Bulletin Daily Paper 07/20/11

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New debt plan echoes Wyden bill National Guard bonus By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has long called for simplifying the tax code.

Inside • Both parties support plan, Page A3

WASHINGTON — A major component of the “Gang of Six” proposal introduced Tuesday and seen by many as a possible solution to the debt ceiling impasse is tax reform, an issue that has been championed for years by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. The Gang of Six, an ad hoc bipartisan group of senators, called for cutting the federal deficit by $3.7 trillion over the next decade, first by immediately passing legislation that cuts $500 billion, followed by major tax reform and widespread reductions in discretionary spending. Tuesday’s plan calls for simplification of the tax code, creating three tax brackets for individuals and one for businesses. It also calls for the repeal of the alternative minimum tax, which the plan says

Kids appear lost in latest geography report card

would save $1.7 trillion. Earlier this year, Wyden and co-sponsor Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., offered the Bipartisan Tax Fairness and Simplification Act of 2011, which would also have created three tax brackets for individuals and a single rate for businesses, although the levels are slightly different than those in Tuesday’s proposal. This plan was based largely on a 2010 plan Wyden introduced with now retired Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H. Wyden said Tuesday that the Gang of Six proposal was a positive development, in part because it acknowledged the need for substantial tax reform and the positive effect it can have on the economy and the federal deficit. See Debt / A4

dispute hits all states Oregon delegation calls for probe By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — The dispute over enlistment bonuses for members of the National Guard is not limited to Oregon, but is occurring nationwide, a National Guard Bureau spokeswoman said Tuesday. This admission came as Oregon’s entire congressional delega-

IN CONGRESS

tion submitted a letter to H. Cronin Byrd, the National Guard’s inspector general, calling for an investigation into matter. As The Bulletin first reported last week, some members of the Oregon National Guard who enlisted in late 2007 and early 2008 were given bonuses of up to $20,000 for signing up to do certain specialized jobs requiring critical skills. The first half of the

bonus money was paid after the completion of initial training, and the second half was payable after three years of military service. More than a dozen members of the Oregon National Guard have been told that they will not receive the second half of their bonuses, and that they must pay back the first installment. They were informed they didn’t qualify for the bonuses, even though they signed contracts acknowledging they met the eligibility criteria. See Bonuses / A6

Proposed COCC road project irks neighbors

And they’re off ...

By John Hechinger

By Patrick Cliff

Bloomberg News

The Bulletin

U.S. schoolchildren, noses in their smartphones, don’t know the lay of the land. Only half of fourth-graders correctly put the following in descending order of size: North America, the United States, California and Los Angeles, according to a federal test known as the “Nation’s Report Card,” the Education Department said Tuesday. Less than one-third of elementary and high school students showed proficiency in geography, the Education Department said. Students aren’t learning subjects such as geography and history as teachers spend more time on math and reading to accommodate standardized tests, said Roger Downs, a Penn State University geography professor. See Geography / A4

A proposed road extension on Central Oregon Community College’s Awbrey Butte campus has angered some members of a nearby neighborhood group. Among several problems — including safety, road aesthetics and noise — leaders of the Awbrey Butte Neighborhood Association argue the planned 700-foot extension in the northeast corner of campus should have received a more thorough and public review by the city of Bend. The city, however, contends that the impact of the road will not be great enough to warrant a public hearing. The extension approval highlights the peculiarity of COCC’s situation. The campus has been its own special district since 2009, which means, in part, that COCC has its own development plan and some development rules specific to its property. That special status has not protected the college from conflict with campus neighbors, however. In the case of COCC’s road extension, Bend staff used a “type one” planning approval, meaning neither public notice nor a public meeting was required. The city used that approval level in order to create a paper trail for the plan and to ensure the road was at least the required 100 feet from private property lines, according to Bend Community Development Director Mel Oberst. Nearby property owners cannot appeal the decision to the city, but they can take it to the state’s Land Use Board of Appeals, said Oberst, who is not concerned about his department’s approval of the road extension. For LUBA to reverse the city’s plan approval, he said, it would have to determine that Bend staff had made some procedural error. “I don’t think that’s the case, but if somebody wants to waste their money (appealing to LUBA), that’s up to them,” Oberst said. Like their city of Bend colleagues, college officials are comfortable with the approval process. Matt McCoy, COCC’s vice president of administration, said the college and city went beyond what the code requires. See COCC / A4

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Sample questions See how you would score on a sample of test questions from the national geography assessment test:

FOURTH GRADE The world’s largest ocean is the: A. Atlantic C. Arctic B. Indian D. Pacific

Rushlee Buchanan, 23, races along Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive past the Les Schwab Amphitheater Tuesday evening during the Old Mill Prologue, the kickoff event for the 2011 Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic. Argentinian rider Fernando Atogna won the men’s two-mile individual time trial with a time of 3 minutes, 35.62 seconds, while Canadian Tara Whitten won the women’s race in 3:52.81. The CCC continues today as pro riders tackle Stage 1, the McKenzie Pass Road Race, finishing south of Sisters. For more on Tuesday’s prologue and full coverage of the CCC, see Sports, Page D1.

EIGHTH GRADE Switzerland is located in the middle of which mountain range? A. Alps C. Andes B. Urals D. Pyrenees

For drinkers, Utah is still the Mild, Mild West

TWELFTH GRADE Which statement is true about the economies of most developing countries? A. Their exports are often limited to a few agricultural products or raw materials. B. They produce a wide variety of high-technology goods. C. Their imports are often limited to manufactured goods. D. Their manufacturing sectors are usually well developed. Answers: Fourth grade: D; Eighth grade: A; Twelfth grade: A. — Chicago Tribune

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By Michael Cooper New York Times News Service

DRAPER, Utah — When Vuz Restaurant and Vuda Bar opened here a couple of months ago, the idea was to bring a dash of dining chic to this corner of the Salt Lake Valley. Diners can watch white-jacketed chefs prepare their risotto in the glassenclosed kitchen. The lounge area is down a hall dominated by a glass wine cellar. Its centerpiece was to be a shiny bar, with high-end bottles arrayed on circular steel shelves bathed in red, blue and purple lights. But the concept ran into Utah’s famously strict liquor laws. Unable to get

one of the state’s closely held licenses, Vuda is run as a restaurant, which means under current Utah law that drinks can be served but not seen — at least until the customers get them. So the wine cellar is stacked with empty bottles. Stools still line the shiny bar in the lounge, but they look straight at a wall of clouded white glass that rises from the middle of the counter, obscuring the bottles and bartenders on the other side. “Without that license, the patrons cannot see the alcohol, and they cannot see the bartenders,” explained James Ables, the restaurant’s manager. “Hence the ‘Zion Curtain.’ ” See Utah / A4

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 108, No. 201, 38 pages, 6 sections

Djamila Grossman / New York Times News Service

A Utah law that prevents patrons from seeing bartenders make drinks shows how strong an influence the Mormon Church still has on politics.

INDEX Abby

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Horoscope

Business

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Crosswords E5, F2

Local

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F1-8

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TV listings

E2

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D1-6

Weather

C6

MURDOCHS: Deny knowledge of hacking, Page A3 HEALTH: Free contraception coverage urged, Page A3


A2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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Lawn chemical is chief suspect in mysterious deaths of trees

HUMAN IMPACT ON NATURE

Decline of predators throws off food chain By Darryl Fears

By Cecil Angel Detroit Free Press

DETROIT — In neighborhoods nationwide, millions of dollars worth of Norway spruce and white pine trees are mysteriously turning brown and dying this summer, and the chief suspect is a new lawn chemical. Officials and lawn care professionals say they think Imprelis, an herbicide introduced last year for commercial use by DuPont, may be attacking pines and spruces as if they were weeds. DuPont has sent teams across the country to check complaints and, for the moment, has recommended not spraying Imprelis near those types of trees. The company says the herbicide may not have been handled properly. Many landscapers switched to Imprelis this year to control weeds such as dandelions because it was touted as safer for the environment than predecessors such as 2, 4-D. So many trees have died — from the East Coast west to Iowa — that the damage is projected to be in the millions of dollars, and now many states and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency are investigating the possible link to Imprelis. In what some say could be one of the biggest disasters of its kind, white pine and Norway spruce trees are turning brown or dying all around the country. Tree damage has been reported throughout the Midwest, in East Coast states and as far south as Georgia. No one can say with certainty what’s causing it, but many lawncare professionals and state officials suspect Imprelis, which the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approved last year. The chemical is supposed to kill such weeds as dandelions and clover, which absorb it through their roots and shoots. Tree damage, though, is so extensive that the EPA hosted a teleconference last week with departments of agriculture from several states to gather information about a possible link between Imprelis and the trees.

The Washington Post

Herbicide under scrutiny Imprelis is an herbicide released in 2010 for professional use to kill weeds in turf. There are reports it may damage trees, especially evergreens such as white pine and Norway spruce. Its manufacturer, DuPont Chemical, is studying the issue, but cites what it says are errors in use. The target Weeds such as dandelions are killed when Imprelis is absorbed through foliage and roots.

Bottle of Imprelis

Applying Imprelis

Also affected? Some botanists fear Imprelis could be harming the health of evergreens.

• DuPont recommends application at least five feet away from ornamental ground covers, trees, shrubs or other desirable plants.

• DuPont has issued a statement suggesting cases in which trees have shown damage may have involved errors in mixing, rates of use, or application too close to trees.

Norway spruce damage some think may be linked to Imprelis

Sources: Penn State Agricultural Sciences, Purdue University Plant and Pest Diagnostic Lab, Ohio State University Extension Service Graphic Martha Thierry, Detroit Free Press; Robert Dorrell, MCT

© 2011 MCT

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Pros urged to apply Imprelis with care DuPont, the chemical giant based in Wilmington, Del., began investigating the problem last month. In a June 17 letter addressed to customers, Michael McDermott, global business leader for DuPont Professional Products, said Imprelis, which is sold only to professional landscapers, may not have been mixed properly or was applied with other herbicides. Until more is known, he urged customers not to apply Imprelis near Norway spruce or white pine. Kate Childress, spokeswoman for DuPont, declined to say how many complaints the company

had received. “We’re taking this seriously,” she said. “We’re very committed to understanding the circumstances and what caused the unfavorable symptoms” in the trees. Is Imprelis damaging trees? “I’m not in a position to say yes or no,” Childress said. “We do recommend everyone keep records and document everything,” she said. She said Imprelis underwent 400 tests conducted at various universities as to its effectiveness, toxicity and other factors. “Imprelis has a very favorable environmental profile,” Childress said, “which is why we do remain excited about the product.”

The decline of large predators such as big cats, wolves, sharks and giant whales may be “humankind’s most pervasive influence on the natural world,” causing prey animals to swell in population and throw food chains out of balance, a new report says. Humans have touched off the world’s latest mass extinction, according to the report, published Thursday in the journal Science, and the consequences are being felt on land and in water systems as large predators vanish. “Recent research suggests that the disappearance of these animals reverberates further than previously anticipated,” says the report, “Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth.” In addition to creating an overabundance of prey, the dwindling number of predators contributes to the spread of disease, wildfires and invasive species. The decline of wolves in Yellowstone Park was cited as an example of what can happen. Elk and deer in the park flourished and ate willow trees and saplings, threatening a crucial part of the forest on which other creatures rely. The report also mentions the slaughter of lions and leopards by hunters and herders in subSaharan Africa. As a result of the killings, disease-carrying olive baboons thrived without their top predators and inched closer to food crops and people. The decimation of sharks along the U.S. Atlantic Coast allowed their mainstay prey, the cow-nosed ray, to proliferate and dine heavily on the threatened Chesapeake Bay oyster. A reduction of big herbivores such as buffalo and wildebeest in East Africa through hunting is also a problem, the report says. Their demise led to increases in plants that fueled giant wildfires in the dry season. Americans don’t have to visit federal parks, sub-Saharan Africa or plunge into seas to see

the consequences, said Ellen Pikitch, a co-author of the report and a professor at Stony Brook University in New York. Many experience the problem every day in their own back yards. “People who live in North America know it’s hard to grow a garden because deer will eat it,” said Pikitch, a marine biologist. “The lack of wolf populations throughout North America has led to an expansion of the deer population. “You may hate wolves. You might think they’re dangerous. But without them, the land changes,” Pikitch said. “Deer carry ticks. We humans become more susceptible to diseases such as Lyme disease.” Wildlife advocates say efforts to protect one species of predator in the United States were set back when the Obama administration signed a bill in April that removed 1,300 wolves from the endangered species list in northern Rocky Mountain states. It was the first time Congress had taken a species off the endangered list. The law allows limited hunting of the animals to begin this summer. Other studies have examined the collateral damage caused by the near extinction of large predators and herbivores. But the report in Science is the first to tie together the impact on land animals, as well as salt and freshwater marine life, Pikitch said. It was conducted by an international team of 24 scientists and funded primarily by the Institute for Ocean Conservation Science at Stony Brook. Much of the science in this area of study focused on the threat to life at the bottom of the food chain, theorizing that small animals and plants were important because so many creatures rely on their survival. Although “bottom-up” research is fundamental and important, the report says, “topdown” research deserves wider consideration “if there is to be any real hope for understanding and managing the workings of nature.”

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Oregon Lottery Results As listed by The Associated Press

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawn are:

2 9 10 16 35 40 x4 Nobody won the jackpot Tuesday night in the Mega Millions game, pushing the estimated jackpot to $53 million for Friday’s drawing.

