Fey avoids narcissism in this funny memoir, see Page F5.

Lincoln lawyer: Best-selling author Michael Connelly tackles the foreclosure crisis, see Page F5.

Hippie pioneers: One dream plus 60 acres equals trouble in paradise, see Page F5.


F2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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The Bulletin

AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

BETSY MCCOOL GORDON BLACK JOHN COSTA RICHARD COE

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-chief Editor of Editorials

Clip and send Oregon is wonderful. Central Oregon more so. But.... Oregon does worse than the U.S. average on unemployment. Oregon trails most of the nation and the region in per capita personal income. The state budget, despite last year’s tax increases, has a shortfall in the billions. Last week, Oregon Secretary of State Kate Brown released a new disturbing pathology of the state’s financials. A few graphics are reproduced below. Total state expenditures have been leaping upward. Oregon’s K-12 costs go in only one direction. The state has doubled its long-term debt in the past nine years. And more and more will have to be spent to keep the state retirement system afloat. Gov. John Kitzhaber and the House co-chairs both proposed reasonable budgets. As a whole, legislators have been pulling punches. They could use a friendly reminder. Cut out the graphic below. Send it to your legislator. Ask what he or she is doing this session to attract jobs, boost business, reform schools and fix the state retirement system. It’s not enough for Oregon to just get by.

Total state expenditures In billions, adjusted for inflation, fiscal year ended June 30 $25 $20 $15 $10 $5 0 2002

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My Nickel’s Worth

K-12 education spending by source In billions, adjusted for inflation

Local funding

$6

State funding

Federal funding

Eliminating Social Security $4

Will you now agree that my prediction, that the conservative agenda is to bankrupt the country in order to dismantle America’s social safety network, is coming true? The 2 percent decrease in Social Security payroll deductions included in the omnibus tax bill passed last year by the lame-duck Congress is actually a 16 percent reduction in the total dollars going into the Social Security fund this coming year. It does not take a genius to predict what will happen to Social Security when its income is slashed by 16 percent. Given the makeup of the new Congress, this so-called temporary 2 percent reduction will be continued indefinitely, probably until conservatives obtain the goal they have sought since the program’s inception, the elimination of Social Security as we know it. Former President George W. Bush has stated his greatest regret was his “failure to privatize Social Security.” However, he did manage to privatize 30 percent of Medicare while simultaneously moving that program into the red. How? First, by introducing the Medicare prescription drug benefit then purposely failing to fund the new program. Second, by turning this new program over to insurance corporations rather than to the Medicare administration, then allowing those insurance corporations to administer a senior’s entire Medicare program.

$2

0 1990-91

1995-96

2000-01

2005-06

2009-10

Long-term debt In billions, adjusted for inflation, fiscal year ended June 30 $15 Revenue bonds

$12

DVA general obligation debt

General obligation debt

Certificates of participation

$9 $6 $3 0 1985

1990

1995

2000

2005

2010

Funded ratio: state agencies Calendar year ended Dec. 31 120% Fully funded

100%

In addition, the continuation of multibillion-dollar tax breaks included in the new legislation will further exacerbate America’s indebtedness difficulties, thus encouraging attacks on the safety net rather than directing attention to the development of sound fiscal reforms. Dick Phay Prineville

What has gone wrong? Could someone please tell us seniors what the (hay) has gone wrong with our country in the past 30-plus years — America, the land of the free, the brave and the poor, most of us. The lawmakers in Washington, who are paid (do not earn) $180,000-plus a year, say the country is broke. So therefore we cannot help the poor, the seniors, the veterans, the mentally ill, the homeless, the schools and our own orphan children who are pushed aside to make room for foreign kids. However, we can send and spend billions of your tax dollars to help other countries and send your young men off to fight foreign wars. Just look at what we gave post-Katrina housing, the Gulf oil spill recovery, floods, fires in California and other disasters in the Midwest and Southern states. Take a look at the police, schools, fire departments, as well as lumber and fishing on the West Coast. Question here. Where does one look? Someone once said, “Charity begins

at home.” So where is it? Imagine what it would be like if our government gave each household $500,000 to spend — not save, but to buy only U.S. goods. If you can find them! The economy would boom and everyone would be working. Old Uncle Sam is a fall guy and now he’s broke. Sad isn’t it? America, wake up. Mel Coffin La Pine

Unfair tax change It’s important that our Oregon tax system be fair to both rich and poor, which makes it outrageous that Rep. Gene Whisnant is sponsoring a bill that exempts gains on selling corporate shares from taxes while hard-working Oregonians continue to pay taxes on their wages. A poor man’s son takes a second job to make ends meet, earns $10,000, and pays $900 to the state of Oregon. A rich man’s son sells stock in a corporation for a $10,000 gain and pays nothing under legislation sponsored by Whisnant (House Bill 3187). How is this fair? Whisnant represents his moneyed supporters well, but he is sure not representing people who actually work for a living. We can only hope that Whisnant changes his mind, starts working for all of us, and kills his own bill. Dave Paulson Bend

80% 60% 40% 20% 0 2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

Source: Oregon Secretary of State’s Office

2008

2009

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

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

Conger should support in-state tuition for migrants By Annis Henson Bulletin guest columnist

Oregon high school graduates should be allowed to qualify for in-state college tuition. It is time to stop persecuting young people who may be undocumented, but whose status is due to decisions made by others, not by themselves. Some have never really lived anywhere else.

O

n Sunday, March 6, a locally significant event occurred called “An Afternoon of Unity and Compassion.” I attended and witnessed the Pilot Butte Event Center on Greenwood filled to capacity. A multitude of our Latino neighbors were there to learn about their rights as immigrants. And they helped educate the rest of us who are perplexed by current immigration laws and practices. We also heard about the human consequences of those laws, their implementation, and about policies of President Obama’s administration that are apparently being ignored by law enforcement agencies in our communities. Yes, some of these Central Oregon residents work and live here without documentation. Many participants were wearing work jackets and baseball caps, advertising local businesses where they work or that they own and operate. Others were handsomely attired in their Sunday best — mothers and children in

IN MY VIEW church clothes and men in white shirts, suits and ties. As the visiting immigration attorney answered questions, her pile of questions stacked up, written out on slips of paper provided by the organizers. Later, some of these Central Oregon residents shared stories of various experiences with local law enforcement, ICE (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement), our community college, and incarceration. Some speakers did request translators for audience members who only speak English; others used their second language and did so eloquently. I only wish that Julia Stapp, whose letter appeared in the March 15 Bulletin, had attended that afternoon. She would have heard clear and logical requests from representative students who are undocumented immigrants. One such young man was educated locally from an early age, having come with his family to the United States.

He really had no choice as an infant or young child but to be with his family when they arrived. If we taxpayers were living and working in Redmond, Bend or Madras during his public school education, Stapp and I had a part in his education, his learning English. We could be proud that he was working toward his goal of becoming a physician. He has now dropped out for financial reasons. Like others in his situation, he is required to pay outof-state tuition although he graduated from a local high school and has lived here his entire school-aged years! According to the March 30 edition of The Bulletin, this would mean he would pay $17,600 more in tuition every year at the University of Oregon than he would there for in-state tuition. It makes no sense to stop investing in this young man’s education after all the years taxpayers have already done so. Did we not expect him to become as successful and productive as possible? It is time to change this law. The Oregon Senate (without Central Oregon

senators’ votes) just passed Senate Bill 742. Known as the Tuition Equity Bill, it now goes to the Oregon House. Rep. Jason Conger, Bend’s representative in the Oregon House, must think this one through. I believe he needs to consider voting, as two other Republicans, Sens. Frank Morse, of Albany, and David Nelson, of Pendleton, did. They voted for this bill. Their reasons for an affirmative vote match my own. The bill requires students to establish that they are working toward U.S. citizenship and have lived in the U.S. for a minimum of five years and resided in our state for at least three. The young man whom I heard speak on March 6 would qualify under these terms. Oregon high school graduates should be allowed to qualify for in-state college tuition. It is time to stop persecuting young people who may be undocumented, but whose status is due to decisions made by others, not by themselves. Some have never really lived anywhere else. Annis Henson lives in Bend.


THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 F3

O Did we simply give up on Libya? P

resident Obama has announced that America would stop attacking Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s forces in Libya. He instead hopes that others can force out Gadhafi — or that the dictator will leave through economic and diplomatic pressure. It will apparently be up to NATO to finish the war — without direct American combat participation. The relieved Obama administration had never quite explained what the mission was in the first place — or for whom and for what we were fighting. Was the bombing to stop the killing, to help the rebels, to remove Gadhafi, or to aid the British and French, who both have considerable oil interests in Libya? Were we enforcing just a no-fly zone, establishing a sort of no-fly zone with occasional attacks on ground targets, or secretly sending in American operatives on the ground to work with rebels? Did the Obama administration go well beyond the Arab League and United Nations resolutions by trying to target Gadhafi for a while and ensure that the rebels won? If so, did anyone care? Was the administration ever going to ask for congressional approval — at a time when we are running a $1.6 trillion annual budget deficit and have about 150,000 troops committed in Afghanistan and Iraq? Was Libya a greater threat to our national security than Syria or Iran, or

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON a greater humanitarian crisis than the Congo or Ivory Coast? Are our new allies, the rebels, Westernized reformers, Islamists, or both — or neither? The abrupt abandonment of hostilities after about two weeks has set an American military precedent. True, the United States once lost a big war in Vietnam. It also decided not to finish a war with Islamic terrorists in 1983 after Hezbollah operatives blew up 241 U.S. military personnel in their Beirut barracks. In 1993, a few months after the “Black Hawk Down” mess in Mogadishu, President Clinton quietly withdrew American troops from Somalia. In the past, the United States has also agreed to conditions short of full victory, as with the 1953 armistice with the North Koreans that has left the Korean peninsula divided to this day. Bill Clinton also ordered missile attacks in retaliation for terrorist attacks on Americans — both in Afghanistan and Sudan — without much follow-up. Yet in no prior military engagement against a nation-state has

the United States simply announced that it was arbitrarily and unilaterally going to stop fighting after an initial two weeks of combat operations. I would not count on the ready departure of Gadhafi or his family. In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat struck back at Libyan provocations and almost invaded the country. Egypt’s massive army could have smashed the Libyan military and easily removed Gadhafi, but Egypt was talked out of the war at the last minute by concerned Arab nations. In 1986, Ronald Reagan ordered a strike against Tripoli aimed at Gadhafi himself — who may have been warned ahead of time of the impending attack and escaped. Reagan gave up on further missions against Gadhafi. Gadhafi fought and lost a decadelong war against Chad from 1978 to 1987. Yet despite thousands of dead and wounded Libyans, the defeat did not endanger Gadhafi’s hold on power. During his 42-year reign, Gadhafi has sent troops to help out the monstrous Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, blown up passenger jets, supported Slobodan Milosevic in the Balkan wars, ordered assassinations abroad, masterminded terrorist plots — and always survived by using his vast petroleum fortunes to buy reprieves. Unlike pro-Western strongmen in

Tunisia and Egypt who simply left when protests mounted, Gadhafi is perfectly willing to kill thousands of his own people to retain power. After all, he is a totalitarian outlaw with nowhere to go. Usually, such monsters do not abdicate unless they are yanked out by American ground troops — as in Grenada, Iraq and Panama — or bombed relentlessly for weeks on end, as in the case of the NATO campaign against Milosevic. Sanctions and pariah status usually do not matter much to brutal dictators like Gadhafi — as the longevity of Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe, North Korea’s Kim Jong-Il or Cuba’s Fidel Castro attests. In our defense, we can say that Gadhafi’s removal was properly a European task. We can even agree that President Obama acted precipitously, without a clear-cut mission, strategy or desired outcome — and without majority support of either Congress or the American people. Yes, we can say all that. But if Gadhafi or his family survives in power after the United States simply got tired and quit, we will also be able to say that this sort of defeat is something quite new in American history.

Y

and local levels. This makes it hard to build up cleared areas; moreover, Afghan security forces are far from ready to take over. And Obama has pledged to withdraw all combat forces by 2014, starting this year. Any exploratory talks — no matter the interlocutor — must concentrate on two core issues. First, they need to figure out who really speaks for the Taliban. Until the Taliban appoints a political leadership, talks with individuals may not mean much. And, if those leaders become known, the interlocutor needs to figure out whether they still dream of an emirate based on their harsh version of Sharia. Or is that leadership ready to listen to what Afghans want? If Karzai makes a deal with some Taliban leaders that alienates large swaths of the Afghan people there will be no peace. There will be a civil war that spills over into nuclear-armed Pakistan next door. As much as we want to leave — and forget — Afghanistan, talks with the Taliban are no silver bullet. It makes sense to send a facilitator to explore the Taliban mind-set, but talks won’t work unless that mind-set has changed.

Trudy Rubin is a columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Charles Krauthammer is a columnist for The Washington Post.

Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.

MAUREEN DOWD mous, the old stylish gals as well as the young, women elegantly draping garbage bags against the storm as well as women in couture. The streets interest him more than the salons. Fashion photography without snobbery: a small miracle. This is a disturbing moment in American culture when financing for public art is under siege and when audiences are ponying up money to boo Charlie Sheen as he talks about throwing away a $2-million-a-week TV job, taking crack and cavorting with porn stars. A new documentary about Cunningham offers a tonic of simplicity and a paean to women after Sheen’s excesses and contempt for women. Richard Press, the documentary’s director, wrote in New York magazine that he worked on the project for 10 years — eight spent begging “the reluctant fashion deity” to cooperate. He calls Cunningham “a celebration of self-invention” — a contrast with Sheen’s carnival of self-destruction. In a world where conflicts of interest are quaint, Cunningham has a profound sense of ethics. He will not even accept a glass of water at the galas he covers. Cunningham started as a milliner with a shop in Carnegie Hall. “Ginger Rogers used to come, and Joan Crawford,” he recalls. “Marilyn Monroe was one. And I had no interest because they weren’t stylish.” He only cares about “birds of para-

dise” with daring styles as opposed to “cookie-cutter sameness.” Before he was evicted by the coldhearted brass at Carnegie Hall, who wanted more office space, he had a tiny apartment filled with file cabinets and a cot, with a bathroom in the hall. He goes to church every Sunday to “repent,” but he seems oblivious to celebrity, money, sex, food and cars. He’s on his 29th bicycle, cheerfully noting, “I’ve had 28 stolen.” He’s never owned a TV. He says he could not be one of the paparazzi who “torture” people. Talking about the time he refused to take money for his work at Details after Si Newhouse bought the magazine, Cunningham says: “You see, if you don’t take money, they can’t tell you what to do, kid. ... Money’s the cheapest thing. Liberty, freedom is the most expensive.” He left Women’s Wear Daily when

they wrote mocking captions for his pictures of women on the street. There’s a poignant moment in the film when Cunningham is asked if he has ever had a romantic relationship in his life. “Now do you want to know if I’m gay?” he says, smiling uneasily. “Isn’t that a riot? Well, that’s probably why the family wanted to keep me out of the fashion world.” Then he answers simply, “I haven’t,” adding: “I suppose you can’t be in love with your work, but I enjoyed it so much.” Talking about his Catholic faith as “a good guidance in your life,” he gets choked up for a few seconds before grinning and confiding: “As a kid, I went to church and all I did was look at women’s hats.” Maureen Dowd is a columnist for The New York Times.

Negotiating with Taliban a tricky proposition I TRUDY

n mid-March, when Gen. David Petraeus returned from Kabul to testify before Congress, an amazing thing happened. The media hardly paid any attention. With revolutions popping up all over the Middle East, and the United States newly embroiled in Libya, the conflict in Afghanistan has vanished from the news pages. The Afghan war has become the forgotten war. When reminded of it by pollsters, nearly two-thirds of Americans say the war is not worth fighting, and many of the war’s onetime supporters have become doubters. Yet no one has figured out a formula to extricate most or all of the 100,000 or so U.S. troops that does not risk plunging the country back into chaos. So it’s not surprising we’re hearing talk again of pursuing talks with the Taliban to achieve a political solution to the Afghan conflict. A report on how to jump-start such talks was just released by the Century Foundation, based on a nine-month study led by former U.S. diplomat extraordinaire Tom Pickering and ex-U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, who helped produce and implement the Bonn peace accords at the end of the 2001 Afghan war. Brahimi says there are prospects for peace talks that didn’t exist before. The Taliban has been under heavy

RUBIN

pressure in southern Afghanistan because of last year’s surge of U.S. troops and a campaign by U.S. Special Forces to target Taliban commanders. News reports indicate that they have also been beset by a wave of killings, arrests, and internal disputes in their haven in Pakistan. “In 2006-2007 the Taliban were doing extremely well and were convinced they didn’t need to negotiate,” Brahimi said at a small dinner in Washington last week, where the report was introduced. “What has happened since is leading them to think it is not going to be that easy, and perhaps it is better to negotiate a compromise. “We think the Taliban may be interested in exploring negotiations, not more than that,” he added. The task force has recommended appointing an “internationally designated facilitator” to explore if such talks are possible. Who would appoint such a person is left vague — maybe the United Nations. It’s clear that Brahimi wants the job.

It’s also clear that the current U.N. envoy in Afghanistan, the very capable Stefan de Mistura, does not want to be bypassed. Nor are U.S. officials — or Petraeus — likely to endorse handing off this role to an independent outsider. The public U.S. position has been that any talks with the Taliban should be handled by Afghan President Hamid Karzai. The late U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan, Richard Holbrooke, had been pushing for talks, no doubt in hopes that he could repeat his success in brokering the Dayton peace accords in the Balkans. And there have been recent reports of secret exploratory talks between administration officials and senior Afghan Taliban leaders. But there is a bigger strategic question beyond who should facilitate such talks: Does the concept really offer any hope of ending the Afghan war? This question is often finessed by those who seek talks, out of a desperate desire to break the Afghan impasse. Despite the military gains by Petraeus in “clearing” Taliban from the south, the other pillars of his strategy — hold, build, and transfer to Afghans — are shaky. The corrupt Karzai government often undercuts progress at provincial

Rep. Ryan’s courageous budget leap WASHINGTON — In 1983, the British Labor Party under the hard-left Michael Foot issued a 700-page manifesto so radical that one colleague called it “the longest suicide note in history.” House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan has just released a recklessly bold, 73-page, 10-year budget plan. At 37 footnotes, it might be the most annotated suicide note in history. That depends on whether a) President Barack Obama counters with a deficit-reduction plan of equal seriousness, rather than just demagoguing the Ryan plan till next Election Day, b) there are any Republicans beyond the measured, super-wonky Ryan who can explain and defend a plan of such daunting scope and complexity, and c) Americans are serious people. My guesses: No. Not really. And I hope so (we will find out definitively in November 2012). The conventional line of attack on Ryan’s plan is already taking shape: It cuts poverty programs and “privatizes” Medicare in order to cut taxes for the rich. Major demagoguery on all three counts. 1) The reforms of the poverty programs are meant to change an incentive structure that today perversely encourages states to inflate the number of dependents (because the states then get more “free” federal matching money) and also encourages individuals to stay on the dole. The 1996 welfare reform was similarly designed to reverse that entitlement’s powerful incentives to dependency. Ryan’s idea is to extend the same logic of rewarding work to the non-cash parts of the poverty program — from food stamps to public housing. When you hear this being denounced as throwing the poor in the snow, remember these same charges were hurled with equal fury in 1996. President Clinton’s own assistant health and human services secretary, Peter Edelman, resigned in protest, predicting that abolishing welfare would throw a million children into poverty. On the contrary. Within five years child poverty had declined by more than 2.5 million — one of the reasons the 1996 welfare reform is considered one of the social policy successes of our time. 2) Critics are describing Ryan’s Medicare reform as privatization, a deliberately loaded term designed to instantly discredit the idea. Yet the idea is essentially to apply to all of Medicare the system under which Medicare Part D has been such a success: a guaranteed insurance subsidy. Thus instead of paying the health provider directly (fee-for-service), Medicare would give seniors about $15,000 of “premium support,” letting the recipient choose among a menu of approved health-insurance plans. Call this privatization if you like, but then would you call the Part D prescription benefit “privatized”? If so, there’s a lot to be said for it. Part D is both popular and successful. Under Ryan’s plan, everyone 55 and over is unaffected. Younger workers get the insurance subsidy starting in 2022. By eventually ending the current fee-forservice system that drives up demand and therefore prices, this reform is far more likely to ensure the survival of Medicare than the current near-insolvent system. 3) The final charge — cutting taxes for the rich — is the most scurrilous. That would be the same as calling the Ronald Reagan-Bill Bradley 1986 tax reform “cutting taxes for the rich.” In fact, it was designed for revenue neutrality. It cut rates — for everyone — by eliminating loopholes, including corrupt exemptions and economically counterproductive tax expenditures, to yield what is generally considered by left and right an extraordinarily successful piece of legislation. Ryan’s plan is classic tax reform — which even Obama says the country needs: It broadens the tax base by eliminating loopholes that, in turn, provide the revenues for reducing rates. Tax reform is one of those rare public policies that produce social fairness and economic efficiency at the same time. Ryan’s overall plan tilts at every windmill imaginable, including corporate welfare and agricultural subsidies. The only thing left out is Social Security. Which proves only that Ryan is not completely suicidal. But the blueprint is brave and profoundly forward-looking. It seeks nothing less than to adapt the currently unsustainable welfare state to the demographic realities of the 21st century. Will it survive the inevitable barrage of mindless, election-driven, 30-second attack ads (see above)? Alternate question: Does Obama have half of Ryan’s courage? I think not (on both counts). But let’s hope so.

Photographer hunts birds of paradise ou know those moments where You Just Want To Die? I had one at a big New York Times party a decade ago. As the publisher, editors, writers and celebrities mingled at the Four Seasons restaurant in New York, a famous fashion designer suddenly glared at me from across the room. “You!” he yelled, pointing at me in a sartorial “J’accuse” moment, “are wearing the wrong stockings with that dress!” The earth, unfortunately, didn’t swallow me. I had to stay at the party in my offensive black outfit and burning red face. But as I was hanging my head at the bar, something wonderful happened. The legendary Times fashion photographer and Gotham sprite Bill Cunningham was wandering through the crowd, snapping pictures. We’d never met, but he paused briefly, looked approvingly at my lace sheath and took a picture. “Early Suzy Parker,” he murmured about the dress, before melting back into the crowd. I still have not formally met Bill Cunningham, now 82 and still going strong. I wave at him when I see him around Manhattan, a slight, gray-haired man in a tweed cap turned backward, standing sentry outside Barney’s, peddling on his red Schwinn through Times Square or darting around taking pictures at the opera. As on that first night, he always looks happy and busy and kind, a Boston Irish priest of street fashion, an aesthetic meritocrat who moves through New York’s seductive trellis of money, power and status and stays pure somehow. He admires anybody who looks good, the obscure as well as the fa-

CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER


F4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

B B E S T- S E L L E R S Publishers Weekly ranks the best sellers for the week ending April 2. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. “The Land of Painted Caves” by Jean M. Auel (Crown) 2. “Lover Unleashed” by J.R. Ward. (NAL) 3. “Mystery” by Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine) 4. “Live Wire” by Harlan Coben (Dutton) 5. “Toys” by James Patterson & Dennis McMahon (Little, Brown) 6. “Sing You Home” by Jodi Picoult (Atria) 7. “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” by Stieg Larsson (Knopf) 8. “The Troubled Man” by Henning Mankell (Knopf) 9. “The Saturday Big Tent Wedding Party” by Alexander McCall Smith (Pantheon) 10. “The Jungle” by Clive Cussler (Putnam) 11. “Night Road” by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin’s) 12. “The Paris Wife” by Paula McLain (Ballantine) 13. “The Tiger’s Wife” by Tea Obreht (Random House) 14. “A Discovery of Witches” by Deborah Harkness (Viking)

HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. “Onward” by Howard Schultz (Rodale) 2. “The 17 Day Diet” by Dr. Mike Moreno (Free Press) 3. “Unbroken” by Laura Hillenbrand (Random House) 4. “The Social Animal” by David Brooks (Random House) 5. “Love Wins” by Rob Bell (HarperOne) 6. “The Money Class” by Suze Orman (Spiegel & Grau) 7. “Moonwalking with Einstein” by Joshua Foer (Penguin Press)

Goldman’s ‘Say Her Name’ tells of fiery love, searing grief “Say Her Name” by Francisco Goldman (Grove, 350 pgs., $24)

By Marion Winik Newsday

So many dead people. So much grief. So many books about it. Critics have asked if Joan Didion might have said all that was necessary on the topic in “The Year of Magical Thinking”; readers can be forgiven for wondering if they can stand to read one more word. The answers are, no, she didn’t; and yes, you can. “Say Her Name” brings something new to the rime of the grieving survivor: fresh supplies of imagination, ruthlessness and over-the-edge crazy love. Believe me, you haven’t been harrowed like this in a while. The brilliant novelist and investigative journalist Francisco Goldman (“The Divine Husband,” “The Art of Political Murder”) met 25-year-old Aura Estrada, a Mexican graduate student and aspiring writer, at a reading at Columbia University in 2003. The morning after their first night together, he came out of the bathroom to find her looking at his driver’s license. Fortyseven! she exclaimed.

8. “All My Life” by Susan Lucci (It Books)

Love story

9. “Red” by Sammy Hagar with Joel Selvin (It Books)

Middle-aged he may have been, but he was soon besotted in a way he never knew possible. “It was all new for me, this degree of intimacy and trust and its requirements: an expansion of attention and a concurrent narrowing of focus to be able to take in everything, past and present, inside the radius of Aura’s life that I could.” The intensity, tenderness and heat of this love is extraordinary; how many of us have ever been loved so well? Or would recognize such love, were it not laid out with such intelligence and precision? Shortly, the lovers are engaged. Aura loses sleep fretting that she’s condemned herself to an early, miserable widowhood. Frank assures her she can stick him in a nursing home when he’s 75 and start a second life. Soon, they are just too happy to worry about it. When Aura calls him to ride an hour on the subway to have lunch with her, he always goes, helpless against her sweet fiat. “Francisco,” she chides, “I didn’t get married to eat lunch by myself.” Then, two years later, Aura breaks her neck bodysurfing on vacation in Mexico. She lives a day, then slips into a coma and dies. As she tells her mother with one of her last breaths, “Fue una tonteria.” It was a stupid thing.

10. “Rawhide Down” by Del Quentin Wilber (Holt) 11. “The 4-Hour Body” by Timothy Ferriss (Crown) 12. “Jesus of Nazareth” by Pope Benedict XVI (Ignatius Press) 13. “Physics of the Future” by Michio Kaku (Doubleday) 14. “Place of Yes” by Bethenny Frankel with Eve Adamson (Touchstone)

MASS MARKET 1. “Caught” by Harlan Coben (Signet) 2. “The Shadow of Your Smile” by Mary Higgins Clark (Pocket) 3. “Dead in the Family” by Charlaine Harris (Ace) 4. “Water for Elephants” by Sara Gruen (Algonquin) 5. “The Darkest Secret” by Gena Showalter (HQN) 6. “Indulgence in Death” by J.D. Robb (Berkley) 7. “Vampire Mine” by Kerrilyn Sparks (Avon) 8. “Home Free” by Fern Michaels (Zebra) 9. “Driftwood Cottage” by Sheryl Woods (Mira) 10. “The Lincoln Lawyer” by Michael Connelly (Grand Central) 11. “Game of Thrones” by George R.R. Martin (Bantam) 12. “Big Girl” by Danielle Steel (Dell) 13. “Eternal Rider” by Larissa Ione (Grand Central) 14. “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” by Stieg Larsson (Vintage)

TRADE 1. “Heaven Is for Real” by Todd Burpo with Lynn Vincent (Thomas Nelson) 2. “Water for Elephants” by Sara Gruen (Algonquin) 3. “Cutting for Stone” by Abraham Verghese (Vintage) 4. “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks” by Rebecca Skloot (Broadway) 5. “Now Eat This! Diet” by Rocco DiSpirito (Grand Central) 6. “Hungry Girl 300 Under 300” by Lisa Lillien (St. Martin’s Griffin) 7. “Have a Little Faith” by Mitch Albom (Hyperion) 8. “Private” by James Patterson & Maxine Paetro (Grand Central) 9. “The Art of Racing in the Rain” by Garth Stein (Harper) 10. “Inside of a Dog” by Alexandra Horowitz (Scribner) 11. “Born to Run” by Christopher McDougall (Vintage) 12. “The Postmistress” by Sarah Blake (Berkley) 13. “Heart of the Matter” by Emily Giffin (St. Martin’s Griffin) 14. “The Glass Castle” by Jeannette Walls (Scribner) — McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Freedom of fiction This part of the book was published in The New Yorker magazine as Personal History — which means fact. Of the unembroidered, verifiable kind. But to this foundation of fact, “Say Her Name” adds layers that require the freedom of fiction. Chapters imagine Aura’s childhood, her years at the university, her entwined relationship with her mother, Juanita, her one encounter with her estranged father. These are journeys a memoirist cannot take. This imagined past is interwoven with charming stories of the marriage and brutal narratives of mourning. Goldman’s grief takes him into the beds of her friends, gives him drunken head injuries, provokes behavior that is by turns pitiable, ugly and disastrous. Meanwhile, Juanita’s bereaved frenzy causes her to sever relations with Goldman, seeing him not as the love of Aura’s life but as her murderer. Goldman is obsessed with his degree of culpability, with the idea that he is, metaphorically, the wave that killed her. I urge readers just discovering Goldman to go back to his 1992 novel, “The Long Night of White Chickens.” The beloved woman at the center of the story is dead when the book begins. That this was Goldman’s subject even then increases the beauty and mystery of both works.

Historian offers chilling account of Cold War’s hair-trigger days “15 Minutes: General Curtis LeMay and the Countdown to Nuclear Annihilation” by L. Douglas Keeney (St. Martin’s, 372 pgs., $26.99).

Weapons were programmed to launch automatically if their controllers were annihilated. “There was more truth than fiction,” Keeney writes, “in the idea that machines could end the world.”

By George Walden Bloomberg News

The onslaught would begin, American war planners assumed in the 1950s, with the detonation of nuclear bombs secreted by Russian operatives in Washington, New York and at ports and airfields. Then Soviet bombers would head for the U.S. to finish the job, crossing Gen. Curtis LeMay’s Strategic Air Command retaliatory force en route. A doomsday scenario — though not everything need be lost. After tens of millions of people had been skinned, vaporized or roasted alive on either side, there could be a pause for negotiation. For retrospective chills about the early days of the Cold War, it’s hard to beat “15 Minutes: General Curtis LeMay and the Countdown to Nuclear Annihilation” by L. Douglas Keeney, a military historian. LeMay emerges not as the manic Cold Warrior of “Dr. Strangelove,” nor as the man who later sullied his reputation as the running mate to segregationist presidential candidate George Wallace, the Alabama governor. LeMay’s verbal extravagances notwithstanding — “We should nuke the bastards” — he was, for Keeney, a supremely competent leader who built the Strategic Air Command, or SAC, from scratch as the key instrument to contain and deter Soviet Russia. The thrills and spills on the way keep you reading. So does a sense of awe. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the nuclear physicist, described early bombs such as the Fat Man dropped on Nagasaki as “haywire contraptions.” Norris Bradbury, head of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, said they “looked like they had the measles.” The spills of nuclear weapons were literal, too: Dozens of airborne bombs were dumped on land and at sea when the planes carrying them came down or got into trouble in the 1950s. Though official cover-ups soothed public fears, the avoid-

St. Martins Press

L. Douglas Keeney, author of “15 Minutes: General Curtis LeMay and the Countdown to Nuclear Annihilation.” The book offers a chilling account of the early days of the Cold War. ance of a nuclear explosion was a miracle. The hazards of warhead testing were similarly horrendous. A “hairy-chested” approach became semiofficial doctrine, says Keeney, describing a manly disinclination to worry too much about radioactive contamination. After the runaway explosion of the Bravo bomb during the Operation Castle tests near the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific in 1954, the government worried more. The yield was 15 megatons instead of the anticipated 8 to 10; visible fallout rained on sailors and technicians in shorts and shirts. The sickness some suffered was appalling, though less so than on the nearby Marshall Islands, where women produced

children with two heads or “grape babies” — newborns that resembled bunches of grapes. As Russian capabilities developed, warning times narrowed. The SAC strived to shave seconds off the 15 minutes needed to get its bombers airborne. The next step, inevitably, was nuclear-armed planes permanently in the sky. Crews on 20-hour patrols routinely overflew foreign countries, chewing Dexedrine to stay alert. Fortunately there were failsafe procedures: Pilots ordered to head for Soviet Russia would turn back automatically after designated periods unless specifically instructed to continue. Nuclear equivalence with the Russians was a concept LeMay and his successor, the equally

ebullient Gen. Thomas Power, wouldn’t have recognized: Overkill was what they wanted — and what they got. In 1956, the U.S. national stockpile was 4,618 nuclear bombs, Keeney says; by 1962, it had reached 27,387. The Russians, we now know, had 3,722. On top of that, the SAC was what the Central Intelligence Agency called a “jumpy, alert happy force” — a glamorous elite reveling in what Keeney describes as a “bring-it-on” culture. The chill factor increases when we learn that both sides had perfected what the Russians called a “dead-hand switch” system of retaliation: Weapons were programmed to launch automatically if their controllers were annihilated. “There was more truth than fiction,” Keeney writes, “in the idea that machines could end the world.” By the 1970s, intercontinental ballistic missiles were being perfected, rendering nuclear bombers largely obsolete, and the SAC was dissolved in 1992, following the disintegration of the Soviet Union. The power of Keeney’s book lies in his determination to avoid excess emotion and stick to the facts — facts that, God knows, are themselves emotive enough. You finish this book a little numbed, though with a strange sense of hope: If mankind can get through years like these and learn the lessons, perhaps it can get through anything. George Walden, a former British diplomat and member of Parliament, is a critic for Muse, the arts and leisure section of Bloomberg News.