Republicans cite jobs in attacking federal environmental regulations By Renee Schoof McClatchy-Tribune News Service

WASHINGTON — Republicans in the House of Representatives are waging an all-out war to block federal regulations that protect the environment. They loaded up a pending 2012 spending bill with terms that would eliminate a broad array of environmental protections, everything from stopping new plants and animals from being placed on the endangered spe-

cies list to ending federal limits on water pollution in Florida. The terms also include a rollback of pollution regulations for mountaintop mining and a red light on federal plans to prevent new uranium mining claims near the Grand Canyon. Another GOP-sponsored bill before Congress would weaken the nation’s 1972 Clean Water Act, taking away the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to step in when it finds state water-

pollution rules too loose. The sweeping anti-environmental regulation agenda has support among Senate Republicans and the GOP’s presidential hopefuls. Its backers say it’s necessary for the sake of jobs and economic growth. The chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., has said the EPA is “riding roughshod” over business. He told EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson that it’s time

to rein in her agency. “Earlier this year, I said that the scariest agency in the federal government is the EPA. I still believe that,” Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, said. The bill “attempts to rein in the excesses of the EPA.” Jim DiPeso, a spokesman for the independent group Republicans for Environmental Protection, said that “some of the more zealous tea partyers in Congress” wouldn’t go so far in environmental protection as even

Ronald Reagan, who signed wilderness bills even though he, too, tried to roll back environmental regulation. “You see a very dogmatic, libertarian faction that for a lot of reasons has become more powerful in the Republican Party than it’s ever been,” DiPeso said. The spending bill’s assault on environmental rules has “very little to do with getting fiscal imbalance under control,” he charged. “It’s ideological.”


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 A3

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B NYC to run lottery for Day 1 of gay marriage NEW YORK — City officials, hoping to prevent confusion and disappointment as thousands of gay and lesbian couples prepare to marry, said Tuesday that the city would take the unusual step of limiting the number of marriages on Sunday, the first day the state will allow same-sex marriage. The city said it would make available 764 marriage licenses through a lottery. Couples who are turned down for Sunday will be able to try again during the rest of next week, when the clerk’s offices in all five boroughs will be open for two extra hours each day. “The last thing we want to have happen is for couples to wait on line for hours and hours, only to walk away upset on what was supposed to be the biggest day of their lives,” Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a news conference at City Hall.

Cardinal Rigali resigns amid scandal PHILADELPHIA — As Cardinal Justin Rigali stepped aside Tuesday to make way for his successor on the public stage, he barely mentioned the sex abuse scandal that has engulfed his eight-year tenure as head of the 1.5 million-member Archdiocese of Philadelphia. Rigali, a longtime Vatican insider, described his departure as a move that was more or less pro forma. He had offered his resignation when he turned 75, as required, in April 2010. Pope Benedict XVI accepted it Tuesday morning, when he named Archbishop Charles Chaput of Denver as Rigali’s replacement. The Vatican did not explain the move or mention the sex scandal in its announcement Tuesday morning.

Bachmann suffers from severe migraines WASHINGTON — Rep. Michele Bachmann suffers from migraine headaches so intense that she has sometimes sought emergency medical treatment, but the congresswoman said Tuesday that the condition would not preclude her from serving as president if elected. “Let me be abundantly clear — my ability to function effectively has never been impeded by migraines and will not affect my ability to serve as commander in chief,” Bachmann, R-Minn., said in a statement. She described the headaches as “easily controlled with medication.” Bachmann, who is seeking the Republican presidential nomination and was campaigning Tuesday in South Carolina, was responding to a report in The Daily Caller, which published an article about the migraines on its website Monday night.

New debt plan gains support By Lori Montgomery and Rosalind S. Helderman The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama and lawmakers in both parties latched on to a new strategy for reducing the federal debt Tuesday, saying an emerging plan to save $3.7 trillion over the next decade could help break a political impasse over the debt limit and avert a U.S. default. The proposal, crafted by a bipartisan group of senators

MINNEAPOLIS — Nineteen days into a state government shutdown that booted thousands from their jobs and left others in limbo, Minnesota legislators hustled back to the State Capitol on Tuesday to begin the work of passing a budget and reopening state government. Highlighting the rush to finish, legislative leaders gaveled in the special session before some of the largest and most controversial bills had been finalized and released to the public and other lawmakers. Much of the partisan warring that consumed the political world the past seven months fell silent as legislators pushed into the evening to finish a $35 billion budget and end the longest state government shutdown in recent U.S. history. — From wire reports

ning out of cash in two weeks, House Republicans are openly hostile to a Senate-led plan that would authorize additional borrowing but kick the hardest decisions — such as whether to raise taxes or cut entitlement programs — to a special legislative panel. The Gang of Six framework, by contrast, would force lawmakers to make some of those tough decisions now. The urgency of the situation was underscored Tuesday when a major credit-rating company said it could down-

grade five states in addition to the federal government if the United States defaults on its obligations. As many policymakers were turning their attention to the new strategy, the Republican-controlled House forged ahead Tuesday with another approach to the debt crisis, voting to sharply cut spending and tie an increase in the debt limit to the eventual adoption of a balanced-budget amendment. The measure is unlikely to pass the Senate, and Obama has promised to veto it.

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PHONE HACKING SCANDAL

Murdochs deny knowledge of illegal activity and it’s for them to pay,” he said. “And I think, frankly, that I’m the best person to see it through.” While the elder Murdoch has long had the reputation of being a hands-on manager, pressing for and savoring the scoops scored by the newspapers he had always felt were the soul of his media empire, he said in his testimony that in the case of News of the World, he had no knowledge of the specifics of what was going on. The hearings provided a gripping spectacle of executives who once commanded unassailable political power enduring sustained questioning from lawmakers enjoying a newfound confidence.

By Sarah Lyall New York Times News Service

LONDON — It was riveting theater, a newly emboldened parliamentary committee facing off against the 80-year-old Rupert Murdoch, the world’s most powerful media mogul, in a series of exchanges designed to get to the bottom of the phone-hacking scandal that has engulfed not just Murdoch’s News Corp. but also Britain’s political and law-enforcement elite. In two hours of intense questioning broken only by a bizarre incident in which Murdoch was accosted with what appeared to be a foil pie plate filled with shaving cream, both he and his son James declared repeatedly that they had been shocked to discover something that has become increasingly apparent: that phone hacking and other illegal behavior was endemic at their News of the World tabloid, which is now defunct. Even so, the Murdochs and Rebekah Brooks, a former editor at the paper who resigned from News Corp. on Friday,

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Rupert Murdoch testifies before the Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee on the phone-hacking scandal Tuesday in London.

Man attacks Murdoch

only to be arrested Sunday on suspicion of phone hacking and bribing the police, apologized again and again for the failures at their company. “I would just like to say one sentence,” Rupert Murdoch said, breaking at one point into a long answer by his son, News Corp.’s deputy chief operating officer.

At one point, a man suddenly rose from his seat and advanced on Rupert Murdoch, striking him with what appeared to be a pie tin filled with shaving cream, or possibly custard. That caused Wendi Murdoch to rise from her chair and slug the attacker with a swift right swing. The committee chairman, John Whittingdale hastily declared a short recess.

“This is the most humble day of my life.” But his humility did not extend to declaring that he was at fault or that he should step down from his company. “I feel that people I trusted — I don’t know who, on what level — have let me down, and I think they have behaved disgracefully,

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10% Off Lobbyist fronted Pakistani campaign donations, FBI says any purchase By Charlie Savage and Eric Schmitt New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — Pakistan’s military, including its powerful spy agency, has spent $4 million over the past two decades in a covert attempt to tilt U.S. policy against India’s control of much of Kashmir — including funneling campaign do-

nations to members of Congress and presidential candidates, the FBI claimed in court papers unsealed Tuesday. The FBI made the allegations in a 43-page affidavit filed in connection with the indictment of two U.S. citizens on charges that they failed to register with the Justice Department as agents of Pakistan, as required by law. One of the men, Zaheer Ahmad,

is in Pakistan, but the other, Syed Fai, lives in Virginia and was arrested Tuesday. Fai is the director of the Kashmiri American Council, a Washington-based group that lobbies for and holds conferences and media events to promote the cause of self-determination for Kashmir. According to the affidavit, the activities by the group, also called the Kashmiri

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Center, are largely financed by Pakistan’s spy agency, the InterServices Intelligence Directorate, or ISI, along with as much as $100,000 a year in related donations to U.S. political campaigns. Foreign governments are prohibited from making donations to U.S. political candidates. A spokesman for the Pakistani Embassy denied any connection to the matter.

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Mandatory contraceptive insurance urged By Robert Pear New York Times News Service

Minnesota lawmakers return to pass budget

known as the “Gang of Six,” calls for $500 billion in immediate savings and requires lawmakers in the coming months to cut agency spending, overhaul Social Security and Medicare, and rewrite the tax code to generate $1 trillion in fresh revenue. In the works since January, the plan became public Tuesday, just as it was becoming apparent that the leading option for raising the federal debt limit faces bleak prospects in the House. With the Treasury expected to start run-

WASHINGTON — A leading medical advisory panel recommended Tuesday that all insurers be required to cover contraceptives for women free of charge as one of several preventive services under the new health care law. Obama administration officials, who say they hope to act on the recommendations by Aug. 1, are receptive to the idea of removing cost as a barrier to birth control — a longtime goal of advocates for women’s rights and experts on women’s health. But the recommendations immediately reignited debate over the government’s role in reproductive health. Women’s groups and medical professionals applauded the recommendations, while the Roman Catholic Church raised strenuous objections.

The recommendations came in a report submitted to Kathleen Sebelius, the secretary of health and human services, by the Institute of Medicine, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences. The new health care law says insurers must cover “preventive health services” and cannot charge for them. Sebelius will decide on a minimum package of essential health benefits, and her decision will not require further action by Congress. The panel said insurers should be forbidden to charge co-payments for contraceptives and other preventive services because even small charges could deter their use. The recommendation would not help women without insurance. The administration asked the Institute of Medicine, a nonpartisan, nongovernmental arm of the National Academy of Sciences, to help identify the specific services that must be covered for women.

“This report is historic,” Sebelius said Tuesday in accepting the recommendations. “Before today, guidelines regarding women’s health and preventive care did not exist. These recommendations are based on science and existing literature.” Defending its recommendations on contraceptive coverage, the panel said that nearly half of all U.S. pregnancies were unintended, and that about 40 percent of unintended pregnancies ended in abortion. Thus, it said, greater use of contraception would reduce the rates of unintended pregnancy, teen pregnancy and abortion. In addition to contraceptive services for women, the panel recommended that the government require health plans to cover screening to detect domestic violence; screening for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS; and counseling and equipment to promote breastfeeding, including the free rental of breast pumps.

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C OV ER S T OR I ES

A4 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

COCC

Debt

Continued from A1 The college, for instance, held a public meeting with neighborhood residents though the code requires none. “I think we strove to follow the code and reach beyond that,” he said. City code provides increasing levels, or types, of review. Type one, used in this case, does not require a public notice. Type two calls for public notice, but not a public hearing. Eventually, projects with significant impacts must receive a public hearing and the approval of Bend City Council. Because COCC is a “special planned district,” its requirements differ from those elsewhere in the city. A similar road outside of the college district might need a higher-level approval. But COCC’s special district rules require higher-level review only for roads tied to the construction of specific buildings and those that intersect directly with public roads. Neither is true in this case, Oberst said. Even so, John Harper, who owns the home closest to the planned road’s route, wishes he knew more and knew it earlier. Harper hired a lawyer to look into the case and consider a LUBA appeal, though he and others have not decided on a next step. It may be that Harper and the college just go on being neighbors, said Harper, who considers the odds of winning a LUBA appeal “dicey.” “I think people do tend to think things are a little stacked against them,” Harper said.

Continued from A1 “They built on our principles, which is to clean out a lot of clutter (in the tax code) and use that money to keep down rates,” he said. There is still a lot of heavy lifting to do before rates can be cut to the levels suggested by the new plan, he said. This includes making sure that possible eliminations to certain tax deductions that are important to many working Americans, such as those for mortgages, health care, retirement and charitable donations, are more than offset by reductions in overall taxes, he said. Importantly, he argued, tax reform will cause the national economy to grow, which is the key to economic recovery. “Tax reform means you get back on the issue of job creation,” he said. “You cannot just cut your way to prosperity. You have to grow the economy.” The last time Congress

Patrick Cliff can be reached at 541-633-2161 or at pcliff@bendbulletin.com.

Geography Continued from A1 As “classroom time becomes an even more precious and scarce commodity, geography, with subjects such as history and the arts, is losing out in the zero-sum game that results from high- stakes testing,” Downs said in a statement released with the results. Education Secretary Arne Duncan has cited this narrowing of the curriculum in calling for changes before the start of the next school year to the No Child Left Behind law, which ties federal funding to standardized math and reading tests. On the federal geography test administered last year, about a third of fourth-graders could answer a question showing they could determine distance on a map. Because of students’ dependence on technology, “the ability to read a map seems to be becoming a lost art,” Shannon Garrison, a member of the board overseeing the test, said in a statement. While fourth-graders made gains in achievement since 2001, the last time the test was given, eighth and 12th graders’ scores were little changed. Shown a picture of tectonic plates near Japan, a third of eighth graders indicated they had no understanding of their relationships to earthquakes. Only 4 percent were able to give two reasons why the U.S. urban population rose sharply from 1800 to 1980. In the nationally representative sample of public and private schools, 7,000 fourth-graders, 9,500 eighth-graders and 10,000 12th-graders participated in last year’s geography test. The periodic “report cards,” officially called the National Assessment of Educational Progress, measure knowledge of math, reading, science and six other subjects. Federal tests on history and civics released earlier this year had similar outcomes, showing a “pattern of disappointing results for our 12th-graders’ performance across all three social science subjects,” David Driscoll, chairman of the board that administers the test, said in a statement. In a bright spot, minorities improved their achievement relative to white students in some cases, said Driscoll, a former Massachusetts education commissioner. Narrowing this “achievement gap” has been a focus of No Child Left Behind, signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2002. The rising results for fourthgraders, especially among lowerperforming students, may have more to do with their improved reading skills than their geography knowledge, said Garrison, a fourth-grade teacher in Los Angeles. In elementary school, teachers tend to integrate geography into social studies, reading, science and math, Garrison said. In middle and high school, “geography is often the unclaimed subject,” she said.