B OOK S

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 F5

‘Lincoln Lawyer’ novel brings Tina Fey has it all – on home the foreclosure crisis her own funny terms “The Fifth Witness” by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown, 416 pgs., $27.99)

By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel

Current issues often filter into the best crime fiction, making the novels as timely and relevant as possible. Best-selling author Michael Connelly tackles the foreclosure crisis in his excellent 23nd novel. In “The Fifth Witness,” Connelly delivers a contemporary novel that has an up-to-the-minute view of home foreclosures — much in the same way that he gave an insider’s view of the newspaper industry in “The Scarecrow” (2009). But “The Fifth Witness” is no simple tale about an owner losing his home because of the economic downturn. Instead, Connelly tackles the industries of corruption that have popped up around foreclosures — shady bankers, sleazy brokers and sneaky activists — while delivering a rousing legal thriller. The “The Fifth Witness” brings back Mickey Haller, the “Lincoln Lawyer” who runs his business from the back seat of his Lincoln Town Car. Like just about everyone in the country, Mickey has felt the financial pinch. Although “In Los Angeles crime marched on through any economy,” Mickey’s would-be clients can’t afford him, opting for a public defender. Reasoning that “the only growth industry in the law business was foreclosure defense,” Mickey goes civil. Now Mickey is busier than ever with a diverse clientele who need help in holding onto their homes. Lisa Trammel was the first

person to answer Mickey’s foreclosure ad, but she also has become his most problematic. The kind of person who blames everyone for her problems, Lisa has turned bombastic activist, picketing in front of the bank for its “fraudulent practices and heartless action.” In turn, the bank has gotten a restraining order to keep Lisa away from the bank and its employees. Lisa becomes the logical suspect when mortgage banker Mitchell Bondurant is murdered in his office parking garage. Despite mounting evidence and his doubts about Lisa, Mickey kicks into high gear to defend his client, assembling his crack team of associates and even renting an office near the courthouse. Mickey knows how to work the law to his advantage. Although his client’s unsympathetic personality makes his work difficult, Mickey discovers that the victim had a shady side business,

dealing with foreclosures that may have led to his death. “The Fifth Witness” moves briskly through L.A.’s courts and neighborhoods as Connelly excels in combining the legal thriller with an investigative procedural. While Connelly’s main series revolves around LAPD detective Harry Bosch, the author has found an intriguing secondary series with Mickey. Mickey is a complicated character like Bosch, who is his half brother. He is both cynical and optimistic about the law; he believes in the justice system even as he manipulates it. He despises his client, yet works hard to offer her the best defense. Mickey is the consummate deal-maker whether it comes to dealing with the prosecutor, the judge or trying to broker a movie and book deal about the case. Mickey’s confidence masks an insecurity about his personal life. A late-night drive through L.A.’s canyons with the windows down allows him to “let in the chill of the air and the loneliness work into my bones.” “The Fifth Witness” is the fourth novel to feature Mickey and Connelly proves that, as with Bosch, there is so much more to explore with this character. A final twist to “The Fifth Witness” hints at more Mickey novels. Currently, Matthew McConaughey is starring as Mickey in the film version of “The Lincoln Lawyer,” which is sure to draw more readers to Connelly’s novels. I’ve said many times that Connelly continues to show why he is one of the best — and most consistent — living crime writers. “The Fifth Witness” adds evidence to the case.

Losing a hard-won paradise “This Life is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family Undone” by Melissa Coleman (Harper Collins, illustrated, 325 pgs., $25.99)

By Janet Maslin New York Times News Service

Melissa Coleman was born in 1969 to parents who were hippie pioneers. In 1968 they had moved to Cape Rosier, Maine, to start an organic farm and devote every waking hour to its upkeep. They had come there as protégés of Helen and Scott Nearing, whose books, most notably “Living the Good Life,” inspired a back-tothe-land movement predicated on hard work and strict discipline. Their goals reflected Thoreau’s determination “to live so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life.” “Why does he have to be so self-righteous?” Coleman’s paternal aunt once asked about her idealistic brother. Here is how Coleman writes in her memoir, “This Life Is in Your Hands,” about her earliest years: “What a joy it is to be alive,

Mama thought, to have a handsome husband and a laughing young child.” And here is what anyone drawn in by the unlikely magnetism of Coleman’s vegetable-filled, sun-kissed story will ask: OK, what went wrong? Even if “This Life Is in Your Hands: One Dream, Sixty Acres, and a Family Undone” did not have a subtitle that refers to a damaged family, the expectation of trouble in paradise would be

“Bossypants” by Tina Fey (Reagan Arthur/ Little, Brown, 277 pgs., $26.99)

By Mary McNamara Los Angeles Times

Ever since Vanity Fair put her on its January 2010 cover in what looked like a Wonder Woman costume, Tina Fey has seemed in danger of falling for the very canard she has spent a career satirizing: that a woman can “have it all” if she’s willing to lose 20 pounds, show her breasts and regularly remind everyone that, although she writes and stars in an Emmywinning TV show, she is still essentially a loser who eats a lot of cupcakes. (Just like, you know, Larry David does.) An excerpt from her new book in a recent New Yorker didn’t help, with Fey assuming the position of agonized career mommy — why do so many people keep asking her if she is going to have another baby when having one is so hard? Fey wonders hysterically, never once considering that these people are Just Making Polite Conversation. But any concern that Fey, like so many before her, has been ruined by fame is quickly dispelled by “Bossypants,” a book that reminds you why Fey has succeeded where so many have failed — because she is precise, professional and hilarious. At first, “Bossypants” appears to be just more of the same — there’s Fey on the cover looking fabulous but not owning it (her airbrushed face is framed by two large and hairy male arms) and the back is filled with fake and self-deprecating quotes regarding her appearance and talent. Pay them no mind; inside lies a collection of autobiographical essays that should (but of course won’t) prove once and for all that pretty is nowhere near as important as funny, and funny doesn’t work without that rare

balance of truth and heart. I didn’t know what was up with the editors at the New Yorker — why choose to cobble together a piece about Fey’s mommy anxiety instead of lifting the gorgeously rendered, breathlessly funny chapter on her father, or even her lifeaffirming treatise on photo shoots (“Don’t ever feel inadequate looking at magazines. Just remember every person you see on a cover has a bra and underwear hanging out a gaping hole in the back”), which comes complete with a very persuasive defense of Photoshopping? But then they ran another piece, one about the lessons she learned from Lorne Michaels. Begging another question: How many people in this world have had two chapters excerpted by the New Yorker? A sidebar on the art of improvisation is as close to intelligent self-help advice as you’re going to get, and her description of an early job at a Chicago Y borders on new journalism. If nothing else, “Bossypants” should make any profile of Fey unnecessary, since it provides everything readers want from a story about a performer and none of the “clever” observations about food intake/ab-

sence of makeup/appearance of child art upon which celebrity profiles are so dependent. In chapter after chapter, in a voice consistently recognizable as her own, Fey simply tells stories of her life: How a nerdy but self-confident halfGreek girl entered theatrical life (a wonderful community theater, lots of gay and lesbian friends), what Second City was like “back in the day” (cultish, hard, unbelievably fun), how “Saturday Night Live” works (a chemical compound of Harvard grads and Improv people), what it’s like to be a woman in comedy (harder than you think but not as hard as coal mining) or to run your own show or to satirize a vice presidential candidate when she’s standing right backstage. Fey has a great sense of pace and timing — longer, weightier chapters dealing with her profession and her career are balanced with short pieces on being fat and being thin and some responses to evil e-mail — and a love of language that echoes early Nora Ephron and, before that, the marvelous Jean Kerr. In her own way, Fey has been doing this all her life. She is a physical personal essayist in that her writing and performing all stem from what she thinks about the experiences she has had. The seams that hold “Bossypants” together are her experiences specifically as a woman; although she is far from heavy-handed, Fey is matter-of-fact about the double standard to which women are still held. That some found her impersonation of Palin “ungracious” is, to her mind, the perfect example: Palin, she argues, is not fragile and she, Fey, is not mean. That she manages to completely avoid a memoir’s biggest pitfall — oblivious narcissism — is proof enough that a sense of humor is crucial to most storytelling.

inevitable. “The very nature of paradise,” clucks one schadenfreude-filled person quoted in the book, “is that it will be lost.” But the Colemans did not face an ordinary set of domestic problems, and that’s a big part of this book’s intense readability. Coleman, a freelance writer, overworks the foreshadowing and omen-dropping, but she manages to weave a lot of real suspense into the question of what type of destruction is in the offing. “This Life Is in Your Hands” takes some of its title from Helen Nearing’s effort to predict the future by reading the hand lines of Coleman’s sister. The lines of the hand can grow and change, she told that little girl. “I didn’t fully understand what she meant then, but I do now,” writes Coleman, who has reimagined her early years with such intensity that there are times when this book turns overripe, and the plink-plink of every freshly picked berry dropped in a bucket can almost be heard. More often, there is haunting power here, as well as lush, vivid atmosphere that is alluring in its own right.

‘Free World’ peppered with promise “The Free World” by David Bezmozgis (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 356 pgs., $26)

By Mike Fischer Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

“The Free World,” David Bezmozgis’ first novel, begins its journey in much the same way as the Krasnansky family it features: with the promise of good things ahead. We first meet the Krasnanskys in a crowded Vienna train station, where three generations of them are midway in their journey from Latvia to the West. It is 1978. The refusenik Natan Sharansky is about to be convicted and Brezhnev is in power. Given that all but one of the Krasnanskys is Jewish, starting over elsewhere seems like a good idea. In a series of short, deftly interwoven chapters, Bezmozgis introduces us to his cast of characters. The family’s titular head is Samuil, a former Red Army officer and unregenerate Stalinist who had watched the Whites murder his father when he was 6. Samuil’s wife, Emma, is

a warm, 53-year-old doctor whom Samuil consistently underestimates. Karl, their eldest son, never met an angle he couldn’t play. Karl’s 26-year-old brother, Alec, is a playboy who wants to leave Latvia so he’ll have “more freedom to bumble.” Karl’s wife, Rosa, wants their two young sons to grow up in Israel. Alec’s 28-year-old wife, Polina, is a shiksa who left her first husband to marry Alec. The Krasnanskys land in Rome, a halfway house where emigrés like them await word that they can move on to final destinations in other countries. Covering a five-month period, the rest of “Free World” unfolds there, where it too often seems lost in transit and unsure what comes next. Hitherto a short story writer, Bezmozgis seems overwhelmed by the array of choices a novel provides, and like the proverbial kid in the candy store, he wants to try everything. Having just finished getting his main characters on stage, Bezmozgis’ attention is already wandering elsewhere. We’re introduced to minor

characters with sketchy back stories that don’t add up to a convincing whole, as is the case with the ex-Soviet and ex-Israeli Lyova, who has left a wife and child he adores in Israel in the name of an abstract and unconvincing rebellion against Israeli militarism. Worst of all, we’re treated to a boring subplot featuring Russian gangsters that takes the long way around the barn to prove what a fool Alec can be — which in turn raises questions as to why Polina would have ever married him. But the steady accretion of historical detail eventually works, transforming an old man who can admittedly seem ridiculous into a dignified figure who commands our empathy and even our respect. “Free World” has other strengths as well. It is sprinkled with sharp aphorisms. Even its flattest characters generate witty and often bitterly sardonic dialogue. Most important, “Free World” embodies the malaise, which would become common after 1989, of people who had finally won the freedom to move, only to learn there was no place to go.

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER


F6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Will author really take Wallander off the case? “The Troubled Man” by Henning Mankell (Alfred A. Knopf, 384 pgs., $25.95)

By John Timpane The Philadelphia Inquirer

PHILADELPHIA — Henning Mankell has given his latest — and could it be last? — Wallander novel the tantalizing title “The Troubled Man.” Who is the troubled man? “I can think of at least three candidates,” says Mankell. There’s a fourth candidate “if you count the author,” Mankell, 63, adds with a dry chuckle. “The writer is a troubled man about what happened in the Cold War.” Kurt Wallander, the rumpled, harried, imperfect protagonist of the novels, is always a candidate. In this one, he faces age, mortality — and a huge, ever-unraveling mystery, pulling in himself, his family — and the recent political history of Sweden. The troubled man could also be Hekan von Enke, a retired navy commander. He’s the father of the man living with Wallander’s daughter, Linda. When first Hekan and then his wife, Louise, disappear, the fatal machine starts moving. Even though he’s suspended from police duty, Wallander gets pulled into the case.

Paranoia Hekan may be paranoid, but sometimes paranoia is reasonable. Sometimes the bad guys are coming to get you. This truth plays out in the larger scheme of “The Troubled Man” as it takes on two shadows over Swedish history and politics. The first is the scandal of Russian submarines supposedly sighted off the coast of Sweden in the 1980s. “There were no subs, or if there were, they were American, not Russian,” Mankell says from his home outside Gothenburg, Sweden. In Mankell’s view, “We were told something that wasn’t true — this charade of neutrality, when Sweden was never neutral. We have always been complicit.” The second shadow is the stillunexplained 1986 assassination of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme. “We most probably will never find out what really happened,” Mankell says, “as with Kennedy in the United States.” “The Troubled Man” begins in Palme’s office. Palme is, indeed, troubled over what he discovers about his government. Cold War anxiety, and more, will come ’round to bear on Wallander’s quest. (Another Swedish writer, Stieg Larsson, tapped similar dark anxieties in the climax of his “Girl With the Dragon Tattoo” series.)

Politics Mankell is a political writer and a political man. “I was a teen in the 1960s,” he says. “In Sweden, that was a time when the doors opened to the rest of the world, and we realized many people didn’t live the same way as we do.” He protested the Vietnam War and worked for social and political causes on the left. “When one reaches the age of 60,” Mankell says, “for many people there comes a need, an urge to look backward to see what you have done with your life. That can be scary. Everybody has dreams, and many see they have lost their dream, were too lazy, or something happened that prevented it. One also realizes that he hasn’t looked upon himself as a political animal, hasn’t been interested in what has been happening in society. Now Wallander has to face it — the hypocrisy and lies about Sweden’s neutrality in the Cold War.” Can this really be the last Wallander book? “Well, I didn’t make the mistake Arthur Conan Doyle did, a very stupid thing, of killing off Sherlock Holmes and then having to bring him back,” Mankell says. “But it would be difficult to write any more about Wallander, in the sense of writing about a man doing work as a detective. In that way, it’s the end.” Many U.S. viewers know Kenneth Branagh as Wallander, and Mankell is a big fan of the BBC/ Yellow Bird versions of his novels: “I like them very much. In a very intelligent way, they have purified the story, made it more like an ancient drama. I was speaking to Kenneth recently, and he was very happy about it.” Then, a revelation: “There will be more. I think I can reveal there will be three more, at least.”

C OV ER S T ORY

Online Continued from F1 “This is being proposed for even your youngest students,” Aronowitz said. “Because it’s good for the kids? No. This is all about cheap.” In Idaho, the state superintendent of education plans to push a requirement that high school students take four or more online courses, following a bill that passed the Legislature last week to provide every student with a laptop, paid for from a state fund for educators’ salaries. Chicago and New York City have introduced pilot online learning programs. In New York, Innovation Zone, or iZone, includes online makeup and Advanced Placement courses at 30 high schools, as well as personalized after-school computer drills in math and English for elementary students.

Increasing interest Reza Namin, superintendent of schools in Westbrook, Maine, which faces a $6.5 million budget deficit, said he could not justify continuing to pay a Chinese language teacher for only 10 interested students. But he was able to offer Chinese online through the Virtual High School Global Consortium, a nonprofit school based in Massachusetts. The virtual high school says its list of client schools has grown to 770, up 34 percent in two years, because of local budget cuts. Nationwide, an estimated 1.03 million students at the K-12 level took an online course in 2007-08, up 47 percent from two years earlier, according to the Sloan Consortium, an advocacy group for online education. About 200,000 students attend online schools full-time, often charter schools that appeal to home-schooling families, according to another report. The growth has come despite a cautionary review of research by the U.S. Department of Education in 2009. It found benefits in online courses for college students but concluded that few rigorous studies had been done at the K-12 level, and policymakers “lack scientific evidence of the effectiveness” of online classes. The fastest growth has been in makeup courses for students who failed a regular class. Advocates say the courses let students who were bored or left behind learn at their own pace. But even some proponents of online classes are dubious about makeup courses, also known as credit recovery — or, derisively, click-click credits — which high schools, especially those in high-poverty districts, use to increase graduation rates and avoid federal sanctions. “I think many people see

Joshua Anderson / New York Times News Service

Students work on their online class assignments during an after-school period last month at Whitehaven High School, in Memphis, Tenn. The number of students from kindergarten to grade 12 who are taking online courses in the U.S. is steadily increasing. In Memphis, every student, beginning with current sophomores, must take an online course to graduate. online courses as being a way of being able to remove a pain point, and that is, how are they going to increase their graduation rate?” said Liz Pape, president of the Virtual High School Global Consortium. If credit recovery were working, she said, the need for remedial classes in college would be declining — but the opposite is true.

More graduates In Memphis, Hamilton’s school, Sheffield High, once qualified as a “dropout factory” with a graduation rate below 60 percent. Now the class of 2011 is on target to graduate 86 percent of its students, said Elvin Bell, the school’s “graduation coach,” an increase attributable in part to a longer school day and online makeup courses for students who failed a regular class. Sixty-one students are in the courses this semester, including Hamilton, whose average in English 3 is below passing. Melony Smith, his online teacher, said she had not immediately recognized that his answer on the Jack London assignment was copied from the Web, but she said plagiarism was a problem with many students. Memphis supplies its own teachers, mostly classroom teachers who supplement their incomes by contracting to work 10 hours a week with 150 stu-

dents online. That is one-fourth of the time they would devote to teaching the same students face-to-face. But administrators insisted that their chief motive was to enhance student learning, not save money in a year when the 108,000-student district is braced for cuts of $100 million and hundreds of jobs. “What the online environment does is continue to provide rich offerings and delivery systems to our students with these resource challenges,” said Irving Hamer, the deputy superintendent. Like other education debates, this one divides along ideological lines. K-12 online learning is championed by conservative-leaning policy groups that favor broadening school choice, including Jeb Bush’s Foundation for Excellence in Education, which has called on states to provide all students with “Internet access devices” and remove bans on for-profit virtual schools. Teachers unions and others say much of the push for online courses, like vouchers and charter schools, is intended to channel taxpayers’ money into the private sector. “What they want is to substitute technology for teachers,” said Alex Molnar, professor of education policy at Arizona State University. In Idaho, Gov. C.L. Otter and the elected superintendent of

“We can educate more students at a higher level with limited resources, and online technology and courses play a big part in that.” — Tom Luna, Idaho superintendent of public instruction

public instruction, Tom Luna, both Republicans, promoted giving students laptops and requiring online courses. The State Legislature, pressed by critics who said the online mandate would cost teachers jobs, rejected it, but Luna said in an interview that he would propose it this summer through the state board of education, which supports him. “I have no doubt we’ll get a robust rule through them,” he said. Four online courses is “going to be the starting number.” Online courses are part of a package of sweeping changes,

including merit pay and ending tenure, which Idaho lawmakers approved, that Luna said would improve education. “We can educate more students at a higher level with limited resources, and online technology and courses play a big part in that,” he said. Sherri Wood, president of the Idaho Education Association, the teachers union, strongly disagreed. She said Luna’s 2010 reelection campaign had received more than $50,000 in contributions from online education companies like K-12 Inc., a Virginiabased operator of online charter schools that received $12.8 million from Idaho last year. “It’s about getting a piece of the money that goes to public schools,” Wood said. “The big corporations want to make money off the backs of our children.” Luna replied that political contributors have never had an inside track in winning education contracts.

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Sunday Driver Range Rover returns to its roots, Page G6 Also: Stocks listing, including mutual funds, Pages G4-5

www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 2011

CENTRAL OREGON’S ECONOMY

JOHN STEARNS

Connecting to build the economy

T

o borrow a sports term, I look at Jim Coonan as Central Oregon’s newest strength coach. He’s taking an already strong entrepreneurial environment and trying to build even more connective muscle tissue among the “players” — the entrepreneurs and startup companies with innovative and scalable ideas, products and services — and help build them into lean, mean, job-producing machines. In the broadest sense, he’s trying to help strengthen this region’s economy. He’s the new venture catalyst manager at Economic Development for Central Oregon, stepping into the slot first filled by Scott Larson, who got the position off the ground last year after it was funded through a $232,750 federal earmark two years ago. The earmark created a threeyear pilot venture catalyst program. Larson, who returned to Seattle after he and his wife could not establish both of their professional careers here, implemented many of the program’s first-year goals, EDCO said in a January news release. According to EDCO, that included “comprehensive outreach to and assessment of the region’s startup companies, including meeting with more than 140 early stage companies and entrepreneurs; coaching and guiding the most promising early stage companies to the next level; connecting local entrepreneurs and investors via venture conferences and personal introductions; creation of a database of experts to tap Central Oregon’s considerable entrepreneurial expertise; and elevation of Central Oregon’s entrepreneurial profile with angel and venture funds throughout the Pacific Northwest.” Larson intends to remain connected with EDCO as a member and through the Bend Venture Conference. Coonan will build on that foundation. He comes from Portland but has maintained a second home in Black Butte Ranch since 1993. Like Larson, he has an impressive résumé (you can read about his experience at www.edcoinfo. com/news/407166.aspx). Gov. John Kitzhaber called Coonan “a true talent” at an EDCO event in March. Coonan said he’ll look “for sustainable structures, systems that will be able to maintain themselves even if this position goes away” should its funding not be extended. Ideas include creating structures around the angel investor community here not only to better link them to entrepreneurs, but to each other, and to educate them about angel investing. Angel investors may have been successful business people, but may not have done angel investing, per se, he said. “So there’s an educational element. (And) you always do better if you can invest as a group,” tapping the combined experience of the members. This dovetails with the goal of creating a new angel investment fund for the region possibly modeled after the Oregon Angel Fund in Portland. The OAF, this year composed of 71 investors — 85 percent of whom are current or former CEOs or current cofounders of their own business — has invested more than $8 million in 17 companies since it began in 2007, which the companies have leveraged into $52 million in additional investments, Coonan said. They’ve also created 456 jobs. Those are impressive numbers. Another concept: so-called “boot camps” for entrepreneurs who may have great ideas, but may not know how to structure deals with angel investors or run a business. Camps could provide mentoring, education and networking. Another concept: perhaps some sort of professionally managed seed fund focused on early stage companies. Coonan is most focused on “scalable” companies that can provide jobs and have a product with national and international reach. For example, it’s great to open a pizza parlor, but if somebody has a concept for software technology to make all pizza parlors more effective, that’s a scalable idea, he said. EDCO Executive Director Roger Lee noted in a release that Coonan has the ideas, experience and contacts “to help our early stage companies and improve Central Oregon’s startup climate.” They’re the job generators of the future that this economy needs and Coonan can hopefully help strengthen. John Stearns, business editor, can be reached at 541-617-7822 or at jstearns@bendbulletin.com.

Signs of life Many businesses are adding employees and space, but much recovery remains

GL Solutions, whose new headquarters is on Bend’s Awbrey Butte, has added about 30 employees since Jan. 1 and plans to hire about 10 more later this year.

By Jordan Novet The Bulletin

C

ounty employment figures don’t show proof of it, but Central Oregon companies in a variety of industries have reported workforce or facility growth in recent months. A list of growing companies ranges from the region’s fledgling high-tech sector to its recognized beer industry. Food-related companies, car dealerships and even a school show up on the list. “It all adds up, actually,” said Ken Patchett, manager of Facebook’s Prineville Data Center, which has added more and more employees in recent months. “You know, when you start to think about it, one job there, one here, pretty soon you’ve got a bunch of jobs.” The latest Central Oregon Business Index rose 2.1 percentage points in the fourth quarter of 2010 against the same period the year before. The fourthquarter rise followed another in the third quarter, marking the first quarterto-quarter improvement of the year. Nevertheless, the economic picture has not cleared up. High rates of joblessness continue to plague the region, and not every company is experiencing growth. But some are. See Growth / G5

“It all comes down to, you know, the management team and the leader, the CEO or the general manager. They have to really be strong leaders, you know, to be able to ... thrive in a recessionary economy like the one we have, and they have to have a product or service that’s unique or differentiates their customers.” Photos by Dean Guernsey / The Bulletin

— Bruce Juhola, chair of two local groups for Vistage International

The Deschutes Brewery & Public House on Bond Street in downtown Bend is expanding to the space directly to its right. The project can be seen in the background.

‘PRIMED FOR RENOVATION’

A niche in Florida’s real estate rubble

A blocked-off pet door at a vacant home in North Port.

By Andrew Martin

A sampling of expansions and new hires Many companies and organizations in the region have announced plans to expand their facilities or hire people. Here are some of those individual stories of growth: • 10 Barrel Brewing Company announced in January it would add a 50-barrel brewery to its current 10-barrel operation, to produce more beer and expand distribution. • Alchemy Solutions Inc. is aiming to move to a much bigger office than its current one in Bend, to accommodate expansion in company operations. • Baldy’s Barbeque, with two locations in Bend, is opening a third restaurant, in Redmond. • BendBroadband has data flowing through its new Vault data center in northeast Bend, with five full-time employees for it. • The Brew Shop, a store for beer and home brewing supplies, will move to the old Ernesto’s Italian Restaurant location on Northeast Third Street in Bend and add a restaurant. • Cascade Lakes Brewing Company installed a bigger and more efficient brew house system at its Redmond production facility this winter, which expands the brewery’s capacity and will allow it to have wider distribution. • Dent Instruments, which manufactures energymeasurement devices in Bend, announced last month it had bought a building for its new headquarters. • Deschutes Brewery is expanding its downtown Bend brewpub and will soon begin adding fermentation tanks to and renovating parts of its southwest Bend production facility. The brewery’s distribution continues to grow. See Companies / G5

Electric-vehicle technology full speed ahead

New York Times News Service

NORTH PORT, Fla. — One recent morning, Shannon Moore raced through a musty pink house — three bedrooms, two baths — that was advertised as having “good bones” and “primed for renovation.” As in many recently foreclosed homes in Florida, the appliances and air-conditioner were missing from this one, either taken by the previous residents or stolen. “It’s not as bad as I thought,” Moore said. “You could probably get this place fixed up for $8,000. You could get a refrigerator on Craigslist for $200.” “$70,000?” she asked aloud, referring to the list price. “What the heck?” Moore, a real estate broker, has found a lucrative niche in the wreckage of Florida’s real estate market, where a glut of vacant homes continues to depress prices. She scouts out deals for several groups of investors, including one that counts a professional poker player as a member and a group of Macedonians from Toronto. Just a few years back, real estate

By Kevin G. Hall and Renee Schoof McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Photos by Chip Litherland / New York Times News Service

Shannon Moore, a real estate broker, at a vacant home that just recently sold in North Port, Fla., on March 22. Housing experts say investors are desperately needed to jump start the housing market because there are so many vacant homes and homebuyers are having such trouble obtaining credit. investors were considered pariahs for fomenting a buying frenzy that drove home prices to stratospheric levels. This time around, housing experts say investors are desper-

ately needed because there are so many vacant homes and homebuyers are having such trouble obtaining credit. See Housing / G5

WASHINGTON — When oil hit a record price of $147 a barrel in July 2008, it was a game-changing moment that sparked a serious push to create electric cars and hybrid electric engines that could help wean Americans off oil. Today, crude is back Inside at more than $100 a barrel, and • Electric the payoff is the first generation cars likely to of mass-produced electric cars. spark new Interest in electric vehicles has “smart grid,” ebbed and flowed with the price Page G3 of oil over the past three decades, but something new is clearly afoot. General Motors and Nissan already have electric cars on the streets of major U.S. cities, and intensified battery research is bringing down costs. In 2005, there were no makers of lithium-ion batteries in the United States. Now, more than half a dozen battery plants are open or near completion, thanks in part to $2.4 billion in co-investment from the federal government. Chevy’s Volt battery costs about $8,000 now, down from $12,000 or more a few years ago. “The question is: Can these guys make a battery that is five times cheaper? I think yes. I think we can do it,” said Eric Isaacs, the director of the Argonne National Laboratory. See Electric / G3


B USI N ESS

G2 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M NEWS OF RECORD

A more eco-friendly Paris takes shape

DEEDS Deschutes County

Regional Trustee Services Corp. to Fannie Mae, aka Federal National Mortgage Association, Chestnut Park, Phase 1, Lot 12, $179,808 Rhey R. and Janice D. Rhodes to Steven A. Carlson and Pamela M. Palmer, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 8, Lot 70, $475,000 Brock Ward to Jason and Summer L. Oman, Westbrook Meadows PUD, Phase 1, Lot 23, $240,000 LSI Title of Oregon LLC to IB Property Holdings LLC, North Brinson Business Park, Phase 2, Lot 34, $400,100 Fidelity National Title Insurance Co. to Vergent LLC, Pine Meadow Village, Phase 1, Lot 28, $246,000 Bank of America N.A. to Brian and Lisa Davis, Estates at Pronghorn, Phase 3, Lot 279, $202,000 Casey W. and Theresa L. Brown to Dustin G. and Tori J. Osteen, Northpointe, Phase 3, Lot 78, $196,000 Don K. and Janice E. Auxier to William P. Brown and Mary Schwenninger, Outback Section of Sunriver Village, Lot 12, Block 13, $489,000 Nancy K. Cary to Washington Federal Savings, Oregon Water Wonderland Unit 2, Lot 6, Block 54, $159,181.41 Fannie Mae, aka Federal National Mortgage Association to Jesse W. Kane, Fairway Point Village 1, Lot 17, Block 1, $264,075 LSI Title Co. of Oregon LLC to Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp., Deschutes River Woods, Lot 14, Block H, $152,886 PNC Bank N.A. to Kazuya and Tracy A. Miyashita, Maplewood, Phase 2, Lot 39, $160,000 Wells Fargo Bank N.A. to Orhan and Elizabeth H. Konez, Pines at Pilot Butte, Phase 5, Lot 57, $160,000 David R. and Judith E. Vial to Keith P. and Heidi L. Wright, River Bluff Section of Sunrise Village, Lot 3, Block 3, $420,000 Yvonne Sappington to Jody R. Sappington, Township 16, Range 12, Section 18, $319,000 Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to Creative Real Estate Solutions, Ridge at Eagle Crest 33, Lot 11, $225,000 Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to Susan V. Skalski and James W. Golden, Fairway Village Condominiums, Unit 19, $170,000 Jeffery L. and Lori L. Moll to Gary I. and Colleen S. Miller, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 5, Lots 19 and 20, Block 31, $263,700 Stephen F. and Sandra R. Hanus, trustees of Hanus Family 2006 Trust to Stanley A. Trakul, Courtyard Townhomes at Broken Top, Lot 29, $170,000 Ralph and Laura Giffin to Pierre W. Dupont, Partition Plat 2001-43, Parcel 1, $429,500 Crook County

Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to David G. Cunningham, Section 35, Township 14 South, Range 17 East, $212,250 Federal National Mortgage Association to Matthew J. and Jessica R. Brougher, Section 29, Township 14 South, Range 16 East, $165,200.00 Union Bank N.A. to Steven R. Christensen and Stephanie E. WoldChristensen, Section 22, Township 16 South, Range 14, $549,000

By Adam H. Graham

Before you go Nouvelles Valeurs (nouvelles-valeurs.com) is an online restaurant guide that lists the restaurants and purveyors it deems most ecofriendly, using search criteria like seasonality and the use of organic ingredients. A popular new dating site called Amours Bio (amours-bio.com) promises to connect singles who share interests like animal rights and veganism. Ecovisit Paris offers informative one-hour tours of the city’s greener sights (ecovisitparis.com; 60 euros, or $83 at $1.38 to the euro).

HOTELS The low-budget, high-design Solar Hotel offers free bikes and organic breakfasts (solarhotel.fr; doubles from 59 euros). Admire the views of the Eiffel Tower from the cozy Hotel Gavarni, the first Paris property to carry an Ecolabel designation from the European Union; a stay includes an organic, fair-trade breakfast (gavarni.com; doubles from 110 euros). Emphasizing natural handcrafted materials, the relaxed and stylish Hidden Hotel offers natural, organic Coco-Mat mattresses topped with linen sheets (hiddenhotel.com; doubles from 145 euros).

FOOD The Marche Biologique on Boulevard Raspail (Sundays, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.) was Paris’s first all-organic market. Le Meurice’s Michelin three-star restaurant offers a Terroir Parisien lunch menu, emphasizing locally sourced ingredients (228, rue de Rivoli; lemeurice.com; four-course lunch menu without wine, 90 euros). For a satisfying snack, try Moisan, an expanding chain of organic bakeries found throughout Paris (painmoisan.fr).

SHOPPING Honore des Pres is a boutique parfumeur that offers organic, phthalate- and chemical-free scents (available in Printemps’ Scent Room, 64, boulevard Haussmann; honoredespres.com). Jewelry Ethical Luxury uses mercury- and cyanide-free precious metals sourced from open-air mines in Colombia (sold at Colette, 213, rue St.Honore; colette.fr). The home decor shop Merci sells eco-friendly items like Jerome Dreyfuss’ “agricouture” bags and disposable plates made from biodegradable sugarcane pulp (111, boulevard Beaumarchais; merci-merci. com).

New York Times News Service

For two scorching days in Paris last May, the Champs-Elysees was closed to traffic, covered over with grass. Visitors traipsed through a forest of Lebanese cedar trees and snapped photos of goat pens and stacked pyramids of vegetables, with the Arc de Triomphe looming above. It was all part of Nature Capitale, a large-scale installation created by the French street artist Gad Weil, who timed it to coincide with International Biodiversity Day, an annual event sponsored by the United Nations. The spectacle drew 2 million visitors, among them two surprise guests: the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, and his wife, Carla Bruni, who wore jeans and an untucked oxford shirt with rolled-up sleeves, providing a bit of barnyard chic in the Eighth Arrondissement. The event — the next Nature Capitale is scheduled for June in Lyon — was equal parts ecological celebration and fundraiser for two groups: Jeunes Agriculteurs, an organization of young French farmers, and France Bois Foret, devoted to the French forest and timber industries. In typical French fashion, it also included a protest against a dip in agriculture prices. Despite its reputation for fur and foie gras, Paris had begun to embrace the ecological movement with the earnestness of leading eco-minded cities like Copenhagen and Vancouver. Paris’s green movement may have arrived fashionably late, but it has taken hold and is growing fast. In 2009, the capital edged into 10th place on a list of Europe’s greenest cities, aided in part by the Velib’ bike-rental program and the costly partial conversion of the city’s taxi fleet to hybrids. Throngs of eco-cafes, bio marches (organic markets) and green wine shops have opened citywide. There are rooftop honeybee programs at the Opera Garnier and the Grand Palais. New eco-minded hotels continue to open, while old ones retrofit their facilities for low-carbon living. The Champs-Elysees began using LED lights during the Christmas season, reducing energy consumption by 90 percent. And in a particularly visible change, the Eiffel Tower shortened its hourly display of sparkling lights from 10 minutes to 5, extending the life of the tower’s thousands of bulbs significantly. If all that weren’t enough, this fall should see the much-anticipated debut of the automated electric-car rental program Autolib’ (autolib-paris.fr), which mimics Velib’, letting users swipe their credit card, and voila, go. All of this change was necessary, say eco-minded advocates. “The little brown boxes on the Champs revealed the truth,” said Erwan Maizy, founder of Ecovisit Paris (ecovisitparis.com), which offers customizable hybrid tours of the city’s greener sights. “The boxes have been monitoring air quality since 1979, and the results revealed a significant

Philadelphia Cream Cheese sets sights beyond the bagel By Andrew Adam Newman New York Times News Service

In the 1980s, when the bagel began its ascent from a specialty item served primarily in delis to a staple in chains like Bruegger’s, and eventually even in McDonald’s, it was an auspicious time to be in the cream cheese business. So in commercials for Philadelphia Cream Cheese over the last few decades, bagels have played a starring role as a platform for the spread. In the 1980s, actors spread cream cheese on bagels accompanied by the lyric “Start spreading the news” (from “New York, New York”), and for much of the last decade, angels ate bagels in Philadelphia commercials, which closed with the tagline, “A little taste of heaven.” But when it comes to Philadelphia Cream Cheese marketing these days, the bagel is, for the most part, toast. Philadelphia, a Kraft brand,

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last year set about to promote the cream cheese as a versatile recipe ingredient — not just for cheesecake, but rather for all courses and meals. The brand is featured in the second season of “Real Women of Philadelphia,” an online series hosted by Paula Deen, the cook, author and TV host, where contestants submit videos of themselves incorporating Philadelphia products into recipes. For eight consecutive weeks beginning this week, contestants will compete in a weekly category like appetizers or entrees, with the brand selecting two finalists for each theme. The first season drew more than 5,000 video submissions, with more than 40,000 people registering on the website, a prerequisite for submitting videos and interacting on chat boards. PaulaDeen.com drew 299,000 unique visitors in February, according to comScore. The most

popular food site, AllRecipes. com, had 17.3 million unique visitors, followed by FoodNetwork. com, with 14.2 million. “We had to figure out how to stop talking at our consumers and to have a conversation with them,” said Adam Butler, a brand manager for Philadelphia. “We could have gone down the road of just developing a bunch of recipes ourselves, but the idea instead was to launch a community,” Butler said. Bricks of cream cheese are claimed by Kraft and others to be an invention by William Lawrence, a dairy owner from Chester, N.Y., who in 1880 began distributing it in foil packets under the label Philadelphia, a brand eventually bought by Kraft in 1928. (There is no geographic connection to Philadelphia; the dairyman chose the name because the city was associated with high-quality food at the time, according to Kraft.)