Utah Continued from A1 It is no longer true that you cannot get a drink in Utah, despite the shot glasses sold in souvenir shops that say “Eat, drink & be merry — tomorrow you may be in Utah.” But the state’s liquor laws — heavily influenced by the Mormon Church, which has its headquarters here and which frowns upon alcohol — are still among the most complex in the country. Bar owners and restaurateurs complain that the laws, which seem to change every few years, discourage business. Utah’s liquor laws were relaxed two years ago by Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr., a Mormon who went on to be President Barack Obama’s ambassador to China and who is now seeking the Republican presiden-

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passed significant tax reform, in 1986, the economy created 6.3 million new jobs over the next two years, he said. The 2010 incarnation of the tax reform bill received favorable reviews from the Heritage Foundation and the Brookings Institution. Wyden was encouraged by the bipartisan support for the idea of tax reform. “It’s important that reformers join hands, and lay out specifically how you create real tax relief,” he said. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., said he hadn’t had a chance to review the Gang of Six plan in depth, but noted that the five-page outline was short on details. “It will take a lot of analysis,” he said. “I want to make sure that we don’t end up with a deal that basically protects programs for the well-connected while attacking programs for the success of our working families.” Merkley stressed that it is crucial that a deal be struck by the Aug. 2 deadline. “The markets are going to start to respond to the uncertainty

we’re creating,” he said. If the government defaults on any portion of its obligations, it will make it more expensive for it to borrow additional money. In turn, individuals and businesses will have to pay higher interest rates, which will stall any economic recovery, he said. “It will be a huge tax on America that produces nothing that helps us resolve our financial challenges,” he said. President Obama said the Gang of Six plan was “good news,” signaling the potential for a bipartisan agreement on the debt ceiling. “What it says is we’ve got to be serious about reducing discretionary spending both in domestic spending and defense; we’ve got to be serious about tackling health care spending and entitlements in a serious way; and we’ve got to have some additional revenue so that we have an approach in which there is shared sacrifice and everybody is giving up something,” Obama told reporters. “For us to see Democratic senators acknowledge that we’ve got to deal with our long-term debt

tial nomination. Huntsman ended the old system in which would-be drinkers had to pay fees to become “members” of bars, which were considered private clubs. Utah’s bar scene has flourished since then, from the martini bars of Salt Lake City to microbreweries selling beers like Provo Girl Pilsner to the slick après ski clubs in the resort areas. The High West Distillery and Saloon in Park City bills itself as “the world’s first and only ski-in gastro-distillery.”

the Green Pig Pub in downtown Salt Lake City, which used to draw customers with $2 drafts on Mondays, $2 Coronas on Fridays and $2 Bloody Marys on Sundays. “Now you can’t do that. You have to do an everyday price, and that’s it.” Gov. Gary Herbert of Utah said that he thought the state’s laws were working but would probably continue to be tweaked. (More changes were proposed for a special session of the Legislature called for today.) “I think right now, with what we’ve put on the table the last couple of years, we have a good balance for Utah,” Herbert, a Republican, said. “It works with our hospitality industry, it works with our tourists that come in.” The end of the private club law made it easier for Marv White and Rob Aagaard to try to visit all 118 of Salt Lake City’s bars and write about it on their blog, DrinkSLC. “We could never have done

No more drink specials This month, a law took effect banning drink specials. Happy hours have long been illegal here, but many bars adapted by offering all-day drink specials. After the specials were banned, the Utah Hospitality Association, which represents club owners, sued to try to restore them. “Business has slowed down,” said Bridget Gordon, owner of

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problems that arise out of our various entitlement programs, and for Republican senators to acknowledge that revenues will have to be part of a balanced package that makes sure that nobody is disproportionately hurt from us making progress on the debt and deficits, I think, is a very significant step.” Late Tuesday evening, the House of Representatives voted on the “Cut, Cap and Balance Act,” which would immediately cut spending, put caps on federal spending and require Congress to pass a balanced budget amendment before any additional debt increases could be approved. In a highly partisan vote, the matter passed, 234 to 190, with five Democrats voting yes and nine Republicans voting no. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, voted in favor of the bill, which is unlikely to pass the Democratically controlled Senate. Obama said Tuesday that he would veto it if it managed to pass both chambers. Andrew Clevenger can be reached at 202-662-7456 or at aclevenger@bendbulletin.com.

DrinkSLC if there was the private club rule,” Aagaard, 30, said recently at an Irish pub in Salt Lake City. “Well, we could have — it just would have cost us,” White, 34, said. They still bristle at the remaining restrictions. “There’s no rationality,” White said. “It’s almost capricious.”

Measured amounts Stiff drinks and doubles are illegal in Utah. Bars and restaurants must use meters on their liquor bottles to make sure they do not pour more than 1.5 ounces at a time. Other liquors can be added to cocktails in lesser amounts, not to exceed 2.5 ounces of liquor in a drink, as long as they are poured from bottles clearly marked “flavoring.” It is illegal to stiffen a drink with a second shot: Under the current law a drinker can order a vodka and tonic with a shot of

Autopsy says Chile’s Allende killed himself New York Times News Service SAO PAULO, Brazil — A new autopsy has determined that President Salvador Allende of Chile killed himself with an assault rifle, Chilean officials said Tuesday, dispelling doubts that have persisted for 37 years about the exact circumstances of his death, including whether troops storming the presidential palace had murdered him. The forensic analysis, overseen by a team of Chilean and international experts, did not find any evidence that others were involved in Allende’s death, concluding that the head injuries he sustained were consistent with bullets fired from a single AK-47 assault rifle. Leftist supporters like Fidel Castro had declared that Allende died in a gun battle on Sept. 11, 1973, the day of the coup.

whiskey on the side, but not a vodka tonic with a shot of vodka on the side. The new law even brought a small change this month to the Shooting Star Saloon in Huntsville, which opened in 1879 and bills itself as the oldest continuously running bar in the state, with a jar hanging by the front door that was used to sell moonshine during Prohibition. The law required the bar — which sells nothing stronger than beer alongside its nationally renowned burgers — to buy an electronic scanner to check the identifications of the younger-looking bikers, skiers and members of the military who mix there. “For us, it’s about the history,” said Leslie Sutter, an owner, as she stood across the bar from the stuffed head of a nearly 300pound St. Bernard named Buck. “The laws and the statutes are going to come and go, and we’re going stay consistent.”


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 A5


C OV ER S T ORY

A6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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A graffiti art piece is reflected in the glasses of Antonio Lomeli, who goes by the name “Saraph.” An upturn in graffiti has renewed debates about whether its glorification contributes to urban blight or is a sign of despair in a struggling economy.

New York Times News Service

SANTA MONICA, Calif. — Fresh blotches of graffiti decorate the backs of street signs here near the ocean. Tags have popped up on guardrails along the dirt trails near Griffith Park across town. There are, almost daily, fresh splashes on walls in the San Fernando Valley, on downtown Los Angeles buildings and on billboards along the highways. And Los Angeles does not appear to be alone in grappling with a recent upsurge in graffiti, which is turning up in some unlikely places. A bumper crop of scrawls is blossoming in many modest-size communities across the country — in places like Florence, Ala.; Bernalillo County, N.M.; Taylors, S.C.; and in larger cities like Nashville, Tenn.; and Portland — even as major cities like Chicago, Denver, New York and Seattle say vigilant antigraffiti campaigns have spared them thus far. The upturn has prompted concern among city officials and renewed a debate about whether glorifying such displays — be it in museum exhibits, tattoos or television advertisements — contributes to urban blight and economic decay. But it is also stirring a debate about what is causing this recent surge and whether it might be an early indicator that anxiety and alienation are growing in some struggling urban areas in the face of stubborn unemployment and the lingering effects of the recession. In Portland, officials said tag-

Bonuses Continued from A1 “We request that you swiftly investigate the violation of these contracts by the Guard to resolve why these soldiers will be unfairly punished for mistakes outside of their control,” the letter states. In response to The Bulletin’s inquiries, the National Guard Bureau said Tuesday it did not yet know how many soldiers were awarded bonuses for which the Bureau now maintains they were not eligible. “All states and territories have had bonus and incentive contracts that did not pass eligibility verification during processing of anniversary payments,” bureau spokeswoman Rose Richeson wrote in an e-mail. In 2009, the bureau instituted electronic eligibility verification, but between 2007 and 2009 incentive contracts were processed manually, she said. Consequently, if local recruiters recognized a shortage of a particular job in the state’s guard units and believed they had permission to give bonuses to fill those slots, those adjustments would not necessarily be reflected in the bureau’s master list for bonus eligibility. When the enlistee submitted paperwork to claim the second half of his or her bonus three years later, the National Guard Bureau checked its master list and rejected payment for any job that wasn’t on it. The Guard Bureau has not yet identified all of the enlistees who were given unauthorized bonuses between 2007 and 2009.

gers from other communities were defacing their property. “We’re arresting more people from out of town,” said Marcia Dennis, the city’s graffiti abatement coordinator. “For every one we get cleaned up, something else takes its place.” The latest statistics from Los Angeles, where the unemployment rate was 11 percent in May, attest to a widening problem: The city removed 35.4 million square feet of graffiti for the fiscal year that ended June 30, an 8.2 percent jump over last year, officials said. “We’ve seen the amount of graffiti go up yearly,” said Paul Racs, director of the Office of Community Beautification. The upsurge comes as communities like Los Angeles, struggling with budget cuts, have trimmed graffiti fighting programs; the $7.1 million budget for graffiti eradication last year was cut 6.5 percent in the budget that took effect July 1. Some officials say it is a symptom of summer recess, a tough economy that has left many teen-

agers out of work and a general sense of anxiety and malaise. Neighborhood leaders and law enforcement officials also blamed what they call a glamorization of graffiti, reflected by a new graffiti exhibit at the Sunset Marquis Hotel in West Hollywood, even after an earlier furor over a fullfledged graffiti exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art. “It’s because of the pop culture,” said Ramona Findley, a Los Angeles police detective who heads the department’s graffiti task force. “It’s very interesting; with your violent crime going down, it seems like your mischievous crime is going up. The art world has accepted it. People make money from graffiti T-shirts. I was in Walmart on Easter, and I saw graffiti Easter eggs.” Dennis, in Portland, described graffiti as “addictive behavior,” adding: “The rush is addictive, and these guys don’t quit. They all think they’re going to end up being fabulously wealthy graffiti artists like Marc Ecko or Banksy or Shepard Fairey.”

In Oregon, however, $262,500 in “improperly approved” bonuses were awarded to 15 guardsmen, Richeson said. In 13 out of those 15 cases, the issue was resolved in the soldier’s favor, she said, although it was not clear whether that meant that the second half of the bonus was paid, or that the soldier simply got to keep the first half. While the bureau did not provide a nationwide figure for the amount of money in dispute, the sum could easily reach millions of dollars if Oregon is typical. In the case of Chelsea Wells, a high school student from MiltonFreewater who received a $20,000 bonus after enlisting in December 2007, the military rejected her paperwork for the second payment four times before indicating that it intended to take back the first half. “The payment was denied based on the fact that her (Military Occupation Specialty) of 35F (or intelligence analyst) was not on the critical skills list on the date of enlistment,” wrote the National Guard Bureau’s Office of Legislation Liaison in a June 29 letter to U.S Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, who had intervened on Wells’ behalf. “Therefore, termination of the bonus with recoupment of the entire incentive amount is required.” Richeson said that not all of the bonus disputes would necessarily result in the military recouping money it had already paid. “Bonus payments are not recouped until an extensive administrative process is followed,” she said. “Other outcomes include 1) NGB approves an exception to

policy which then authorizes the bonus, 2) NGB approves granting relief from recoupment which then authorizes a Soldier to retain funds paid, or 3) the Army Board of Correction of Military Records approves the claim form.” However, the June 29 letter indicated that the third option could take as long as 18 months because of a backlogged docket. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., spoke on the Senate floor Tuesday about Wells’ predicament and other disputed bonuses, calling the situation “100 percent unacceptable.” “We ask a tremendous amount of those who serve. Now is when we should be giving back, not asking for more,” he said. Merkley later told The Bulletin that he wants the matter cleared up, and quickly. It bothered him that guardsmen were seemingly being punished for a mistake on the part of the military, which he said should honor the contracts signed by its enlistment officers the way a company must honor deals cut by its employees. “Here is a basic deal that was struck at the time you signed up, and you’re counting on it,” he said. “And the military creates some fine-print decision that doesn’t honor the heart of the agreement?” The next step should be an investigation, so that the facts surrounding the issue become public, he said. “If it’s a pattern, it’s completely unacceptable,” he said. Andrew Clevenger can be reached at 202-662-7456 or at aclevenger@bendbulletin.com.

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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2011

MARKET REPORT

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2,826.52 NASDAQ CLOSE CHANGE +61.41 +2.22%

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

B U S I N E SS IN BRIEF

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12,587.42 DOW JONES CLOSE CHANGE +202.26 +1.63%

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1,326.73 S&P 500 CLOSE CHANGE +21.29 +1.63%

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By Tim Doran The Bulletin

PORTLAND — State officials say Oregon’s unemployment rate was essentially unchanged last month, marking four months of stagnation in hiring. The figures suggest that Oregon’s rate is tracking with the national economic slowdown. The state Employment Department said Tuesday the unemployment rate in June was 9.4 percent, essentially unchanged since May. Since the fall, the agency says, the state has seen four months of improved hiring numbers, followed by four flat months.

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Ten-year CLOSE 2.89 treasury CHANGE -.34%

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$1600.90 GOLD CLOSE CHANGE -$1.20

In Deschutes, free checking accounts harder to find as new law takes effect Banks reduce, waive fees for customers who meet criteria

State jobless rate shows little hiring

Two of the three banks with the largest market share in Deschutes County have eliminated their free checking accounts, at least in part due to the weak economy and new banking regulations. Wells Fargo & Co. and U.S. Bank — which have the second- and third-largest market share, respectively, — have eliminated what they previously called free checking accounts, though both banks

waive service fees for customers who meet specified criteria. Bank of the Cascades, which has the largest share of the deposits in Deschutes County, offers free checking to customers over age 50. It also recently added a new type of checking account that reduces fees as customers increase their use of debit cards, said Julie Miller, executive vice president and regional manager. The bank has “added a new product to enhance what we provide to our custom-

Inside • Another Dodd-Frank regulation set to take effect: improved credit history information for consumers, Page B2

“Investing is being in a dark room and trying to find the way out. If you have a match, you should light it.” — Bill Maris, managing partner, Google Ventures

Apple announced another record quarter Tuesday, buoyed by enormous growth in sales of iPhones and iPads around the world. In the Cupertino, Calif., company’s third fiscal quarter, it earned a best-ever $28.57 billion and posted profit of $7.31 billion ($7.79 per share). Revenue increased 82 percent from the third quarter last year, and profit was up 125 percent. The results surpassed the expectations of analysts, who predicted revenue of $25 billion and profit of $5.87 per share, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “We’re thrilled to deliver our best quarter ever,” Apple CEO Steve Jobs said in a statement.

Bank of America posts $9.1B loss

Housing starts up, but analysts cautious The pace of new construction of private homes in the United States last month was the highest since January, according to government figures released on Tuesday. Economists, however, warned that the sector had still not stabilized for a full recovery. Builders broke ground at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 629,000 units in June, a rise of more than 14 percent compared with the previous month and a rate that was 16.7 percent higher than June 2010, the Department of Commerce reported. It was the highest since January, when construction starts came in at a 636,000-unit annual rate. — From wire reports

Housing starts New privately owned housing units started: 650 thousand

Google searching for the next Google Hoping to find hot startups, company turns to what it knows best: algorithms New York Times News Service

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Google thinks it can be young and crazy again. And it is betting $200 million that it is right. In the hottest market for technology startup companies in over a decade, the Silicon Valley behemoth is playing venture capitalist in a rush to discover the next Facebook or Zynga. Other pedigreed tech companies are

doing the same, as venture capital dollars coming from corporations approach levels last seen in the dot-com bubble era of 2000. To some, it is a telltale sign of an overheated industry, symptomatic of a late and ill-advised rush to invest during good times. But Google says it has a weapon to guide it in picking investments — a Google-y secret sauce, which means using data-driven algorithms to analyze the would-be next big thing.

The Washington Post

600 575 550 525 500 2011

Note: All figures seasonally adjusted Source: Department of Commerce AP

$40.211 SILVER CLOSE CHANGE -$0.122

U.S. plans to shut down 800 computer centers

Never mind that there often is very little data because the companies are so young and that most venture capitalists say investing is more of an art than a science. At Google, even art is quantifiable. “Investing is being in a dark room and trying to find the way out,” said Bill Maris, managing partner of Google Ventures, the corporate investment arm. “If you have a match, you should light it.” See Google / B5

New York Times News Service

The federal government plans to shut 40 percent of its computer centers over the next four years to reduce its technology budget and modernize the way it uses computers to manage data and provide services to citizens. Computer centers typically do not employ many people to tend the machines, but analysts say tens of thousands of jobs will likely be eliminated. The federal government is the largest buyer of information technology in the world, spending about $80 billion a year. The Obama administration, in plans detailed Wednesday, is taking aim at some of that by closing 800 of its sprawling collection of 2,000 data centers. The savings, analysts say, will translate into billions of dollars a year and acres of freed-up real estate. The government is following the lead of private business. For years, companies have been using software that shares computing tasks across several machines in a data center. The task-juggling technology enables computers to run at far higher levels of efficiency and use than in the past, doing more computing chores with fewer computers, and fewer data centers. See Computers / B5

Despite past failed efforts, no big fixes planned for housing sector By Renae Merle The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has no plans to introduce another large-scale program for relieving the troubled housing market, despite the president’s recent admission that his past efforts have not solved the problem, according to a senior administration official. President Obama’s acknowledgment that the weak housing market had become one of his administration’s chief burdens set off industry speculation that there could be another government offensive to jump-start the sector. But experts said the government’s options are limited. There isn’t likely to be the money or political will to push through any significant legislation to address the problem, they said. And the evolution of the housing crisis may have pushed it beyond quick policy fixes. See Housing / B5

‘Fourth bureau’ keeps close eye on those on the financial fringes By Ylan Q. Mui

629 625

2010

Peter DaSilva / New York Times News Service

David Krane, standing left, and Bill Maris, standing right, are managing partners of Google Ventures, the corporate investment arm of Google. They hope to use data-driven algorithms to analyze startups and identify the next Facebook or Zynga.

By Claire Cain Miller

t

By Steve Lohr ers, rather than hitting them with higher costs,” she said. Regulations included in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act have, or will, reduce bank revenues, bank officials and regulators have said. See Checking / B2

Apple delivers its best quarter ever

NEW YORK — Things keep getting worse for Bank of America. On Tuesday, the nation’s largest bank reported a loss of $9.1 billion during the second quarter, partly due to an $8.5 billion settlement with investors. That agreement, reached in June, settled claims that the bank had sold the investors poor-quality mortgage bonds. The bank had already announced several other settlements this year. The total so far to settle investor claims: $12.7 billion.

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WASHINGTON — Atlanta entrepreneur Mike Mondelli has access to more than a billion records detailing consumers’ personal finances — and there is little they can do about it. The information collected by his company, L2C, comes from thousands of everyday transactions that many people do not realize are being tracked, such as auto warranties, cellphone bills and magazine subscriptions. It includes purchases of prepaid cards and visits to payday lenders and rent-to-own furniture stores. It knows whether your checks have cleared and scours public records for mentions of your name. Pulled together, the data follow the life of your

wallet far beyond what exists in the country’s three main credit bureaus. Mondelli sells that information for a profit to lenders, landlords and even health care providers trying to solve one of the most fundamental questions of personal finance: Who is worthy of credit? The answer increasingly lies in the “fourth bureau” — companies such as L2C that deal in personal data once deemed unreliable. Although these dossiers cover consumers in all walks of life, they carry particular weight for the estimated 30 million people who live on the margins of the banking system. Yet almost no one realizes these files exist until something goes wrong. See Bureau / B2

Stephen B. Thornton / The Washington Post

Catherine Taylor, in her Benton, Ark., home, looks through some of the boxes of paperwork she has compiled to counter erroneous background check information that has wrecked her credit history and caused her to be denied employment.


C OV ER S T OR I ES

B2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Bureau Continued from B1 Federal regulations do not always require companies to disclose when they share your financial history or with whom, and there is no way to opt out when they do. No standard exists for what types of data should be included in the fourth bureau or how it should be used. No one is even tracking the accuracy of these reports. That has created a virtually impenetrable system in which consumers, particularly the most vulnerable, have little insight into the forces shaping their financial futures. Arkansas resident Catherine Taylor didn’t learn about the fourth bureau until she was denied a job at her local Red Cross several years ago. Her rejection letter came with a copy of her file at a firm called ChoicePoint that detailed criminal charges for the intent to sell and manufacture methamphetamines. The information was incorrect — she says the charges were for another woman with the same name and birth date — but it has haunted her ever since. Taylor said she has identified at least 10 companies selling reports with the inaccurate personal and financial information, wrecking her credit history so badly that she says she cannot qualify to purchase a dishwasher at Lowe’s. Taylor must apply for loans under her husband’s name and has retained an attorney to force the firms to correct the record. She has settled one case, and a trial in another is expected next week. “Everything went to hell in a handbasket from then on out,” Taylor said. “I can’t be the watchdog all the time.”

Piecing together financial portraits A credit score is like a financial driver’s license. It serves not only as proof of identity and a certain competency behind the wheel, but also as a passport to a world beyond your doorstep. A home, a car, a college education — all are financed by lenders that rely on the score to determine who gets credit and how much they pay for it. For most consumers, those scores are based on records of loans they have taken out in the past and how well they have paid them off. Information on credit cards, auto notes and mortgages are all housed in the Big Three national credit bureaus — Experian, Equifax and TransUnion.

Consumers to get more information on credit histories New federal regulations require banks and other lenders to provide consumers with additional information when they make credit decisions based on their customers’ credit histories or scores. Under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act approved last year, lenders who deny credit must provide the customer with the credit scores, factors affecting the score and other information used to make the decision. Provisions of the law become effective Thursday. Some lenders also determine loan terms based on credit rating, known as risk-based pricing. For example, a customer with a high credit score may receive a lower interest rate on a mortgage than one with a lower score. Lenders using risk-based pricing must also provide customers who receive less favorable terms based on their credit with scores, factors and other information. Federal agencies approved portions of the regulations in January and finalized others on July 6. Bank of the Cascades and Wells Fargo & Co. have already implemented the rules, officials with the banks said Tuesday. For more information, visit www.federalreserve .gov/consumerinfo/wyntk_ notices.htm — Tim Doran, The Bulletin

Factoring in alternative data

VantageScore credit score distributions WITHOUT UTILITY DATA

WITH UTILITY DATA

30% of people

A recent study showed that including data from utility 25 payments in traditional credit scoring increases the number of consumers 20 with credit scores in 15 almost every bracket.

All

Previously unscorable

Unscorable Remain unscorable

10 5 Sources: Political and Economic Research Council; Brookings Institution

0 500 620 740 860 990

500 620 740 860 990

500 620 740 860 990

Credit score ranges The Washington Post

Lenders use formulas developed by companies such as FICO and VantageScore to analyze the data and determine how likely each person is to repay. Government regulators, financial firms and consumer advocates have launched extensive education campaigns in recent years to make sure that consumers understand what goes into their Big Three credit reports and how that affects the cost of a loan. Lawmakers and federal officials have crafted rules to try to help consumers understand what’s in their files. But little attention has been paid to the firms that target consumers outside the mainstream financial system. Often they are students, immigrants or lowincome consumers who do not qualify for traditional loans or choose not to use them. Instead, they rely on a makeshift system of payday lenders, check cashers and prepaid cards — none of which show up in the Big Three. Without a paper trail of credit, these consumers are virtually shut out of the traditional banking system. Mondelli recognized this problem a decade ago during the telecommunications boom. Cellphone companies wanted to tap into this market but had no way to figure out who was risky and who was worth signing up. But Mondelli knew these people left financial footprints somewhere — he just had to find them. “Credit bureau data alone is valuable but not the complete picture,” he said in an interview. The trail led him to a jumbled marketplace of financial and other personal information that was ignored by the main bureaus. It includes magazine subscriptions, cable and utility bills and child care tuition. Some firms collect

medical payments, prescription drug history and insurance claims; others mine public records for bankruptcies and liens. LexisNexis, whose parent company bought ChoicePoint three years ago, handles background checks, tax assessments and criminal histories. Bounced checks can be tracked through Chex Systems, TeleCheck or SCAN. Payday lenders report to a company called Teletrack. Alliant Data compiles information on so-called “installment payments,” industry jargon for recurring monthly fees such as gym memberships. The National Communications, Telecom and Utilities Exchange collects account information for 63 of that industry’s largest firms — although the group’s director won’t specify which ones. Members use the data to decide who to approve for new accounts and the size of a security deposit. These dossiers go into what the industry calls a “black box” — a veil of secrecy surrounding the origins of the information, how it is analyzed and who buys it. Consumers have no voice in those decisions, even though the information concerns their lives. The data could help struggling borrowers prove they are ready for the financial mainstream. But the data can also penalize them for actions they didn’t realize were being tracked, forcing them to pay far higher interest rates or more fees. Out of the black box comes a credit score that can be sold not only to lenders, but also colleges making tuition decisions, landlords choosing tenants or health-care providers determining financial aid. Every score out of the black box can be tailored for each of these buyers, even if it’s about the same person.

“It’s kind of like buying a tailor-fitted suit,” said Jeff Liebl, executive vice president at credit scoring firm eBureau. “When you build a custom model for your client, it just tends to fit better.” The client in this case is not the consumer, but the lender. Consumers cannot dispute the result, and eBureau’s website lists no obvious way for them to request a copy of their files. Meanwhile, companies ranging from landlords to debt collectors may purchase the raw data. “There are secret databases out there,” said Michael Turner, executive director of the Political and Economic Research Council (PERC), an industry research group. “You have to give consumers those rights and protections.”

Checking

In Deschutes County, the three banks had about 75 percent of the deposits, according to a market share report from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from June 30, 2010, the latest available. Bank of the Cascades, which led the way with about 39 percent, has a free checking account for those age 50 and older. Premier 50 accounts require no minimum balance, according to the bank’s website. Fees on other accounts vary, from $6 to $7.50. The Interest and Private Banking checking accounts charge $10 and $16, respectively. For most of the accounts, the fee can be waived if the customer maintains a minimum daily balance, which varies by account. Bank of the Cascades’ Rewards Checking, which started about three months ago, has no minimum requirement. The $6 monthly service charge gets reduced by 25 cents each time the customer uses his or her debit card, according to Miller. It costs less for the bank to process debit-card transactions, Miller said, “so we’re passing (the savings) along to customers.” Wells Fargo, which has about 26 percent of the deposits, stopped offering its free checking account to new customers about a year ago, said Tom Unger, a spokesman based in Portland. The San Francisco-based bank offers about five varieties of checking accounts, according

to its website. Service fees range from $3-$30 monthly, which can be waived by using direct deposit or maintaining an average daily balance. “We do so many things to try as hard as we can to waive the fees whenever we can,” he said. Lending has been reduced by the economic conditions, and banks need to maintain profitability. “Really, there’s only two ways we make revenues,” Unger said, “on the spread in the loans or fees for services.” U.S. Bank, which has more than 11 percent of the market, converted its free checking and eight other checking accounts into one called Easy Checking, which carries an $8.95 per month service charge for those who receive paper statements, or $6.95 for online statements. The conversions become effective on Sunday, according to the bank. A representative from U.S. Bank, which is headquar-

Continued from B1 On June 29, the Federal Reserve effectively cut by half the amount the largest banks can charge for each debit-card transaction, from an average of 44 cents to 21 cents maximum, along with 0.05 percent of the transaction’s value. An earlier proposal called for a 12-cent cap. The new rate, originally slated to become effective Thursday, will start Oct. 1, according to the Federal Reserve. Banks with combined assets of less than $10 billion, such as Bank of the Cascades, are exempt from the rule, according to the agency. Consumers used debit cards in 35 percent of noncash transactions in 2009, according to the Federal Reserve. They also use debit cards more frequently than checks, jumping from 8 billion payments in 2000 to nearly 38 billion in 2009. Each time a customer buys something with a debit card, the store’s bank pays a fee to the cardholder’s bank and passes the cost along to the store or business owner. The fees totaled $16.2 billion in 2009, according to the Federal Reserve. The American and Oregon banking associations opposed the proposal, at least in February. They wrote letters to the Federal Reserve saying the cap on debit-card fees would lead to higher prices for consumers. “Ultimately, the consumer will bear the brunt of the … proposed rule on interchange fees,” wrote Linda Navarro, president and CEO of the Oregon Bankers Association. “Banks are telling us that they will be forced to charge fees for checking accounts or other banking services in order to make up for the revenue that previously supported these services.”