Photos by Ed Alcock / New York Times News Service

Shoppers buy produce at Marche Biologique, the first all-organic market in Paris on March 29. The green movement has started to take hold and is growing fast here.

Organic, phthalate- and chemical-free scents from a small production boutique were on sale at Marche Biologique. Paris may be fashionably late to the green movement, but it is among the top 10 eco-minded cities in Europe. deterioration,” he said from the driver’s seat of his silver Prius. The enthusiasm of Maizy, a self-professed ecolo (ecological supporter), is contagious. He went on about the energy-producing windmills in Belleville and water turbines on the Seine, as he quietly glided to a stop at Patrick Blanc’s “Mur Vegetal,” a vertical garden installed on the walls of Jean Nouvel’s Quai Musee Branly — one of 82 such walls in Paris. Many credit Bertrand Delanoe, mayor of Paris, for the shift. He championed Velib’, expanded electric tramways and recently extended Metro hours to 2 a.m. on weekends to discourage car use. One hundred forty-eight parks and gardens have stopped using pesticides during his term, making Paris’ one of the first city park systems in Europe to go organic. But Delanoe cannot be credited for the changes to the city’s dining scene, as evolving ecological concepts have crept onto menus over the last few years. “Agriculture raisonnee is a new concept,” said Frederic Hubig, owner of Jeanne A, a restaurant in the 11th Arrondissement, the epicenter of ecolo activity. Hubig recently opened an epicerie a

manger, which uses ingredients from farmers who are intimate with their terroir. “All the animals I use are brought up in open areas, feed themselves as they please and grow at their own rhythm without hormones or being gave,” he said, using the term for the forcefeeding of animals. “I don’t nec-

essarily want the organic certification. Quality and taste are my first criteria.” (Even his foie gras is an “agriculture raisonnee” version, made with slowly fed, field-raised geese, producing a smaller, firmer lobe.) Another restaurateur, PierreHenri Castets, warned about so-called greenwashing. His spot, BioArt (it closed late last year), used 100 percent organic ingredients certified by Agence Bio, a group that promotes organic farming. “There are a lot of fake green businesses,” he said. “Some are only in it for the money. But food is religion here in France. You need to have this in your heart.” And so, with Earth Day approaching April 22, here are a few ways eco-minded travelers can make their carbon footprint in Paris as light as possible.


C OV ER S T ORY

Electric vehicles likely to spark new ‘smart grid’ By Kevin G. Hall McClatchy-Tribune News Service

WASHINGTON — Entire industries grew up around gasoline-powered cars, ranging from the ubiquitous filling stations to fast-food restaurants along highway exits. Similarly, the rise of electric cars probably will transform more than just the automobile. “The moment you put a plug on a car, you’ve got these two titan industries coming together and supporting a customer,” said Ed Kjaer, the director of electric transportation for Southern California Edison, a giant utility. The alliance between utilities and carmakers will lead to numerous changes, he predicts, including a faster build of the “smart grid.” This involves the use of digital technology by utilities to allow consumers real-time measures of their energy use.

‘Smart’ users For power providers, the smart grid allows them to provide pricing that encourages conservation and better utilizes off-peak hours overnight, when there’s less draw on electricity as factories and office buildings ramp down. In a true smart grid, digital communications between a utility and the consumer’s home could stagger the charge coming to an electric car depending on the overall demand for power. Big off-peak energy users could see lower bills. This is one factor behind General Electric’s November announcement that it will purchase 25,000 electric cars by 2015, a number almost as large as its current fleet of 30,000 conventional gasoline-powered cars. GE anticipates savings from fuel economy and overnight charging. Dual savings help explain why Dennis Beal, the vice president of global vehicles for FedEx Corp., recently said that 30 percent of his company’s fleet could be electric if batteries with a 100-mile range became commonplace. Much of the early shift to electric vehicles has come from companies that make deliveries, provide services or operate at airports. “People tend to focus on the light-duty (cars) segment ... and they don’t understand the off-road piece,” said Genevieve Cullen, the vice president of the Electric Drive Transportation Association, an advocacy group for electric cars. “A small increase in efficiency translates into huge oil savings.” Carmakers and manufacturers of electric-car chargers already have agreed on a common plug that’ll work across the wide range of equipment providers. Utilities, carmakers and equipment providers now are working out a standard communica-

tion protocol for electric cars to communicate with power grids. This would be key in advancing a smart grid.

Change in landscape What’ll become of the corner Exxon or Shell station? The first wave of car-charging stations is likely to involve the owners of buildings, and national retail chains that install car-charging operations for some small economic or marketing gain. Once a critical mass is reached in production and sales of electric cars, advocates said, the market could build out quickly. “At some point, you will have these well-capitalized people that come in and who say, ‘We want to be the Exxon of charging infrastructure.’ And they will buy electricity in bulk from the utilities, and they will pony up the money to actually plant infrastructure on the ground, sign up customers,” said Mahi Reddy, the CEO of SemaConnect, a company in Annapolis, Md., that’s making electric car chargers. Reddy calls these companies charging infrastructure network operators, and expects them to provide “smart cards” similar to building ID badges or transit-system electronic-fare cards. When motorists pull into charging stations, they’ll swipe the cards to pay, much like using credit cards. “Electricity has infrastructure that is already ubiquitous,” Reddy said. Power lines and power distribution are already in place, making the transition far cheaper than for competing technologies. “It is orders of magnitude cheaper than, say, installing hydrogen infrastructure or an ethanol infrastructure,” he said. Electric cars aren’t expected to overburden the utilities that are developing the smart grid. “There is so much excess capacity that there are not near- or midterm challenges. Where we think there is going to be some issue, and it will vary across the country, is really the last 50 feet,” said Kjaer of Southern Cal Edison, referring to the connections from homes to the neighborhood transformer. Sherif Marakby, the director of electric-vehicle programs for Ford Motor Co., shares that view. “How many electric vehicles can you charge on the same transformer in a subdivision? It seems like it’s pretty doable to a large extent ... as long as the trend is to charge at the low points overnight,” he said.

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 G3

Electric Continued from G1 Argonne, outside Chicago, is the Department of Energy’s lead lab for advanced battery research and development. Its 15 years of research into lithium ion batteries resulted in the one that’s now being used in GM’s Chevy Volt. “We think that increasing electric is inevitable. The speed is variable,” said Genevieve Cullen, the vice president of the Electric Drive Transportation Association, an advocacy group for electric cars. That’s why a global race is on among the United States, Japan, China and other manufacturing powers not only to develop the next generation of battery and electric-motor technology, but to define what the auto of the future will be. “The days of sub-$100 oil are really behind us,” Mahi Reddy, the CEO of SemaConnect, said during a company tour in Annapolis, Md. SemaConnect is one of a handful of U.S. startup companies that are designing charging stations for electric cars, and Reddy is buoyed by the flurry of new electric cars coming out. “That to me is a signal that a critical mass has been reached,” he said, confident that the price advantage that conventional cars still hold will narrow rapidly. SemaConnect recently installed a charging station outside a Safeway grocery store in Westminster, Md. It’s preparing to put in 50 more in places such as regional airports and rail stations. Federal stimulus funds totaling almost $400 million have been used to help companies such as San Francisco-based ECOtality. It manufactures its Blink batterycharging stations in Detroit and is deploying stations in 18 large cities across six states. Installations began in the past several weeks in California, Washington state, Oregon and Arizona. Rental-car giant Hertz offers electric cars at New York locations and will expand that to San Francisco and the nation’s capital in coming weeks. “Currently, we have a few dozen vehicles. By the end of the year we anticipate having hundreds of them available,” spokeswoman Paula Rivera said. “We do view this as the future of transportation, and see adoption coming not only from having the cars available, but the ecosystem to charge them. … As the ecosystem builds out, our fleet will increase.” That “ecosystem” is exactly what consumer-electronics behemoth Best Buy is eyeing. The retailer expects to capitalize on the need to install 220-volt electrical sockets in homes and businesses across America to allow for speedier car charging. “We dedicated a significant amount of resources to help this technology come to market,” said Chad Bell, the senior director of Best Buy’s New Business Solutions Group. “We think these (home charging stations) will be purchased and sold in the future similar to how electronics are sold today.”

A Volt battery awaits installation in Hamtramck, Mich., in 2010. Mandi Wright Detroit Free Press

GM via McClatchy-Tribune News Service

The Chevrolet Volt is an electric car that works on a battery then has a gasoline motor that kicks in to charge lithium ion batteries and extend the range before a charge from an external source is needed. This illustrates one of the latest design themes undergoing a wind tunnel test at GM’s Aero Lab in Warren, Mich. SemaConnect via McClatchy-Tribune News Service

SemaConnect is one of a handful of U.S. startup companies that are designing charging stations for electric cars. When a consumer buys an electric vehicle, the car equivalent of Best Buy’s computer-repair service Geek Squad would do an assessment of the customer’s needs, then send a contracting partner to install the charge station. Best Buy would remain the point of contact if problems arose.

Making them affordable President Barack Obama has challenged automakers to put 1 million electric cars on the road by 2015. That would be equal to one out of 12 cars sold last year. Oil-price shocks and concern about climate change help push electric car production, but a third critical push has come from breakthroughs in battery technologies, aided by federal investment. Battery price is the biggest cost component in an electric car. For every kilowatt hour of battery power, there’s a driving range of four miles. Nissan’s Leaf has a 24 kilowatt-hour battery, or a range of about 96 miles between charges. The battery costs $12,000, but as it’s mass-produced and demand for electric cars grows, the cost should come down to $6,000 in three years, said Reddy of SemaConnect. That will put the cost of an electric car on par with conventional cars. That’s important because Toyota’s pioneering hybrid Prius, which combines gasoline

and electric propulsion, won over many motorists who wanted to be early adopters, but its higher price as a hybrid was greater than the fuel economy savings it provided.

Buyer benefits Buyers of electric cars qualify for a federal tax credit that ranges from $2,500 to $7,500, with the credit rising along with battery life. States are adding their own incentives, both on taxes and sweeteners such as preferred parking spaces and lower registration fees. Consumers who install charging stations can write off 30 percent of the cost from federal taxes up to $1,000; commercial sites can write off up to $30,000 in installation costs. The Energy Department is funding research for next-generation batteries that could go 500 miles on a single charge, con-

vinced by surveys that Americans will buy electric cars only if they have a range of at least 250 miles, roughly the equivalent of a full tank of gas. At least one expert thinks range concerns are overblown. “We shouldn’t let the perfect become the enemy of the good,” said Ed Kjaer, the director of electric transportation programs for Southern California Edison, a utility that’s pioneered the use of electric car fleets. “I have never run out of juice, and I commute 100 miles a day, so let’s be real. The battery-powered car is an urban commuting vehicle.”

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BUSI N ESS

G4 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Mutual funds Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

AcadEm n 21.29 +.42 Alger Funds I: CapApprI 22.21 -.06 SmCapGrI 30.51 -.10 AllianceBernstein : IntDurInstl 15.63 -.06 AllianceBern A: BlWthStrA p 12.31 +.01 GloblBdA r 8.31 ... GlbThmGrA p 79.77 -.11 GroIncA p 3.59 ... HighIncoA p 9.25 +.04 IntlGroA p 15.93 +.26 LgCapGrA p 26.92 -.35 Allianz Admin MMS: NFJSmCpVl t 31.07 -.03 Allianz Fds Instl: NFJDivVal 12.21 +.04 SmCpVl n 32.59 -.03 Allianz Funds A: NFJDivVal t 12.13 +.05 SmCpV A 31.10 -.03 Alpine Funds: TaxOptInco 10.04 +.01 AmanaGrth n 25.58 -.06 AmanaInco n 33.50 +.10 Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 20.69 +.06 SmCapInst 21.57 -.19 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 19.65 +.06 SmCap Inv 21.02 -.19 Ameri Century 1st: Growth 27.56 -.15 Amer Century Adv: EqtyIncA p 7.48 +.01 HeritageA p 21.81 -.34 Amer Century Inv: DivBond n 10.67 -.04 DivBond 10.67 -.04 EqGroInv n 22.22 -.01 EqInco 7.48 +.01 GNMAI 10.79 -.05 Gift 29.90 -.37 GlblGold 27.26 +1.80 GovtBd 11.03 -.05 GrowthI 27.33 -.16 HeritageI 22.42 -.35 IncGro 25.48 +.01 InfAdjBond 12.06 -.01 IntTF 10.74 -.02 IntlBnd 14.19 +.08 IntDisc 11.30 +.14 IntlGroI 11.66 +.16 MdCapVal 13.20 -.03 SelectI 40.19 -.26 SmCapVal 9.50 -.02 Ultra n 23.99 -.15 ValueInv 6.02 ... Vista 17.79 -.30 American Funds A: AmcapFA p 19.84 -.10 AmMutlA p 26.54 +.01 BalA p 18.67 -.05 BondFdA p 12.16 -.02 CapInBldA p 51.71 +.38 CapWGrA p 37.60 +.37 CapWldA p 20.68 +.10 EupacA p 43.70 +.44 FundInvA p 39.32 +.05 GovtA p 13.77 -.07 GwthFdA p 32.16 -.07 HI TrstA p 11.57 +.04 HiIncMuniA 13.24 -.03 IncoFdA p 17.34 +.05 IntBdA p 13.36 -.02 IntlGrIncA p 33.23 +.37 InvCoAA p 29.42 +.05 LtdTEBdA p 15.37 -.02 NwEconA p 26.67 -.02 NewPerA p 30.15 +.13 NewWorldA 56.35 +.67 STBFA p 10.05 ... SmCpWA p 40.74 +.49 TaxExA p 11.69 -.02 TxExCAA p 15.33 -.04 WshMutA p 28.91 -.01 American Funds B: BalanB p 18.61 -.05 CapInBldB p 51.74 +.38 CapWGrB t 37.40 +.36 GrowthB t 31.15 -.07 IncomeB p 17.21 +.04 ICAB t 29.30 +.04 Arbitrage Funds: Arbitrage I n 12.94 ... Ariel Investments: Apprec 45.46 -.35 Ariel n 52.69 -.59 Artio Global Funds: GlbHiInco t 10.99 +.08 GlbHiIncI r 10.54 +.08 IntlEqI r 31.66 +.61 IntlEqA 30.88 +.59 IntlEqIIA t 13.00 +.25 IntlEqII I r 13.09 +.25 TotRet I 13.45 +.02 Artisan Funds: Intl 23.15 +.46 IntlValu r 28.21 +.23 MidCap 35.95 -.49 MidCapVal 22.46 +.19 SmCapVal 18.41 -.11 Aston Funds: M&CGroN 25.05 -.13 MidCapN p 34.11 -.32 BBH Funds: BdMktN 10.42 +.01 BNY Mellon Funds: BondFund 13.04 -.02 EmgMkts 12.40 +.21 IntlFund 11.45 +.18 IntmBdFd 12.85 -.01 LrgCapStk 9.21 -.07 MidCapStk 13.19 -.13 NatlIntMuni 12.91 -.02 NtlShTrmMu 12.88 ... Baird Funds: AggBdInst 10.51 -.03 ShtTBdInst 9.69 +.01 Baron Fds Instl: Growth 56.26 -.50 Baron Funds: Asset n 59.17 -.67 Growth 55.99 -.51 Partners p 22.27 -.02 SmallCap 26.08 -.28 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.69 -.05 Ca Mu 14.16 ... DivMun 14.19 -.02 NYMun 13.99 -.01 TxMgdIntl 16.16 +.21 IntlPort 16.04 +.21 EmgMkts 35.11 +.65 Berwyn Funds: Income 13.43 ... BlackRock A: BasValA p 27.38 ... CapAppr p 23.75 -.32 Eng&ResA 44.20 -.48 EqtyDivid 18.80 +.02 GlbAlA r 20.31 +.12 HiYdInvA 7.89 +.05 InflProBdA 10.96 ... LgCapCrA p 12.00 +.07 TotRetA 11.03 -.03 USOppA 41.59 -.33 BlackRock B&C: EquityDivC 18.40 +.01 GlAlB t 19.80 +.12 GlobAlC t 18.93 +.11 BlackRock Fds Blrk: TotRetII 9.22 -.04 BlackRock Instl: InflProtBd 11.06 ... US Opps 43.79 -.34 BasValI 27.56 ... EquityDiv 18.85 +.02 GlbAlloc r 20.41 +.12 CapAppr p 24.59 -.33 HiYldBond 7.89 +.05 TotRet 11.02 -.04 IntlOppI 36.55 +.37 NatlMuni 9.69 -.03 S&P500 16.32 -.04 SCapGrI 26.29 +.09 BlackRock R: GlblAlloc r 19.65 +.11 Brandywine Fds: BlueFd 26.61 -.39 Brandywine 29.06 -.06 BrownSmCoIns47.69 -.32 Buffalo Funds: SmlCap 27.87 +.01 CGM Funds: FocusFd n 32.96 -.83 Realty n 27.86 -.51 CRM Funds: MidCapValI 30.78 -.20 Calamos Funds: ConvA p 20.59 -.03 ConvI 19.33 -.03 Gr&IncC t 33.37 -.04 Grth&IncA p 33.25 -.04 GrowthA p 57.14 -.15 GrowthC t 51.88 -.14 Growth I 62.27 -.17 MktNeutA p 12.19 ... Calvert Group: Inco p 16.02 -.03 ShDurIncA t 16.49 ... SocEqA p 38.51 -.08 Cambiar Funds: OpportInv 19.72 -.19

3 yr %rt

+23.2 +1.7 +14.7 +15.7 +23.1 +25.1 +6.9 +22.7 +11.2 +5.8 +18.0 +16.7 +14.4 +12.6 +14.2

+7.9 +19.6 +22.0 -0.8 +46.6 -12.3 +28.4

+22.7 +24.3 +16.8 -7.3 +23.0 +25.3 +16.5 -8.3 +22.5 +23.8 +1.5 NA NA

+8.2 NA NA

+12.0 +1.1 +20.2 +28.1 +11.6 +0.2 +19.7 +26.8 +17.6 +12.9 +12.7 +9.0 +26.2 +15.5 +5.1 +4.8 +13.8 +13.0 +4.6 +20.7 +42.9 +4.0 +17.3 +26.5 +12.9 +7.3 +1.8 +6.6 +23.0 +18.3 +16.0 +15.4 +15.3 +16.4 +12.3 +21.3

+18.0 +17.3 +2.8 +9.7 +17.6 +6.2 +49.4 +14.4 +12.2 +16.4 +0.6 +12.8 +11.7 +4.2 -9.9 -5.0 +27.5 +9.7 +38.0 +9.4 +8.7 -5.6

+12.1 +13.4 +12.8 +5.6 +12.0 +13.0 +7.2 +13.9 +16.0 +4.2 +12.3 +14.0 +1.0 +14.3 +3.7 +15.2 +11.3 +2.7 +13.8 +14.9 +15.6 +1.4 +19.8 +0.7 +0.5 +15.5

+12.9 +9.0 +11.3 +10.0 +0.7 -2.7 +14.0 +0.6 +3.5 +13.7 +2.2 +32.1 +5.6 +9.9 +10.3 NS +3.4 +11.4 +12.3 +6.7 +4.2 +6.3 +12.3 +9.5 +9.5 +2.0

+11.9 +8.8 +11.1 -1.6 +12.1 -5.0 +11.4 0.0 +13.4 +7.3 +10.4 +1.1 +0.5 +11.9 +17.2 +32.2 +22.2 +27.3 +12.6 +12.9 +11.3 +11.0 +11.4 +11.7 +6.9

+39.9 +41.0 -14.7 -15.3 -10.5 -9.8 +19.6

+15.8 +18.6 +30.1 +22.7 +19.0

-8.6 +20.5 +30.7 +29.7 +34.6

+8.2 +6.1 +18.9 +30.8 +3.3 +14.2 +5.0 +18.7 +10.3 +3.7 +14.6 +22.7 +1.3 +1.5

+17.6 +18.8 -7.2 +14.7 +3.6 +16.3 +13.4 +8.0

+6.9 +18.2 +3.6 +10.6 +25.3

NS

+20.1 +24.9 +26.9 +25.4

+10.7 +19.9 +7.9 +21.6

+6.7 +2.4 +2.1 +2.2 +6.0 +6.1 +16.1

+22.0 +11.2 +11.4 +11.5 -25.4 -25.6 +5.4

+8.2 +32.8 +11.9 +16.5 +32.5 +15.8 +11.8 +14.9 NA +13.4 +7.2 +21.1

+5.0 +13.6 +5.7 +3.1 +11.2 +39.3 NA +4.7 +13.3 +23.1

+14.9 +0.9 +11.0 +8.5 +11.0 +8.7 +5.5 +14.7 NA +21.7 +12.2 +16.2 +12.1 NS +15.2 +7.6 +14.1 +0.6 +13.9 +19.9

NA +24.9 +6.0 +4.1 +12.1 NS +40.9 +14.3 -5.8 +11.5 +3.3 +16.5

+11.4 +10.1 +14.1 -17.6 +23.9 -11.6 +30.6 +48.3 +9.7 +35.1 +4.3 -36.7 +17.0 -5.9 +19.1 +12.5 +13.2 +13.5 +14.8 +15.7 +22.5 +21.6 +22.8 +5.3

+20.2 +21.1 +17.5 +20.2 +7.8 +5.4 +8.6 +7.7

+5.2 +12.2 +3.6 +15.2 +17.4 +14.6 +20.6 +13.5

Footnotes Table includes 1,940 largest Mutual Funds

e - Ex capital gains distribution. s - Stock dividend or split. f - Previous day’s quote n or nl - No up-front sales charge. p - Fund assets are used to pay for distribution costs. r - Redemption fee for contingent deferred sales load may apply. t - Both p and r. y - Fund not in existence for one year. NE - Data in question. NN - Fund does not wish to be tracked. NS - Fund did not exist at the start date. NA - Information unavailable.

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

Causeway Intl: Institutnl nr 13.55 +.14 Clipper 66.91 +.59 Cohen & Steers: InsltRlty n 39.66 -.81 RltyShrs n 61.03 -1.23 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 31.07 +.04 BldModAgg p 10.82 -.01 DivEqInc A 10.73 +.01 DivrBd 5.01 -.02 DiviIncoA 13.77 +.05 DivOpptyA 8.37 +.03 FocusEqA t 23.72 -.26 HiYldBond 2.86 +.01 LgCorQA p 5.80 +.01 21CentryA t 14.45 -.03 MarsGroA t 21.38 -.12 MidCpGrOpp 11.95 -.03 MidCpValA 14.38 -.13 MidCVlOp p 8.42 -.07 PBModA p 10.95 -.01 SelLgCpGr t 13.59 -.10 StratAlloA 9.82 +.02 StrtIncA 6.11 +.03 TxExA p 12.60 -.03 SelComm A 46.05 -.62 Columbia Cl I,T&G: DiverBdI 5.02 -.02 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 32.10 +.04 AcornIntl Z 42.23 +.39 AcornSel Z 29.45 +.29 AcornUSA 30.67 -.12 Bond 9.22 -.02 DiviIncomeZ 13.77 +.05 FocusEqZ t 24.25 -.26 IntmBdZ n 9.07 -.01 IntmTEBd n 10.14 -.02 IntEqZ 12.77 +.13 IntlValZ 14.90 +.13 LgCapCoreZ 13.79 -.03 LgCapGr 13.69 -.10 LgCapIdxZ 25.79 -.06 LgCapValZ 11.98 -.03 21CntryZ n 14.77 -.04 MarsGrPrZ 21.77 -.12 MarInOppZ r 12.39 +.14 MidCapGr Z 29.05 -.21 MidCpIdxZ 12.57 -.11 MdCpVal p 14.40 -.12 STIncoZ 9.92 ... STMunZ 10.47 ... SmlCapGrZ n 35.04 -.24 SmlCapIdxZ n18.50 -.16 SmCapVal 49.31 -.40 SCValuIIZ 15.05 -.13 ValRestr n 53.36 ... CRAQlInv np 10.67 -.04 CG Cap Mkt Fds: CoreFxInco 8.34 -.02 EmgMkt n 18.05 +.25 LgGrw 15.56 -.17 LgVal n 9.42 +.01 Credit Suisse ABCD: ComdyRetA t 10.01 +.22 Credit Suisse Comm: CommRet t 10.08 +.23 DFA Funds: Glb6040Ins 13.41 +.03 IntlCoreEq n 11.94 +.13 USCoreEq1 n 11.79 -.05 USCoreEq2 n 11.82 -.05 DWS Invest A: DrmHiRA 34.74 -.07 DSmCaVal 38.85 -.08 HiIncA 4.92 +.03 MgdMuni p 8.54 -.02 StrGovSecA 8.79 -.02 DWS Invest Instl: Eqty500IL 150.72 -.41 DWS Invest Inv: ShtDurPlusS r 9.56 ... DWS Invest S: GNMA S 15.23 -.04 GroIncS 17.63 -.01 LgCapValS r 18.37 -.01 MgdMuni S 8.55 -.02 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 36.36 +.21 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 36.76 +.22 NYVen C 35.09 +.20 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.22 ... LtdTrmDvrA 8.84 -.02 Diamond Hill Fds: LongShortI 17.14 -.01 Dimensional Fds: EmMkCrEq n 23.01 +.36 EmgMktVal 37.67 +.67 IntSmVa n 18.38 +.11 LargeCo 10.48 -.03 STExtQual nx 10.69 -.02 STMuniBd nx 10.24 -.01 TAWexUSCr n 10.22 +.13 TAUSCorEq2 9.62 -.05 TM USSm 24.93 -.14 USVectrEq n 11.78 -.05 USLgVa n 22.01 -.08 USLgVa3 n 16.85 -.06 US Micro n 14.83 -.10 US TgdVal 18.05 -.09 US Small n 23.18 -.13 US SmVal 27.78 -.21 IntlSmCo n 18.12 +.15 GlbEqInst 14.41 +.03 EmgMktSCp n24.54 +.54 EmgMkt n 32.11 +.37 Fixd nx 10.33 ... ST Govt n 10.75 ... IntGvFxIn n 12.17 -.05 IntlREst 5.32 +.03 IntVa n 19.62 +.22 IntVa3 n 18.36 +.20 InflProSecs 11.53 +.02 Glb5FxInc 10.88 -.01 LrgCapInt n 21.07 +.25 TM USTgtV 23.22 -.13 TM IntlValue 16.10 +.18 TMMktwdeV 16.40 -.06 TMMtVa2 15.79 -.05 TMUSEq 14.42 -.04 2YGlFxd n 10.16 ... DFARlEst n 22.59 -.42 Dodge&Cox: Balanced n 73.52 -.16 GblStock 9.46 +.08 IncomeFd 13.27 ... Intl Stk 37.46 +.39 Stock 114.23 -.33 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 10.94 -.03 TRBd N p 10.93 -.04 Dreyfus: Aprec 40.71 +.21 BasicS&P 27.24 -.07 CalAMTMuZ 13.61 -.04 Dreyfus 9.52 -.05 DreyMid r 30.41 -.27 Drey500In t 36.67 -.10 IntmTIncA 13.14 -.02 IntlStkI 14.16 +.13 MunBd r 10.69 -.02 NY Tax nr 14.14 -.03 OppMCVal A 37.59 -.33 SmlCpStk r 21.88 -.17 DreihsAcInc 11.25 +.03 EVPTxMEmI 53.27 +.88 Eaton Vance A: GblMacAbR p 10.23 +.02 FloatRate 9.40 +.01 IncBosA 5.96 +.02 LgCpVal 18.85 -.01 NatlMunInc 8.64 -.01 Strat Income Cl A 8.23 +25.6 TMG1.1 24.94 -.04 DivBldrA 10.39 ... Eaton Vance C: NatlMunInc 8.64 -.01 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.09 +.01 GblMacAbR 10.23 +.02 LgCapVal 18.90 -.01 ParStEmMkt 16.50 +.27 EdgwdGInst n 11.99 -.14 FMI Funds: CommonStk 26.95 -.02 LargeCap p 16.40 -.03 FPA Funds: Capit 46.61 -.18 NewInc 10.85 +.01 FPACres n 28.23 +.08 Fairholme 34.62 -.25 Federated A: KaufmSCA p 27.12 +.13 KaufmA p 5.70 +.04 MuniUltshA 10.01 ... TtlRtBd p 11.10 -.03 Federated Instl: AdjRtSecIS 9.81 ... KaufmanR 5.70 +.04 MdCpI InSvc 23.54 -.21 MunULA p 10.01 ... TotRetBond 11.10 -.03 TtlRtnBdS 11.10 -.03 StaValDivIS 4.63 +.03 Fidelity Advisor A: DivrIntlA r 16.92 +.20 FltRateA r 9.91 +.02 FF2030A p 12.85 +.06 LevCoStA p 37.39 -.14 MidCapA p 20.85 -.05 MidCpIIA p 18.74 -.03 NwInsghts p 20.88 -.04 SmallCapA p 26.88 -.11 StrInA 12.56 +.03 TotalBdA r 10.73 -.03 Fidelity Advisor C: NwInsghts tn 19.90 -.05 StratIncC nt 12.54 +.03 Fidelity Advisor I: DivIntl n 17.19 +.21 FltRateI n 9.89 +.02 GroIncI 18.25 +.06 HiIncAdvI 9.87 +.04 LgCapI n 19.89 +.03 MidCpII I n 18.98 -.03 NewInsightI 21.09 -.04 SmallCapI 28.16 -.11 StrInI 12.70 +.03 Fidelity Advisor T: EqGrT p 57.98 -.55 EqInT x 24.85 +.06 GrOppT 37.33 -.04 MidCapT p 21.04 -.05 NwInsghts p 20.64 -.04 SmlCapT p 25.95 -.11 StrInT 12.56 +.03 Fidelity Freedom: FF2000 n 12.22 +.01

+17.2 +13.7

3 yr %rt -2.5 -4.0

+18.6 +7.9 +18.1 +7.8 +21.8 +13.5 +15.7 +6.5 +12.9 +20.0 +14.0 +14.1 +14.9 +14.3 +16.1 +18.4 +18.6 +19.4 +12.1 +27.2 +9.4 +10.5 +0.4 +14.0

+22.1 +11.2 +1.3 +18.1 +7.7 +12.7 +7.7 +37.6 -0.6 -2.9 +3.6 +32.4 +9.9 +9.5 +14.7 +13.7 +2.2 +23.7 +9.6 +36.1

+6.8 +19.4 +22.1 +19.9 +12.6 +20.7 +4.8 +13.1 +14.4 +5.9 +2.3 +12.6 +6.6 +12.4 +27.5 +14.1 +10.6 +14.6 +16.5 +15.9 +28.8 +23.8 +18.9 +2.9 +1.1 +29.1 +20.9 +18.4 +22.5 +17.5 +2.9

+23.2 +8.8 +16.6 +21.8 +17.9 +8.4 +8.5 +21.9 +11.3 -15.2 -7.2 +3.4 +14.5 +3.7 -0.8 -2.2 +4.4 -13.0 +22.9 +26.4 +10.8 +12.4 +8.2 +28.6 +22.4 +22.2 +20.0 +0.6 +12.6

Name

NAV

FF2005 n 11.20 FF2010 n 14.15 FF2010K 13.21 FF2015 n 11.82 FF2015A 11.96 FF2015K 13.26 FF2020 n 14.45 FF2020A 12.56 FF2020K 13.83 FF2025 n 12.14 FF2025A 12.21 FF2025K 14.12 FF2030 n 14.54 FF2030K 14.36 FF2035 n 12.17 FF2035K 14.62 FF2040 n 8.51 FF2040K 14.71 FF2045 n 10.09 FF2045K 14.85 FF2050 n 10.00 IncomeFd nx 11.50 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 13.14 AMgr50 nx 15.96 AMgr70 nr 17.14 AMgr20 nrx 12.99 Balanc x 18.95 BalancedK x 18.95 BlueChipGr 47.91 BluChpGrK 47.93 CA Mun n 11.50 Canada n 63.77 CapApp n 26.33 CapDevelO 11.63 CapInco nr 9.85 ChinaReg r 33.69 Contra n 71.06 ContraK 71.05 CnvSec x 27.02 DisEq n 24.22 DiscEqF 24.21 DiverIntl n 31.82 DiversIntK r 31.81 DivStkO n 15.94 DivGth n 30.42 Emerg Asia r 32.37 EmrgMkt n 27.62 EqutInc nx 47.36 EQII nx 19.53 EqIncK x 47.34 Export n 23.00 FidelFd x 34.52 FltRateHi r 9.89 FourInOne n 28.44 GNMA n 11.40 GovtInc n 10.33

1 yr Chg %rt

3 yr %rt

+.03 +.04 +.04 +.03 +.04 +.04 +.05 +.04 +.05 +.06 +.05 +.06 +.06 +.06 +.06 +.08 +.05 +.07 +.05 +.09 +.06 ...