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Little regulation The rules governing disclosures are not the same across the industry. The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), a law that aims to protect the personal information used to influence credit scores, requires the Big Three to give consumers a free copy of their report annually. But the fourth bureau can charge consumers as much as $11 to access their own records. The Big Three also must maintain a toll-free phone number and a website, annualcreditreport.com, to handle consumer requests. But firms that collect information on rental history, check writing, medical history, employment or insurance claims need only to create a “streamlined” system for consumer requests, although the law does not define what that is. Firms that gather other kinds of data don’t even have to go that far. There is also no registry of

fourth-bureau companies, which makes tracking down all the firms that track you nearly impossible. The businesses that submit data to fourth-bureau companies have to provide only vague disclosures, if they provide them at all. Federal law requires lenders to notify their customers that any late or missed payments could be reported to a credit bureau, but they do not have to specify which ones or at what point in the process. The disclosures are also often tucked within what one regulator nicknamed “word barf.” Companies that are not considered lenders do not have to notify consumers at all. Some argue that their business models exempt them from the FCRA altogether. That creates a chicken-and-egg conundrum: Credit bureaus have to provide consumers a copy of their files only if they request it. But most people don’t ask for it because they do not know the company exists. Lawmakers have tried to address the problem with a roundabout solution. Rules that took effect this year require lenders to explain to consumers why they are denied credit or didn’t receive the best interest rate. Starting this week, the notice must include a copy of the consumer’s credit score and the company that created it. But Mondelli said he thinks the notices are complicated and are likely to generate more questions than answers. L2C is building a website to help shed light on what goes into his version of a credit score. “The poor consumer now in my mind is even more confused than they were before,” he said.

Questioning the data What information should go into the fourth bureau is hotly debated, and even consumer advocates do not agree on one standard. At issue is how well any piece of information can forecast future behavior — and whether these firms are choosing data that create skewed reports on consumers. “We put numbers in a box and we somehow come up with a magical answer,” said Ira Rheingold, executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates. “But there’s a real subjective piece to this.” In 2008, a PERC study concluded that utility bills are one of the most promising types of information in the fourth bureau. The study found that it boosted credit

tered in Minneapolis, could not be reached for comment. Like the others, U.S. Bank service charges can be waived for customers who maintain an average account balance or have direct deposit. The FDIC urges consumers to shop around and compare banks when looking for checking accounts. The agency suggests asking banks how they calculate the minimum account balances required to waive fees, and consumers should understand the penalties for failing to meet the conditions. “Before you open a new account, read all of the information about it, including the fine print,” according the agency’s consumer newsletter. “You do not want to be surprised later by limitations and fees you could have avoided.” Tim Doran can be reached at 541-383-0360 or at tdoran@ bendbulletin.com.

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scores for nearly 20 percent of all consumers. It also allowed lenders to create scores for 10 percent of people who did not have one before. Some consumer advocates worry that even this data could backfire on the neediest consumers. That’s because the price of energy is often volatile, and an unexpected spike could result in a late payment for cash-strapped consumers. But even the most reliable data are no help to consumers if the information is wrong. Estimates for the number of files in the Big Three that contain errors have ranged from 1 percent to 25 percent, depending on which group conducted the study. But no significant analysis has been done on fourth-bureau data. Catherine Taylor said the errors in her files have persisted despite several attempts to correct them. Another woman with a similar name would miss a payment or commit a crime, and Taylor said she would suffer for it. When she tried to volunteer with her daughter’s Girl Scout troop, she said a background check turned up a woman named Cathy Taylor charged with indecent exposure before minors. Taylor was barred from helping out with the troop. LexisNexis did not respond to questions on Taylor’s case. It said in a statement that it makes changes to less than 0.2 percent of background reports because of consumer complaints. It took Taylor four years to find a job after she was rejected from the Red Cross. Taylor said she has been turned down for an apartment and now lives in a house purchased through her sister. The stress of dealing with the consequences has exacerbated her diabetes and heart problems, she said. “I’m guilty and then I have to prove myself innocent, and that’s just not how it’s supposed to be,” Taylor said.

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THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 B3

A W Turning a lost job into a fruitful reinvention Find someone at the top of the food chain and ask, ‘Should I get into this now?’ ” Unexpected barriers to entry can hamstring a career change. Like Rutter’s, a new career may require going back to school. And switching careers may entail a pay cut. When Collins was a real estate agent in the heydays, she was making more than $100,000 a year. “I was at the Capital Grille three times a week. After I got out of real estate, I’m eating grilled cheese. ... I went from Coach bags to sitting in coach,” she quipped. Although she makes half the income she once did, Col-

By Marcia Heroux Pounds Sun Sentinel

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. —When South Florida real estate agent Anna Collins saw the bottom drop out of the market, she needed a new career. Today, she is a comedian who performs at local comedy clubs. Jan Rutter was longtime singer and dancer on cruise ships, but she had to hang up her tap shoes when she lost her voice. Now Rutter is a private investigator. After Fort Lauderdale, Fla., resident Bennett Mazor lost his job as an inventory manager, he found he wasn’t passionate about some aspects of his former job. He recently found a new job as a staffing consultant. When a job is no longer viable, workers are forced to reinvent themselves. For some, it might lead to an even brighter future. Think about your “unique selling proposition” — what you are better at than your competition, said Peter Fogel, a Delray Beach, Fla., speaker and copywriter who has reinvented himself several times. “The first thing you have to do is define the reality of the situation,” Fogel said. “Do an assessment of your industry and your company. Do I still like my industry? Where is my industry going to be next week or next year? Do I still have the passion?” Then decide whether you want to work for someone else or start your own venture, said Fogel, author of “Reboot Your Career.” “I’m used to being on my own, sink or swim. But a 9-to-5 person may not be a good fit” for an entrepreneurial pursuit, he said. “I examined what I’m good at and what I like to do,” said Collins, 55. As a baby boomer, Collins has found a niche for her humor, launching “Beyond Complicated,” a boomer-themed comedy show with Fogel on Internet radio, TalkZone.com. She also has authored two humor books.

Mike Stocker / Sun Sentinel

Jan Rutter, a former cruise ship singer and dancer, became a private investigator after she lost her voice. Rutter was devastated when at age 47 she lost her voice and could no longer perform. But she moved on by considering what she could do: She loves talking to people, and has always been interested in mystery and detective stories. She enrolled in private investigator classes, reasoning that she at least had the wardrobe for a private investigating gig. “If I ever have to go undercover, I have plenty of wigs,” Rutter said. After graduating, she attended association meetings to get to know other private investigators. Now 52, Rutter is building her business slowly by doing contract work for other agencies.

Following your passion It helps to be passionate about your choice. Mazor, 46, was an

inventory manager for a South Florida retailer for 12 years. What he enjoyed most about the job was coordinating planning with vendors, merchandisers and others; he least enjoyed analyzing the data. “I liked being the glue, keeping everyone on task,” he said. He applied for inventory management jobs, got interviews, but wasn’t getting offers. He turned to a career coach who told him: “I don’t feel your passion.” Mazor then talked about his passions, which include helping people. “I like the reward and sense of accomplishment,” he said. They discussed the occupations where he could transfer his skills, and one was “recruiter.” Through contacts he gained during his job search, Mazor set

up informational meetings with recruiting agencies. He was offered a job at TransHire in Fort Lauderdale within seven days of making the decision to switch careers. “When you find your passion, it’s pretty powerful,” he said. Getting an employer to take a chance on someone who has no experience in a field is difficult, especially in this job market. But Mazor was given a two-week trial run to find out if the dayto-day activities of a recruiter really suited him. They did, and he was offered a permanent job because the agency owner liked “his desire to learn.” Think of yourself as a marketer when exploring your potential career, Fogel said. “Am I going to make money at this?

lins is happy with her choice: “Having a lot of money is the best, but you have to like what you’re doing.” Rutter also used to make more money performing on cruise ships, but she thinks her private investigation business will continue growing to provide more income. Her goal is to eventually employ others. Mazor says he expects as a recruiter to earn compensation equal to or greater than his former inventory management job. With base pay plus commission, “I have a greater earnings potential than I did in corporate America, and that was very attractive,” he said.

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For entrepreneurs, the first hire is usually the most difficult one By Cindy Krischer Goodman McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Each Friday when Maria Guadamuz prepares the payroll at her small business, she goes through an internal struggle. With her second child on the way, she knows she can’t do all the tasks she does now, particularly payroll, and raise her family. Yet she frets over the idea of hiring someone else to take over the job. “I want to be able to oversee everything and do everything,” said Guadamuz, co-owner of AAA Miami Locksmith. “Because it is my business, it’s hard to let go.” Many people leave big companies to start their own businesses because they want more flexibility or more of a personal life. But where do you draw the line on guarding those perks when your business starts to grow? The decision to hire or outsource a function often is a necessary step for any maxed-out entrepreneur or business owner seeking to expand, but it’s a scary move fraught with a variety of concerns. “A lot of business owners are afraid,” said Jerry Selevan, a counselor with SCORE MiamiDade, a small-business consulting agency. “They don’t know if they can afford help; they don’t know if someone can do the job as well as they do or if that person will learn too much and come back and compete.” But an inability to recognize the need to make a hire — or waiting too long to get around to doing it — often stymies growth and profit. Guadamuz, for example, said her strength is marketing. Yet she spends an entire day each week on payroll. She then finds herself staying late at the office and missing out on marketing opportunities. Experts said that for most, the telltale sign that you need to hire or outsource is when you no longer spend most of your time doing what you do best. For others, the sign may be that you are turning away business or you failed to ship a product or neglected a customer because you’re overwhelmed by

“A lot of business owners are afraid. They don’t know if they can afford help; they don’t know if someone can do the job as well as they do or if that person will learn too much and come back and compete.” — Jerry Selevan, counselor with SCORE Miami-Dade, a small-business consulting agency other tasks. “You have to ask yourself, ‘How important is my time relative to the cost of having someone do it for me?’ ” Selevan said. Factor in whether it’s worth spending money to be available to see your child’s soccer game every week or the value of taking away the headache of culling a report that someone else can put together and present to you, he said. An estimated 550,000 business owners each year become employers for the first time, according to government reports. But while 16 percent of women-owned companies in Florida say business is exceeding expectations and 50 percent are meeting them, only 13 percent plan to hire in the next six months, according to a survey by PNC Bank. Nell Merlino, founder of Count Me In, sees a correlation between hiring and sales growth. Her organization mentors women-owned business to help them become larger. “As you create, market and sell, other people need to be fulfilling the orders. In a growth company, not all revolves around your time and abilities, but your ability to organize other people to deliver those products and services.” Deciding what tasks to outsource and what to hire an employee for may come down to

whether the function is needed on a regular basis. Often vendors such as bookkeepers or website developers have more knowledge and experience than someone a small-business owner can afford to hire. Business coaches advise making a list of the skills you need to run and grow your company, then figure out what skills you are best at. If there are gaps, it’s time to add someone to the mix — whether it’s an independent contractor, an outside firm or an employee. Colleen Dupont and her husband, Antoine, just went through that analysis. The couple own Admin eSolutions, a 12-year-old South Florida website design and management company. The Duponts found clients were pulling back in the recession. As they began spending time on marketing, they were having trouble keeping up with existing work. “We were backlogged and not delivering in the timely way we should.” The Duponts decided to outsource some of the back-end technology, freeing up Antoine to spend more time on sales and client retention and Colleen to focus on creating new marketing materials. Since they began outsourcing the work, business has increased. “Our reluctance was making sure what we sold, we delivered. Once we figured out a way to measure quality, we let it go, and it paid off.” Jody Johnson, of Action Coach in Coral Gables, Fla., advises clients to hire someone to do the low-value and low-skill-level tasks. “For every hour an attorney spends running to the bank or doing errands, she has a huge opportunity cost.” From outsourcing bookkeeping, one of her clients discovered a financial trend the owner had overlooked. Her sales were coming from her residential business, but her profits were from her commercial clients. Said Johnson: “Sometimes people just don’t realize all the benefits of taking something off their plate.”