+10.4 +11.7 +11.8 +11.9 +12.1 +12.0 +13.0 +13.3 +13.2 +14.1 +14.5 +14.2 +14.2 +14.4 +15.0 +15.2 +15.2 +15.3 +15.4 +15.7 +15.8 +7.0

+10.5 +12.0 NS +11.0 +10.2 NS +8.8 +7.7 NS +9.3 +8.0 NS +5.8 NS +6.0 NS +5.1 NS +5.1 NS +3.8 +13.3

-.06 -.03 +.05 -.03 -.13 -.13 -.25 -.24 -.02 +.71 -.40 +.02 +.02 +1.01 -.15 -.14 -.35 +.03 +.04 +.39 +.40 +.06 -.01 +.64 +.53 -.02 +.01 -.04 -.08 -.13 +.01 +.02 -.05 -.05

+15.9 +12.8 +15.2 +8.0 +12.6 +12.8 +17.8 +18.0 +1.4 +23.7 +11.3 +20.2 +17.1 +18.3 +16.7 +16.8 +19.1 +9.2 +9.4 +14.0 +14.2 +14.8 +18.5 +23.7 +18.0 +13.5 +12.4 +13.7 +11.7 +15.9 +6.2 +13.6 +5.3 +3.5

NS +16.6 +14.1 +16.0 +9.0 NS +22.4 NS +9.3 +10.8 +9.0 +4.1 +49.1 +25.4 +8.5 NS +12.8 -5.9 NS -10.9 NS +10.5 +20.3 +3.3 -5.8 -0.4 -3.0 NS +1.7 +1.1 +20.5 +6.1 +20.5 +14.1

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

Frank/Temp Frnk A: AdjUS p 8.85 -.01 +1.5 BalInv p 49.98 -.35 +14.9 CAHYBd p 8.70 -.03 -0.3 CalInsA p 11.31 -.05 -0.6 CalTFrA p 6.51 -.01 -2.0 EqIncA p 17.57 +.07 +15.3 FedInterm p 11.27 -.03 +1.8 FedTxFrA p 11.22 -.02 -0.2 FlexCapGrA 50.52 -.70 +16.0 FlRtDA p 9.22 +.01 +6.5 FL TFA p 10.94 -.02 +0.4 FoundFAl p 11.18 +.05 +13.5 GoldPrM A 51.29 +3.12 +37.7 GrowthA p 46.63 -.31 +11.9 HY TFA p 9.49 -.02 +0.1 HiIncoA 2.05 +.01 +14.1 IncoSerA p 2.27 +.01 +15.0 InsTFA p 11.21 -.05 -1.2 MichTFA p 11.38 -.04 -0.1 NatResA p 44.82 +.03 +36.8 NJTFA p 11.27 -.05 -1.6 NY TFA p 11.02 -.03 -0.9 NC TFA p 11.57 -.05 -0.6 OhioITFA p 11.79 -.06 -1.2 ORTFA p 11.34 -.03 +0.1 PA TFA p 9.69 -.05 -1.2 RisDivA p 34.39 -.02 +15.2 SmCpVal p 47.45 -.25 +20.7 SMCpGrA 40.40 -.41 +27.2 StratInc p 10.61 +.05 +9.6 TotlRtnA p 10.12 ... +7.9 USGovA p 6.68 -.02 +4.3 UtilitiesA p 12.01 -.02 +13.4 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: FdTF Adv 11.22 -.03 -0.2 GlbBdAdv p 13.93 +.15 +9.1 IncomeAdv 2.26 +.01 +15.3 TGlbTRAdv 13.68 +.17 +12.4 TtlRtAdv 10.13 -.01 +8.1 USGovAdv p 6.70 -.02 +4.6 Frank/Temp Frnk B: IncomeB t 2.26 +.01 +14.1 Frank/Temp Frnk C: CalTFC t 6.50 -.01 -2.5 FdTxFC t 11.21 -.03 -0.9 FoundFAl p 11.01 +.05 +12.7 HY TFC t 9.62 -.02 -0.5 IncomeC t 2.29 +.01 +14.3 StratIncC p 10.60 +.05 +9.0 USGovC t 6.64 -.02 +3.8 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: BeaconA 12.98 +.05 +10.6 SharesA 21.85 +.02 +11.1 Frank/Temp Mtl C: SharesC t 21.62 +.02 +10.3

3 yr %rt +8.4 +3.9 +7.4 +5.6 +7.1 +3.1 +11.2 +9.5 +14.7 +13.5 +9.2 +2.7 +59.6 +14.9 +9.8 +34.0 +15.8 +7.1 +7.9 +13.6 +8.3 +9.7 +10.3 +8.2 +11.0 +9.2 +8.3 +19.2 +28.5 +26.2 +21.3 +16.1 +1.8 +9.8 +40.6 +16.4 NS +22.1 +16.7 +12.9 +5.3 +7.6 +0.5 +8.0 +13.9 +24.6 +14.5 -3.1 +0.3 -1.8

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

Hartford Fds I: DivGthI n 20.15 +.03 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppY n 38.83 -.05 CapAppI n 35.78 -.04 DivGrowthY n 20.50 +.03 FltRateI x 8.97 +.01 TotRetBdY nx 10.61 -.02 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 44.70 -.03 DiscplEqty 12.64 -.04 Div&Grwth 20.85 +.03 GrwthOpp 27.96 -.24 Advisers 20.18 -.06 Stock 43.66 -.11 IntlOpp 12.99 +.13 MidCap 27.87 -.32 TotalRetBd 11.00 -.02 USGovSecs 10.43 -.03 Hartford HLS IB: CapApprec p 44.29 -.04 Heartland Fds: ValueInv 47.76 +.06 ValPlusInv p 31.89 -.12 Henderson Glbl Fds: IntlOppA p 22.61 +.21 Hotchkis & Wiley: MidCpVal 25.89 +.09 Hussman Funds: StrTotRet r 12.15 ... StrGrowth 11.99 +.04 ICM SmlCo 31.87 -.31 ING Funds Cl A: GlbR E p 16.58 -.09 IVA Funds: Intl I r 16.72 +.07 WorldwideA t 17.39 +.09 WorldwideC t 17.27 +.09 Worldwide I r 17.40 +.10 Invesco Fds Instl: IntlGrow 29.63 +.35 Invesco Fds Invest: DivrsDiv p 12.85 -.04 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 14.24 -.16 Chart p 17.18 -.04 CmstkA 16.78 +.02 Constl p 24.22 -.25 DevMkt p 34.42 +.51 Energy p 47.15 -.64 EqtyIncA 8.99 ... GlbFranch p 23.00 +.22 GrIncA p 20.39 +.05 HYMuA 8.75 -.03 IntlGrow 29.24 +.35 MidCpCEq p 24.69 -.13

3 yr %rt

+13.7 +6.4 +10.8 -2.4 +10.7 -2.8 +13.8 +6.8 +7.9 +19.7 +5.4 +15.1 +14.8 +15.4 +14.0 +19.5 +10.8 +13.6 +14.7 +19.7 +5.7 +2.1

+4.5 +6.1 +6.2 +2.5 +9.8 +7.1 -0.8 +18.4 +14.8 +5.7

+14.5 +3.7 +22.2 +25.6 +21.9 +35.9 +11.5

-2.2

+22.4 +40.0 +6.8 +15.0 -5.2 -9.0 +14.8 +18.2 +13.6 +15.7 +16.1 +15.3 +16.5

-8.7 NS NS NS NS

+17.3 +3.6 +11.5 +13.8 +19.2 +9.2 +14.6 +13.1 +18.4 +29.2 +10.6 +17.1 +10.4 +0.5 +16.8 +12.9

+15.2 +11.1 +9.2 -6.1 +23.0 +3.4 +15.7 +18.0 +8.3 +4.3 +2.3 +16.3

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

EmgMktOp p 22.77 +.36 Legg Mason A: CBEqBldrA 13.36 +.01 CBAggGr p 118.84 -.17 CBAppr p 14.43 -.04 CBFdAllCV A 14.60 -.09 WAIntTmMu 6.12 -.01 WAMgMuA p 14.77 -.06 Legg Mason C: CMOppor t 10.82 -.01 CMSpecInv p 33.27 -.05 CMValTr p 40.39 -.08 Legg Mason Instl: CMValTr I 47.46 -.08 Legg Mason 1: CBDivStr1 17.40 +.02 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.66 -.24 Intl n 15.98 +.10 SmCap 29.26 -.07 Loomis Sayles: GlbBdR t 16.75 +.09 LSBondI 14.71 +.09 LSGlblBdI 16.90 +.09 StrInc C 15.36 +.10 LSBondR 14.66 +.09 StrIncA 15.28 +.10 ValueY n 19.98 -.08 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p 12.30 +.04 InvGrBdC p 12.21 +.04 InvGrBdY 12.31 +.04 Lord Abbett A: FloatRt p 9.41 +.02 IntrTaxFr 9.98 -.01 ShDurTxFr 15.63 +.01 AffiliatdA p 12.24 -.04 FundlEq 13.78 -.07 BalanStratA 11.14 +.05 BondDebA p 8.05 +.02 DevGthA p 23.51 -.05 ShDurIncoA p 4.60 ... MidCapA p 17.79 -.12 RsSmCpA 34.09 -.35 TaxFrA p 9.92 -.01 CapStruct p 12.39 -.03 Lord Abbett C: BdDbC p 8.07 +.02 FloatRt p 9.41 +.01 ShDurIncoC t 4.63 ... Lord Abbett F: FloatRt p 9.40 +.02 ShtDurInco 4.59 ... TotalRet 10.66 -.03 Lord Abbett I: SmCapVal 36.08 -.36

3 yr %rt

+16.5 +12.1 +14.9 +21.7 +12.2 +14.2 -0.6 -3.0

+0.9 +8.7 +4.7 +4.7 +9.4 +9.6

-4.2 -18.4 +10.7 +25.5 +3.0 -16.2 +4.0 -13.8 +12.9 +8.6 +16.5 +3.8 +13.4 -5.2 +18.7 +21.7 +9.5 +12.5 +9.8 +11.9 +12.2 +12.8 +11.6

+18.4 +27.6 +19.6 +25.0 +26.5 +27.8 +0.7

+9.5 +26.8 +8.8 +23.9 +9.9 +27.7 +7.0 +2.1 +2.3 +10.4 +16.9 +12.1 +13.5 +36.5 +5.2 +23.1 +21.5 -0.4 +14.4

+17.6 +14.7 NS -2.6 +19.7 +16.1 +29.6 +43.2 +22.7 +15.9 +29.0 +8.9 +16.3

+12.7 +27.0 +6.1 +15.1 +4.4 +20.1 +7.0 +18.1 +5.0 +23.0 +6.1 +23.0 +21.8 +30.1

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

FixIn n 10.11 -.03 HiYFxInc n 7.49 +.03 IntTaxEx n 9.92 -.03 IntlEqIdx r 11.14 +.13 MMEmMkt r 23.80 +.32 MMIntlEq r 10.35 +.18 MMMidCap 12.57 -.09 ShIntTaxFr 10.47 ... ShIntUSGv n 10.29 -.01 SmlCapVal n 16.11 -.16 StockIdx n 16.45 -.04 TxExpt n 9.91 -.03 Nuveen Cl A: HYldMuBd p 14.01 -.03 TWValOpp 36.46 +.47 LtdMBA p 10.75 ... Nuveen Cl C: HYMunBd t 14.00 -.03 Nuveen Cl I: CoreBond I 11.38 -.01 Nuveen Cl R: IntmDurMuBd 8.77 -.01 HYMuniBd 14.01 -.02 TWValOpp 36.58 +.47 Nuveen Cl Y: RealEst 18.93 -.36 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 29.27 +.05 GlobalI r 23.20 +.11 Intl I r 20.36 +.30 IntlSmCp r 14.79 +.14 Oakmark r 43.78 +.13 Select r 29.64 +.25 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.17 +.04 GlbSMdCap 16.41 +.03 NonUSLgC p 11.20 +.12 RealReturn 11.51 +.10 Oppenheimer A: AMTFrMuA 5.78 -.01 AMTFrNY 10.30 -.04 ActiveAllA 10.05 +.05 CapAppA p 45.39 -.32 CapIncA p 8.83 ... DevMktA p 37.20 +.43 DiscFd p 64.27 -.77 Equity A 9.34 ... EqIncA p 26.07 +.21 GlobalA p 64.41 +.05 GblAllocA 16.09 +.11 GlblOppA 30.64 +.08 GblStrIncoA 4.38 +.03 Gold p 51.45 +3.47 IntlBdA p 6.63 +.07 IntlDivA 12.58 +.11 IntGrow p 29.59 +.31

3 yr %rt

NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA NA

NA NA NA NA NS NA NA NA NA NA NA NA

-2.1 -8.8 +18.9 +36.5 +2.2 +11.0 -2.6 -10.3 +6.2 +20.7 +2.0 +12.4 -1.9 -8.3 +19.1 +37.5 +20.4 +9.4 +9.4 +11.3 +15.3 +17.4 +9.8 +12.0

+13.4 +8.7 +21.5 +22.7 +21.4 +24.5

+16.5 +3.3 +23.6 +39.7 +18.7 +2.3 +23.5 -9.2 -3.1 -4.3 +14.1 +8.9 +11.8 +22.9 +33.5 +12.0 +18.1 +16.1 +10.6 +9.3 +14.7 +45.1 +8.3 +14.8 +15.7

-13.0 +2.4 -4.3 -4.3 -9.9 +30.6 +29.7 -0.8 +28.0 +9.5 +15.1 +26.1 +20.4 +62.5 +16.2 +9.0 +3.3

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

HiInc 7.39 +.04 Perm Port Funds: Permanent 47.86 +.32 Pioneer Funds A: CullenVal 19.30 +.08 GlbHiYld p 10.89 +.04 HighYldA p 10.66 -.01 MdCpVaA p 22.44 -.14 PionFdA p 43.07 -.11 StratIncA p 11.08 +.01 ValueA p 12.06 -.08 Pioneer Funds C: PioneerFdY 43.22 -.10 StratIncC t 10.84 ... Pioneer Fds Y: CullenVal Y 19.37 +.08 GlbHiYld 10.70 +.04 StratIncY p 11.08 +.01 Price Funds Adv: EqtyInc n 25.05 -.02 Growth pn 33.46 -.25 HiYld n 6.94 +.03 MidCapGro n 62.57 -.29 R2020A p 17.16 -.01 R2030Adv np 18.14 -.02 R2040A pn 18.34 -.02 SmCpValA n 38.61 -.27 TF Income pn 9.43 -.02 Price Funds R Cl: Ret2020R p 17.04 -.01 Ret2030R n 18.05 -.02 Price Funds: Balance n 20.05 -.05 BlueChipG n 40.10 -.43 CapApr n 21.27 -.07 DivGro n 24.23 -.10 EmMktB n 13.36 +.06 EmMktS n 36.68 +.62 EqInc n 25.09 -.02 EqIdx n 35.80 -.09 GNM n 9.84 -.04 Growth n 33.75 -.25 GwthIn n 21.25 -.05 HlthSci n 34.46 +.05 HiYld n 6.95 +.02 InstlCpGr n 17.29 -.17 InstHiYld n 10.06 +.04 InstlFltRt n 10.42 +.01 MCEqGr n 30.37 -.15 IntlBd n 10.12 +.06 IntlDis n 45.61 +.47 IntlGr&Inc n 14.27 +.15 IntStk n 14.93 +.23 LatAm n 57.20 +.53 MdTxFr n 9.99 -.02 MediaTl n 56.07 +.22

3 yr %rt

+12.9 +23.2 +19.5 +29.2 +12.2 +16.0 +17.7 +13.9 +14.4 +10.0 +8.2

-2.6 +33.7 +31.1 +10.9 +3.8 +30.8 -6.0

+14.9 +5.2 +9.2 +28.0 +12.6 -1.6 +16.3 +34.6 +10.3 +32.2 +12.1 +15.5 +13.5 +25.7 +13.5 +14.8 +15.3 +21.2 -0.4

+3.3 +10.6 +36.9 +30.9 +12.2 +10.9 +10.9 +23.7 +9.7

+13.2 +11.4 +14.5 +10.1 +11.8 +15.2 +11.8 +13.3 +10.5 +16.7 +12.3 +13.9 +4.8 +15.8 +12.7 +20.8 +13.8 +15.9 +14.1 +8.2 +26.9 +9.4 +19.6 +15.3 +14.8 +15.6 +0.2 +27.6

+11.9 +10.1 +17.2 +6.2 +28.6 -1.7 +3.9 +3.6 +17.7 +11.3 +6.2 +35.8 +37.7 +21.3 +39.4 +25.5 +32.7 +10.5 +7.1 -6.2 +0.2 +11.5 +11.9 +38.8

+6.3 +21.5 +17.2 +3.5 +17.6 +5.9 +16.3 -3.3 +30.1 -12.9 +30.4 -12.3 +12.9 +14.2 +15.9 -1.1 +17.7 +13.1 +18.6 +13.9 +11.5 +15.3 +13.8 -0.5 +5.0

-13.5 +21.4 +31.5 +12.2 +18.8

+14.1 +3.9 +3.7 +12.1 +5.3 +18.4 +15.2 +10.9 +11.3 -1.5 -0.3 +12.8 +12.1

-0.5

Pick up a copy of the most comprehensive visitor’s guide in Central Oregon:

+12.4 +0.3 +11.2 -2.9 +5.7 +28.3 +1.5 +17.1 +5.8

-7.4

+20.0 +19.3 +17.1 +14.2 +4.0 +1.6 +16.5 +18.7 +24.2 +20.2 +17.4 +17.5 +25.1 +20.5 +24.9 +21.5 +21.6 +17.8 +22.5 +19.6 +1.0 +3.4 +4.9 +24.4 +14.9 +15.1 +8.6 +3.5 +13.2 +21.7 +15.4 +18.1 +18.4 +15.7 +1.2 +19.1

+24.8 +20.1 +5.8 +4.5 NS +7.5 +4.5 +14.9 +16.5 +16.3 +5.8 +6.2 +24.2 +26.8 +32.9 +24.2 +8.8 +8.9 +36.7 +17.5 +6.5 +13.9 +15.2 -15.6 -7.0 -6.4 +13.8 +13.2 -6.9 +16.3 -4.6 +7.7 +8.2 +6.2 +7.5 +1.4

+10.8 +6.7 +13.3 NS +6.6 +24.4 +14.5 +1.0 +11.7 -1.3 NA NA

NS NS

+17.0 +14.0 -0.8 +13.4 +23.5 +13.7 +7.3 +12.9 -0.3 +0.6 +23.4 +21.0 NA +18.8

+5.6 +3.7 +7.6 +5.2 +25.5 +2.8 +20.7 +14.1 +8.4 +11.0 +37.7 +22.5 NA +11.8

+3.0 +6.7 +14.4 +5.7 -5.1 +.02

+16.9 +20.4 +34.1 -9.1 -1.4 +5.9

+10.3 +2.9 +9.0 -14.5 -5.8

-3.6

+6.9 +21.3 +3.5 +18.0 +6.0 -8.3 +17.6 +8.8 +18.1 -1.5 +19.0 +40.2 +10.0 +14.6 +29.7 +3.0 +12.5 +5.7

+38.0 +10.2 +19.5 +19.6

+23.7 +15.2 +1.1 +5.0

+21.1 +3.7 +6.9 +18.2

+1.4 +15.2 +23.4 +0.7 +5.6 +5.3 +16.7

+9.1 +3.5 +25.5 +5.4 +20.1 +19.0 0.0

+14.1 +6.0 +14.8 +21.4 +14.1 +21.3 +15.6 +21.8 +9.8 +6.4

-11.0 +19.5 +4.4 +3.6 +0.5 +19.7 +6.0 +27.8 +30.8 +21.9

+14.8 +3.6 +9.0 +28.0 +14.5 +6.3 +13.3 +16.8 +14.0 +21.6 +15.9 +22.2 +10.0

-10.3 +20.4 -2.8 +35.4 +10.1 +20.6 +6.8 +29.0 +31.8

+23.0 +11.9 +22.3 +13.9 +15.3 +21.5 +9.8

-0.2 -4.5 +0.7 -0.1 +5.2 +27.0 +30.9

+7.4 +12.2

• Bend V s or and Conven on Bureau • Deschu es Coun y Expo Cen er • O her Po n s o n eres

• The Bullet n • Chambers o Commerce • Oregon Border K osks • Cen ra Oregon V s or s Assoc a on

This guide features a wide variety of informative maps, points of interest, fall and winter events and recreational opportunities.

IN COOPERATION WITH:

PRESENTED BY:

GroCo n 90.07 -.21 GroInc x 19.28 +.01 GrowCoF 90.04 -.20 GrowthCoK 90.05 -.20 GrStrat nr 21.57 -.13 HighInc rn 9.21 +.03 Indepndnce n 25.92 -.21 InProBnd 11.87 -.02 IntBd n 10.53 -.02 IntGov 10.64 -.02 IntmMuni n 9.96 -.01 IntlDisc n 34.42 +.43 IntlSmCap rn 22.20 +.28 InvGrBd n 11.36 -.04 InvGB n 7.39 -.03 LargeCap n 18.73 +.03 LgCapVal n 12.32 +.04 LatAm n 60.26 +.44 LeveCoStT 36.73 -.14 LevCoStock 30.85 -.11 LowPr rn 41.16 +.14 LowPriStkK r 41.16 +.15 Magellan n 75.28 -.60 MagellanK 75.24 -.60 MA Muni n 11.53 -.04 MidCap n 30.96 -.18 MidCapK r 30.95 -.18 MuniInc n 12.15 -.03 NewMkt nr 15.73 +.05 NewMill n 31.58 -.04 NY Mun n 12.46 -.03 OTC 59.68 -.67 OTC K 59.99 -.68 100Index 9.23 ... Ovrsea n 34.32 +.48 PacBas n 26.21 +.24 Puritan x 18.74 -.12 PuritanK x 18.74 -.13 RealEInc r 10.72 -.05 RealEst n 26.80 -.55 SrAllSecEqF 13.14 -.06 SCmdtyStrt n 13.53 +.31 SCmdtyStrF n 13.56 +.32 SrsEmrgMkt 19.82 +.39 SrsIntGrw 11.84 +.21 SerIntlGrF 11.86 +.20 SrsIntSmCp 12.49 +.05 SrsIntVal 10.76 +.14 SerIntlValF 10.78 +.14 SrsInvGrdF 11.36 -.04 ShtIntMu n 10.58 ... STBF n 8.46 ... SmCapDisc n 22.20 -.17 SmCpGrth r 17.06 +.05 SmCapOpp 11.82 -.04 SmallCapS nr 20.74 -.20 SmCapValu r 16.49 -.18 SpSTTBInv nre10.48 -.09 StkSlcACap n 27.47 -.04 StkSelSmCap 20.22 -.05 StratInc n 11.24 +.03 StratReRtn rx 9.94 -.01 StratRRF rx 9.93 -.01 TaxFreeB r 10.44 -.02 TotalBond n 10.73 -.03 Trend n 72.90 -.05 USBI n 11.25 -.05 Utility nx 16.87 -.07 ValueK 74.45 +.10 Value n 74.37 +.10 Wrldwde n 19.83 +.04 Fidelity Selects: Biotech n 80.14 +1.25 Electr nx 52.73 +2.57 Energy nx 61.58 -.53 EngSvc n 86.89 -1.72 Gold rn 55.28 +3.38 Health n 138.42 -.78 Materials 72.79 +.90 MedEqSys ne 29.96 -.29 NatGas nx 37.17 -.05 NatRes rnx 40.25 -.03 Softwr ne 86.78 -6.39 Tech n 101.32 -.47 Fidelity Spartan: ExtMktIndInv 41.14 -.28 500IdxInv nx 47.03 -.31 IntlIndxInv 37.24 +.49 TotMktIndInv 38.80 -.13 Fidelity Spart Adv: ExtMktAdv r 41.14 -.28 500IdxAdv x 47.03 -.32 IntlAdv r 37.24 +.48 TotlMktAdv r 38.80 -.13 First Eagle: GlobalA 48.18 +.17 OverseasA 23.18 +.06 SoGenGold p 35.64 +1.73 Forum Funds: AbsolStratI r 10.84 +.02

+20.8 +12.5 +21.1 +21.0 +19.1 +13.7 +19.1 +7.5 +5.8 +3.5 +2.0 +13.8 +24.2 +5.5 +6.6 +14.0 +10.8 +16.8 +21.1 +21.5 +16.8 +17.0 +10.6 +10.7 +1.3 +15.3 +15.6 +1.2 +7.9 +16.9 +0.8 +21.6 +21.8 +11.9 +12.7 +18.4 +13.4 +13.5 +14.5 +18.8 +16.0 +29.3 +29.5 +20.0 +18.3 +18.5 +21.4 +12.0 +12.2 +5.5 +2.0 +2.9 +27.9 +23.9 +29.3 +17.4 +18.7 +6.2 +17.7 +30.4 +10.1 +15.6 +15.8 +0.9 +6.8 +21.9 +4.8 +21.3 +17.8 +17.7 +18.8

+17.5 -21.6 NS NS +12.7 +38.1 -3.1 +11.7 +19.0 +12.5 +12.2 -8.3 +9.4 NS +18.6 +9.9 NS +0.4 +2.9 +1.3 +21.0 NS -8.2 NS +11.9 +17.6 NS +11.4 +32.4 +20.5 +11.9 +32.5 NS +1.1 -18.8 +9.6 +13.5 NS +30.2 +2.1 NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS +10.2 +9.1 +57.0 +23.1 +45.0 +31.0 +37.1 +13.4 +3.1 +17.2 +31.0 +13.0 NS +12.2 +23.2 +17.5 +15.7 -1.1 NS +7.9 +3.4

+8.2 +22.1 +36.0 +42.0 +33.7 +20.3 +27.2 +14.4 +15.6 +37.1 +23.1 +28.0

+27.0 +39.5 -5.5 -8.7 +44.1 +33.0 +25.6 +25.1 -25.3 +3.4 +39.1 +48.6

+22.9 +24.1 +14.1 +4.0 +12.6 -9.5 +15.8 +7.7 +23.0 +24.2 +14.1 +4.1 +12.6 -9.4 +15.8 +7.8 +15.8 +18.2 +15.4 +16.2 +34.6 +55.4 +2.0

+8.7

Frank/Temp Temp A: DevMktA p 26.86 +.51 +17.9 ForeignA p 7.67 +.13 +18.9 GlBondA p 13.97 +.16 +8.9 GlSmCoA p 7.72 +.04 +18.4 GrowthA p 19.31 +.20 +14.7 WorldA p 15.94 +.14 +14.0 Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: FlexCpGr 51.33 -.71 +16.3 FrgnAv 7.59 +.13 +19.2 GrthAv 19.32 +.20 +15.0 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.99 +.15 +8.5 GrwthC p 18.84 +.20 +13.9 Franklin Mutual Ser: QuestA 18.42 +.04 +10.1 Franklin Templ: TgtModA p 14.65 +.03 +11.0 GE Elfun S&S: S&S Income n11.25 -.04 +6.1 S&S PM n 42.58 -.24 +10.2 TaxEx 11.19 -.03 +0.5 Trusts n 44.23 ... +13.2 GE Instl Funds: IntlEq n 12.16 +.24 +11.3 SmCpEqI 16.15 -.09 +27.7 GE Investments: TRFd1 17.05 +.03 +9.9 TRFd3 p 17.00 +.03 +9.7 GMO Trust: ShtDurColl r 10.17 ... NE USTreas x 25.01 +.01 +0.2 GMO Trust II: EmergMkt r 15.84 +.27 +22.1 GMO Trust III: EmgMk r 15.88 +.28 +22.2 Foreign 12.90 +.12 +10.9 IntlIntrVal 23.23 +.23 +12.0 Quality x 20.91 ... +8.7 GMO Trust IV: EmgCnDt 9.44 +.08 +19.0 EmerMkt 15.78 +.28 +22.3 IntlCoreEq 30.69 +.32 +13.5 IntlGrEq 24.09 +.26 +15.4 IntlIntrVal 23.22 +.23 +12.1 Quality x 20.92 -.01 +8.7 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 15.79 +.28 +22.4 IntlCoreEq 30.66 +.32 +13.5 Quality x 20.91 -.01 +8.7 StrFixInco 15.21 -.18 +2.0 USCoreEq x 12.04 -.07 +10.0 Gabelli Funds: Asset 52.38 -.30 +21.1 EqInc p 21.77 +.01 +16.3 SmCapG n 35.99 -.20 +22.8 Gateway Funds: GatewayA 26.71 +.09 +6.0 Goldman Sachs A: GrIStrA 11.02 +.07 NA GrthOppsA 24.39 -.10 +17.7 MidCapVA p 37.89 -.28 +17.6 ShtDuGvA 10.23 ... +1.2 SmaCapA 42.27 -.33 +19.2 Goldman Sachs Inst: CoreFxc 9.80 -.03 +5.5 GrthOppt 25.90 -.10 +18.1 HiYield 7.45 +.03 +13.5 HYMuni n 8.01 -.02 +0.1 MidCapVal 38.20 -.28 +18.0 SD Gov 10.20 ... +1.7 ShrtDurTF n 10.44 ... +2.0 SmCapVal 44.36 -.34 +19.6 StructIntl n 11.08 +.16 +11.8 Greensprng 24.76 +.07 +8.5 GuideStone Funds: BalAllo GS4 12.57 +.01 +11.3 GrEqGS4 19.79 -.11 +17.3 IntlEqGS4 14.22 +.23 +14.7 ValuEqGS4 15.23 -.02 +14.0 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.18 +.03 +6.9 CapAppInst n 38.27 -.35 +11.5 HiYBdInst r 11.15 +.05 +12.4 IntlInv t 64.42 +1.18 +18.2 IntlAdmin p 64.61 +1.18 +18.3 IntlGr nr 12.79 +.16 +16.1 Intl nr 65.07 +1.19 +18.6 Harding Loevner: EmgMkts r 52.68 +.85 NA Hartford Fds A: CapAppA p 35.75 -.05 +10.4 Chks&Bal p 9.85 -.01 +9.8 DivGthA p 20.22 +.03 +13.3 FltRateA px 8.97 +.02 +7.8 MidCapA p 23.54 -.26 +19.5 Hartford Fds C: CapAppC t 31.66 -.05 +9.6 FltRateC tx 8.96 +.02 +7.0

+10.8 +5.2 +39.6 +21.4 -5.6 +1.7 +15.6 +6.0 -4.9 +37.9 -7.7 +8.2 +17.7 +14.2 +6.6 +12.4 +11.3 -17.9 +22.4 +1.1 +0.5 NE NS NS +8.3 -12.5 -12.3 +7.3 +34.1 +8.4 -11.2 -4.3 -12.1 +7.4 +8.7 -11.1 +7.5 +7.4 +5.0 +15.3 +10.8 +27.3 +0.2 NA +24.7 +14.0 +11.1 +26.4 +15.0 +26.1 +33.1 -2.0 +15.4 +12.2 +10.0 +28.0 -10.6 +16.5 +13.5 +8.5 -7.3 +1.0 +24.3 +12.8 +33.7 -2.7 -2.3 -11.3 -1.6 NA -3.7 +7.0 +5.4 +18.9 +16.2 -5.7 +16.1

MidCGth p 31.62 -.32 RealEst p 22.21 -.43 SmCpGr p 31.81 -.19 SmCapGr p 12.15 -.10 SmCpValA t 19.08 -.16 TF IntA p 11.02 -.02 Invesco Funds B: DivGtSecB 13.62 -.03 EqIncB 8.82 ... Invesco Funds C: EqIncC 8.87 +.01 Invesco Funds P: SummitP p 12.36 -.07 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 25.04 +.20 AssetStrA p 25.82 +.21 AssetStrY p 25.86 +.21 AssetStrI r 26.05 +.22 GlNatRsA p 24.44 +.07 GlNatResI t 24.93 +.07 GlbNatResC p 21.20 +.06 HighIncoA p 8.49 +.01 JPMorgan A Class: Core Bond A 11.41 -.02 Inv Bal p 12.60 ... InvCon p 11.38 +.01 InvGr&InA p 13.32 ... InvGrwth p 14.19 -.01 MdCpVal p 24.57 -.14 JPMorgan C Class: CoreBond pn 11.47 -.02 JP Morgan Instl: MidCapVal n 24.97 -.14 JPMorgan R Cl: CoreBond n 11.41 -.02 HighYld r 8.37 +.05 MtgBacked 11.26 ... ShtDurBond 10.95 ... JPMorgan Select: MdCpValu 24.77 -.14 SmCap 39.52 -.33 USEquity n 10.71 -.02 USREstate n 16.12 -.33 JPMorgan Sel Cls: AsiaEq n 38.85 +.63 CoreBond n 11.41 -.02 CorePlusBd n 8.15 -.01 EmMkEqSl 25.03 +.45 EqIndx 30.15 -.08 HighYld 8.37 +.04 IntmdTFBd n 10.73 ... IntlValSel 14.27 +.21 IntrdAmer 24.63 -.06 MkExpIdx n 11.70 -.10 MidCpGrw 24.57 -.36 MuniIncSl n 9.76 ... ShtDurBdSel 10.95 ... TxAwRRet n 10.08 +.06 USLCCrPls n 21.56 -.04 Janus Aspen Instl: Balanced 29.60 -.03 Janus S Shrs: Forty 34.05 +.05 Overseas t 51.48 -.23 Janus T Shrs: BalancedT n 26.07 -.02 Contrarian T 15.05 +.02 EnterprT 62.71 -.55 GlbSel T 12.41 +.03 Grw&IncT n 32.49 -.12 HiYldT r 9.27 +.03 Janus T 30.16 ... OverseasT r 51.61 -.23 PerkMCVal T 24.04 -.04 PerkSCVal T 25.46 -.08 ResearchT n 30.74 -.04 ShTmBdT 3.08 ... Twenty T 67.10 +.12 WrldW T r 48.67 +.30 Jensen I 28.36 -.07 Jensen J 28.35 -.06 John Hancock A: LgCpEqA 27.57 +.01 StrIncA p 6.83 +.03 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggress 13.05 +.01 LSBalance 13.45 +.01 LS Conserv 13.00 +.01 LSGrowth 13.54 +.01 LS Moder 13.00 +.02 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p 27.10 -.36 LSV ValEq n 14.89 +.03 Laudus Funds: IntFxInInst r 11.86 +.04 IntlMsterS r 20.07 +.15 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 22.38 +.36 Lazard Open:

+26.3 +16.3 +29.2 +23.6 +20.8 +2.1

+20.7 -1.1 +28.8 +15.9 +34.1 +13.8

+9.1 -2.8 +10.5 +15.5 +9.9 +13.2 +14.0

-4.5

+12.1 +13.0 +13.0 +13.2 +27.2 +27.7 +26.3 +15.2

+6.7 +9.1 +9.1 +9.9 -11.3 -10.1 -13.1 +43.2

+5.8 +9.1 +7.4 +10.8 +12.1 +17.9

+20.0 +15.2 +16.3 +12.3 +8.6 +16.0

+5.2 +17.7 +18.4 +17.8 +6.2 +14.4 +7.9 +2.7

+21.2 +41.2 +28.0 +11.3

+18.2 +16.9 +22.4 +37.9 +12.4 +11.1 +20.3 -5.6 +17.7 +6.1 +8.5 +13.2 +13.9 +14.3 +1.9 +14.4 +13.6 +21.5 +23.4 +2.5 +2.4 +4.4 +11.0

+10.8 +20.6 +23.7 +9.3 +3.7 +40.7 +11.5 -8.4 +4.3 +23.5 +20.1 +12.3 +10.5 +9.2 +12.8

+8.8 +19.6 +3.3 -13.0 +10.0 NS +8.3 +3.7 +24.4 +16.0 +10.2 +15.5 +10.0 +10.3 +14.1 +15.1 +17.8 +2.4 +4.2 +12.7 +12.9 +12.6

+18.1 -14.1 +14.6 +2.8 -2.0 +39.4 +2.2 +6.3 +17.7 +37.2 +7.1 +15.9 -8.7 -2.8 +14.9 +13.9

+13.1 -2.1 +12.5 +35.2 +15.6 +12.9 +9.5 +14.8 +11.6

+5.0 +13.1 +18.3 +10.1 +16.7

+23.5 -2.0 +13.6 +0.3 +8.1 +17.3 +20.3 +6.4 +16.9 +13.4

MFS Funds A: IntlDiverA 14.15 +.22 +15.7 MITA 20.30 -.05 +11.0 MIGA 15.88 -.06 +14.3 EmGrA 43.71 -.47 +13.9 GrAllA 14.60 +.02 +15.7 IntNwDA 22.85 +.29 +20.4 IntlValA 25.62 +.40 +11.3 ModAllA 13.90 ... +13.3 MuHiA t 7.10 -.01 +1.0 RschA 26.10 -.12 +12.6 ReschIntA 16.18 +.26 +16.5 TotRA 14.58 -.02 +9.4 UtilA 17.64 +.03 +21.7 ValueA 24.27 +.03 +12.2 MFS Funds C: ValueC 24.05 +.02 +11.3 MFS Funds I: IntNwDI n 23.46 +.29 +20.7 ResrchBdI n 10.43 -.03 +6.6 ReInT 16.70 +.27 +16.7 ValueI 24.38 +.03 +12.5 MFS Funds Instl: IntlEqty n 18.91 +.19 +15.8 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBdA 6.00 +.03 +12.2 LgCpGrA p 7.54 -.08 +17.8 MainStay Funds I: MnStMAP I 34.00 -.02 +14.7 ICAP SelEq 37.33 -.06 +15.0 S&P500Idx 30.74 -.07 +13.7 Mairs & Power: Growth n 75.64 -.66 +12.2 Managers Funds: PimcoBond n 10.48 +.02 +6.8 TmSqMCpGI n14.98 -.14 +17.3 Bond n 25.93 -.01 +8.7 Manning&Napier Fds: WorldOppA n 9.19 +.07 +13.0 Marsico Funds: Focus p 18.87 -.20 +14.4 Master Select: Intl 16.26 +.20 +21.1 Matthews Asian: AsiaDivInv r 14.29 +.08 +10.8 AsianG&IInv 18.24 +.14 +14.1 China Inv 30.42 +1.00 +13.2 IndiaInv r 20.79 +.32 +12.8 PacTigerInv 23.93 +.39 +18.7 MergerFd n 16.20 +.02 +4.2 Meridian Funds: Growth 47.42 -.49 +29.4 Value 29.86 -.33 +13.6 Metro West Fds: HiYldBdM p 11.00 +.04 +14.5 LowDurBd 8.66 ... +8.6 TotRetBd 10.39 -.02 +8.6 TotalRetBondI10.39 -.02 +8.8 MontagGr I 25.16 -.12 +8.5 Morgan Stanley A: FocusGroA 38.34 +.04 +28.4 MorganStanley Inst: EmMktI n 27.57 +.33 +15.5 IntlEqI n 14.37 +.14 +9.6 IntlEqP np 14.20 +.14 +9.3 MCapGrI n 41.25 +.41 +35.9 MCapGrP p 39.95 +.39 +35.6 SmlCoGrI n 15.28 +.14 +31.7 Munder Funds A: MdCpCGr t 29.82 -.49 +23.1 Munder Funds Y: MdCpCGrY n 30.44 -.50 +23.3 Mutual Series: BeaconZ 13.07 +.05 +10.9 EuropZ 22.70 +.23 +11.4 GblDiscovA 30.69 +.19 +10.8 GlbDiscC 30.40 +.18 +10.1 GlbDiscZ 31.08 +.20 +11.2 QuestZ 18.57 +.04 +10.5 SharesZ 22.03 +.02 +11.4 Nationwide Instl: IntIdx I n 7.83 +.09 +12.1 NwBdIdxI n 11.21 -.05 +4.7 S&P500Instl n11.15 -.03 +14.0 Nationwide Serv: IDModAgg 9.59 -.01 +12.8 IDMod 9.75 -.02 +10.5 Neuberger&Berm Inv: Genesis n 36.31 -.23 +24.2 GenesInstl 50.25 -.33 +24.4 Guardn n 16.00 -.02 +21.3 Partner n 29.57 -.03 +11.2 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis n 52.04 -.35 +24.1 Nicholas Group: Nichol n 48.11 -.37 +17.4 Northern Funds: BondIdx 10.42 -.04 NA EmgMEqIdx 13.44 +.18 NA

-1.2 +5.1 +11.9 +11.5 +11.3 +10.2 -1.5 +15.6 +9.1 +6.5 -7.2 +8.2 +7.6 +2.2 0.0 +11.1 +24.2 -6.4 +3.0 +3.3 +29.2 +13.2 +4.7 +6.1 +3.3 +11.8 +24.2 +20.4 +23.6 +0.6 +5.6 +1.4 +37.4 +19.6 +34.2 +23.6 +31.2 +16.6 +45.1 +7.0 +48.5 +12.9 +29.0 +29.9 +6.9 +19.9 -0.4 -5.6 -6.3 +33.7 +32.7 +29.2 +8.8 +9.5 -2.2 +3.7 +9.7 +7.4 +10.6 +9.2 +1.2 -10.3 +15.3 +3.5 +6.0 +8.7 +12.7 +13.5 +10.1 -2.8 +12.6 +26.3 NA NA

LtdTrmMu 14.03 -.01 MnStFdA 33.40 -.01 MainStrOpA p12.85 -.06 MnStSCpA p 21.89 -.12 RisingDivA 16.40 +.02 SenFltRtA 8.41 +.01 S&MdCpVlA 34.23 -.04 Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 14.87 +.02 S&MdCpVlB 29.30 -.04 Oppenheimer C&M: DevMktC t 35.71 +.40 GblStrIncoC 4.37 +.03 IntlBondC 6.60 +.06 LtdTmMuC t 13.98 -.01 RisingDivC p 14.81 +.01 SenFltRtC 8.42 +.01 Oppenheim Quest : QOpptyA 27.35 +.08 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.17 -.01 LtdNYC t 3.16 ... RoNtMuC t 6.43 -.01 RoMu A p 14.54 -.07 RoMu C p 14.52 -.07 RcNtlMuA 6.44 -.01 Oppenheimer Y: CapApprecY 47.49 -.33 CommStratY 4.26 +.15 DevMktY 36.82 +.43 IntlBdY 6.62 +.06 IntlGrowY 29.45 +.31 MainStSCY 23.01 -.12 ValueY 23.95 +.20 Osterweis Funds: OsterweisFd n 28.65 -.05 StratIncome 11.83 +.03 PACE Funds P: LgGrEqtyP 19.02 -.17 LgVEqtyP 17.81 -.01 PIMCO Admin PIMS: ComdtyRRA 9.85 +.24 RelRetAd p 11.53 ... ShtTmAd p 9.90 +.01 TotRetAd n 10.91 +.02 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AllAssetAut r 10.93 +.10 AllAsset 12.51 +.08 CommodRR 9.96 +.25 DevLocMk r 11.06 +.14 DiverInco 11.54 +.03 EmMktsBd 11.12 +.02 FltgInc r 9.21 +.06 FrgnBdUnd r 10.67 +.05 FrgnBd n 10.37 ... HiYld n 9.50 +.04 InvGradeCp 10.60 +.01 LowDur n 10.46 +.01 ModDur n 10.72 +.01 RERRStg r 4.69 -.10 RealReturn 11.29 -.05 RealRetInstl 11.53 ... ShortT 9.90 +.01 StksPlus 8.98 -.01 TotRet n 10.91 +.02 TR II n 10.38 ... TRIII n 9.67 +.02 PIMCO Funds A: AllAstAuth t 10.87 +.10 All Asset p 12.42 +.08 CommodRR p 9.81 +.25 HiYldA 9.50 +.04 LowDurA 10.46 +.01 RealRetA p 11.53 ... ShortTrmA p 9.90 +.01 TotRtA 10.91 +.02 PIMCO Funds Admin: HiYldAd np 9.50 +.04 PIMCO Funds C: AllAstAut t 10.77 +.09 AllAssetC t 12.28 +.07 CommRR p 9.62 +.24 LwDurC nt 10.46 +.01 RealRetC p 11.53 ... TotRtC t 10.91 +.02 PIMCO Funds D: CommodRR p 9.83 +.24 LowDurat p 10.46 +.01 RealRtn p 11.53 ... TotlRtn p 10.91 +.02 PIMCO Funds P: AstAllAuthP 10.92 +.10 CommdtyRR 9.95 +.25 RealRtnP 11.53 ... TotRtnP 10.91 +.02 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 27.80 -.03 Pax World: Balanced 23.58 -.10 Paydenfunds:

+1.7 +11.9 +9.7 +18.8 +13.9 +10.1 +18.2

+8.7 +2.5 +3.7 +20.2 +2.4 +25.5 +0.7

+12.8 +17.3

-0.3 -1.7

+21.9 +13.6 +7.5 +1.0 +12.9 +9.5

+27.8 +17.7 +13.6 +6.3 +0.1 +24.0

+7.5

+2.7

+1.3 +10.7 +0.9 +8.3 -3.5 -14.5 -3.7 +4.6 -4.5 +1.2 -2.7 -12.6 +9.4 +25.4 +23.2 +8.6 +16.3 +19.3 +15.6

-3.1 -43.9 +31.7 +17.2 +4.9 +21.7 +3.6

+13.6 +17.1 +9.9 +32.1 +15.1 +10.3 +12.1 +0.9 +38.7 -7.6 +8.2 +16.1 +1.6 +9.4 +7.0 +26.1 +12.9 +15.0 +39.0 +9.7 +11.1 +9.8 +5.7 +14.2 +5.1 +12.7 +10.3 +4.2 +6.9 +30.1 +11.8 +8.5 +1.9 +17.4 +7.3 +6.7 +7.9

+23.5 +21.7 -7.0 +12.5 +32.1 +25.9 +16.4 +22.2 +24.0 +31.1 +36.7 +17.2 +25.5 +8.8 +17.4 +17.0 +10.2 +5.2 +27.0 +24.8 +28.1

+12.2 +14.3 +38.2 +12.4 +3.8 +8.0 +1.5 +6.8

+21.3 +19.6 -8.3 +29.8 +15.8 +15.4 +9.0 +25.3

+12.5 +30.2 +11.2 +13.3 +37.1 +3.5 +7.5 +6.0

+18.5 +16.9 -10.4 +14.4 +13.7 +22.5

+38.3 -8.4 +3.9 +16.2 +8.1 +15.5 +6.9 +25.9 +12.7 +38.7 +8.4 +7.1

NS NS NS NS

+10.2 +18.6 +13.4 +3.6

MidCap n 63.76 -.30 MCapVal n 25.10 -.16 NewAm n 35.18 -.23 N Asia n 19.58 +.43 NewEra n 57.66 -.16 NwHrzn n 37.00 -.22 NewInco n 9.43 -.03 OverSea SF r 8.86 +.08 PSBal n 19.84 -.05 PSGrow n 24.21 -.07 PSInco n 16.54 -.02 RealEst n 18.18 -.31 R2005 n 11.77 +.01 R2010 n 15.98 +.01 R2015 12.44 ... Retire2020 n 17.27 ... R2025 12.69 -.01 R2030 n 18.27 -.01 R2035 n 12.96 -.01 R2040 n 18.45 -.02 R2045 n 12.30 -.01 Ret Income n 13.48 +.01 SciTch n 29.20 +.58 ST Bd n 4.84 ... SmCapStk n 37.57 -.24 SmCapVal n 38.86 -.27 SpecGr 18.80 -.03 SpecIn n 12.52 ... SumMuInt n 11.06 -.01 TxFree n 9.42 -.03 TxFrHY n 10.19 -.02 TxFrSI n 5.53 ... Value n 25.05 -.10 Primecap Odyssey : AggGrwth r 18.02 +.06 Growth r 16.52 +.08 Stock r 14.91 -.05 Principal Inv: BdMtgInstl 10.45 ... DivIntlInst 10.62 +.12 HighYldA p 8.15 +.03 HiYld In 11.24 +.08 Intl I Inst 12.15 +.11 IntlGrthInst 9.37 +.11 LgCGr2In 8.73 -.04 LgLGI In 9.83 -.07 LgCV3 In 10.87 -.04 LgCV1 In 11.27 ... LgGrIn 8.44 -.07 LgCpIndxI 9.33 -.02 LgCValIn 10.13 -.05 LT2010In 11.66 ... LfTm2020In 12.25 +.01 LT2030In 12.20 -.01 LT2040In 12.45 ... MidCGIII In 11.63 -.08 MidCV1 In 13.93 -.13 PreSecs In 10.12 +.01 RealEstSecI 16.87 -.32 SGI In 11.99 -.06 SmCV2 In 10.42 -.09 SAMBalA 13.24 -.01 SAMGrA p 14.28 -.01 Prudential Fds A: BlendA 18.28 -.10 HiYldA p 5.63 +.02 MidCpGrA 29.42 -.21 NatResA 62.18 +.89 STCorpBdA 11.44 ... SmallCoA p 22.06 -.19 2020FocA 16.81 -.07 UtilityA 10.96 -.03 Prudential Fds Z&I: MidCapGrZ 30.51 -.21 SmallCoZ 23.05 -.20 Putnam Funds A: AABalA p 11.43 +.01 AAGthA p 13.05 +.04 CATxA p 7.27 -.85 DvrInA p 8.28 +.01 EqInA p 16.33 ... GeoBalA 12.44 ... GrInA p 14.40 +.01 GlblHlthA 48.17 +.40 HiYdA p 7.95 +.04 IntlEq p 20.94 +.16 IntlCapO p 37.01 +.14 InvA p 13.60 -.01 MultiCpGr 53.57 -.32 NYTxA p 8.10 -.02 TxExA p 8.10 +.81 USGvA p 14.10 -.06 VoyA p 24.53 -.18 Putnam Funds C: DivInc t 8.17 +.01 RS Funds: CoreEqVIP 39.69 +.06 EmgMktA 27.27 +.22 RSNatRes np 41.35 +.25 RSPartners 35.50 +.06

+26.0 +13.6 +18.7 +15.2 +27.2 +33.2 +5.2 +14.3 +13.0 +14.7 +11.0 +19.0 +10.9 +11.8 +12.9 +13.8 +14.5 +15.1 +15.5 +15.5 +15.6 +9.7 +22.7 +2.4 +28.3 +21.5 +15.8 +8.7 +2.0 -0.1 +0.3 +2.0 +14.2

+31.7 +22.1 +24.0 +23.0 -2.2 +44.2 +20.0 -5.0 +16.2 +11.1 +18.1 +1.8 +15.1 +14.1 +13.8 +13.1 +12.3 +11.8 +11.5 +11.6 +11.6 +15.3 +37.0 +12.5 +44.7 +24.5 +10.1 +21.4 +13.3 +10.6 +7.9 +11.4 +8.0

+19.6 +43.8 +15.1 +21.8 +11.3 +12.6 +9.2 +16.1 +13.4 +15.1 +15.2 +13.6 +13.9 +19.1 +10.8 +9.8 +12.2 +14.1 +13.9 +12.7 +14.0 +14.6 +15.2 +26.1 +18.5 +13.7 +17.2 +34.3 +19.4 +12.1 +13.7

+19.9 -12.2 +33.4 +48.7 -13.8 -18.7 +6.8 +25.2 -8.6 -5.8 -2.3 +3.5 -2.0 +8.1 +7.2 +5.9 +4.4 +14.6 +18.2 +33.4 +7.4 +37.2 +20.9 +12.1 +6.7

+13.4 +13.9 +19.5 +31.8 +4.0 +24.1 +11.1 +20.5

+11.4 +38.3 +23.4 +8.3 +18.7 +23.5 +13.2 -11.5

+19.9 +24.6 +24.2 +24.3 +13.0 +14.1 -0.4 +13.6 +15.2 +10.8 +12.8 NA +14.0 +12.6 +15.1 +13.6 +18.6 +0.2 +0.7 +3.9 +12.8

+13.6 +9.8 +7.5 +23.8 +13.9 -8.1 +5.9 NA +35.0 -15.4 +4.3 +6.9 +12.5 +9.5 +9.6 +27.8 +42.5

+12.8 +20.8 +11.8 +15.3 +31.4 +20.6

+10.9 +10.5 +4.4 +24.5

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

Value Fd 27.06 -.15 Rainier Inv Mgt: SmMCap 35.51 -.28 SmMCpInst 36.40 -.29 RidgeWorth Funds: GScUltShBdI 10.07 -.01 HighYldI 10.13 +.04 IntmBondI 10.31 -.03 InvGrTEBI n 11.64 ... LgCpValEqI 13.53 -.03 MdCValEqI 12.81 ... SmCpValI 14.58 -.06 RiverSource A: HiYldTxExA 4.03 -.01 Royce Funds: LowPrSkSvc r 19.85 +.22 MicroCapI n 19.16 +.22 OpptyI r 12.80 -.11 PennMuI rn 12.75 -.03 PremierI nr 22.60 +.02 SpeclEqInv r 22.12 ... TotRetI r 14.02 -.07 ValuSvc t 14.13 +.10 ValPlusSvc 14.43 ... Russell Funds S: EmerMkts 21.86 +.44 GlobEq 9.39 +.06 IntlDevMkt 33.50 +.49 RESec x 36.91 -.26 StratBd x 10.82 -.04 USCoreEq x 29.48 -.14 USQuan x 30.96 -.16 Russell Instl I: IntlDvMkt 33.53 +.49 StratBd x 10.69 -.05 USCoreEq x 29.48 -.15 Russell LfePts A: BalStrat px 10.85 +.03 Russell LfePts C: BalStrat 10.76 +.03 Rydex Investor: MgdFutStr n 26.76 +.35 SEI Portfolios: CoreFxInA n 10.81 -.03 EmgMkt np 12.58 +.25 HiYld n 7.60 +.03 IntlEqA n 9.31 +.15 LgCGroA n 22.97 -.10 LgCValA n 17.29 -.02 S&P500E n 36.44 -.10 TaxMgdLC 12.84 -.04 SSgA Funds: EmgMkt 23.85 +.42 IntlStock 10.78 +.15 SP500 n 21.83 -.06 Schwab Funds: CoreEqty 18.21 -.09 DivEqtySel 13.69 +.01 FunUSLInst r 10.27 -.01 IntlSS r 18.47 +.28 1000Inv r 39.54 -.13 S&P Sel n 20.77 -.05 SmCapSel 22.83 -.13 TotBond 9.11 -.04 TSM Sel r 24.23 -.09 Scout Funds: Intl 34.13 +.41 Security Funds: MidCapValA 35.23 -.39 Selected Funds: AmerShsD 43.89 +.29 AmShsS p 43.88 +.29 Seligman Group: GrowthA x 5.07 -.04 Sentinel Group: ComStk A p 33.35 ... SMGvA p 9.19 ... SmCoA p 8.50 -.05 Sequoia n 145.05 -.02 Sit Funds: US Gov n 11.27 -.02 Sound Shore: SoundShore 33.62 +.01 Stadion Funds: ManagedA p 10.51 -.08 St FarmAssoc: Balan n 56.02 -.01 Gwth n 56.07 +.12 Stratton Funds: SmCap 53.65 -.33 Sun Capital Adv: GSShDurItl 10.31 ... IbbotsBalSv p 12.87 ... TCW Funds: EmMktInc 8.88 +.11 TotlRetBdI 9.89 -.01 TCW Funds N: TotRtBdN p 10.23 -.01 TFS Funds: MktNeutral r 15.58 +.03 TIAA-CREF Funds: BdIdxInst 10.22 -.03 BondInst 10.33 -.03 EqIdxInst 10.16 -.04 Gr&IncInst 9.74 -.03 IntlEqIInst 17.46 +.21 IntlEqInst 10.15 +.11 IntlEqRet 10.46 +.12 LgCVl Inst 13.90 -.01 LgCVlRet 13.86 ... LC2040Ret 11.58 ... MdCVlRet 18.18 -.11 Templeton Instit: EmMS p 17.41 +.32 ForEqS 21.73 +.33 Third Avenue Fds: IntlValInst r 18.49 +.38 REValInst r 24.09 +.15 SmCapInst 22.53 +.05 ValueInst 54.81 +.80 Thornburg Fds C: IntValuC t 28.12 +.34 Thornburg Fds: IntlValA p 29.88 +.35 IncBuildA t 19.85 +.13 IncBuildC p 19.85 +.13 IntlValue I 30.54 +.37 LtdMunA p 13.89 -.01 LtTMuniI 13.89 -.01 ValueA t 37.04 -.14 ValueI 37.72 -.14 Thrivent Fds A: LgCapStock 23.29 -.13 MuniBd 10.74 -.03 Tocqueville Fds: Delafield 31.40 -.16 Gold t 91.56 +4.97 Touchstone Family: SandsCapGrI 14.72 -.03 Transamerica A: AsAlMod p 12.13 +.03 AsAlModGr p 12.45 +.04 Transamerica C: AsAlModGr t 12.40 +.03 TA IDEX C: AsAlMod t 12.08 +.03 Transamerica Ptrs: InstStkIdx p 8.88 -.03 Turner Funds: MidcpGwth n 38.67 -.28 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 24.61 +.27 US Global Investors: GlbRsc n 12.98 +.19 USAA Group: AgsvGth n 35.00 -.24 CornstStr n 23.85 +.12 Gr&Inc n 15.87 +.02 HYldOpp n 8.71 +.04 IncStk n 12.85 -.04 Income n 12.75 -.02 IntTerBd n 10.42 -.02 Intl n 25.62 +.27 PrecMM 43.30 +2.52 S&P Idx n 19.89 -.05 S&P Rewrd 19.89 -.06 ShtTBnd n 9.16 ... TxEIT n 12.53 -.02 TxELT n 12.14 -.02 TxESh n 10.60 ... VALIC : ForgnValu 10.09 +.17 IntlEqty 6.80 +.09 MidCapIdx 22.40 -.19 SmCapIdx 15.45 -.10 StockIndex 26.31 -.07 Van Eck Funds: GlHardA 57.15 +.19 InInvGldA 25.83 +1.64 Vanguard Admiral: AssetAdml n 57.73 -.26 BalAdml n 22.10 -.08 CAITAdm n 10.67 -.01 CALTAdm 10.57 -.03 CpOpAdl n 80.05 -.95 EM Adm nr 41.80 +.55 Energy n 140.52 -.02 EqIncAdml 45.60 +.14 EuropAdml 67.37 +1.55 ExplAdml 74.04 -.52 ExntdAdm n 44.70 -.34 500Adml n 122.41 -.32 GNMA Adm n 10.68 -.05 GroIncAdm 45.88 -.04 GrwthAdml n 33.06 -.18 HlthCare n 55.10 +.13 HiYldCp n 5.83 +.02 InflProAd n 25.95 +.01 ITBondAdml 11.04 -.06 ITsryAdml n 11.18 -.05 IntlGrAdml 65.23 +.90 ITAdml n 13.19 -.02 ITCoAdmrl 9.79 -.03 LtdTrmAdm 10.98 ... LTGrAdml 9.13 -.13 LTsryAdml 10.64 -.23 LT Adml n 10.55 -.03 MCpAdml n 99.66 -.68 MorgAdm 59.10 -.41 MuHYAdml n 9.95 -.02 NJLTAd n 11.11 -.03 NYLTAd m 10.69 -.02 PrmCap r 71.47 -.72 PacifAdml 68.55 -.51 PALTAdm n 10.64 -.03 REITAdml r 81.49 -1.51 STsryAdml 10.65 -.01 STBdAdml n 10.50 -.01 ShtTrmAdm 15.86 ... STFedAdm 10.73 -.01 STIGrAdm 10.72 -.01 SmlCapAdml n37.80 -.25 TxMCap r 66.66 -.22 TxMGrInc r 59.51 -.16 TtlBdAdml n 10.50 -.04 TotStkAdm n 33.49 -.12 ValueAdml n 22.24 -.01 WellslAdm n 53.64 -.05 WelltnAdm n 55.97 +.07 WindsorAdm n48.58 -.17 WdsrIIAdm 48.85 +.03

3 yr %rt

+15.6 +11.2 +25.7 +0.3 +26.0 +1.0 +1.6 +15.8 +3.3 +2.2 +14.8 +19.0 +22.3

+9.8 +32.3 +17.5 +14.6 +12.4 +43.1 +33.9

+0.2

+9.6

+33.3 +31.7 +20.8 +24.0 +28.3 +16.3 +20.1 +29.9 +18.7

+43.2 +37.7 +33.5 +24.5 +32.7 +34.2 +17.8 +26.9 +14.0

+18.9 +12.6 +15.2 +0.1 +12.8 NS +14.4 -3.0 +8.1 NS +13.7 NS +14.6 NS +12.9 -12.1 +8.1 +21.4 +13.8 -0.3 +12.5 +9.2 +11.7 +6.7 +3.8

-2.2

+8.1 +16.3 +15.6 +15.3 +16.1 +13.3 +14.2 +13.3

+23.5 +7.8 +37.3 -22.7 +7.4 -1.7 +3.4 +1.6

+19.3 +2.1 +12.8 -12.7 +14.0 +3.7 +13.9 +12.3 +14.8 +13.0 +14.9 +14.1 +21.9 +4.4 +15.8

+5.8 +4.4 +16.8 -9.8 +5.5 +4.3 +28.2 +8.4 +8.4

+15.4 +2.2 +18.9 +38.2 +12.5 +1.1 +12.1 +0.1 +15.8 +4.8 +14.7 +1.8 +25.4 +23.1

+6.2 +11.3 +23.0 +17.2

+4.3 +16.3 +11.8 +1.8 +9.7 +11.0 +9.4 +7.3 +12.9 +2.0 +18.2 +16.8 +1.8 +10.3 +11.7 NS +15.6 +57.8 +10.3 +34.1 +10.1 +33.0 +9.7 +21.7 +4.9 +5.4 +15.4 +14.2 +12.2 +18.8 +18.5 +13.7 +13.5 +14.9 +18.1

NS +15.8 +7.1 +7.6 -9.5 -8.5 -9.2 +6.5 +5.8 +4.8 +10.9

+17.3 +10.3 +15.9 -3.5 +19.5 +1.2 +16.8 -2.5 +18.8 +2.1 +15.9 +3.8 +17.4

-2.3

+18.2 +14.1 +13.3 +18.7 +2.5 +2.8 +12.1 +12.6

-0.1 +14.4 +12.2 +1.1 +12.2 +13.3 +11.3 +12.6

+8.6 -2.8 +0.5 +10.8 +19.6 +34.8 +49.2 +89.6 +26.2 +29.8 +11.4 +9.7 +13.1 +5.4 +12.3 +3.4 +10.7 +7.8 +13.8 +3.5 +26.6 +17.2 +12.3 +7.9 +36.7

-4.0

+15.5 +13.6 +13.9 +15.2 +13.7 +6.4 +10.5 +14.7 +32.8 NA NA +3.6 +2.0 -0.3 +2.6

+3.6 +10.9 +3.2 +40.8 -2.2 +22.4 +30.3 +1.5 +54.6 NA NA +16.7 +13.3 +9.0 +10.5

+17.1 +12.5 +23.6 +21.4 +13.8

+3.3 -10.3 +25.9 +22.7 +3.1

+29.4 +11.3 +47.6 +67.2 +15.5 +11.7 +2.0 +0.1 +9.1 +18.1 +27.9 +16.5 +17.2 +25.5 +23.5 +14.2 +5.5 +13.9 +15.5 +11.7 +12.8 +7.9 +7.2 +5.5 +18.4 +1.8 +7.9 +2.0 +8.3 +5.4 +0.5 +22.3 +17.6 +0.6 -0.1 +0.8 +13.4 +4.1 +1.0 +18.9 +1.9 +3.1 +1.1 +2.5 +4.0 +23.0 +15.2 +14.1 +4.8 +15.8 +14.0 +10.4 +11.5 +12.9 +10.4

-2.4 +13.5 +10.8 +8.0 +10.7 +11.1 +4.4 +5.5 -10.7 +24.9 +23.8 +4.2 +18.9 -0.3 +11.3 +21.9 +29.9 +12.2 +19.4 +14.2 +1.5 +12.5 +21.8 +10.0 +24.0 +10.7 +10.6 +18.3 +9.2 +11.0 +9.8 +10.9 +11.3 -5.6 +10.8 +3.1 +8.2 +11.8 +6.9 +11.0 +14.4 +28.6 +6.4 +4.0 +16.4 +8.3 +0.3 +20.6 +13.0 +6.5 +4.1

Name

NAV

1 yr Chg %rt

Vanguard Fds: DivrEq n 21.80 -.09 +15.4 FTAlWldIn r 19.80 +.26 +14.5 AssetA n 25.71 -.12 +15.4 CAIT n 10.67 -.01 +1.9 CapValue n 12.00 -.04 +18.7 CapOpp n 34.65 -.41 +9.0 Convt n 14.03 -.03 +18.2 DivAppInv n 22.34 -.02 +15.7 DividendGro 15.23 +.04 +13.4 Energy 74.83 -.01 +27.8 EqInc n 21.76 +.07 +16.5 Explorer n 79.53 -.57 +25.3 GNMA n 10.68 -.05 +5.3 GlobEq n 18.99 +.11 +16.0 GroInc n 28.09 -.03 +13.8 HYCorp n 5.83 +.02 +12.7 HlthCare n 130.56 +.29 +11.6 InflaPro n 13.21 ... +7.8 IntlExplr n 17.33 +.15 +20.3 IntlGr 20.50 +.29 +18.2 IntlVal n 33.51 +.34 +9.3 ITI Grade 9.79 -.03 +7.8 ITTsry n 11.18 -.05 +5.3 LIFECon n 16.76 -.02 +10.0 LIFEGro n 23.21 ... +14.4 LIFEInc n 14.21 -.03 +7.8 LIFEMod n 20.35 -.02 +12.4 LTInGrade n 9.13 -.13 +8.2 LTTsry n 10.64 -.23 +5.3 MidCapGro 20.48 -.24 +24.1 MidCpGrIn n 26.51 -.22 +27.4 Morgan n 19.06 -.13 +17.4 MuHY n 9.95 -.02 +0.5 MuInt n 13.19 -.02 +1.8 MuLtd n 10.98 ... +2.0 MuLong n 10.55 -.03 +0.4 MuShrt n 15.86 ... +1.1 PrecMtlsMin r28.35 +1.43 +34.6 PrmCpCore rn14.44 -.09 +13.9 Prmcp r 68.87 -.70 +13.3 SelValu r 20.12 -.06 +16.0 STAR n 19.82 -.04 +10.9 STIGrade 10.72 -.01 +3.9 STFed n 10.73 -.01 +2.4 STTsry n 10.65 -.01 +1.8 StratEq n 20.27 -.12 +22.0 TgtRet2005 12.02 -.02 +8.9 TgtRetInc 11.47 -.02 +8.5 TgtRet2010 23.02 -.03 +10.4 TgtRet2015 12.88 -.01 +11.2 TgtRet2020 23.01 -.01 +12.0 TgtRet2025 13.20 ... +12.8 TgRet2030 22.78 +.01 +13.5 TgtRet2035 13.82 +.02 +14.3 TgtRe2040 22.71 +.03 +14.4 TgtRet2050 n 22.60 +.02 +14.5 TgtRe2045 n 14.26 +.01 +14.4 TaxMngdIntl rn12.23 +.16 +12.3 TaxMgdSC r 29.12 -.24 +20.9 USGro n 19.30 -.14 +12.9 Wellsly n 22.14 -.02 +10.3 Welltn n 32.41 +.04 +11.4 Wndsr n 14.40 -.05 +12.8 WndsII n 27.52 +.02 +10.3 Vanguard Idx Fds: DevMkInPl nr109.79 +1.41 NS EmMkInPl nr105.80 +1.41 NS MidCpIstPl n108.58 -.74 NS SmCapInPl n109.12 -.72 NS TotIntAdm nr 27.82 +.36 NS TotIntlInst nr111.28 +1.44 NS TotIntlIP nr 111.29 +1.44 NS TotIntSig nr 33.38 +.43 NS 500 n 122.40 -.33 +14.0 Balanced n 22.10 -.08 +11.5 DevMkt n 10.62 +.14 +12.3 EMkt n 31.80 +.42 +18.0 Europe n 28.91 +.67 +17.1 Extend n 44.66 -.35 +23.3 Growth n 33.06 -.18 +15.3 ITBond n 11.04 -.06 +7.1 LTBond n 11.70 -.19 +7.1 MidCap 21.95 -.15 +22.1 REIT r 19.10 -.35 +18.7 SmCap n 37.76 -.25 +22.9 SmlCpGrow 24.20 -.15 +28.8 SmlCapVal 17.11 -.11 +17.0 STBond n 10.50 -.01 +2.9 TotBond n 10.50 -.04 +4.7 TotlIntl n 16.63 +.21 +14.0 TotStk n 33.49 -.11 +15.7 Value n 22.24 -.01 +13.9 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 22.10 -.08 +11.7 DevMktInst n 10.54 +.14 +12.6 EmMktInst n 31.80 +.42 +18.2 ExtIn n 44.69 -.35 +23.5 FTAllWldI r 99.32 +1.30 +14.8 GrowthInstl 33.06 -.18 +15.5 InfProtInst n 10.57 ... +7.9 InstIdx n 121.56 -.32 +14.2 InsPl n 121.56 -.32 +14.2 InstTStIdx n 30.29 -.10 +15.8 InstTStPlus 30.29 -.11 +15.8 LTBdInst n 11.70 -.19 +7.3 MidCapInstl n 22.02 -.15 +22.4 REITInst r 12.61 -.24 +18.9 STIGrInst 10.72 -.01 +4.0 SmCpIn n 37.80 -.25 +23.1 SmlCapGrI n 24.25 -.16 +29.0 SmlCapValI 17.15 -.12 +17.3 TBIst n 10.50 -.04 +4.8 TSInst n 33.50 -.11 +15.8 ValueInstl n 22.25 -.01 +14.1 Vanguard Signal: ExtMktSgl n 38.40 -.29 +23.5 500Sgl n 101.12 -.26 +14.2 GroSig n 30.61 -.17 +15.5 ITBdSig n 11.04 -.06 +7.2 MidCapIdx n 31.45 -.21 +22.3 REITSig r 21.75 -.41 +18.9 STBdIdx n 10.50 -.01 +3.1 SmCapSig n 34.06 -.23 +23.0 TotalBdSgl n 10.50 -.04 +4.8 TotStkSgnl n 32.33 -.11 +15.8 ValueSig n 23.15 -.01 +14.1 Vantagepoint Fds: AggrOpp n 11.95 -.09 +14.7 EqtyInc n 9.32 -.02 +13.4 Growth n 9.12 -.07 +13.0 Grow&Inc n 10.25 -.03 +13.3 Intl n 9.93 +.14 +12.5 MPLgTmGr n 22.47 -.02 +12.4 MPTradGrth n23.08 -.02 +10.8 Victory Funds: DvsStkA 16.22 -.07 +11.1 Virtus Funds: EmgMktI 9.36 +.17 +25.3 Virtus Funds A: MulSStA p 4.87 +.02 +8.8 WM Blair Fds Inst: EmMkGrIns r 16.26 +.28 +20.4 IntlGrwth 14.66 +.14 +16.4 WM Blair Mtl Fds: IntlGrowthI r 22.79 +.23 +16.7 Waddell & Reed Adv: Accumultiv 7.94 -.08 +15.3 AssetS p 9.86 +.08 +12.1 Bond 6.16 -.02 +3.9 CoreInvA 6.41 -.08 +17.6 HighInc 7.28 +.02 +15.5 NwCcptA p 12.14 -.11 +30.9 ScTechA 11.32 -.22 +18.6 VanguardA 8.41 -.12 +11.7 Wasatch: IncEqty 14.83 ... +12.7 SmCapGrth 41.90 -.09 +28.1 Weitz Funds: ShtIntmIco 12.39 ... +3.4 Value n 30.27 +.03 +14.1 Wells Fargo Adv A: AstAllA p 12.43 +.05 NA EmgMktA p 23.71 +.24 +21.3 Wells Fargo Adv Ad: ToRtBd 12.45 -.04 +5.6 AssetAll 12.50 +.05 NA Wells Fargo Adv B: AstAllB t 12.31 +.05 NA Wells Fargo Adv C: AstAllC t 12.05 +.04 NA Wells Fargo Adv : CmStkZ 21.97 -.14 +18.4 GrowthInv n 36.05 -.26 +30.3 OpptntyInv n 41.15 -.43 +17.8 STMunInv n 9.87 ... +2.3 SCapValZ p 33.96 -.12 +14.5 UlStMuInc 4.81 ... +1.0 Wells Fargo Ad Ins: TRBdS 12.43 -.05 +5.9 CapGroI 17.27 -.25 +18.0 DJTar2020I 14.25 -.01 +10.6 DJTar2030I 15.11 ... +13.4 IntlBondI 11.56 +.06 +8.8 UlStMuInc 4.81 ... +1.6 Wells Fargo Admin: Growth 37.74 -.27 +30.8 Wells Fargo Instl: UlStMuInc p 4.81 ... +1.3 Westcore: PlusBd 10.69 -.04 +5.6 Western Asset: CrPlusBdF1 p 10.82 -.02 +8.4 CorePlus I 10.82 -.02 +8.7 Core I 11.52 -.02 +9.0 William Blair N: IntlGthN 22.27 +.22 +16.4 Wintergreen t 14.57 +.14 +17.7 Yacktman Funds: Fund p 17.61 -.04 +12.3 Focused 18.77 -.07 +12.5