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A-B-C-D AAR ABB Ltd ACE Ltd AES Corp AFLAC AGCO AGL Res AK Steel AMC Net n AMR AOL APACC ASML Hld AT&T Inc ATMI Inc ATP O&G AU Optron AVI Bio AVX Cp AXT Inc Aarons Aastrom AbtLab AberFitc AbdAsPac AbitibiB n Abraxas AcaciaTc AcadiaRlt Accenture AccretivH Accuray Accuride n Achillion AcmePkt AcordaTh ActivePwr ActivsBliz Actuant Actuate Acuity Acxiom Adecaog n AdobeSy Adtran AdvAmer AdvAuto AdvBattery AdvEnId AMD AdvSemi AdvOil&Gs AdvCGlbCv Adventrx AecomTch AegeanMP Aegon AerCap Aeroflex n Aeropostl AEterna g Aetna AffilMgrs Affymax Affymetrix AgFeed Agilent Agilysys Agnico g Agria Cp Agrium g AirLease n AirProd AirTrnsp Aircastle Airgas Aixtron AkamaiT Akorn AlskAir AlaskCom Albemarle AlcatelLuc Alcoa Alere AlexREE AlexcoR g Alexion s Alexza AlignTech Alkerm AllegTch AllegiantT Allergan AlliData AlliancOne AlliBInco AlliBern AlliantEgy AlliantTch AlldHlthcr AldIrish rs AlldNevG AlldWldA AllosThera AllotComm AllscriptH Allstate AllyFn pfB AlmadnM g AlnylamP AlonUSA AlphaNRs AlpGPPrp AlpTotDiv AlpAlerMLP AltairN rs AlteraCp lf AlterraCap Altria AmBev s Amarin Amazon Amdocs Amedisys Ameren Ameresco n Amerigrp AMovilL s AmAxle AmCampus ACapAgy AmCapLtd AEagleOut AEP AEqInvLf AmExp AFnclGrp AmIntlGrp AmOriBio AmSupr AmTower AVangrd AmWtrWks Ameriprise AmeriBrgn AmCasino Ametek s Amgen AmkorT lf Amphenol Amtech Amylin Anadarko Anadigc AnalogDev Ancestry AnglogldA ABInBev Anixter Ann Inc Annaly Anooraq g Ansys AntaresP Anworth Aon Corp A123 Sys Apache Apache pfD AptInv ApolloGM n ApolloGrp ApolloInv Apple Inc ApldIndlT ApldMatl AMCC Approach Aptargrp AquaAm ArcadiaRs ArcelorMit ArchCap s ArchCh ArchCoal ArchDan ArcosDor n ArenaPhm AresCap AriadP Ariba Inc ArkBest ArmHld ArmourRsd ArmstrW s Arris ArrowEl ArrwhRsh h ArubaNet AsburyA AscenaRtl AshfordHT Ashland AsiaEntRs AsiaInfoL AspenIns AspenTech AspenBio h AsscdBanc AsdEstat Assurant AssuredG AstoriaF AstraZen athenahlth AtlPwr g AtlasEngy Atmel ATMOS AtwoodOcn AudCodes Augusta g AuRico g Aurizon g AutoNatn Autodesk Autoliv AutoData

0.30 30.76 +.88 1.12 25.00 +.26 1.34 63.87 +.18 12.53 +.24 1.20 45.09 +.76 48.14 +.99 1.80 41.00 +.21 0.20 15.57 +.33 36.97 +.51 4.93 +.02 19.33 +.31 8.46 +.01 0.58 35.50 +1.29 1.72 30.33 +.21 19.63 +1.12 15.50 -.29 0.14 6.03 +.18 1.64 +.06 0.22 15.04 +.41 7.22 +.19 0.05 27.01 +.28 2.72 +.03 1.92 52.89 +.35 0.70 77.10 +2.64 0.42 7.71 +.12 19.53 +.21 4.97 +.62 39.61 +2.97 0.72 21.58 +.37 0.90 61.60 +1.62 29.24 +2.02 8.62 +.15 12.58 +.23 7.55 +.01 69.42 +4.57 29.65 +.75 2.20 +.04 0.17 11.89 +.19 0.04 26.57 +.49 6.62 +.44 0.52 50.80 +.06 12.00 +.25 11.51 +.09 29.40 +.63 0.36 35.84 +.50 0.25 8.55 +.45 0.24 55.49 +.67 1.31 +.13 12.56 +.41 6.48 +.30 0.06 5.05 -.06 7.63 +.17 0.80 8.57 +.04 3.49 +.27 26.33 +.37 0.04 6.31 -.18 5.76 +.19 12.84 +.09 15.07 +.31 17.43 +.44 2.21 0.60 43.27 +.32 99.66 +1.65 7.32 +.14 6.43 +.13 1.58 -.02 46.94 +1.48 9.78 +.39 0.64 63.48 -2.23 .89 +.03 0.11 90.33 +2.25 24.82 +.23 2.32 94.20 +1.28 6.01 +.06 0.50 12.20 +.35 1.16 69.85 +1.14 0.84 28.67 +1.41 29.24 +.18 7.30 +.09 66.82 +1.59 0.86 7.85 -.05 0.66 68.88 +1.49 5.17 +.32 0.12 15.44 +.27 36.88 +.67 1.80 82.83 +1.73 8.45 -.10 53.20 +1.49 1.82 +.09 23.55 +.51 18.97 +.05 0.72 64.82 +.35 45.95 +1.77 0.20 84.02 +1.50 97.92 +3.23 3.36 +.12 0.48 7.92 +.04 1.27 18.03 +.08 1.70 40.51 +.39 0.80 67.93 +1.10 2.47 -.03 1.65 -.04 40.36 +.08 0.80 55.84 +.43 2.06 +.05 19.05 +2.01 18.71 +.26 0.84 28.30 +.29 2.13 24.41 +.26 3.70 -.09 9.76 -.11 0.16 12.75 +.46 46.06 +.74 0.60 7.34 +.08 0.66 6.08 +.06 0.74 16.06 +.05 .76 -.05 0.32 43.56 +1.01 0.48 22.32 +.32 1.52 27.02 +.42 1.43 32.15 +.76 14.10 +.11 218.06 +6.53 31.44 +.73 25.75 -.67 1.54 28.69 +.33 14.55 +.07 71.55 -.48 0.41 25.72 -.09 11.26 +.11 1.35 37.13 +.83 5.60 29.38 +.37 9.86 +.16 0.44 13.69 +.12 1.84 37.39 +.28 0.10 12.47 +.26 0.72 51.81 +.48 0.65 34.42 +.62 27.87 +.22 1.13 +.04 7.59 +.37 52.91 +.69 0.04 13.79 +1.10 0.92 29.24 +.10 0.92 53.41 +.26 0.42 41.85 +.65 0.42 22.98 +.84 0.24 43.85 +.66 55.27 +.61 5.51 +.15 0.06 51.68 +1.53 18.15 +.19 12.86 +.27 0.36 82.33 +3.10 3.00 +.09 1.00 36.09 +.63 44.70 +1.10 0.20 44.41 -.83 1.16 56.52 +1.12 3.25 65.60 +2.10 28.08 +1.00 2.59 17.94 +.15 .77 +.03 53.74 +1.18 2.38 +.13 1.00 7.27 +.12 0.60 49.05 +.17 5.48 -.02 0.60 125.74 +2.91 3.00 66.04 +1.11 0.48 27.14 +.51 16.00 +.10 50.30 +.99 1.12 9.82 +.27 376.85 +3.05 0.76 34.98 +.46 0.32 12.66 +.36 8.52 +.39 27.12 +2.01 0.72 53.54 +1.91 0.62 22.02 +.23 .06 -.00 0.75 31.91 +.62 32.42 +.10 0.80 47.25 +.02 0.44 27.57 +1.21 0.64 30.56 +.93 0.06 21.34 +1.36 1.40 +.03 1.40 15.53 +.37 13.02 +.43 34.79 +.99 0.12 26.23 +.40 0.13 28.55 +.83 1.44 7.47 +.13 13.74 42.72 +.68 11.54 +.31 37.04 +1.39 .53 +.04 28.39 +1.38 19.95 +.45 33.90 +.65 0.40 12.06 +.18 0.70 63.78 +1.15 0.20 9.92 +.80 15.75 -.18 0.60 26.66 +.40 16.41 +.48 .62 -.01 0.04 13.24 +.16 0.68 17.88 +.02 0.72 34.19 +.41 0.18 15.00 +.15 0.52 13.07 +.17 2.55 48.73 48.36 +2.74 1.09 16.23 +.26 0.28 24.35 +.56 12.86 +.30 1.36 33.42 +.16 46.95 +1.39 5.37 +.28 5.40 +.07 12.66 -.46 6.19 -.19 38.68 -.68 36.33 +1.00 1.80 69.32 +.47 1.44 53.03 +.69

Nm AutoZone Auxilium AvagoTch AvalRare n AvalonBay AvanirPhm AveryD AviatNetw AvisBudg Avista Avnet Avon Axcelis AXIS Cap B&G Foods BB&T Cp BCE g BE Aero BGC Ptrs BHP BillLt BHPBil plc BJsRest BJs Whls BMC Sft BP PLC BPZ Res BRE BRFBrasil BT Grp BabckW n Bacterin Baidu BakrHu BallCp s BallardPw BallyTech BalticTrdg BcBilVArg BcoBrades BcoMacro BcoSantSA BcoSBrasil BcpSouth BcpSth pf BkofAm BkAm pfH BkAm wtA BkAm wtB BkAML pfQ BkHawaii BkIrelnd BkMont g BkNYMel BkNova g BankUtd n BarcUBS36 BarcGSOil BiPCop BarcBk prD BarcB prC BarcBk prA Barclay Bar iPVix rs BarVixMdT Bard BarnesNob Barnes BarrickG BasicEnSv Baxter BaytexE g BeacnRfg BeazerHm BebeStrs BectDck BedBath Belo Bemis BenchElec Berkley BerkH B BerryPet BestBuy BigLots BBarrett BioRefLab BioFuelE h BiogenIdc BioLase BioMarin BioMedR BioMimetic Bionovo rsh BioSante BlkRKelso Blkboard BlackRock BlkBldA n BlkDebtStr BlkEEqDv BlkIntlG&I BlkRsCmdy Blackstone BlockHR BlueCoat BdwlkPpl Boeing Boise Inc BoozAllen n BorgWarn BostPrv BostProp BostonSci BoydGm Brandyw BreitBurn BridgptEd BrigStrat BrigExp Brightpnt Brigus grs Brinker BrMySq BristowGp Broadcom BroadrdgF BroadSoft Broadwind BrcdeCm Brookdale BrkfldAs g BrkfldOfPr BrklneB BrooksAuto BrwnBrn BrownShoe BrukerCp Brunswick BuckTch Buckle Buenavent BuffaloWW BungeLt CA Inc CB REllis CBL Asc CBOE CBRE GRE CBS B CF Inds CGI g CH Robins CIGNA CIT Grp CLECO CME Grp CMS Eng CNH Gbl CNO Fincl CPFL En s CRH CSX s CVB Fncl CVR Engy CVR Ptrs n CVS Care Cabelas CblvsNY s Cabot CabotO&G CACI CadencePh Cadence CalDive CalaCvOp CalaStrTR Calgon CaliperLSc Calix CallGolf Callidus CallonP h Calpine CAMAC En CamdenPT Cameco g CameltInf n Cameron CampSp CampCC n CdnNRy g CdnNRs gs CP Rwy g CdnSolar CapOne CapitlSrce CapFdF rs CapsteadM CapsThera CpstnTrb h CarboCer CardnlHlth Cardtronic CareFusion CareerEd CaribouC Carlisle CarMax Carnival CarpTech Carrizo Carters Caseys CashAm CatalystH Caterpillar CathayGen Cavium Cbeyond CedarSh CelSci Celanese Celestic g Celgene CellTher rsh Cellcom CelldexTh Celsion Cemex Cemig pf CenovusE

D 298.33 +2.97 20.15 -.01 0.36 36.20 +1.20 6.23 +.13 3.57 135.39 +3.09 3.45 +.04 1.00 32.65 -5.16 4.15 +.08 15.84 +.37 1.10 25.88 +.38 29.60 +.82 0.92 28.45 +.55 1.63 +.03 0.92 31.21 +.35 0.84 21.01 +.63 0.64 25.28 +.30 2.07 39.90 +.47 40.68 +.58 0.68 8.19 +.26 1.82 91.94 +2.29 1.82 75.53 +1.81 54.42 +.03 50.32 +.06 53.70 +1.98 0.42 44.96 +.65 4.11 +.13 1.50 53.02 +.83 0.35 18.43 -.30 1.19 31.41 +1.02 25.30 +.60 2.62 +.06 152.56 +4.43 0.60 78.66 +1.66 0.28 38.62 +.38 1.59 +.12 40.84 +1.10 0.55 5.01 +.25 0.59 10.11 +.16 0.80 18.38 +.43 2.08 35.57 -.75 0.82 10.34 +.26 1.65 9.77 +.11 0.04 11.85 +.19 2.04 25.28 +.03 0.04 9.57 -.15 2.05 25.19 -.06 4.50 -.17 1.46 +.01 2.16 25.97 -.08 1.80 45.41 +.49 1.06 -.02 2.80 63.59 +.88 0.52 24.73 +.09 2.08 59.30 +.88 0.56 25.38 -.38 49.70 +.23 25.20 +.47 58.75 +.80 2.03 25.33 +.02 1.94 25.05 +.22 1.78 24.19 +.08 0.36 13.96 +.48 22.52 -1.12 49.70 -1.29 0.76 112.98 +1.54 17.88 +.65 0.32 24.76 +1.05 0.48 48.56 -.47 36.99 +.67 1.24 61.41 +1.10 2.40 57.81 +1.87 22.09 +.84 3.15 +.04 0.10 7.72 +.25 1.64 87.89 +1.22 59.55 +.38 0.24 7.14 +.22 0.96 33.60 -.10 16.01 +.34 0.32 31.52 +.30 76.29 +1.18 0.30 57.62 +2.14 0.64 29.02 +.06 34.13 +.40 48.08 +1.49 20.03 +.31 .38 -.01 107.21 +3.46 0.10 3.73 -.12 30.46 +.89 0.80 20.04 +.41 4.26 +.14 .94 3.71 +.12 1.04 9.03 +.03 43.95 -.15 5.50 183.69 +3.44 1.42 18.91 +.04 0.32 4.23 -.01 0.68 8.01 +.08 1.36 9.89 0.35 18.79 +.12 0.40 15.79 +.40 0.60 15.23 +.09 22.13 +.78 2.09 28.85 +.13 1.68 70.53 +.98 0.80 7.54 -.02 18.60 -.05 76.11 +.99 0.04 6.14 +.19 2.00 110.99 +2.89 7.14 +.22 8.85 +.35 0.60 11.91 +.30 1.67 19.75 -.04 28.31 +.45 0.44 18.57 -.46 32.84 +.92 8.23 +.28 1.86 -.10 0.56 25.71 +.49 1.32 28.81 +.15 0.60 52.13 -.19 0.36 34.68 +2.03 0.60 23.72 +.31 39.86 +1.10 1.38 +.07 6.29 +.07 22.74 +.23 0.52 32.38 +.56 0.56 19.29 +.23 0.34 9.19 +.09 10.33 +.53 0.32 22.00 -1.84 0.28 10.90 +.18 19.70 +.30 0.05 18.92 +.33 0.20 28.50 +.77 0.80 46.63 +1.43 0.49 41.95 +.58 69.31 +2.25 1.00 70.36 +1.75 0.20 22.27 +.46 23.52 +.45 0.84 18.42 +.42 0.40 23.04 +.18 0.54 8.30 +.03 0.40 27.96 +.59 0.40 156.65 +5.09 23.56 +.34 1.16 79.30 +1.23 0.04 51.53 -.08 39.85 +.82 1.12 35.05 +.56 5.60 289.40 +3.47 0.84 19.64 +.20 35.77 +.54 7.46 +.28 1.52 28.74 +.27 0.84 19.92 +.68 0.48 25.48 +.29 0.34 9.36 +.23 26.45 +.81 24.99 +.49 0.50 37.12 +.38 27.75 +.50 0.60 26.23 +.59 0.72 40.71 +.63 0.12 71.08 +2.50 62.05 +.13 8.55 +.01 9.85 +.17 6.12 +.17 1.14 12.68 +.02 0.63 9.52 +.11 16.26 +.41 8.51 +.22 21.67 +.92 0.04 6.47 +.06 5.50 +.16 7.28 +.40 16.41 +.21 1.26 +.04 1.96 67.75 +1.10 0.40 26.12 +.61 12.84 +.23 51.33 +1.55 1.16 33.93 +.36 0.64 12.81 +.25 1.30 78.25 +1.49 0.36 42.47 +1.30 1.20 62.60 +1.53 9.52 +.28 0.20 48.56 +.21 0.04 5.84 +.07 0.30 11.69 +.02 1.64 13.48 +.21 .36 +.11 1.54 +.04 0.80 175.07 +4.64 0.86 45.81 +.10 24.54 +.79 27.73 +.45 23.98 +.93 13.50 +.87 0.68 48.58 +1.64 32.14 -.01 1.00 35.67 +.94 0.72 57.95 +2.49 40.20 +1.44 33.42 +.83 0.60 46.97 +.96 0.14 56.99 +1.07 62.14 +1.61 1.84 109.64 +1.84 0.04 15.96 +.52 40.78 +2.28 12.91 +.04 0.36 5.20 +.02 .50 +.01 0.24 54.16 +1.35 8.43 +.41 60.54 +1.40 1.34 +.07 3.64 26.34 +.38 3.49 -.17 4.23 +.35 7.78 +.05 1.89 20.08 +.04 0.80 39.30 +.80