3 yr %rt +9.5 -3.4 -2.7 +10.5 +35.7 +10.4 +26.7 +9.7 +11.2 +4.2 +5.2 +24.3 +18.6 -5.4 -0.7 +29.4 +21.7 +11.8 +8.6 +1.0 -8.7 +21.4 +13.7 +10.3 +4.9 +12.0 +8.2 +23.6 +10.3 +21.2 +14.4 +8.8 +10.7 +12.2 +9.7 +10.4 +6.7 +0.5 +17.8 +11.0 +23.3 +13.2 +14.0 +10.7 +7.9 +10.7 +11.2 +13.7 +11.4 +10.9 +9.9 +8.7 +7.6 +7.5 +7.9 +7.8 +7.7 -9.2 +23.1 +9.2 +20.3 +12.7 +6.1 +3.8 NS NS NS NS NS NS NS NS +3.9 +13.1 -9.7 +10.7 -11.0 +23.2 +10.8 +19.0 +19.0 +17.9 +2.7 +28.1 +33.4 +22.3 +11.5 +16.0 -5.2 +8.0 -0.1 +13.7 NS +11.3 +23.9 -2.7 +11.4 +12.3 +4.2 +4.3 +8.4 +8.5 +19.5 +18.5 +3.2 +14.5 +28.8 +34.1 +22.9 +16.5 +8.3 +0.5 +23.8 +4.2 +11.2 +19.4 +18.3 +3.1 +11.8 +28.6 +16.4 +8.3 +0.4 +22.0 +6.7 -3.9 +8.2 -8.7 +9.0 +10.1 +1.1 +17.3 +26.8 -2.4 -9.3 -9.3 -0.5 +8.1 +13.2 +12.4 +35.2 +42.9 +24.6 -1.8 +4.9 +37.3 +16.7 +6.3 NA +20.6 +21.2 NA NA NA +27.4 +40.6 +17.5 +11.9 +18.4 +9.3 +22.1 -1.1 +9.4 +9.8 +20.0 +10.4 +42.4 +9.4 +16.0 +29.6 +30.6 +27.2 -10.1 +9.1 +47.8 +54.0


C OV ER S T OR I ES

Growth Continued from G1 Roger Lee, executive director of Economic Development for Central Oregon, acknowledged the growth across many sectors in the region, naming several companies but stopping short of identifying others, as they are currently confidential. He figures it’s just a good time for growth in the region, with lower real estate prices and an impressive selection of job candidates. “If you’ve got a low barrier to entry as far as getting into a commercial space, then that helps your bottom line,” Lee said. “If you’re not having to pay so much rent, you’re able to put it into the business.” Successful and appealing products or services can also give a green light for growth, he said. His organization has indeed noticed such moving and shaking. “We’ve seen an improvement in activity in the fourth quarter of last year and maybe the first quarter of this year,” Lee said. “Maybe you’re not seeing that in retail storefronts, restaurants, but it’s coming.” He said he could foresee the decline in employment for Deschutes County in recent months leveling off in the first and second quarter of this year. Then, he said, we’ll see “hopefully some acceleration finally in the last half of the year.” Bruce Juhola, chair of two local groups for Vistage International, which focuses on coaching business leaders, is aware of success stories across the board in the region as well, as he meets with CEOs and other executives in Central Oregon every month. “The companies that are really thriving here, quite a few of them are (breaking) records every quarter — I mean, they’re just doing fantastic,” Juhola said. Two keys to success Juhola identified are strong leadership and a focus on value proposition, or improving value for a company’s customers. “… It all comes down to, you

Companies Continued from G1 • Deschutes Public Library system added a second Bend location, near the Forum Shopping Center in east Bend. • Facebook has been adding employees at its Prineville Data Center, with about 47 now, some of whom work for Facebook and some for other companies. • Falling Waters, a medical clinic in Bend’s Old Mill District, will move to a new location in west Bend equipped with a pool that will feature underwater treadmills. Construction is ongoing at the new site. • Ginger’s Kitchenware, a kitchen shop in west Bend, will move to a bigger space in the Old Mill District in the next few months. • GL Solutions, which produces software for state regulatory agencies, has moved its headquarters into a building on Bend’s Awbrey Butte. The company has added around 30 employees since Jan. 1, for a total of 70, and plans to hire about 10 more later this year, after it secured a new contract for work in December. • Goody’s Candy Store Inc. is expanding a building that will serve as its new factory and store in southeast Bend. • The city of La Pine bought its first City Hall building in February.

know, the management team and the leader, the CEO or the general manager,” he said. “They have to really be strong leaders, you know, to be able to … thrive in a recessionary economy like the one we have, and they have to have a product or service that’s unique or differentiates their customers.” Business growth in the region cannot be denied. Still, economic strains remain. Gas prices in Central Oregon continue to creep higher, unemployment rates for Central Oregon counties are still in the teens, and default notices filed in Deschutes County remain elevated, even though they were down 52 percent in the first quarter from the same period in 2010 and have fallen five straight months, year over year. It’s unclear whether companies’ and organizations’ recent growth will translate to a turning point in employment figures for Central Oregon. Bill Watkins, director of the Central Oregon Economic Forecast Project at California Lutheran University in Thousand Oaks, said he is not surprised some companies are manifesting growth in the form of expansion and new hires in recent months. “What would be surprising is if we had very strong employment numbers in the first quarter or so,” he said. In his presentation at January’s Central Oregon Economic Forecast, he predicted mixed outcomes — some positive changes in the economic situation, and some negative. It’s “pretty much what we’d expected to see,” Watkins said. At least, he said, “we’ve reached the bottom. Everybody’s not afraid anymore.” He added, “But there’s still millions of people unemployed, and we’re not going to get (them) employed anytime soon.” Jordan Novet can be reached at 5 4 1 -6 3 3 -2 1 1 7 or at jnovet@bendbulletin.com.

• Lithia Motors gave Bend Honda its own space on U.S. Highway 20, moving it out of the location it shared with Chevrolet Cadillac of Bend on Northeast Third Street. • McDonald’s of Bend demolished its Northeast Third Street location and is building in its place a smaller one that includes space for two drive-thru lanes. • Navis, which provides software for hotels and resorts, moved its headquarters to the Old Mill District in September, allowing the company to continue to grow. • The Pilot Butte Drive-In, on Greenwood Avenue in east Bend, will open a second location, in southwest Bend. • The Redmond School District is building a second high school, Ridgeview High School. The school will open next year. • Tate and Tate Catering, based in Redmond, has added a retail store in Bend’s NorthWest Crossing. • Three Creeks Brewing Company in Sisters submitted an application to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission last month for a 50 percent expansion of its brewing capacity. • The Toyota Scion of Bend dealership moved into a new space designed with Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification in mind late last year.

Housing Continued from G1 “If Florida is going to have a comeback anytime soon, investors are going to have to play a role,” said Rick Sharga, a senior vice president at RealtyTrac. “There are just too many properties for traditional homebuyers to absorb.” Of course, speculators have been picking through the rubble of America’s real estate collapse for several years now, and the housing industry remains deeply troubled across the country, suggesting that it would be far worse were it not for investors. Data released by the National Association of Realtors on Wednesday shows that investors represented 17 percent of all home sales in 2010 nationwide, the same as the previous year. But in recent months, investment activity has picked up, according to Walter Molony, an association spokesman, who attributed the increase to relatively cheap prices and the lack of available credit for homebuyers. There is no shortage of deals in Florida. The Census Bureau recently reported that 17 percent of the homes in Florida were vacant. Even though the figure includes vacation homes that were unoccupied at the time of the survey, the underlying rate within the state reflects a sustained downturn. The median house price in Florida, meanwhile, had dropped to $121,900 in February, from $257,800 in June 2006, a decline of 53 percent, according to Metrostudy, a housing research firm. Indeed, some houses and condominiums in Florida are selling for roughly the price of a practical family sedan, new or used. For instance, a two-bedroom house in Port Charlotte, just south of North Port on the Gulf Coast of the state, recently sold for $8,000, and listings for $25,000 homes are not uncommon. Many experts expect prices to drop even further. “Nationally we are expecting prices to stabilize by the end of this year,” said Celia Chen, senior director at Moody’s Analytics. “We don’t expect it to stabilize in Florida until sometime in 2012, and that’s a direct overhang of the excess inventory.” Despite the risks, several investors expressed optimism about their chances of making money, if not a killing. “A wise man told me that the best time to enter a business is during a recession,” said Peter Ide, a British builder who was transferred by his company to Florida to buy up homes, fix them up and resell them. “The potential here is phenomenal.” Not everyone views real estate investors as that benign, or savvy. April Charney, a public aid lawyer who lives in nearby Venice, questioned why investors would fix up houses with so few eligible buyers. Besides, she said the new owners were likely

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

Div

PE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

... 1.10f .04 .36 1.68 ... .80f .80a .82 ... .24 .32 .22 .72 .04 .42 ... ... .65 ... .64

9 14 20 22 17 ... 24 27 24 86 22 10 ... 10 19 14 13 ... 17 66 7

60.12 -2.81 +6.1 23.52 ... +4.4 13.48 -.13 +1.0 15.87 -.18 +2.1 73.47 -.82 +12.6 7.75 ... -8.3 46.00 -3.63 -2.7 60.00 -.61 -.5 76.41 -1.41 +5.8 8.55 +.22 +15.7 33.68 -.19 +13.2 40.70 -.38 -3.3 11.36 -.42 -7.4 20.02 -.01 -4.8 8.87 -.06 +.2 24.00 -.11 +7.3 6.15 -.01 +1.5 9.59 -.11 +1.4 23.25 -.05 +14.7 14.46 +.03 +20.5 26.07 -.13 -6.6

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

Div

PE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

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

18 17 17 17 41 ... 34 21 15 17 20 11 26 11 75 15 14 14 90 6

77.39 -.70 -9.4 46.22 -.39 +9.1 45.44 -.19 -2.2 13.46 -.56 -24.0 51.28 -1.51 -10.6 2.34 +.07 +13.0 42.74 -.49 +14.1 146.25 -.94 +5.1 23.87 -.24 +6.1 63.26 -.51 -4.7 84.98 -.32 +1.5 46.49 -.31 +3.0 35.77 -.13 +11.3 12.37 -.20 +5.8 11.18 -.24 -8.2 26.18 -.25 -2.9 17.06 -.25 +.8 31.62 -.55 +2.0 3.60 +.02 +27.7 23.61 -.49 +24.7

NY HSBC Bank US NY Merc Gold NY Merc Silver

Price (troy oz.) $1473.00 $1473.40 $40.600

Chip Litherland / New York Times News Service

Shannon Moore, a real estate broker, strolls through a vacant home in North Port, Fla., in late March. The glut of vacant homes in Florida has dropped the median house price to $120,000, down from about $250,000 in 2006. to end up with a vacant home next door with squatters, mold or filthy pools. “They are dreaming,” she said. “That’s just a pipe dream in North Port.” About 35 miles southeast of Sarasota, North Port was carved out of shrub land in the 1950s by the General Development Corp., which sold the plots to buyers up north. It remained a relatively quiet community until the last decade, when developers erected one subdivision after the next. North Port’s population doubled in less than four years, city officials say. There are now about 55,000 residents. In those high-flying days of Florida real estate, Moore said she would buy up vacant shrub land and sell seven or eight lots on a good day, for $50,000 apiece, making as much as 40 percent in profits. Those days are long gone, and North Port has fallen hard. Moore, a Florida native, is stuck with four plots that cost her $38,000 each (each is worth $5,000 or less) and a duplex she bought for $140,000 (it’s now worth $30,000, she says). She is also $100,000 under water on her house and living on a street, Mistleto Lane, in which a third of the houses are vacant, including one just across the street. Nonetheless, Moore reinvented herself as an intelligence agent of sorts, alerting her clients, for instance, to details like whether a house has undesirable neighbors, Chinese drywall or an unsavory past. (She steered her clients away from a threebedroom house that appeared to be a steal, but was tied to a grisly rape and murder.) One investor, a Florida businessman, exclusively buys duplexes. Moore’s Macedonian clients want three-bedroom,

two-bathroom houses that cost about $100,000, which they buy and rent. Ide’s group, which includes a retired Maryland developer and the poker player, buys homes at foreclosure auctions, fixes them up and resells them. Since investors can’t inspect the inside of a foreclosed house before auction, Ide’s group is particularly reliant on Moore’s local knowledge. If she isn’t familiar with a house, she drives by and often brings along two of her three daughters, who are home-schooled. (Her 13-yearold, Willow, has made as much as $400 a week on Craigslist, selling belongings left behind in vacant homes.) During a recent auction, Moore sat in front of a computer screen in her office, with Ide’s partner, Jon Breen, the retired developer, on the speaker phone. Thirteen properties were being auctioned

Market recap

Precious metals Metal

THE BULLETIN • Sunday, April 10, 2011 G5

NYSE Most Active ($1 or more) Vol (00)

Citigrp S&P500ETF BkofAm SprintNex iShR2K

3840127 4.56 -.02 1254362 132.86 -.46 812495 13.48 -.13 568824 4.73 +.11 554479 83.98 -.89

Last Chg

Gainers ($2 or more) Name Goldcp wt GenCorp TempurP BlueLinx Blyth

Last

Chg %Chg

6.80 +.93 +15.9 6.89 +.78 +12.8 57.17 +6.18 +12.1 4.20 +.44 +11.7 41.01 +3.87 +10.4

Losers ($2 or more) Name QiaoXMob AldIrish rs DBCmdDS CSGlobWm DuoyGWat

Last

Chg %Chg

3.12 -.38 -10.9 3.90 -.44 -10.1 25.16 -2.84 -10.1 9.40 -.93 -9.0 3.22 -.31 -8.8

$1459.50 $1458.50 $39.542

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Nasdaq

Most Active ($1 or more) Name PudaCoal AvalRare n ChinaShen RareEle g GtPanSilv g

Vol (00)

Last Chg

238916 6.00 -3.10 118525 9.28 -.24 117371 5.71 +.31 100277 14.42 -.88 63062 4.30 +.18

Gainers ($2 or more) Name GoldenMin ContMatls ASpecRlt s ExtorreG g WstCopp g

Last

24.15 +2.75 +12.9 20.69 +2.03 +10.8 17.99 +1.43 +8.6 7.66 +.56 +7.9 4.24 +.31 +7.9

PudaCoal AoxingPh Accelr8 ChaseCorp ChiMetRur

Last

Most Active ($1 or more) Name Cisco Intel SeagateT Microsoft Expedia

Name SynthEngy NwCentBcp Expedia LizhanEn n Wowjoint

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Vol (00)

Last Chg

813383 456011 433612 394851 384454

17.65 -.26 20.02 -.01 15.84 +1.15 26.07 -.13 25.30 +2.90

Last

Chg %Chg

3.25 +.53 +19.5 5.25 +.66 +14.4 25.30 +2.90 +12.9 2.22 +.25 +12.7 2.32 +.26 +12.6

Losers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg

6.00 -3.10 -34.1 2.17 -.50 -18.7 3.57 -.55 -13.3 16.90 -2.07 -10.9 4.64 -.56 -10.8

Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Clearfield OssenInno n HercOffsh Yongye IdenixPh

4.19 2.77 5.66 4.88 2.90

-.67 -.40 -.72 -.59 -.34

-13.8 -12.6 -11.3 -10.8 -10.5

-.67 -.40 -.72 -.59 -.34

-13.8 -12.6 -11.3 -10.8 -10.5

Diary 1,009 1,982 135 3,126 164 11

52-Week High Low Name

Gainers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg

Losers ($2 or more) Name

Diary Pvs Day

Indexes

Amex

Name

Diary 234 229 40 503 24 4

by the county this morning, though Breen focused his attention on a half dozen or so. Moore pulled up comparable sales and back taxes, while Breen calculated his costs aloud. “Barcelona has $8,367 in back taxes,” she says, referring to a house on Barcelona Avenue in Sarasota. “Remember the house next door had an odd color.” “I think it’s a junky piece of property,” Breen said, before bidding $59,000. Later, when the house sells for $64,001, she says, “Who is the dummy today? They are paying way too much.” Moore, meanwhile, has plowed her earnings into her own deals, recently purchasing a second duplex for $30,000 in cash. “I’m getting $650 a side in rent, a lot better than the stock market,” she said. “My plan is to buy up as much multifamily as I can while the market is down.”

Clearfield OssenInno n HercOffsh Yongye IdenixPh

4.19 2.77 5.66 4.88 2.90

12,450.93 5,404.33 422.43 8,530.66 2,453.68 2,840.51 1,344.07 14,276.94 859.08

9,614.32 3,872.64 346.95 6,355.83 1,689.19 2,061.14 1,010.91 15.80 587.66

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

World markets

Last

Net Chg

12,380.05 5,228.30 414.45 8,483.94 2,447.88 2,780.42 1,328.17 14,117.71 840.89

-29.44 -88.24 -.83 -5.39 +25.74 -15.72 -5.34 -68.25 -8.55

YTD %Chg %Chg -.24 -1.66 -.20 -.06 +1.06 -.56 -.40 -.48 -1.01

52-wk %Chg

+6.93 +2.38 +2.34 +6.53 +10.85 +4.81 +5.61 +5.67 +7.30

+12.57 +15.99 +7.67 +11.21 +24.47 +13.30 +11.20 +12.80 +19.62

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed yesterday.

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

Market

Dollar vs:

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

Close 366.94 2,722.23 4,061.91 6,055.75 7,217.02 24,396.07 37,471.72 22,389.15 3,445.27 9,768.08 2,127.97 3,187.31 5,036.50 5,889.89

Change -.12 t +.37 s +.83 s +.81 s +.53 s +.47 s ... +.65 s -.15 t +1.85 s +.27 s +.49 s +.62 s -.04 t

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

Exchange Rate 1.0523 1.6352 1.0442 .002123 .1529 1.4435 .1287 .011780 .085180 .0357 .000924 .1607 1.0992 .0344

Pvs Day 1.0449 1.6315 1.0427 .002113 .1528 1.4297 .1287 .011770 .084901 .0354 .000918 .1581 1.0913 .0345


G6 Sunday, April 10, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

S D Imagine a motorized palace: Range Rover returns to its roots By Warren Brown

Examine thermostat to explain mystery gunk

Special to The Washington Post

By Paul Brand

There are people for whom price is no object. They are not necessarily rich. They are in love. When it comes to certain automotive makes — Jaguar, Land Rover, Rolls-Royce, Aston-Martin — theirs is a love that defies most commonly held views of common sense. Yet, their love is not unconditional. The object of affection must keep certain promises. It has to bring something to the table. Consider, for example, the 2011 Land Rover Range Rover HSE sport utility vehicle, priced north of R E V I E W $90,000 as equipped for the sample drive. But, first, an aside: Jaguar and Land Rover are now owned by Tata Motors, a part of the Tata Group, India’s largest corporation and a multinational conglomerate. From 1900 until it achieved independence in 1947, India was a part of the British Empire. Tata bought Jaguar and Land Rover from American-owned Ford Motor in 2008 for the bargainbasement price of $2.3 billion. Land Rover via The Washington Post Think about that. Two former The 2011 Land Rover Range Rover HSE offers standard hill-descent control, a computerized system that automatically takes over colonies of Britain, America engine acceleration and braking to move you downhill at a slow, even pace. and India, have owned legendary British automotive brands. America, which never took colovehicle. The engine requires premium gasoline. It is linked to a six-speed nialism seriously, made a mess 2011 Range Rover HSE transmission that can be operated automatically or manually. of both Jaguar and Land Rover. Base price: $78,835 Having done so, it sold the reEngine: It comes with a standard 5.7-liter, 32-valve, double-overhead As tested: $92,235, including $12,550 in options (adaptive dynamics/ mains of the once-proud British cam, direct-injection V-8 engine with variable valve lift and timing (375 electronic rear differential lock, digital radio, premium sound system, climate automotive companies to Tata of horsepower, 375 foot-pounds of torque). glass and four-zone interior climate control, wood/leather steering wheel and India. Mileage: You get 12 mpg in the city and 18 mpg on the highway … if you are matching shift knob, rear seat audio/visual entertainment package) and an Tata takes colonialism sericarrying neither cargo nor passengers on a perfectly smooth and level road $850 destination charge. ously. That is not an insult. It on a day of mild weather. Changes in any of those variables could negatively Type: Full-size, front-engine, full-time four-wheel-drive luxury sport utility is why, so far, it is nurturing a affect fuel economy. somewhat successful rebirth of Land Rover and Jaguar. The caveat is needed because reality often favored by the people at — slow sales — has yet to mate Porsche. The Range Rover HSE’s stanwith perception — for example, that Land Rover is back in all of dard equipment is embedded in its glory with none of its former genuine luxury — super-supple Blenheim leather on the heated faults. It is arguably true that the front and rear seats, superbly people who buy Land Rover’s stitched Cambridge leather top-of-the-line Range Rover atop the instrument panel, the HSE would not buy something heated leather steering wheel. The Range Rover like the slightly HSE smells rich. more expensive It feels like the Porsche Cay- The Range Rover stuff of royalty. enne sport utility HSE smells rich. It But it all would vehicle. be meaningless For one thing, feels like the stuff in the absence there is the mat- of royalty. of performance, ter of heritage. of which the The Range Rover Range Rover HSE has it. The nouveau riche Cayenne doesn’t. HSE has plenty. It has the guts The people who buy Range Rov- — a 5.7-liter, direct-injection V8 ers value heritage. It is an essen- engine (375 horsepower, 375 tial part of their celebration of foot-pounds of torque). It has a full-time, four-wheel-drive sysbeauty. The Range Rover brand has tem that can be electronically long had an association with adjusted for different surfaces, British royalty. But Porsche’s such as sand, snow, mush and Cayenne is associated with little mud. For those leery of the frequent other than a need to make money in global markets, mostly in off-road need to drive down North America, where drivers steeply inclined mountain paths, the Range Rover HSE offers are clamoring for more SUVs. Under Ford’s tutelage, Land standard hill-descent control, a Rover’s Range Rover sort of lost computerized system that autoits way. The good news was that matically takes over engine acFord brought much-improved celeration and braking to move technology to Range Rover you downhill at a slow, even — better engine and emissions pace. For drivers going the oppocontrols and computer-con- site direction, the Range Rover trolled suspension systems. HSE also comes standard with The bad news was that all of brake hill holder technology. But what the Range Rover that Yankee know-how was introduced at the expense of Old HSE lacks as standard equipWorld craftsmanship, highly ment, and what arguably is valued by a certain class of peo- holding back its sales growth, ple willing to spend big bucks is consumer confidence. During on an automobile and then to in- its many years of foster parentvest even more in their models’ hood, it has passed from Britregional, national and interna- ain’s Leyland Motors to British Aerospace to Germany’s BMW, tional clubs. Tata, with its legions of intel- and then to America’s Ford and ligence technology experts, im- finally to India’s Tata. A number of things were lost proved the Yankee know-how. But it brought back the Old in those various transitions, World craftsmanship in a way chief among them the once-legmade possible only by a corpo- endary reliability of Land Rover rate mentality that deeply un- products. Tata appears intent on rederstood and valued the service storing that reputation with the of afternoon tea. Imagine a motorized palace same passion and attention to with iPad, iPod and other in- detail it is investing in restoring fotainment capability. That’s a Land Rover’s reputation for Old simple way of putting it. But it’s World craftsmanship. There is a market for success pretty much what you have in the 2011 Range Rover HSE. And in that endeavor. It is affluent, it is mostly there as standard not necessarily filthy rich, but equipment, including a high- willing to fund the purchase of definition, dashboard-mounted a vehicle that supplies beauty, backup camera. There is little heritage and performance. It is of the vulgar nickel-and-dim- a market in which hearts open ing for optional equipment so well before wall

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Q:

When I took my 2005 Ford F-150 (a 5.4-liter Supercab with 74,000 miles on it) in for an oil change, the mechanic asked if I put a stop-leak additive in it because he found cream-colored moisture in the oil fill cap. We have not put stop-leak or anything else in it. He suggested doing a radiator and compression check. Should I? The milky, cream-colored “gunk” in the oil filler cap is probably moisture condensing in the crankcase and mixing with the oil. This is relatively common in colder weather. As the engine warms up, the moisture in the air inside the engine condenses into liquid form and mixes with the circulating oil, leaving a milky residue on the dipstick, inside of the valve covers and oil filler cap. This condensation will be worse if the engine does not fully warm up due to relatively short drives and/or is not driven long enough — 20 minutes or more — to reach full temperature and evaporate the internal moisture. The first test should be the thermostat to ensure the engine is warming up to full operating temperature. Longer drives and more frequent oil changes will help clean out this residue before it has a chance to turn into sludge.

A:

Paul Brand, author of “How to Repair Your Car,” is an automotive troubleshooter, driving instructor and former race car driver. E-mail questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Please explain the problem in detail and include a daytime phone number.


S U N D AY, A P R I L 1 0 , 2 0 1 1

THE CIVIL WAR THE CONFLICT THAT DIVIDED AMERICA BEGAN 150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK.

ROBERT REDFORD O EXAMINES ITS IMPACT IN THE CONSPIRATOR

JON MEACHAM ADDRESSES THE REAL LESSONS OF OUR BLOODIEST STRUGGLE PLUS

THE BEST CIVIL WAR BOOKS AND MOVIES

ROBERT REDFORD SHOT BY ROBERT SZABO USING A CIVIL WAR–ERA PHOTO PROCESS ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2011.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Personality Walter Scott’s

PARADE

Parade.com/celebrity

‘ love

draw” over her Nashville home. “When children are teenagers,” she said, “they have a say in where they want to be.”

Q: Is Morgan Freeman still st working on a film version of Arthur C. Clarke’s Rendezvous with Rama? —Robert Nolan,

—Steven Tyler, on meeting his fellow American Idol judges

Washington, N.J. P Nicole Kidman

Cruise and Nicole Kidman’s two adopted children live with him and not her? —Julie Hoy, Rocky Point, N.C.

PTy Murray

A: “[It] was their choice,”

Q: I loved Ty Murray

Kidman, 43, has explained, referring to Isabella, 18, and Connor, 16. The actress has also stated that geography was a factor, calling Cruise’s Los Angeles base a “big

on Dancing with the Stars. Does he still dance? —Oleg Khvatov, St. Petersburg, Russia

A: “No! I’m in full retire-

ment,” jokes Murray, 41.

The Professional Bull Riders cofounder er and nine-time world d champion rodeo cowboy wboy is busy preparing for his is next gig: dad. He and his wife, the singer Jewel, 36, are expecting their first child this summer. “We’re super excited and taking it one day at a time,” he says. ys. “So far the pregnancy has gone well. Everything is rocking along real good.”

A: “We’re still pushing for it,” says the actor, 73, of his 15-year quest to bring the classic sci-fi novel n to the big screen. In the th meantime, you can catch cat Freeman’s other passion pa project, Born to Be Wild W 3-D, a documentary about ab endangered species, in IMAX theaters.

egf

Q: Why do Tom

Q: Are there any plans for a movie version of the musical Wicked? —Lee Hallowell, Indianapolis

WALTER SCOTT ASKS…

Tracy Morgan The 30 Rock star, 42, voices Luis the bulldog in the animated 3-D comedy Rio, in theaters April 15. You once called your life a performance. What genre would it fit into? Drama. My life isn’t all games and jokes. Reality isn’t always funny—I just try to make it so. How are you feeling after your kidney transplant last year? I’m doing great. When someone blesses you with a kidney, you sort of look at things in a different way. You’ve done movies, stand-up, and TV. What do you want to do next? Write, produce, direct—I want to do it all.

Have a question for Walter Scott? Visit Parade.com/celebrity or write Walter Scott at P.O. Box 5001, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10163-5001.

2 • April 10, 2011

P Elizabeth Berkley

Q: What happened to Elizabeth Berkley’s MTV reality show? —Xavier Via, Chicago

A: “We shot a beautiful pilot, and I’m excited for you to see it,” Berkley, 38, says of the series, which focuses on Ask-Elizabeth, the nationwide self-esteem program she started for teen girls. She also has a companion advice book, available now.

A: Yes, there are! Universal, which helped produce the Broadway show, is in the early planning stages for a film. Meanwhile, Salma Hayek and ABC are producing an eight-hour miniseries based on the novel by Gregory Maguire. No word yet on whether Hayek will star in it as well. THE PERSONALITY

QUIZ FIND OUT...

WHICH REALITY SHOW SHOULD YOU BE ON? Go to Parade.com/reality

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: RD/ORCHON/RETNA; SMEAL/BEIMAGES; GALLO/RETNA; SANDERS/PICTUREGROUP; PETER YANG/AUGUST. ILLUSTRATION: LUIS GRAÑENA

PM Morgan Freeman

It was at first sight.’

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© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


S a v e t h e d a t e… A p r i l 2 9 , 2 0 1 1

On April 29, 2011, His Royal Highness Prince William, heir to the throne of England, will marry Miss Catherine Elizabeth Middleton at Westminster Abbey. The ring betrothed to "Kate" Middleton is the same ring his mother, Princess Diana, received as her engagement ring from Prince Charles nearly 30 years ago.

Only 90 $

19 plus P&H

3.0 CARATS OVAL CUT, FACETED FAUX CEYLON SAPPHIRE FOURTEEN OVAL DIAMOND-x4 CZS 1.26 T.W. CARATS LAYERED IN STERLING SILVER or deluxe to PLATINUM PLATE (for just an additional $10.00)

Don’t know your ring size? Place a ring on a circle. The correct circle size should fit against the inside edge of the ring. 5

6

7

8

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11

In celebration of this historic event, you can now own the Royal Heirloom Ring, a limited edition replica of the timeless piece now considered the most famous jewel in the world. The beautiful simulated "Ceylon" sapphire represents the original quality of the centerpiece and is surrounded by breathtakingly brilliant Diamond X-4 CZs and prong set in silver plate. Its style; luster, color and cut are unsurpassed. For a limited time, Sterlington Collections is making available this timeless collectors masterpiece for just $19.90. Each ring is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity and comes complete with a hinged decorative jeweler’s box. This offer not available in stores. Please make certain to note your ring size. Orders without ring size will be sent Size 7, our most popular ring size.

Call toll-free

1-800-961-3261 or visit www.MyRoyalRing.com

To mail in your order send your name, address and check to: Telebrands, Dept. RRP0200, One Telebrands Plaza, Fairfield, NJ 07004. The Royal Heirloom Ring is $19.90 (add $10.00 for the deluxe platinum plating) plus $6.99 postage & handling. CA & NJ residents please add sales tax. Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express accepted – send account number and expiration date. Limit one ring per household. Your Satisfaction is Guaranteed. Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Not Available in Stores. Valid in the US only. ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2011.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


your guide to health, life,

Parade Picks

encouraging, and funny memoir tells the story of how the pair has coped, healed, and learned to ”unwrap one day at a time, treating it as a star-spangled gift.” THE TROUBLED MAN by Henning Mankell, fiction ($27) Detective Kurt Wallander

money, entertainment, and more

considers love and loss as he investigates the disappearance of his future son-in-law’s father. Mankell has said this is the last of his superb Wallander series; his complex, irascible cop will be sorely missed.

Board meeting BETHANY HAMILTON AND ANNASOPHIA ROBB AT A FAVORITE SURF SPOT IN HAWAII

P Music SO BEAUTIFUL OR SO WHAT from Paul Simon ($15) Simon’s first album in five years doesn’t shy away from weighty subjects: life after death, a Vietnam vet working in a car wash, Simon’s own nephew in Iraq. Yet the music is playful and sprightly, combining worldbeat touches—such as Indian percussion on “Dazzling Blue”—with the folkish feel of Simon’s early work. It’s like the homecoming of an old friend.