Nm Centene CenterPnt CnElBras pf CnElBras lf CentEuro CEurMed CFCda g CentAl CntryLink Cenveo Cephln Cepheid Ceradyne CeragonN Cerner s ChRvLab ChrmSh ChartInds CharterCm ChkPoint Checkpnt Cheesecake ChelseaTh Chemtura n CheniereEn ChesEng Chevron ChicB&I Chicos ChildPlace Chimera ChinaBAK ChiCbl rsh ChiGengM ChinaGreen ChinaLife ChinaMed ChiMYWd n ChinaMble ChiNBorun ChinaPStl ChinaSecur ChinaShen ChiShngd n ChinaSun ChinaTcF ChinaUni Chipotle Chiquita Chubb ChungTel n ChurchD s CIBER CienaCorp Cimarex CinciBell CinnFin Cinemark Cintas Cirrus Cisco Citigrp rs Citigp wtA Citigp wtB CitrixSys ClaudeR g CleanDsl rs CleanEngy Clearwire ClevBioL h CliffsNRs Clorox CloudPeak Coach CobaltIEn CocaCola CocaCE Coeur CoffeeH CogdSpen CogentC Cognex CognizTech Cogo Grp Cohen&Str Coinstar ColdwtrCrk ColgPal CollctvBrd ColonPT ColumLabs Comcast Comc spcl Comerica CmcBMO CmclMtls CmclVehcl CmwREIT CmtyHlt CommVlt CBD-Pao s CompDivHd CmGnom n CompPrdS CompSci Compuwre ComstkRs Comtech Con-Way ConAgra Concepts ConchoRes ConcurTch ConocPhil ConsolEngy ConEd ConstantC ConstellA ConstellEn ContlRes Continucre Cnvrgys Cooper Ind CooperTire Copart Copel CoreLabs CoreLogic CorinthC CornPdts Corning CorpOffP CorrectnCp Cosan Ltd Costco Cott Cp CousPrp Covance CovantaH CoventryH Covidien CowenGp Crane Credicp CSVS2xVxS CSVelIVSt s CredSuiss CrSuiHiY Cree Inc CreXus CrimsnExp Crocs CrosstexE CrosstxLP CrwnCstle CrownHold CrystalRk Ctrip.com CubistPh CullenFr Cummins Curis CurEuro CurrCda CurSwiss Cyberonics Cyclacel Cymer CypSemi CypSharp CytRx h Cytec Cytokinet Cytori DCT Indl DG FastCh DHT Hldgs DNP Selct DPL DR Horton DSW Inc DTE DanaHldg Danaher DaqoNEn n Darden Darling DaVita DeVry DeanFds DeckrsOut Deere DejourE g Delcath Delek Dell Inc DeltaAir DeltaPtr rs Deluxe DemMda n DenburyR Dndreon DenisnM g Dennys Dentsply Depomed DeutschBk DB Cap pf DeutBCT5 pf DB AgriDL DBGoldDL DBGoldDS DevelDiv DevonE Dex One DexCom Diageo DiaOffs DiamRk DianaShip DiceHldg DicksSptg Diebold DigiIntl DigitalRlt DigRiver Dillards DirecTV A DrxTcBull DrSCBr rs DSOXBr rs

D 35.26 +.42 0.79 19.71 +.31 0.03 15.49 -.15 1.56 12.36 -.11 10.20 +.10 17.17 +.35 0.01 22.90 -1.08 14.09 +.24 2.90 37.94 +.11 6.14 +.02 80.02 -.01 31.62 +.49 35.71 +1.23 13.31 +.42 63.55 +2.01 41.16 +.22 4.44 +.07 61.33 +2.99 57.41 +1.13 60.13 -1.04 17.02 -.08 33.61 +.91 5.34 -.40 17.98 +.64 9.58 +.01 0.35 33.66 +.77 3.12 107.48 +1.25 0.20 40.60 +.64 0.20 15.98 +.53 48.38 +1.57 0.62 3.25 +.07 1.10 +.06 .19 -.04 1.74 +.18 5.27 -.03 0.91 50.71 +1.12 6.63 -.37 5.28 +.03 1.93 46.61 +.85 7.21 +.21 1.02 5.41 +.09 3.01 +.31 1.47 -.05 1.58 -.02 4.31 +.31 0.12 19.59 +.07 333.71 +5.72 12.29 +.07 1.56 61.49 +.28 1.91 35.67 +.29 0.68 42.55 +.37 5.50 +.16 16.27 +.66 0.40 89.58 +3.11 3.37 +.03 1.60 27.86 +.40 0.84 19.60 +.55 0.49 30.86 +.42 17.14 +.94 0.24 15.66 +.23 0.04 38.02 +.28 .68 +.01 .12 +.01 77.43 +2.25 1.92 -.10 7.15 +.60 16.00 +.41 3.16 +.07 3.05 +.06 1.12 101.43 +3.66 2.40 72.57 -.47 22.46 +.54 0.90 67.40 +1.86 14.57 +.50 1.88 69.32 +2.20 0.52 29.17 +1.24 27.86 -.43 0.12 23.42 +1.84 0.40 6.09 +.04 16.36 -.05 0.36 36.41 +1.52 74.46 +2.10 4.47 +.01 0.60 36.17 +1.55 59.20 +1.57 1.27 +.03 2.32 88.52 +.53 13.90 +.04 0.60 21.52 +.53 3.16 -.09 0.45 24.47 +.54 0.45 23.70 +.51 0.40 32.48 +.17 0.92 42.89 +.44 0.48 14.41 +.70 14.13 +.16 2.00 23.88 +.36 26.47 +1.40 44.86 +1.31 0.38 42.13 -.36 1.44 16.26 +.29 15.28 +.32 38.38 +1.31 0.80 36.96 +.69 9.50 +.18 31.43 +.78 1.00 28.67 +.39 0.40 39.07 +.43 0.92 26.49 +.26 11.96 +.26 95.31 +.79 49.05 +1.20 2.64 75.43 -.01 0.40 54.08 +.54 2.40 53.13 +.60 22.27 +.75 20.94 +.62 0.96 38.77 +.27 69.81 +1.69 6.27 +.02 13.05 +.25 1.16 58.71 +.77 0.42 18.89 +.53 45.43 +.38 0.66 24.98 -.10 1.00 116.13 +.97 15.89 +.09 4.58 +.24 0.64 57.70 +2.41 0.20 16.85 +.35 1.65 30.34 +.71 21.72 +.26 12.23 -.01 0.96 80.81 +1.70 8.35 +.08 0.18 8.84 +.29 60.00 +.37 0.30 16.78 36.18 +.21 0.80 52.02 +.45 3.95 +.09 0.92 48.56 +1.27 1.95 94.55 +2.55 19.81 -2.17 16.83 +.76 1.40 34.53 -.76 0.32 3.15 -.01 31.16 +.93 0.87 11.19 +.09 3.75 +.18 27.14 +1.10 0.40 13.57 +.70 1.24 18.04 +.17 42.15 +.23 37.08 +.41 1.07 -.08 44.15 +.54 35.34 +.55 1.84 54.86 +.68 1.60 106.58 +3.08 4.00 +.16 0.16 140.86 +.27 0.08 104.59 +.88 120.02 -1.00 29.80 +.15 1.17 -.04 46.35 +1.65 0.36 21.26 +.78 2.40 12.88 +.21 .70 -.01 0.50 55.99 +.99 1.27 -.01 4.94 +.22 0.28 5.37 +.13 30.17 +1.15 0.40 3.89 +.14 0.78 9.97 -.03 1.33 30.37 +.05 0.15 11.93 +.64 55.05 +1.37 2.35 50.05 +.26 18.77 +.61 0.08 53.01 +.53 6.54 +.24 1.72 53.61 +1.09 18.00 +.91 86.61 +.76 0.24 65.91 +2.81 11.41 +.20 95.28 +2.92 1.64 80.88 +1.08 .33 +.00 5.12 +.12 0.15 16.90 +.67 17.42 +.63 8.26 +.20 3.83 +.32 1.00 24.54 +.36 11.13 +.12 19.81 +.61 39.00 +.78 1.90 +.03 4.09 +.22 0.20 39.43 +.77 8.50 +.24 1.07 52.08 +1.30 1.90 24.99 -.05 2.01 25.49 -.06 14.42 +.18 52.03 -1.15 6.08 +.16 0.16 14.75 +.39 0.68 82.32 +2.35 2.32 -.07 15.26 -.37 2.46 79.66 +.12 0.50 72.31 +2.14 0.32 10.43 +.17 10.55 +.07 12.89 +.70 39.99 +.94 1.12 31.48 +.62 14.53 +.55 2.72 63.22 +.88 32.35 +.61 0.20 60.28 +1.47 52.80 +1.13 0.84 48.45 +3.64 33.24 -2.39 0.75 68.94 -7.35

Nm

D

DirFnBr rs DirLCBr rs DirDGldBll DrxEMBull DrxTcBear DRE Bear DrxEnBear DrxSOXBll DirEMBear DrxFnBull Dir30TrBear Dir30TrBull DrxREBull DirxSCBull DirxLCBull DirxEnBull Discover DiscCm A DiscCm C DishNetwk Disney DolbyLab DollarGen DollarTh DollarTree DomRescs Dominos Domtar grs DonlleyRR DoralFncl DblEgl DEmmett Dover DowChm DrPepSnap DrmWksA DresserR DryHYSt Dril-Quip DryShips DuPont DuPFabros DukeEngy DukeRlty DurectCp DyaxCp Dynavax Dynegy

1.20

0.01

1.39 0.05 0.10 0.24

0.40

1.97 1.40 1.04 0.52 1.10 1.00 1.28 0.52 1.64 0.48 1.00 0.68

Nm 47.81 -1.90 33.71 -1.76 35.31 -1.11 35.84 +1.49 18.91 -1.66 11.01 -.61 12.91 -.70 41.08 +3.70 18.08 -.79 23.50 +.87 34.21 -2.26 39.22 +2.31 78.61 +4.02 83.50 +5.30 83.40 +3.98 81.18 +3.83 25.81 +.01 40.97 +.38 36.69 +.16 31.39 +.72 39.54 +.79 42.69 +1.06 33.82 +.76 73.07 +.59 68.93 +1.38 48.69 +.69 26.00 +.57 93.76 +2.06 19.21 +.38 1.94 10.93 +.26 19.66 +.21 67.07 +1.40 34.76 +.49 40.78 +1.01 20.33 +.34 55.27 +1.64 4.75 +.03 72.30 +2.37 3.99 +.03 54.10 +.63 26.60 +.59 18.76 +.13 14.22 +.20 2.15 +.07 1.90 -.09 3.16 +.20 6.03 +.04