P Television UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRS PBS Masterpiece Classic, April 10, 9 p.m. ET/PT The beloved

1970s series gets a threeepisode Depression-era sequel that puts a new family, the Hollands, into 165 Eaton Place,

P Books ONE HUNDRED NAMES FOR LOVE by Diane Ackerman, nonfiction ($27) Ackerman and her hus-

The Ultimate Comeback Kid

B

ethany hamilton was only 13 when a horrific shark attack

almost took her life, leaving her with one arm and little hope of realizing her professional-surfing dreams. But less than a month later, the determined teen egf was back in the water, fearlessly learning how to rebalance her body and master the board again. Hamilton’s optimism and perseverance captured the world’s attention, and now you can catch her dramatic saga in the film Soul Surfer, starring AnnaSophia Robb. “I realized that telling my life story could change people’s perspectives on hard times they’re going through,” says Hamilton, 21, who has published five nonfiction books that reflect her strong sense of spirituality. During one humanitarian trip to Thailand in 2005, the same year she won a national surfing championship, she led 50 children, many orphaned by the tsunami in late ’04, into the water for the first time. “Helping them overcome their fear of the ocean was a great opportunity,” she says. “There aren’t a lot of good role models out there, so it’s cool that I could be one.” She turned pro in 2007 and now travels the world on the surfing circuit. On the set, Hamilton—who did all the post-injury surfing in the film—made a fast friend in Robb. “Bethany looks at the attack as a blessing because she’s been able to do so much through it,” says the 17-year-old actress. “She could have been a one-week news story, but now she’s inspiring millions.” —Mary Margaret

band, Paul, shared a great love for each other—as well as for wordplay, Scrabble, and Jumbles. In 2004, Paul suffered a stroke, leaving him bedridden and able to utter only a single syllable: ”mem.” This frank,

with the venerable Rose (Jean Marsh) as housekeeper. Indoors, class consciousness abounds, while outside fascism is on the rise and the king is dallying with Mrs. Simpson. (A new box set of the original series is also out on DVD.)

fge PARADE POLL

SHOULD THE POST OFFICE SUSPEND SATURDAY SERVICE TO SAVE MONEY?

67% YES

33% NO

We want to know! For more questions, go to Parade.com/poll

PHOTOS, FROM FAR LEFT: BETHANYHAMILTON.COM; MARK SELIGER; © BBC/MASTERPIECE. ILLUSTRATION: GARY TAXALI

Report INTELLIGENCE

4 • April 10, 2011

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Drinks are cooled within minutes, and precious fridge space is spared for more iimportant things— llike snacks. W WHERE TO GET IT

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PLAN YOUR SUMMER VACATION Patricia Schultz, author of the recently updated 1,000 Places to See in the U.S.A. & Canada Before You Die, offers these tips

Get Your Airline Ticket First Prices are rising, so the sooner you finalize your airfare, the better. You’ll have plenty of time to book a hotel afterward, because there tend to be more lodging options.

1

Compare Websites Check all three big travel sites—Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz. Each strikes different deals with different airlines. If you don’t have to travel on a specific date, check within a three-day range— the price can vary substantially.

2

If You Made a Percentage Co-Payment for Certain Drugs Under Medicare Part B You May Be Able To Get At Least $35 back Hundreds of drugs for cancer, HIV, asthma, allergies, infections, inflammation, pain, gastrointestinal, lung and blood issues, and other conditions are included There is a proposed class action Settlement with several drug manufacturers concerning hundreds of drugs. These drugs are used for the treatment of many medical conditions and they are often, but not always, injected in a doctor’s office or clinic. For a list of the drugs, go to www.AWPTrack2Settlement.com. This lawsuit claims that consumers paid too much for these drugs. It is not about whether these drugs are safe or effective.

Can I Get Money Back? You can get a refund if you paid a percentage co-payment for any of the covered drugs from January 1, 1991 through January 1, 2005. A percentage co-payment varies with the cost of the drug. You cannot get a refund if you paid a flat co-payment.

How Much Can I Get Back? Approximately $21.8 million will be paid to consumers who file valid claims. 𰁳𰀀 𰀹𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁇𰁅𰁔𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁉𰁍𰁕𰁍𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰀄𰀓𰀕 simply by certifying you paid percentage co-payments, or 𰁳𰀀 𰀩𰁆𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁅𰁓𰁔𰁉𰁍𰁁𰁔𰁅𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁓𰁈𰁏𰁗𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁁𰁔𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁉𰁄𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁒𰁃𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁇𰁅𰀀𰁃𰁏𰀍𰁐𰁁𰁙𰁍𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁒𰁏𰁕𰁇𰁈𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁃𰁅𰁉𰁐𰁔𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀 bills, you can receive more money. 𰀦𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁓𰁏𰁍𰁅𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁄𰁒𰁕𰁇𰁓𰀌𰀀𰁙𰁏𰁕𰀀𰁃𰁁𰁎𰀀𰁇𰁅𰁔𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁒𰁅𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁉𰁍𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁒𰁃𰁅𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁇𰁅𰀀 𰁃𰁏𰀍𰁐𰁁𰁙𰁍𰁅𰁎𰁔𰀎

What Should I Do? Get complete information about the Settlement and make a decision on your legal rights: 𰁳𰀀 𰀦𰁉𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁁𰀀𰀣𰁌𰁁𰁉𰁍: In order to receive a payment, you must file a claim postmarked by 𰀪𰁕𰁌𰁙𰀀𰀑𰀌𰀀𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀑.

Be Flexible on Timing Choose the “anytime” option when asked what hour of the day you want to fly, then compare prices within a 24-hour period.

3

Package It Keep an eye out for air+hotel packages on the same sites. These are generally big hotels and resorts with lots of rooms to fill.

PHOTO: COURTESY OF OSTER

4

Call Frequently If you want to use your frequent-flier miles, call the airline three or four days in a row—things open up daily.

𰁳𰀀 𰀥𰁘𰁃𰁌𰁕𰁄𰁅𰀀𰀹𰁏𰁕𰁒𰁓𰁅𰁌𰁆: You may exclude yourself and keep your right to sue the Defendants on your own. You must submit your request for exclusion in writing postmarked by 𰀭𰁁𰁙𰀀𰀒𰀔𰀌𰀀𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀑𰀎 𰁳𰀀 𰀯𰁂𰁊𰁅𰁃𰁔𰀀 𰁏𰁒𰀀 𰀣𰁏𰁍𰁍𰁅𰁎𰁔: You may object to or comment on the Settlement, but you must do so in writing by 𰀭𰁁𰁙𰀀𰀒𰀔𰀌𰀀𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀑. The Court has appointed lawyers to represent you. You may hire your own lawyer, but at your own expense. The Court will determine whether to approve the Settlement at a Fairness Hearing on 𰀪𰁕𰁎𰁅𰀀𰀑𰀓𰀌𰀀 𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀑𰀀𰁁𰁔𰀀𰀒𰀚𰀐𰀐𰀀𰁐𰀎𰁍𰀎𰀀𰀀If you do not exclude yourself and the Court approves the Settlement, you will be bound by all the Court’s decisions.

5

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For Detailed Information and a Claim Form:

Call Toll-Free: 1-877-465-8136 Visit: www.AWPTrack2Settlement.com Or Write: AWP Track 2 Settlement Administrator, P.O. Box 2417, Faribault, MN 55021-2417 ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2011.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


RELIVING HISTORY At 4:30 a.m. on April 12, 1861, a single mortar round was fired on Fort Sumter, S.C., and the Civil War began. By the time it ended in 1865, approximately 620,000 soldiers’ lives had been lost, and America had changed in profound, immutable ways. One hundred and fifty years later, we’re still examining why. Here, director Robert Redford talks about his new film, The Conspirator, the story of the lone woman implicated in the plot to kill Abraham Lincoln. Historian Jon Meacham explores the war’s legacy in politics today. Finally, for buffs and novices alike, we offer expert picks for the best Civil War artifacts, movies, and books.

6 • April 10, 2011

Above, Robin Wright and James McAvoy in The Conspirator. Of Wright, Redford says, “She had all the qualities needed to play Mary Surratt—the repose, the dignity.” Below, the director on location in Savannah, Ga.

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‘History Is Telling Us Something’ Director Robert Redford tackles the tensions of post–Civil War America

PHOTOS, CLOCKWISE FROM BOTTOM LEFT: CLAUDETTE BARIUS; ©2010 THE AMERICAN FILM COMPANY; THE MUSEUM OF THE CONFEDERACY, RICHMOND, VA.

BY JAMIE MALANOWSKI

R Robert Redford’s new movie, The Conspirator (in theaters April 15), tells the story of a little-known chapter in American history: the trial of Mary Surratt, the owner of a Washington boardinghouse who was accused of being a part of John Wilkes Booth’s plot to assassinate President Lincoln. It’s a gripping drama about the tension between security and justice, between government protection and government aggression, that resonates strongly today. Director Redford talks to PARADE about what it takes to bring history to life. What appealed to you about The Conspirator? I’m always drawn to stories that people don’t know about, particularly when they’re inside of a story that everyone knows about. I got caught up in the characters of Mary Surratt [played by Robin Wright], who’s been charged with this terrible crime, and Frederick Aiken [ James McAvoy], her

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lawyer. The dynamic between the two was very compelling. He’d been a Union soldier who almost sacrificed his life in that cause, who didn’t want to participate in the trial—he thought it was a betrayal of his comrades, and he thought she was guilty. She was a woman who was presumed to be guilty and whose only recourse, considering the way the deck was stacked against her, was to behave with as much dignity as she could muster and to protect her son, who was also a suspect in the case. Mary was tried before a military court. With Guantánamo and other tribunals in the news, the contemporary relevance of the story must have appealed to you. Obviously, I could see the parallels to the present, and I knew that this could be dangerous for me, because people see me as a liberal and might pigeonhole me and the film as having some partisan point of view. But I don’t feel that the political films I’ve made have been partisan criticisms of the left or right, but criticisms of the political process itself. I’m not inventing anything [about Mary Surratt’s trial]—I’m just putting a spotlight on it. The other factor for me, having experienced what I’ve experienced in my lifetime, is how could I not see patterns in our history? And one of the biggest patterns I’ve noticed is that whenever there’s chaos, there’s ambiguity, and where there’s ambiguity, there’s fear. And fear gets manipulated. What makes for good leadership in times of chaos and ambiguity?

You have to have courage beyond reason. You might even have to be slightly foolhardy. In this film, we don’t really take a side. I’m trying to put a light on the ambiguity [produced by the chaos of Lincoln’s assassination] and how that gets worked by somebody like Edwin Stanton [Kevin Kline], the secretary of war. Stanton could be considered the villain here, but you’ve got to give him his due. Robert E. Lee’s army surrendered only five days before the assassination. Other Rebel armies were still in the field. How does he know what else is coming? He thinks, “I have to get this thing shut down quickly, even if I have to violate the Constitution. I have to drive a stake into this threat.” You can’t ignore that point of view. Prior to making this film, did you have a particular interest in the Civil War? I had ancestors in both the North and the South; my father’s family was from New England, and my mother’s was from Texas. But I never had the kind of interest you could attach “-phile” to—for example, “Lincoln-phile” or “Civil War–phile.” It’s been eye-opening to discover just how many Civil War–philes there are. There’s something special about these stories that draws people in. Is it difficult to get people to see historical films? No, but you need story and characters. If it’s just pageantry, audiences will get bored. It was the same with All the President’s Men. History would take care of Nixon continued on page 14

5 CIVIL WAR ARTIFACTS ON DISPLAY Abraham Lincoln’s Top Hat SMITHSONIAN NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY, WASHINGTON, D.C.

Lincoln added a black silk mourning band in remembrance of his son Willie, who died in 1862 at age 11. The last time he wore the hat was on April 14, 1865, the day he was shot. Robert E. Lee’s Frock Coat and Sword MUSEUM OF THE CONFEDERACY, RICHMOND, VA.

erate The Confederate re this general wore nder to his surrender ttox at Appomattox e in Courthouse e 1865. In the early 20th e’s century, Lee’s sword was occasionallyy ding lent to wedding parties for the akes. cutting of cakes. Section of Underground Railroad MILTON HOUSE MUSEUM, MILTON, WIS. One of only a few segments of the Underground Railroad located below ground, this section is 45 feet long and was originally three feet tall—it’s now six feet. Surgeon’s Tent NATIONAL MUSEUM OF CIVIL WAR MEDICINE, FREDERICK, MD. The only surviving surgeon’s tent from the era. Amputations were the most common operation performed during the Civil War, the first conflict in which doctors widely used anesthesia.

H.L. Hunley Submarine WARREN LASCH CONSERVATION CENTER, NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. The H.L. Hunley was the world’s first submarine ever to sink an enemy ship in combat. Found in 1995 by thriller writer Clive Cussler, the vessel is now displayed in a tank underwater and can be viewed from a ledge above.

April 10, 2011 • 7

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VIEWS

WAR WITHOUT END The Civil War’s true legacy must be remembered: Then and now, prejudice will not be tolerated. BY JON MEACHAM

A

s the nation prepares to

mark the 150th anniversary of the start of the Civil War this month, we are learning anew the truth of William Faulkner’s observation that the past is never dead; it isn’t even past. In Mississippi, the Sons of Confederate Veterans has provoked controversy by proposing a commemorative license plate honoring Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, who was also a leading member of the Ku Klux Klan. In Marshall, Ark., a mayor was ostensibly rebuked by his own city council after he flew the Confederate flag to honor Robert E. Lee on Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday. And at Florida’s Gainesville State College, a painting showing a Confederate flag with Klansmen and a lynching sparked weeks of debate and was eventually removed from a faculty art show. No one refights the Revolution or World Wars I or II, but what President Abraham Lincoln termed our “fiery trial” has proved to be an American war without end. From Appomattox forward, how we see the Civil War reveals much about what Dr. King called “the content of our character.” Following World War II, with Jim Crow under attack, many Southerners reached back to the 1860s for imagery to lend historical drama and credibility to their resistance. After South Carolina’s Strom Thurmond defected from the Democratic Party in 1948 to form the pro-segregation Dixiecrats, he was greeted by supporters in the South waving Confederate flags. That same year, Ole Miss added the playing of “Dixie,” the

8 • April 10, 2011

Robert Osborne, host of Turner Classic Movies, lists his favorites. TCM is airing films about the era on Monday and Wednesday nights throughout April.

The General (1927) This Buster Keaton comedy is one of the most accurate re-creations of the era. The story is based on fact—in 1862, Union spies stole the General, a Confederate train—and it always makes me laugh. Gone with the Wind (1939) Not a single scene occurs on a battlefield per se, but no other film so fully captures what’s at stake on a personal and social level during war and how much devastation it can cause. Even after 72 years, the movie impresses and overwhelms. The Red Badge of Courage (1951) Director John Huston, working from a screenplay he adapted from the novel, knew of the damage war can inflict on a person. This film depicts the inner stories of young soldiers and their days of tedium and moments of sheer terror. Friendly Persuasion (1956) Thanks to producer/director William Wyler and his cast, this beautifully shows the war’s impact on a Quaker family. It’s the best film from the third act of Gary Cooper’s career, with a superb Tony Perkins in his first act.

NAACP members and other demonstrators protesting December’s Secession Ball in South Carolina

change laws as “a continuation of the efforts by Jefferson Davis and the other secessionists in the 1860s,” according to the Washington Post. One member of the Virginia Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans said that Rebels “were fighting for the same things that people in the ‘Tea Party’ are fighting for now.” This year, as the 2012 presidential campaign gets under way, two powerful forces will intersect: the commemorations of the continued on page 19

Glory (1989) A moving tribute to the littlerecognized freed slaves who served in the Union army. Impressively directed by Edward Zwick, it’s filled with exceptional performances, especially those from Morgan Freeman and Denzel Washington (below), who won an Oscar. Go to Parade.com/civilwar to recommend your favorites.

PHOTOS, FROM LEFT: ALAN HAWES/POSTANDCOURIER.COM; TRISTAR PICTURES/COURTESY OF EVERETT COLLECTION

AMERICA’S

unofficial anthem of the Confederacy, to its football pageantry. During the integration decisions of the 1950s, Georgia altered its flag to include the Confederate battle emblem. Ultimately, though, the bigotry and brutality of white authorities could not withstand the forces of justice and equality, and the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964. Today, a new battle for history is being waged, with political conservatives casting the Civil War as a struggle against Big Government, with only tangential connections to slavery. These neo-Confederates contend that one can honor the South’s heritage without condoning its institutionalized racism. But as a historian and as a Southerner, I believe that is a losing cause. Without what our seventh vice president, John C. Calhoun, called the South’s “peculiar domestic institution,” there would have been no Civil War. There can be no revision of this inescapable reality. Some conservatives in Virginia have said they see the current battles against health-care reform and climate-

MY TOP FIVE CIVIL WAR FILMS

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ARICEPT PATIENT PACKAGE INSERT ARICEPT® (Air-eh-sept) (donepezil hydrochloride) tablets • Tablets: 5 mg, 10 mg, and 23 mg ARICEPT® ODT (Air-eh-sept oh-dee-tee) (donepezil hydrochloride) orally disintegrating tablets • ODT Tablets: 5 mg and 10 mg Read the Patient Information that comes with ARICEPT before the patient starts taking it and each time you get a refill. There may be new information. This leaflet does not take the place of talking with the doctor about Alzheimer’s disease or treatment for it. If you have questions, ask the doctor or pharmacist. What is ARICEPT? ARICEPT comes as ARICEPT film-coated tablets in dosage strengths of 5 mg, 10 mg, and 23 mg, and as ARICEPT Orally Disintegrating Tablets (ODT; 5 mg and 10 mg). Except where indicated, all the information about ARICEPT in this leaflet also applies to ARICEPT ODT. ARICEPT is a prescription medicine to treat mild, moderate and severe Alzheimer’s disease. ARICEPT can help with mental function and with doing daily tasks. ARICEPT does not work the same in all people. Some people may: • Seem much better • Get better in small ways or stay the same • Get worse over time but slower than expected • Not change and then get worse as expected ARICEPT does not cure Alzheimer’s disease. All patients with Alzheimer’s disease get worse over time, even if they take ARICEPT. ARICEPT has not been approved as a treatment for any medical condition in children. Who should not take ARICEPT? The patient should not take ARICEPT if allergic to any of the ingredients in ARICEPT or to medicines that contain piperidines. Ask the patient’s doctor if you are not sure. See the end of this leaflet for a list of ingredients in ARICEPT. What should I tell the doctor before the patient takes ARICEPT? Tell the doctor about all the patient’s present or past health problems. Include: • Any heart problems including • Present pregnancy or plans to problems with irregular, slow, become pregnant. It is not known or fast heartbeats if ARICEPT can harm an unborn • Asthma or lung problems baby. • A seizure • Present breast-feeding. It is not • Stomach ulcers known if ARICEPT passes into • Difficulty passing urine breast milk. ARICEPT is not for • Liver or kidney problems women who are breast-feeding. • Trouble swallowing tablets Tell the doctor about all the medicines the patient takes, including prescription and non-prescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal products. ARICEPT and other medicines may affect each other. Be particularly sure to tell the doctor if the patient takes aspirin or medicines called nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). There are many NSAID medicines, both prescription and non-prescription. Ask the doctor or pharmacist if you are not sure if any of the patient’s medicines are NSAIDs. Taking NSAIDs and ARICEPT together may make the patient more likely to get stomach ulcers. ARICEPT taken with certain medicines used for anesthesia may cause side effects. Tell the responsible doctor or dentist that the patient takes ARICEPT before the patient has: • surgery • medical procedures • dental surgery or procedures. Know the medicines that the patient takes. Keep a list of all the patient’s medicines. Show it to the doctor or pharmacist before the patient starts a new medicine. How should the patient take ARICEPT? • Give ARICEPT exactly as prescribed by the doctor. Do not stop ARICEPT or change the dose yourself. Talk with the doctor first. • Give ARICEPT one time each day. ARICEPT can be taken with or without food. • ARICEPT 23 mg tablets should be swallowed whole without the tablets being split, crushed or chewed.

• ARICEPT ODT melts on the tongue. The patient should drink some water after the tablet melts. • If you miss giving the patient a dose of ARICEPT, just wait. Give only the next dose at the usual time. Do not give 2 doses at the same time. • If ARICEPT is missed for 7 days or more, talk with the doctor before starting again. • If the patient takes too much ARICEPT at one time, call the doctor or poison control center, or go to the emergency room right away. What are the possible side effects of ARICEPT? ARICEPT may cause the following serious side effects: • slow heartbeat and fainting. This happens more often in people with heart problems. Call the doctor right away if the patient faints while taking ARICEPT. • more stomach acid. This raises the chance of ulcers and bleeding, especially when taking ARICEPT 23 mg. The risk is higher for patients who had ulcers, or take aspirin or other NSAIDs. • worsening of lung problems in people with asthma or other lung disease. • seizures. • difficulty passing urine. Call the doctor right away if the patient has: • fainting. • bowel movements or stools that look like black tar. • heartburn or stomach pain that is • new or worse asthma or breathing new or won’t go away. • nausea or vomiting, blood in the problems. • seizures. vomit, dark vomit that looks like coffee grounds. • difficulty passing urine. The most common side effects of ARICEPT are: • nausea • muscle cramps • feeling tired • diarrhea • not sleeping well • not wanting to eat • vomiting These side effects may get better after the patient takes ARICEPT for a while. This is not a complete list of side effects with ARICEPT. For more information, ask the doctor or pharmacist. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088. How should ARICEPT be stored ? Store ARICEPT at room temperature between 59° to 86°F (15° to 30°C). Keep ARICEPT and all medicines out of the reach of children. General information about ARICEPT Medicines are sometimes prescribed for conditions that are not mentioned in this Patient Information Leaflet. Do not use ARICEPT for a condition for which it was not prescribed. Do not give ARICEPT to people other than the patient, even if they have the same symptoms as the patient, as it may harm them. This leaflet summarizes the most important information about ARICEPT. If you would like more information talk with the patient’s doctor. You can ask your pharmacist or doctor for information about ARICEPT that is written for health professionals. For more information, go to www.ARICEPT.com, or call 1-800-760-6029. What are the ingredients in ARICEPT? Active ingredient: donepezil hydrochloride Inactive ingredients: • ARICEPT 5 mg and 10 mg film-coated tablets: lactose monohydrate, cornstarch, microcrystalline cellulose, hydroxypropyl cellulose, and magnesium stearate. The film coating contains talc, polyethylene glycol, hypromellose, and titanium dioxide. Additionally, the 10 mg tablet contains yellow iron oxide (synthetic) as a coloring agent. • ARICEPT 23 mg film-coated tablets: ethylcellulose, hydroxypropyl cellulose, lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate and methacrylic acid copolymer, Type C. The reddish color film coating includes ferric oxide, hypromellose 2910, polyethylene glycol 8000, talc and titanium dioxide. • ARICEPT ODT 5 mg and 10 mg tablets: carrageenan, mannitol, colloidal silicon dioxide, and polyvinyl alcohol. The 10 mg tablet contains yellow iron oxide (synthetic) as a coloring agent.

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PHOTO: JULIO C. ZANGRONIZ, WWW.ZPHOTOS.SMUGMUG.COM

THE REENACTORS: WHY THEY FIGHT THE GOOD FIGHT—AGAIN AND AGAIN Many weekends throughout the year, TJ and Susan Youhn of Hollywood, Md., and their daughter, Amelia, put down their cellphones, pack up their cars, and leave home for the battlefields of the 19th century. The Youhns are among the estimated 50,000 Civil War reenactors in the U.S. Here, they explain the lure of the past. What Reenacting Is “There are two kinds of events,” Amelia says. “The larger ones, like Gettysburg, are basically big shows with battles. The living histories are smaller. We go to schools or homes, interact with the public, and show what life was like back then.” What Reenactors Do “I’m a sergeant with the 20th Maine infantry, a Union regiment that helped win the Battle of Gettysburg,” TJ says. “A women’s auxiliary group followed them and took care of them, and Susan is part of that. We’ve been doing it for 20 years, since Amelia

was only 6 weeks old, and we go out around 25 times a year.” What Their Friends Think “I call it my secret life. Some people think it’s cool, but most don’t understand it,” says Amelia, a junior at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, R.I. How Much It Costs “An The Youhns at a Remembrance Day event in Gettysburg, Pa., in November 2007 infantryman’s outfit— uniform, boots, hat, weapon, tent—may run $2,500. Ladies’ commentator, and you get to see strateclothes are more expensive,” TJ says. gies play out. When someone goes Susan adds, “Dresses need to be down, a ‘surgeon’ makes sure he’s not custom-made, and I wear seven layers hurt. It’s frowned upon for soldiers to get of clothes when I’m fully dressed.” up and move after they’ve been hit.” The Best Part “The dances!” Amelia Why They Do It “Reenacting is addictive, says. “The larger events have balls, and but the same can be said of any hobby,” they’re great social gatherings.” TJ says. “Some people sail boats or fly What a Battle’s Like “It’s a real-life planes. This is just a labor of love.” re-creation,” Amelia says. “There’s a —Emmet Sullivan

Pat Boone Confesses: My Heart Rate Monitor Helps Keep Me Young! — Pat Boone olks are often amazed when I tell them I am 76 years old and full of youthful energy. Perhaps you wonder whether I have some secret for maintaining good health to share with you . . . Well, one of my secrets is performing simple exercises that strengthen my heart muscle. My cardio routine is simple: I swim, bicycle, and even play tennis. And my doctor tells me I still have an “athlete’s heart,” with a usual pulse of 70 beats per minute. As Chauncey Crandall, M.D., one of America’s top cardiologists, explains, your heart rate is a key to long life — and closely related to high blood

F

pressure, your number one you need to monitor your pulse risk factor for heart disease. regularly. To do this, I use the If your pulse rate is 85, your Heart Rate Monitor Watch. heart will contract its powerIt’s a stylish but simple wrist ful muscle watch that monitors both time 122,400 times and heart rate. In fact, I can see each day. what my heart is doing at any Multiply that over just 40 moment. years, and Now, the your heart Heart Rate Monitor will beat 1.8 billion times! Pat says this stylish Watch usuwatch also monitors But, drop his heart rate — keeping him young. ally sells for your rate to $49.95. 72 beats per minute, you can But my readers can get a eliminate the wear and tear of great deal with this incredible 280 million wasted heart contrac- watch for just $7.95 — a savings tions over the same 40 years. And of $42! lower your risk of high blood PLUS, you’ll get 2 free issues pressure and heart disease, too. of Health Radar, a monthly So how do you do this? First, health newsletter I read to help

MY TOP FIVE CIVIL WAR READS James McPherson, Princeton University professor and author of Battle Cry of Freedom, recommends these books. The War for the Union, by Allan Nevins (4 vols.) Written from a national perspective, it’s the most comprehensive account of the war. The Civil War, by Shelby Foote (3 vols.) A masterful, flowing history, with a Southern point of view. The Killer Angels, by Michael Shaara A striking novel about Gettysburg that employs characters from both sides to show some of the reasons the war was fought. The Confederate War, by Gary W. Gallagher A brief but powerful analysis of what the war meant—for the Confederate Rebels and for the nation.

me stay young. With your Heart Rate Monitor Watch for only $7.95 (just pay $5.95 shipping) — you’ll also get another great FREE publication, Newsmax magazine, for 4 months. In all, this is a free value of $59! P.S. : Dr. Crandall has also offered to include another free gift — his Special Report on how to lower your own heart rate safely — if you order directly from this article. So get this special watch, plus 3 bonuses, today — don’t delay. If you care about your health, I hope you won’t pass up this offer.

Get Your Heart Rate Monitor Usually $49.95 Retail — s/h Now for Only $7.95! Plus of $5.95 Call: 1-800-701-3725 Online:

www.newsmax.com/pat CODE: BCE4-1 ©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2011.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


ATTENTION ALL RECIPIENTS OF DE PUY Don’t rely on the company who gave you a potentially defective hip implant to advise you on your legal rights! DePuy Orthopaedics, a division of Johnson & Johnson, has issued a worldwide recall of it’s ASRTM Acetabular System for Total Hip Replacement, after determining that these hip implants may fail at an alarming rate. The “metal-on-metal” composition of these implants can release particles into the patient, potentially causing serious and painful reactions — sometimes requiring complete revision surgery. Reportedly, Johnson & Johnson has been seeking medical releases from recipients so that their claims adjustors can speak with you directly and possibly take down statements without your having counsel present – an unwise action for any recipient to do. Having a defective hip implant in your body clearly demands having your own

&

lawyer. You must be very cautious with dealing with the manufacturer or its representative without proper legal representation. If you have a DePuy ASR TM product, please call us immediately, as there are time limits for filing a claim. You might already have problems with the implant about which you are unaware, so please contact us — and certainly do not forfeit your legal rights without talking to us.

WEITZ LUXENBERG P.C.

LAW OFFICES

Robert Redford | continued

and his misdeeds, but what made that film work was the relationship between Woodward and Bernstein, men who were pretty dissimilar and who didn’t much like one another but who learned how to work together. To me, that was the story, set against the backdrop of the Watergate scandal. It’s the same thing here—the relationship between Mary and Frederick, set against this trial.

Do we learn from history? No. It’s sad to say, but we have a short attention span, and there are so many patterns of mistakes that we don’t learn from. Just look at the story behind this film. We didn’t invent that story, and we didn’t invent what is happening today. History is telling us something. Redford talks about filming The Conspirator and his hopes for today’s environmental issues at Parade.com/redford

REAL OR REENACTMENT? Can you tell which is the authentic Civil War–era image by Mathew Brady— and which is the modern replica? Find out if you’re right at Parade.com/civilwar

ASBESTOS • DRUGS/MEDICAL DEVICES • ENVIRONMENTAL • NEGLIGENCE

700 BROADWAY • NEW YORK, NY 10003 BRANCH OFFICES IN NEW JERSEY, CALIFORNIA & COLORADO

1.888.411.LAWS • www.weitzlux.com ATTORNEY ADVERTISING. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. We may associate with local firms in states wherein we do not maintain an office.

We are also investigating

• FOSAMAX FEMUR INJURIES • KNEE REPLACEMENT INJURIES

SEE MORE AT PARADE.COM/CIVILWAR ■ Read actual 19th-century news stories about the war from

the archives of PARADE’s partner newspapers. ■ View a slideshow of seldom-seen Civil War–era ambrotypes and

tintypes that were recently donated to the Library of Congress. ■ Take a quiz to test your historical knowledge. ■ Recommend your favorite Civil War books. ■ Watch a video account of this month’s special Fort Sumter reenactment activities. ■ Discover where you can go to see Grant’s camp chair, Lee’s portable desk, and other priceless pieces of war memorabilia.

REENACTOR PHOTO: ROBERT SZABO. PORTRAIT OF THOMAS “STONEWALL” JACKSON: THE MATHEW BRADY STUDIO, U.S. NATIONAL ARCHIVES, WASHINGTON, D.C.

DEFECTIVE HIP IMPLANTS

14 • April 10, 2011

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


Stay Healthy Are You Vitamin-Savvy? You could be missing out on important benefits—or doing yourself more harm than good. Stay safe by avoiding these four common mistakes.

1

PHOTO: ISTOCK PHOTO

Downing your multivitamin with water— and nothing else. Many vitamins—including A, E, D, and K—are fat soluble, meaning they need to be eaten along with fat for your body to fully absorb them. That’s why most experts recommend taking multis with a meal. “Doing so also reduces vitamin-related stomach upset,” says Roberta Anding of the American Dietetic Association. Need to swallow your multi on the run? Pop a fish oil supplement at the same time.

2

Taking vitamins to make up for a bad diet. There’s a reason they’re called supplements: Vitamins alone aren’t enough to reduce your risk for disease. “In addition to taking a daily multi, it’s important to eat a diet rich in fruits, veggies, whole grains, and healthy fats,” says Dr. Victor Sierpina, professor of integrative medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.

3

Assuming that higher doses = more health benefits. “In many cases, the opposite is true,” says Dr. Sierpina. For example, too much iron increases the risk of cardiovascular problems. Anding suggests sticking to the recommended dietary allowance (printed on most labels) and taking a multivitamin instead of single supplements unless you’ve been diagnosed with a specific deficiency or are otherwise instructed by your doctor.

4

Keeping quiet about what you take. “Seventyfive percent of Americans don’t tell their physicians about their vitamin intake,” Anding says. “That’s a problem—vitamins can have drug-like effects. For example, very high doses of fish oil can inhibit blood clotting. Plus, vitamins can make some prescription medications more or less effective.” Anding advises keeping a list of your supplements (dosage, frequency, and brand) in your wallet so it’s always handy. —Camille Noe Pagán

50 Percentage of Americans who take at least one vitamin or mineral supplement regularly

𰀭𰀡𰀫𰀥𰀀𰀤𰀥𰀬𰀩𰀣𰀩𰀯𰀵𰀳𰀀𰀭𰀯𰀲𰀥𰀀𰀮𰀵𰀴𰀲𰀩𰀴𰀩𰀯𰀵𰀳𰀎 ENJOY GUILT-FREE GOODNESS WITH POST SHREDDED WHEAT APPLE CRISP. INGREDIENTS 𰁳𰀀𰀕𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰁓𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁅𰁌𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁐𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁌𰁉𰁃𰁅𰁓𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀏𰀒𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰀀𰁬𰀀𰁒𰁍𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁐𰁁𰁃𰁋𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁌𰁉𰁇𰁈𰁔𰀀𰁂𰁒𰁏𰁗𰁎𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁇𰁁𰁒𰀌𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁖𰁉𰁄𰁅𰁄𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀀𰁔𰁂𰁓𰁐𰀎𰀀𰁌𰁅𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁊𰁕𰁉𰁃𰁅𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀀𰁔𰁂𰁓𰁐𰀎𰀀𰁔𰁁𰁐𰁉𰁏𰁃𰁁𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀏𰀔𰀀𰁔𰁓𰁐𰀎𰀀𰁇𰁒𰁏𰁕𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁉𰁎𰁎𰁁𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀍𰀑𰀏𰀒𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰁓𰀀𰀰𰁏𰁓𰁔𰀀𰀯𰁒𰁉𰁇𰁉𰁎𰁁𰁌𰀀𰀳𰁈𰁒𰁅𰁄𰁄𰁅𰁄𰀀𰀷𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁔𰀀𰀳𰁐𰁏𰁏𰁎 𰀀𰀳𰁉𰁚𰁅𰀀𰀣𰁅𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀌𰀀𰁬𰀀𰁎𰁅𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁃𰁒𰁕𰁓𰁈𰁅𰁄𰀀 𰁳𰀀𰀑𰀏𰀔𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰀀𰀈𰀑𰀏𰀒𰀀𰁓𰁔𰁉𰁃𰁋𰀉𰀀𰁍𰁁𰁒𰁇𰁁𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁅𰀌𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁌𰁔𰁅𰁄

DIRECTIONS 𰁳𰀀 𰀭𰁉𰁘𰀀𰁁𰁐𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁓𰀌𰀀𰀑𰀏𰀔𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰀀𰁏𰁆𰀀𰁔𰁈𰁅𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁇𰁁𰁒𰀌𰀀𰁌𰁅𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁊𰁕𰁉𰁃𰁅𰀌𰀀 𰁔𰁁𰁐𰁉𰁏𰁃𰁁𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁉𰁎𰁎𰁁𰁍𰁏𰁎𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁌𰁁𰁒𰁇𰁅𰀀𰁂𰁏𰁗𰁌𰀎𰀀𰀬𰁅𰁔𰀀 𰁓𰁔𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰀑𰀐𰀀𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁕𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁔𰁉𰁒𰀀𰁃𰁒𰁕𰁓𰁈𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁃𰁅𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀌𰀀𰁒𰁅𰁍𰁁𰁉𰁎𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰀑𰀏𰀔𰀀𰁃𰁕𰁐𰀀𰁓𰁕𰁇𰁁𰁒𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀 𰁍𰁁𰁒𰁇𰁁𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁍𰁅𰁄𰁉𰁕𰁍𰀀𰁂𰁏𰁗𰁌𰀀𰁕𰁎𰁔𰁉𰁌𰀀𰁗𰁅𰁌𰁌𰀀𰁂𰁌𰁅𰁎𰁄𰁅𰁄𰀎𰀀 𰁳𰀀 𰀳𰁐𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁐𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁍𰁉𰁘𰁔𰁕𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁕𰁎𰁇𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁓𰁅𰁄𰀀𰀑𰀍𰀑𰀏𰀒𰀍𰁑𰁕𰁁𰁒𰁔 𰁂𰁁𰁋𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀𰁄𰁉𰁓𰁈𰀎𰀀𰀳𰁐𰁒𰁉𰁎𰁋𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁅𰁖𰁅𰁎𰁌𰁙𰀀𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁃𰁅𰁒𰁅𰁁𰁌𰀀𰁔𰁏𰁐𰁐𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀎 𰁳𰀀 𰀢𰁁𰁋𰁅𰀀𰁁𰁔𰀀𰀓𰀕𰀐𰂗𰀦𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁒𰀀𰀔𰀕𰀀𰁍𰁉𰁎𰁕𰁔𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁏𰁒𰀀𰁕𰁎𰁔𰁉𰁌𰀀𰁔𰁏𰁐𰁐𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀀 𰁉𰁓𰀀𰁂𰁒𰁏𰁗𰁎𰁅𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁎𰁄𰀀𰁁𰁐𰁐𰁌𰁅𰁓𰀀𰁁𰁒𰁅𰀀𰁔𰁅𰁎𰁄𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁅𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁉𰁅𰁒𰁃𰁅𰁄𰀀 𰁗𰁉𰁔𰁈𰀀𰁁𰀀𰁆𰁏𰁒𰁋𰀎

Try more recipes loaded with whole grain.*

Visit PostNatural.com/recipes 𰀧𰀲𰀡𰀰𰀥𰀍𰀮𰀵𰀴𰀳𰀀𰀣𰀲𰀵𰀮𰀣𰀨𰀹𰀀 𰀰𰀥𰀡𰀮𰀵𰀴𰀀𰀢𰀵𰀴𰀴𰀥𰀲𰀀𰀢𰀡𰀲𰀳 *

𰀰𰀯𰀳𰀴𰀀𰀲𰀡𰀩𰀳𰀩𰀮𰀀𰀢𰀲𰀡𰀮𰀀 𰀡𰀰𰀰𰀬𰀥𰀳𰀡𰀵𰀣𰀥𰀀𰀭𰀵𰀦𰀦𰀩𰀮𰀳

𰀰𰁏𰁓𰁔𰀀𰀳𰁈𰁒𰁅𰁄𰁄𰁅𰁄𰀀𰀷𰁈𰁅𰁁𰁔𰀀𰀡𰁐𰁐𰁌𰁅𰀀𰀣𰁒𰁉𰁓𰁐𰀀𰁃𰁏𰁎𰁔𰁁𰁉𰁎𰁓𰀀𰀑𰀒𰁇𰀀𰁗𰁈𰁏𰁌𰁅𰀀𰁇𰁒𰁁𰁉𰁎𰀀𰁐𰁅𰁒𰀀𰁓𰁅𰁒𰁖𰁉𰁎𰁇𰀎

𰃚𰀒𰀐𰀑𰀑𰀀𰀰𰁏𰁓𰁔𰀀𰀦𰁏𰁏𰁄𰁓𰀌𰀀𰀬𰀬𰀣𰀀

©฀PARADE฀Publications฀2011.฀All฀rights฀reserved.


Sunday with... taken up too quickly. A plant needs to get its roots into the soil before it can withstand the wind and the ice and the cold. Nowadays, the business has a huge appetite for youth and tends, when it’s tired of it, to spit it out. But I think he’s got his head screwed on quite straight.

The acclaimed actor opens up about living on the edge and why it’s so good to play bad egf

f there’s a cad or a creep

I

to be played, Jeremy Irons’s antennae shoot up. “Characters who live on the outer edge of acceptable behavior have always been to my taste,” says the Oscar winner, now starring as the power-mad patriarch of Showtime’s series The Borgias (Sundays, 10 p.m. ET/PT). Irons, 62, chats with Steve Daly about his affinity for sinners.

Why are scandalous families like the Borgias so fascinating? Whether it be in The Borgias or Shakespeare or The Godfather, we love watching people doing what we 16 • April 10, 2011

don’t dare do. Murder and mayhem, from the safe position of our armchairs, can be delightful. What will audiences make of Rodrigo Borgia, who became Pope Alexander VI in 1492 but kept multiple mistresses? He wouldn’t see that as hypocritical. He wasn’t a god—he was a man, and man was born a sinner. He’s rather endearing, in a strange way. He’s as pathetic as all men are. They want everything, don’t they? Will people be surprised at the brutal Vatican politics? The Vatican at that time was noth-

ing like it is now. In a way, it was a medieval West Wing—the center of power in the known world. Sundays have changed since Borgia days. What do they mean for you? I’m a bit sorry we have all the shops open. But we all have to be encouraged to buy, buy, buy, to keep society going, so I suppose one has to accept that. For me, it’s a day I can have a lie-in and a relaxed brunch. I think we need a down day. Otherwise we’d just go bananas. Your 25-year-old son, Max, is co-starring in Red Riding iding Hood. d What’s it been like watching him deal with the publicity? ublicity? Well, it fills me with h concern. I’m very happyy he’s doing what he loves. But my nightmare as a young actor was to bee

You’re skilled at sailing the ocean and riding horses and motorcycles fast—not the safest activities. Are you a daredevil? Living on the edge, for me, has always been one of life’s great pleasures. It’s not really the speed; it’s the fact that you have to do it well in order to survive. Ever pushed it too far? Oh, I have. At any time, you can tumble, but that adds to the frisson. It reminds you there is an edge. And I think we need constant reminder reminders: The edge is there. Don’t fall over it. The actor talks about the Irish castle he’s renovated cas at Parade.com/irons

PHOTOS, FROM TOP: NORMAN JEAN ROY; KIMBERLY FRENCH

Jeremy Irons

You’ve played some very dark roles. Which gave you the most pause before saying yes? I think Reversal of Fortune, because the protagonists [Claus and Sunny von Bülow] were still alive—or partly alive, anyway. But Glenn Close persuaded me that if I didn’t do it, someone else would. And I knew Lolita would cause fireworks. I said to my agent, “You’d better get me a wage that will keep me the next three years, because I don’t think I’ll work much after this.” That was indeed what happened.

Visit us at PARADE.COM

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


SundayDinner Milwaukee Memories For chef Paul Bartolotta, this dish recalls time spent with his father

On Saturday afternoons when I was young, my father would take me to the fish markets on Brady Street in Milwaukee. One of his favorite dishes was spaghetti alle vongole, so it was very much a part of my childhood. I now serve

cle

a slightly more Italianate version in my restaurant [Bartolotta] at Wynn Las Vegas. Every time I eat it—and I eat it probably three nights a week— I feel like I’m closer to my dad. It was the last dish I ever cooked for him. To me, that’s a big deal.

Spaghetti alle Vongole

PHOTOS, FROM LEFT: BILL MILNE; ALEX KARVOUNIS

(Spaghetti with Clams) 48 Manila (or littleneck) clams 9 oz spaghetti 2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced 5 Tbsp extravirgin olive oil, divided Pinch of crushed red pepper 1 cup white wine ½ cup cherry tomatoes, quartered 2 Tbsp fresh parsley, coarsely chopped

1. Wash clams carefully. 2. Bring a large pot of salted water to boil. Add spaghetti and cook about 8 minutes, until it’s al dente. Drain but do not rinse. 3. In a large pan, sauté garlic in 3 Tbsp olive oil over mediumhigh until translucent. Add clams; season with salt and crushed red pepper. 4. Add white wine; cook over medium-high about 5 minutes, or until clams steam open and liquid is reduced by half. 5. Add cherry tomatoes; cook until soft. 6. Gently toss with cooked pasta; add parsley and drizzle with 2 Tbsp olive oil. Serve immediately.

SERVES: 4 PER SERVING: 570 calories, 55g carbs, 32g protein,

20g fat, 60mg cholesterol, 180mg sodium, 3g fiber

Bartolotta will join more than 50 chefs at Vegas Uncork’d by Bon Appétit, May 5–8 in Las Vegas. For details, go to dashrecipes.com April 10, 2011 • 17

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


®

If all the gold in the world were melted into a block, what would be its size? —Rob Garl, Camby, Ind.

All of the gold that has ever been mined would probably fit into a cube less than 75 feet long on each side. An eightstory office building (with the

By Marilyn vos Savant

same width and depth) could serve as a global Fort Knox. Of all the celestial bodies we see in the night sky, how many are not in the Milky Way? —Bobby Darr, Fort Worth, Tex.

Nearly everything you can see with an unaided eye is in our own galaxy. If you’re in a place

®

Cartoon Parade without much light pollution, you can also see the Andromeda galaxy and other extragalactic objects—but not many. To see more, you need a telescope or at least a good pair of binoculars. To ask a question, visit Parade.com/askmarilyn

RINA PICCOLO

Ask Marilyn

“I hate it when this happens—I want to ride off into the sunset, but my house is that way.”

LEGAL NOTICE OF PROPOSED CLASS ACTION SETTLEMENT

This Notice is being published because a settlement has been proposed by all parties in the following class action matters pending in the United States District Court, Central District Of California, Western Division: In Re Quantcast Advertising Cookie Litig., No. 2:10-cv-05484-GW Davis v. VideoEgg, Inc., No. 2:10-cv-07112-GW In Re Clearspring Flash Cookie Litig., NO. 2:10-CV-05948-GW WHAT IS THIS NOTICE FOR? This Notice is being published by order of the Court, before the Court considers final approval of the proposed Settlement, and is meant to inform you of actions you may take in response to the proposed Settlement. x You may do nothing and be bound by the Settlement, if the Court approves it. x You also may object to the proposed Settlement, or opt out of it, by following the instructions in this Notice. x The Court will hold a hearing about the Settlement, which you may attend. This Notice summarizes some of the information related to the proposed Settlement. For more details, go to www.flashcookiesettlement.com. WHAT ARE THESE LAWSUITS ABOUT? Quantcast Corporation, Clearspring Technologies, Inc., VideoEgg, Inc. and other companies allegedly deposited browser “cookies” and Adobe Flash Player local shared objects (LSOs) on users’ computers when users visited any of tens of millions of pages on the Internet. (VideoEgg does not use browser cookies). Browsing programs may not manage LSOs, so LSOs may be deposited even when users set their browsers to block browser cookies. Plaintiffs allege that, in some cases with some defendants, after users deleted browser cookies, information from LSOs was used to “respawn” those deleted browser cookies. The Plaintiffs allege that the Defendants and their affiliates did not give users adequate notice and choice about their use of LSOs. The Defendants deny this. WHAT DOES THE SETTLEMENT DO? The proposed Settlement would resolve these lawsuits before the Court takes a position on which side is right. As part of the Settlement, Quantcast, Clearspring, and VideoEgg state that they do not and will not use LSOs to respawn browser cookie information to serve as an undisclosed alternative to browser cookies for tracking users online, or otherwise to counteract users’ decisions to block or delete browser cookies. Other defendants and their affiliates agree to take significant future measures to enhance consumers’ online privacy.

This is not a Settlement in which Class Members will receive compensation directly. Under the proposed settlement agreement, subject to Court review and approval, Quantcast, Clearspring, and VideoEgg together will contribute $3,225,000 to two Settlement Funds. After payment of attorneys’ fees and costs (no more than $806,250), small payments to the representative plaintiffs and administration costs, the bulk of the Settlement Fund will be distributed among Court-approved non-profit groups engaged in research and education that promote consumer awareness and choice regarding privacy, safety, and security of the electronic information. AM I AFFECTED? Quantcast, Clearspring, and VideoEgg technologies have been used on tens of thousands of web pages, including the heavilytrafficked websites of the Defendants and their affiliates. For these reasons, substantially all U.S. persons who have used the Internet since June 1, 2008, likely are members of the class. Clearspring LSOs can be identified by a filename of “clearspring.sol.” Quantcast LSOs can be identified by filenames that include “____qca.sol” or “Quantserve.” VideoEgg LSOs can be identified by filenames that include “admanager.sol” that originated from core.videoegg.com. WHAT ARE MY OPTIONS? Do nothing: If you are a Class Member and do nothing, you will be legally bound by the Settlement, and you will be giving up the right to sue the Defendants or their affiliates over claims related to or arising out of the use of LSOs. Opt out: If you do not want to be legally bound by the Settlement, you must exclude yourself, as to Quantcast and Clearspring by May 13, 2011, or, as to VideoEgg, by June 10, 2011, or you will not be able to sue the Defendants and their affiliates for the claims listed in the settlement agreement. Object: If you wish to object to the terms of the settlement, you must file your objection as to Quantcast and Clearspring by May 13, 2011, or, as to VideoEgg, by June 10, 2011. Only members of the Settlement Class who have not opted out may object to the settlement. Opt-out elections and objections must be received no later than the ab ove-stated dates at this address: Flash Cookie Settlement Claims Administrator c/o Rosenthal & Company LLC P.O. Box 6177, Novato, CA 94948-6177 Attend the settlement hearings: On June 13, 2011, at 9:30 a.m., the Court will hold a hearing to consider granting final approval to the proposed Settlement as to Quantcast and Clearspring. The Court will hold a hearing as to the VideoEgg settlement on July 18, 2011 at 9:30 a.m. You do not have to attend either hearing. For a full copy of the Notice of Settlement and details on required procedures, deadlines, and your options and obligations, visit www.flashcookiesettlement.com.

“You’re telling me to follow the yellow brick road, but my phone’s navigation app found a quicker route.”

GLENN M C COY

THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT OR ATTORNEY SOLICITATION. THIS NOTICE MAY CONCERN YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU ACCESSED AN INTERNET SITE OPERATED OR SERVICED BY DEMAND MEDIA, INC., HULU, LLC, JIBJAB MEDIA, INC., NBC UNIVERSAL, INC., NEWS CORP., SCRIBD, INC., VIACOM INC., THE WALT DISNEY CO. OR WARNER BROS. RECORDS, OR ANY INTERNET SITE EMPLOYING QUANTCAST, CLEARSPRING OR VIDEOEGG TECHNOLOGIES BETWEEN JUNE 1, 2008 and MARCH 3, 2011.

Numbrix

®

Complete 1 to 81 so the numbers follow a horizontal or vertical path—no diagonals.

77

75

53

47

45

67

41

65

37

27

7

25

15

13

3

5

MORE WAYS TO PLAY! Print and play a new puzzle every day at Parade.com/numbrix 18 • April 10, 2011

© PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


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Civil War and the opposition to President Obama’s policies. As groups in the South reenact historical moments—the Sons of Confederate Veterans in South Carolina has already held a “Secession Ball�—the rhetoric of resistance to Washington will inevitably resonate. While politicians and citizens continue to debate the size and shape of our government, Confederate symbols and the language of “states’ rights� will be in the air. At such a charged moment, we must remember our nation’s history fully, not selectively. If we truly want to be faithful stewards of the past, Americans need to recall what the war was about: slavery and the definition of human liberty. And the Civil War’s true legacy is not about Big Government or today’s political skirmishing—it’s about a nation’s obligation to live up to the best part of itself. Slavery was an evil, and it had to be defeated. As we reflect on the war, let us never forget that it was fought to rid us of a monumental prejudice and that we must remain vigilant about confronting inequality in our time. On the war’s eve, Lincoln hoped that we might be touched by the “better angels of our nature.� That’s a prayer worth repeating now, and always. Jon Meacham, the executive editor of Random House, is the author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.

April 10, 2011 • 19

An Ounce of Hydrogen Peroxide is Worth a Pound of Cure (SPECIAL) - Hydrogen peroxide is trusted by every hospital and emergency room in the country for its remarkable ability to kill deadly germs like E. coli. In fact, it has attracted so much interest from doctors that over 6000 articles about it have appeared in scientific publications around the world. Research has discovered that hydrogen peroxide enables your immune system to function properly and fight infection and disease. Doctors have found it can shrink tumors and treat allergies, Alzheimer’s, asthma, clogged arteries, diabetes, digestive problems and migraine headaches. Smart consumers nationwide are also discovering there are hundreds of health cures and home remedy uses for hydrogen peroxide. A new book called The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide is now available that tells you exactly how to use hydrogen peroxide by itself... and mixed with simple everyday kitchen items... to make liniments, rubs, lotions, soaks and tonics that treat a wide variety of ailments. It contains tested and proven health cures that do everything from relieving chronic pain to making age spots go away. You’ll be amazed to see how a little hydrogen peroxide mixed with a pinch of this or that from your cupboard can: đ° łđ°€€ đ°€˛đ° …đ° Œđ° ‰đ° …đ° –đ° …đ°€€ đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ°€€ đ° ?đ° 𰠉𰠎𰀀 đ° ?𰠆𰀀 đ° đ° ’đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ’đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ‰đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ’đ° ˆđ° …đ° •đ° ?đ° 𰠔𰠉𰠓đ° ?đ°€€đ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠆𰠉𰠂𰠒đ° ?đ° ?đ° ™đ° đ° Œđ° ‡đ° ‰đ° đ° łđ°€€ đ°€´đ° ’đ° …đ° 𰠔𰀀đ° đ° ”đ° ˆđ° Œđ° …đ° ”đ° …đ°€‡đ° “đ°€€đ° †đ° ?đ° ?đ° ” đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Łđ° Œđ° …đ° đ° ’đ°€€ đ° •đ° ?đ°€€ đ° đ° Œđ° Œđ° …đ° ’đ° ‡đ° ‰đ° …đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ 𰠓𰠉𰠎𰠕𰠓𰀀 problems đ° łđ°€€ 𰀳đ° ?đ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ°€€đ° “đ° ?đ° ’đ° …đ°€€đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ’đ° ?đ° 𰠔𰠓𰀀 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Śđ° ‰đ° ‡đ° ˆđ° ”đ°€€đ° ƒđ° ?đ° Œđ° „đ° “đ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° †đ° Œđ° • đ° łđ°€€ đ°€¨đ° …đ° Œđ° ?đ°€€đ° ˆđ° …đ° đ° Œđ°€€đ° ‚đ° ?đ° ‰đ° Œđ° “đ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° “đ° ‹đ° ‰đ° Žđ°€€đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ° ‰đ° ?đ° Žđ° “đ°€€ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€ˇđ° ˆđ° ‰đ° ”đ° …đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ”đ° …đ° …đ° ”đ° ˆđ°€€ đ° —đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ?𰠕𰠔𰀀 đ° “đ° ?𰠅𰠎𰠄𰠉𰠎𰠇𰀀 đ° đ°€€ đ° †đ° ?𰠒𰠔𰠕𰠎𰠅𰀀 đ° łđ°€€ 𰀤𰠅𰠓𰠔𰠒đ° ?𰠙𰀀 đ° ˆđ° đ° ’đ° ?đ° †đ° •đ° Œđ°€€ đ° „đ° …đ° Žđ° ”đ° đ° Œđ°€€ đ° ‚đ° đ° ƒđ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ° ‰đ° đ°€€ and heal gingivitis đ° łđ°€€ đ°€¨đ° …đ° Œđ° ?đ°€€ đ° ˆđ° …đ° đ° Œđ°€€ đ° ƒđ° ?đ° Œđ° „đ°€€ đ° “đ° ?đ° ’đ° …đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ƒđ° đ° Žđ° ‹đ° …đ° ’đ°€€ sores đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Łđ° Œđ° …đ° 𰠒𰀀𰠕đ° ?𰀀𰠆đ° ?đ° ?𰠔𰀀đ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠎đ° đ° ‰đ° Œđ°€€đ° †đ° •đ° Žđ° ‡đ° •đ° “ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€˛đ° …đ° Œđ° ‰đ° …đ° –đ° …đ°€€đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ°€€đ° “đ° ”đ° ‰đ° Žđ° ‡đ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° ?đ° 𰠉𰠎𰀀đ° ?đ° †đ°€€đ° ‰đ° Žđ° “đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ°€€ bites đ° łđ°€€ 𰀳đ° ?đ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ°€€đ° “đ° ?𰠒𰠅𰀀𰠆𰠅𰠅𰠔𰀀 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€˛đ° …đ° Œđ° ‰đ° …đ° –đ° …đ°€€đ° …đ° đ° ’đ°€€đ° đ° ƒđ° ˆđ° …đ° “đ°€€ đ° łđ°€€ 𰀳đ° ?đ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ°€€đ° ?đ° •đ° “đ° ƒđ° Œđ° …đ°€€đ° đ° ƒđ° ˆđ° …đ° “ đ° łđ°€€ 𰀼𰠎đ° đ° ‚đ° Œđ° …đ°€€ đ° ?𰠉𰠎đ° ?đ° ’đ°€€ đ° —đ° ?đ° •đ° Žđ° „đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ƒđ° •đ° ”đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° “đ° ƒđ° ’đ° đ° ?𰠅𰠓𰀀𰠔đ° ?đ°€€đ° ˆđ° …đ° đ° Œđ°€€đ° †đ° 𰠓𰠔𰠅𰠒 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€˛đ° …đ° †đ° ’đ° …đ° “đ° ˆđ°€€đ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠔đ° ?𰠎𰠅𰀀𰠙đ° ?𰠕𰠒𰀀𰠓𰠋𰠉𰠎

đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Łđ° Œđ° …đ° 𰠒𰀀𰠕đ° ?đ°€€đ° đ° ƒđ° Žđ° …đ°€Œđ°€€đ° ’đ° đ° “đ° ˆđ° …đ° “đ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° 𰠇𰠅𰀀𰠓đ° ?đ° ?𰠔𰠓 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€¨đ° …đ° Œđ° ?đ°€€đ° ˆđ° …đ° đ° Œđ°€€đ° ™đ° …đ° đ° “đ° ”đ°€€đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ° ‰đ° ?đ° Žđ° “ đ° łđ°€€ 𰀥𰠎𰠄𰀀đ° ?đ° •đ° ƒđ° ˆđ°€€đ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ° … Besides killing E. coli, hydrogen peroxide also destroys botulism, salmonella and other harmful organisms. It works by making viruses and bacteria self-destruct on the cellular level. Amazingly, for something so powerful, hydrogen peroxide is safe. That’s because after it makes germs self-destruct, hydrogen peroxide breaks down into harmless water. The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide book is a valuable health improvement treasure that also shows you how to make tons of household cleaners that work better and more economically than expensive store-bought products. It’s a safe powerful alternative to harsh chemical cleaners. Discover easy-tomake formulas that: đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Ťđ° ‰đ° Œđ° Œđ°€€ 𰠇𰠅𰠒đ° ?đ° “đ°€€ đ° ?đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ‹đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ƒđ° ˆđ° …đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ƒđ° ?𰠕𰠎𰠔𰠅𰠒𰠓𰀀 đ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠓𰠕𰠒𰠆đ° đ° ƒđ° …đ° “ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€łđ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ° ‰đ° Œđ° ‰đ° šđ° …đ°€€ đ° „đ° ‰đ° “đ° ˆđ° …đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ƒđ° •đ° ?đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ‹đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ƒđ° ˆđ° …đ° Žđ°€€ utensils đ° łđ°€€ đ°€­đ° đ° ‹đ° …đ°€€đ° đ°€€đ° ?đ° ?đ° —đ° …đ° ’đ° †đ° •đ° Œđ°€€đ° “đ° ƒđ° ?𰠕𰠒𰠉𰠎𰠇𰀀đ° ?đ° ?đ° —đ° „đ° …đ° ’đ°€€ đ° ”đ° ˆđ° 𰠔𰀀 đ° —đ° ?đ° ’đ° ‹đ° “đ°€€ đ° —đ° ?đ° Žđ° „đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ đ° ?đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ‹đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ƒđ° ˆđ° …đ° Žđ°€€ đ° “đ° ‰đ° Žđ° ‹đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€đ° ’đ° …đ° †đ° ’đ° ‰đ° ‡đ° …đ° ’đ° đ° ”đ° ?đ° ’đ° “đ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° ?đ° –đ° …đ° Žđ° “ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€¤đ° ‰đ° “đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° „đ° …đ° ?đ° „đ° ?𰠒𰠉𰠚𰠅𰀀 đ° ƒđ° ?𰠆𰠆𰠅𰠅𰀀 đ° ?đ° đ° ‹đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ 𰠔𰠅đ° đ°€€ đ° ?đ° ?đ° ”đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ‚đ° Œđ° …đ° Žđ° „đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° †đ° ?đ° ?đ° „đ°€€đ° ?đ° ’đ° ?đ° ƒđ° …đ° “đ° “đ° ?đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ đ° łđ°€€ 𰀳đ° 𰠎𰠉𰠔𰠉𰠚𰠅𰀀 đ° —đ° ?đ° ?đ° „đ°€€ đ° ƒđ° •đ° ”đ° ”đ° ‰đ° Žđ° ‡đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° ?đ° đ° ’đ° „đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° —đ° ?đ° ?𰠄𰠅𰠎𰀀𰠓đ° ?đ° ?đ° ?đ° Žđ° “đ°€€ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Łđ° Œđ° …đ° đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ?𰠕𰠔𰀀 đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° „đ° ‰đ° “đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ°€€ đ° ƒđ° Œđ° ?𰠇𰠇𰠅𰠄𰀀 drains đ° łđ°€€ đ°€­đ° đ° ‹đ° …đ°€€đ° ˆđ° đ° ’đ° „đ° —đ° ?đ° ?đ° „đ°€€đ° †đ° Œđ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€đ° ”đ° ‰đ° Œđ° …đ°€€đ° †đ° Œđ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ grout and linoleum gleam đ° łđ°€€ 𰀧𰠅𰠔𰀀 𰠒𰠉𰠄𰀀 đ° ?𰠆𰀀 đ° ˆđ° đ° ’đ° ?đ° †đ° •đ° Œđ°€€ đ° ‚đ° đ° ƒđ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ° ‰đ° đ°€€ đ° ?đ° Žđ°€€ đ° †đ° ’đ° •đ° ‰đ° ”đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ 𰠖𰠅𰠇𰠅𰠔đ° đ° ‚đ° Œđ° …đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ?đ° …đ° 𰠔𰠓𰀀 đ° —đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ˆđ°€€ đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ‰đ° “đ°€€đ° “đ° 𰠆𰠅𰀀đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° …đ° †đ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ° ‰đ° –đ° …đ°€€đ° †đ° ?đ° ?𰠄𰀀𰠒𰠉𰠎𰠓𰠅𰀀 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Ľđ° Œđ° ‰đ° ?𰠉𰠎đ° 𰠔𰠅𰀀 đ° Žđ° 𰠓𰠔𰠉𰠎𰠅𰠓𰠓𰀀 𰠆𰠒đ° ?đ° ?đ°€€ đ° ”đ° ?đ° ‰đ° Œđ° …đ° ”đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° ?đ° —đ° Œđ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ‚đ° đ° ”đ° ˆđ°€€ đ° ”đ° •đ° ‚đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° “đ° ˆđ° ?đ° —đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° “đ° ˆđ° ?đ° —đ° …đ° ’đ°€€đ° ƒđ° •đ° ’đ° ”đ° 𰠉𰠎𰠓𰀀 đ° łđ°€€ đ°€łđ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ° ‰đ° Œđ° ‰đ° šđ° …đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ?𰠕𰠒𰠉𰠆𰠙𰀀 đ° ”đ° ?đ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ‚đ° ’đ° •đ° “đ° ˆđ° …đ° “đ°€€ and dentures đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Łđ° Œđ° …đ° đ° Žđ°€€đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° „đ° ‰đ° “đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ°€€đ° ?𰠅𰠔𰀀𰠓𰠔đ° 𰠉𰠎𰠓 đ° łđ°€€ 𰀲𰠅đ° ?đ° ?đ° –đ° …đ°€€ đ° ?đ° ?đ° Œđ° „đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ?đ° ‰đ° Œđ° „đ° …đ° —đ°€€ 𰠆𰠒đ° ?đ° ?đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° đ° “đ° …đ° ?𰠅𰠎𰠔𰀀 đ° —đ° đ° Œđ° Œđ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ’đ° ?đ° ?𰠆𰠓𰀀 đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° …đ° ’đ°€€ đ° “đ° •đ° ’đ° †đ° đ° ƒđ° …đ° “ đ° łđ°€€ đ°€¤đ° ‰đ° “đ° ‰đ° Žđ° †đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ°€€ đ° „đ° ‰đ° đ° ?đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ?đ° đ° ƒđ° ‰đ° †đ° ‰đ° …đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° 𰠂𰠙𰀀𰠔đ° ?𰠙𰠓 đ° łđ°€€ 𰀲𰠅đ° ?đ° ?đ° –đ° …đ°€€ đ° —đ° ‰đ° Žđ° …đ°€Œđ°€€ 𰠉𰠎𰠋𰀀 đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° Œđ° ?đ° ?đ° „đ°€€ đ° “đ° ”đ° 𰠉𰠎𰠓𰀀 𰠆𰠒đ° ?đ° ?đ°€€ đ° ƒđ° Œđ° ?đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ‰đ° Žđ° ‡đ°€Œđ°€€ đ° ƒđ° đ° ’đ° ?𰠅𰠔𰠓𰀀 đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ 𰠆𰠕𰠒𰠎𰠉𰠔𰠕𰠒𰠅 đ° łđ°€€ 𰀢đ° ?đ° ?𰠓𰠔𰀀 đ° Œđ° 𰠕𰠎𰠄𰠒𰠙𰀀 𰠄𰠅𰠔𰠅𰠒𰠇𰠅𰠎𰠔𰀀 đ° ?đ° ?đ° —đ° …đ° ’đ°€€

and restore brightness and color đ° ”đ° ?𰀀𰠆đ° đ° ‚đ° ’đ° ‰đ° ƒđ° “đ°€€ đ° łđ°€€ 𰀳𰠔𰠒𰠅đ° đ° ‹đ°€?𰠆𰠒𰠅𰠅đ°€?đ° ƒđ° Œđ° …đ° đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ™đ° ?đ° •đ° ’đ°€€ 𰠗𰠉𰠎𰠄đ° ?đ° —đ° “đ°€€ and mirrors đ° łđ°€€ đ°€Ľđ° Œđ° ‰đ° ?𰠉𰠎đ° 𰠔𰠅𰀀 đ° “đ° ‹đ° •đ° Žđ° ‹đ°€€ đ° “đ° ”đ° …đ° Žđ° ƒđ° ˆđ°€€ đ° ?đ° Žđ°€€ đ° ?𰠅𰠔𰠓𰀀 đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° †đ° ?đ° •đ° Œđ°€€ đ° ?đ° „đ° ?đ° ’đ° “đ°€€ 𰠆𰠒đ° ?đ° ?đ°€€ đ° Œđ° ‰đ° ”đ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ°€€ đ° ‚đ° ?đ° ˜đ° …đ° “đ°€Œđ°€€ old tennis shoes, etc. đ° łđ°€€ 𰀲𰠉𰠄𰀀đ° ?𰠅𰠔𰠓𰀀đ° ?𰠆𰀀đ° ?đ° đ° ’đ° 𰠓𰠉𰠔𰠅𰠓𰀀đ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠂đ° đ° ƒđ° ”đ° …đ° ’đ° ‰đ° đ° łđ°€€ đ°€­đ° đ° ‹đ° …đ°€€ 𰠉𰠎𰠄đ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€ đ° ?𰠕𰠔𰠄đ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ°€€ đ° ?đ° Œđ° 𰠎𰠔𰠓𰀀 đ° †đ° Œđ° ?đ° •đ° ’đ° ‰đ° “đ° ˆđ°€€ đ° —đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ˆđ°€€ đ° đ°€€ 𰠓𰠕𰠒𰠅𰠆𰠉𰠒𰠅𰀀 đ° †đ° …đ° ’đ° ”đ° ‰đ° Œđ° ‰đ° šđ° …đ° ’đ°€€ đ° đ° Žđ° „đ°€€đ° ‰đ° Žđ° “đ° …đ° ƒđ° ”đ° ‰đ° ƒđ° ‰đ° „đ° …đ°€€đ° đ° Œđ° Œđ°€€đ° ’đ° ?đ° Œđ° Œđ° …đ° „đ°€?𰠉𰠎𰠔đ° ?đ°€?đ° ?đ° Žđ° … đ° łđ°€€ 𰀍𰠅𰠅đ° ?đ°€€ đ° ˆđ° đ° Žđ° „đ° “đ°€€ 𰠇𰠅𰠒đ° ?đ°€?𰠆𰠒𰠅𰠅𰀀 đ° —đ° ‰đ° ”đ° ˆđ° ?𰠕𰠔𰀀 đ° …đ° ˜đ° ?đ° …đ° Žđ° “đ° ‰đ° –đ° …đ°€€đ° ˆđ° 𰠎𰠄𰀀𰠓đ° 𰠎𰠉𰠔𰠉𰠚𰠅𰠒𰠓 đ° łđ°€€ 𰀥𰠎𰠄𰀀đ° ?đ° •đ° ƒđ° ˆđ°€€đ° ?đ° ?đ° ’đ° … The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide contains many more amazing health remedies, cleaning formulas and gardening mixtures. In addition, it also gives you a list of qualified physicians who use hydrogen peroxide in their practices to treat serious ailments. Also included FREE with each book are useful tips and home remedy formulas using vinegar, garlic baking soda and teas. To get your copy of The Magic of Hydrogen Peroxide direct from the publisher at the special introductory price of $19.95 plus $3.98 shipping and handling (total of $23.93, OH residents please add 6% sales tax) simply do this: Write “Hydrogen Peroxideâ€? on a piece of paper and mail it along with your check or money order payable to: James Direct, Inc., Dept HP1 , 500 S. Prospect Ave., Box 980, Hartville, Ohio 44632. You can charge to your Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express by mail. Be sure to include your card number, expiration date and signature. Want to save even more? Do a favor for a relative or friend and order two books for only $30 postpaid. Remember, you’re protected by our 90-day money back guarantee. If you’re not happy, for any reason, we’ll refund your money. Simple as that. 𰀌𰀲𰀼𰀼𰀀𰀧𰀊𰀌𰀴𰀠You will also receive a copy of the handy booklet “How To Grow, Dry, Use & Prepare Herbsâ€? as our gift to you. Even if you return the book, it is yours to keep with no obligation. Hurry! Supplies are limited so you Š2011 JDI HP106S04 must act now. http://www.jamesdirect.com Š PARADE Publications 2011. All rights reserved.


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