E-F-G-H ECDang n 10.82 -.23 E-House 0.25 7.91 +.54 E-Trade 12.95 +.47 eBay 33.76 +1.07 EMC Cp 27.38 +.74 ENI 2.67 43.49 +.74 EOG Res 0.64 104.03 +2.51 EQT Corp 0.88 60.10 +1.04 ETFSGold 157.72 -1.82 EV Engy 3.04 64.76 +.42 EagleBulk 2.47 +.07 EagleMat 0.40 24.55 +.62 EaglRkEn 0.60 11.18 +.17 ErthLink 0.20 7.70 +.06 EstWstBcp 0.20 19.27 -.04 EastChm 1.88 102.02 +2.42 EKodak 2.31 -.21 Eaton s 1.36 51.45 +.86 EatnVan 0.72 27.78 +.12 EV EEq2 1.11 11.91 +.13 EV LtdDur 1.25 16.44 -.04 EVRiskMgd 1.28 12.42 EV TxDiver 1.16 10.85 +.17 EVTxMGlo 1.14 10.28 +.13 EVTxGBW 1.21 11.93 +.14 Ebix Inc 18.55 +.20 EchoGLog 15.85 -.42 Ecolab 0.70 55.39 +.38 Ecopetrol 1.39 42.13 +.67 EdisonInt 1.28 38.05 +.12 EducRlty 0.28 9.05 +.10 EdwLfSci 89.65 -.04 8x8 Inc 4.95 +.28 ElPasoCp 0.04 20.23 +.11 ElPasoPpl 1.76 35.69 +.39 Elan 12.40 +.06 EldorGld g 0.10 18.18 -.25 ElectArts 24.10 +.49 EFII 17.27 +.32 ElizArden 32.07 +1.55 ElsterGp n 16.86 +.38 Embraer 0.72 28.50 -.18 Emcore lf 2.89 +.11 EmersonEl 1.38 55.47 +.61 EmpDist 19.57 +.39 EmpirRst h .89 EmployH 0.24 14.75 -.13 EmpIca 8.07 -.15 Emulex 9.12 +.28 EnbrEPt s 2.06 29.83 +.28 Enbridge s 0.98 32.66 +.39 EnCana g 0.80 30.98 +.38 EndvrInt rs 13.80 -.44 EndvSilv g 10.63 -.20 EndoPhrm 40.05 +.48 Endocyte n 11.13 -.17 Endologix 9.73 +.27 Ener1 .00 +.10 EnerNOC 16.72 +.27 Energen 0.54 60.67 +1.52 Energizer 79.60 +1.00 EngyConv 1.11 -.02 EngyPtrs 17.14 +.54 EngyTEq 2.50 43.53 -.50 EngyTsfr 3.58 47.21 -.78 EngyXXI 34.52 +.35 EnergySol 5.09 +.06 Enerpls g 2.16 31.37 +.50 Enersis 0.79 23.01 +.13 EnerSys 35.84 +.72 ENSCO 1.40 51.82 +.68 Entegris 8.55 +.21 Entergy 3.32 66.79 -.43 EntPrPt 2.42 43.60 +.72 EntGaming .32 +.01 EntropCom 7.84 +.33 EnzoBio 4.04 -.04 EnzonPhar 10.23 +.08 Equifax 0.64 34.26 +.45 Equinix 100.70 +2.43 EqLfPrp 1.50 65.99 +.47 EqtyOne 0.88 19.62 +.44 EqtyRsd 1.47 62.16 +.66 EricsnTel 0.37 14.26 +.67 EssexPT 4.16 141.20 +1.76 EsteeLdr 0.75 106.91 +2.07 EtfSilver 38.78 -1.46 EthanAl 0.28 19.45 +.30 Evercore 0.72 30.36 -.24 EvergE rs 2.03 -.05 EvrgSlr rsh .32 -.04 ExactSci h 8.61 +.46 ExamWk n 22.98 -.91 Exar 6.45 +.27 ExcelM 2.78 ExcoRes 0.16 16.16 -.05 Exelixis 8.83 +.28 Exelon 2.10 43.36 +.25 ExeterR gs 4.41 -.26 ExideTc 7.38 +.29 Expedia 0.28 30.32 +.57 ExpdIntl 0.50 49.68 +.91 Express 23.38 +.38 ExpScripts 51.85 +.14 Express-1 3.55 +.11 ExterranH 18.98 +.32 ExtorreG g 13.15 ExtraSpce 0.56 22.00 +.54 ExtrmNet 3.60 +.10 ExxonMbl 1.88 83.63 +.98 Ezcorp 37.01 +.74 F5 Netwks 118.65 +6.83 FEI Co 36.99 +1.36 FLIR Sys 0.24 28.83 +.05 FMC Corp 0.60 88.25 +2.19 FMC Tch s 45.13 +1.44 FNBCp PA 0.48 10.21 +.26 FSI Intl 2.99 +.09 FTI Cnslt 36.95 +.05 FX Ener 10.10 +.65 Fabrinet 18.50 +.01 FactsetR 1.08 96.30 +2.36 FairIsaac 0.08 30.15 +.43 FairchldS 16.83 +.58 FamilyDlr 0.72 52.90 +.47 Fastenal s 0.52 34.44 +.82 FedExCp 0.52 91.77 +1.31 FedRlty 2.68 88.92 +.92 FedSignl 0.24 6.19 +.10 FedInvst 0.96 22.04 +.05 FelCor 5.52 +.22 Ferro 14.02 +.33 FiberTwr 1.25 -.13 FibriaCelu 11.69 +.15 FidlNFin 0.48 15.97 +.27 FidNatInfo 0.20 29.78 +.77 FifthStFin 1.28 11.24 -.22 FifthThird 0.24 12.20 +.21 FinclEngin 23.59 +.40 Finisar 17.97 +.99 FinLine 0.20 22.91 +.62 FstAFin n 0.24 15.37 +.53 FstCwlth 0.12 5.30 +.05 FstHorizon 0.04 9.39 +.04 FstInRT 11.61 +.20 FMajSilv g 23.68 -.79 FstMarblhd 1.59 FstNiagara 0.64 13.01 +.12 FstPotom 0.80 16.28 +.38 FstRepB n 28.95 -.17 FstSolar 123.94 +2.01 FTCloud n 20.04 +.63 FT RNG 0.05 22.55 +.52 FirstEngy 2.20 43.09 +.21 FstMerit 0.64 16.51 +.23 Fiserv 61.33 +1.14 FiveStar 5.48 -.05 FlagstBcp 1.16 Flextrn 6.32 +.17 Flotek 10.17 +.73 FlowInt 3.50 +.21 FlowrsFd s 0.60 22.90 +.21 Flowserve 1.28 106.40 +2.56 Fluor 0.50 65.75 +1.45 FocusMda 32.67 +1.45 FEMSA 1.16 66.97 +.06 FootLockr 0.66 23.76 +.65 ForcePro 4.78 +.13 FordM 13.09 +.19 FordM wt 4.59 +.16 ForestCA 18.13 +.04 ForestLab 38.42 +.47 ForestOil 25.31 +.62 FormFac 9.29 +.51 Fortinet s 26.78 +.25 Fortress 4.40 +.06 FortuneBr 0.76 63.08 +.63 Fossil Inc 134.29 +5.37 FosterWhl 27.63 +.72 FranceTel 1.96 19.58 +.23 FrankRes 1.00 130.41 +2.13

How to Read the Market in Review He e a e he 2 578 mos ac ve s ocks on he New Yo k S ock Exchange Nasdaq Na ona Ma ke s and Ame can S ock Exchange Mu ua unds a e 415 a ges S ocks n bo d changed 5 pe cen o mo e n p ce Name S ocks a e s ed a phabe ca y by he company s u name no s abb ev a on Company names made up o n a s appea a he beg nn ng o each e e s s D v Cu en annua d v dend a e pa d on s ock based on a es qua e y o sem annua dec a a on un ess o he w se oo no ed Las P ce s ock was ad ng a when exchange c osed o he day Chg Loss o ga n o he day No change nd ca ed by ma k Fund Name Name o mu ua und and am y Se Ne asse va ue o p ce a wh ch und cou d be so d Chg Da y ne change n he NAV YTD % Re Pe cen change n NAV o he yea o da e w h d v dends e nves ed S ock Foo no es – PE g ea e han 99 d – ue ha been a ed o edemp on b ompan d – New 52 wee ow dd – Lo n a 12 mo e – Compan o me ed on he Ame an E hange Eme g ng Compan Ma e p a e g – D dend and ea n ng n Canad an do a h – empo a e mp om Na daq ap a and u p u ng qua a on n – S o wa a new ue n he a ea The 52 wee h gh and ow gu e da e on om he beg nn ng o ad ng p – P e e ed o ue p – P e e en e pp – Ho de owe n a men o pu ha e p e q – C o ed end mu ua und no PE a u a ed – R gh o bu e u a a pe ed p e – S o ha p b a ea 20 pe en w h n he a ea w – T ade w be e ed when he o ued wd – When d bu ed w – Wa an a ow ng a pu ha e o a o u– New 52 wee h gh un – Un n ud ng mo e han one e u – Compan n ban up o e e e hp o be ng eo gan ed unde he ban up aw Appea n on o he name D v dend Foo no es a – E a d dend we e pa d bu a e no n uded b – Annua a e p u o – L qu da ng d dend e – Amoun de a ed o pa d n a 12 mon h – Cu en annua a e wh h wa n ea ed b mo e en d dend announ emen – Sum o d dend pa d a e o p no egu a a e – Sum o d dend pa d h ea Mo e en d dend wa om ed o de e ed – De a ed o pa d h ea a umu a e ue w h d dend n a ea m – Cu en annua a e wh h wa de ea ed b mo e en d dend announ emen p – n a d dend annua a e no nown e d no hown – De a ed o pa d n p e ed ng 12 mon h p u o d dend – Pa d n o app o ma e a h a ue on e d bu on da e Mo a e o abo e mu be wo h $1 and ga ne o e $2 Mu ua Fund Foo no es e – E ap a ga n d bu on – P e ou da quo e n – No oad und p – Fund a e u ed o pa d bu on o – Redemp on ee o on ngen de e ed a e oad ma app – S o d dend o p – Bo h p and – E a h d dend

Sou ce The Assoc a ed P ess and L ppe Nm FMCG s Freescale n FreshMkt n FriendFd n FrontierCm Frontline FuelCell FullerHB FultonFncl FurnBrds FushiCopp Fusion-io n GATX GFI Grp GMAC CpT GMX Rs GNC n GSV Cap n GT Solar GTx Inc GabelliET GabGldNR Gafisa SA Gallaghr GameStop Gannett Gap GardDenv Garmin GascoEngy Gastar grs GaylrdEnt GenProbe GencoShip GenCorp GnCable GenDynam GenElec GenGrPr n GenMarit GenMills GenMoly GenMot n GM cvpfB Gensco GenesisEn GenOn En Genpact Gentex Gentiva h GenuPrt Genworth GeoGrp GeoGloblR Geores GaGulf Gerdau GeronCp GiantIntac Gildan GileadSci GlacierBc GlaxoSKln Gleacher GlimchRt GlobalCash GlobCrsg GloblInd GlobPay GlbShipLs GblXColm s GblXSupDv GlbXSilvM Globalstar GlbSpcMet GluMobile GolLinhas GolarLNG GoldFLtd GoldResrc Goldcrp g GoldStr g GoldS60 n GoldmanS Goodrich GoodrPet Goodyear Google vjGrace Graco GrafTech GrahamPk Graingr Gramrcy lf GranTrra g GraphPkg GrtBasG g GrLkDrge GtPanSilv g GtPlainEn Grtbatch GreenMtC GreenbCos Greenhill GrifolsSA n Group1 GrubbEllis GpTelevisa Guess GugFront GugMultAs GulfRes GulfportE HCA Hld n HCC Ins HCP Inc HSBC Hallibrtn Halozyme HancHld Hanesbrds HanmiFncl HansenMed HansenNat HanwhaSol HarbinElec HarleyD Harman Harmonic HarmonyG HarrisCorp Harsco HartfdFn HarvNRes Hasbro HatterasF HawaiiEl HawHold Headwatrs HltCrREIT HlthCSvc s HltMgmt HlthcrRlty HealthNet HlthSouth HlthSprg HrtlndEx HeartWare Heckmann HeclaM Heinz HelixEn HelmPayne Hemisphrx HSchein Herbalife s HercOffsh Hersha Hershey Hertz Hess HewlettP Hexcel hhgregg Hibbett HigherOne HighwdPrp Hittite HollyFront Hollysys Hologic HomeDp Home Inns HomeProp Honda HonwllIntl HorizLns Hormel s Hornbeck HorsehdH Hospira HospPT HostHotls HotTopic HstnAEn HovnanE

D 1.00 56.30 +1.25 17.14 +.23 37.71 +1.36 4.57 -.08 0.75 7.77 +.19 1.20 11.40 1.42 +.16 0.30 23.95 +.29 0.20 10.32 -.08 4.16 +.10 7.35 -.51 30.22 -1.91 1.16 37.24 +1.13 0.20 4.56 +.08 25.40 +.35 5.13 +.15 22.56 +.63 17.40 -2.11 15.34 +.74 4.31 -.13 0.56 6.02 +.06 1.68 18.26 +.07 0.29 8.53 +.25 1.32 26.97 -.54 23.71 +.29 0.32 13.51 +.50 0.45 19.27 +.43 0.20 85.96 +3.26 2.00 32.23 +.15 .25 +.01 3.94 +.11 30.94 +.42 62.41 -1.58 6.97 +.08 6.14 +.13 43.47 +.94 1.88 69.93 +.47 0.60 18.58 +.29 0.40 16.80 +.41 1.21 -.01 1.22 37.81 +.41 4.48 +.11 29.33 +.23 2.38 47.79 +.32 53.39 +.40 1.66 25.97 -.04 4.06 +.08 0.18 17.70 +.32 0.48 30.45 +.77 18.16 -.30 1.80 57.07 +.86 9.50 +.44 21.96 +.02 .36 +.02 26.25 +.74 21.82 +.99 0.27 9.31 +.08 3.95 +.06 0.18 7.11 -.35 0.30 33.43 +.18 41.70 +.89 0.52 12.87 +.22 2.11 42.87 -.06 1.90 +.03 0.40 9.84 +.22 3.00 -.02 37.29 +1.46 5.53 +.29 0.08 51.93 +1.41 4.27 -.02 0.21 20.32 +.55 0.10 24.29 +.39 0.25 27.15 -.61 1.14 +.02 0.15 24.76 +.58 5.84 +.06 0.12 10.81 -.03 1.00 39.15 +1.50 0.19 15.50 -.07 0.48 26.88 +.92 0.41 54.01 -1.03 2.74 -.17 1.53 25.00 +.01 1.40 128.49 -.84 1.16 93.79 +1.71 19.97 +1.31 17.50 +.21 602.55 +7.61 46.72 +.85 0.84 50.33 +.98 21.09 +.39 25.31 +.05 2.64 156.24 -.07 2.82 +.01 6.60 +.19 5.22 +.10 2.08 -.16 0.08 6.17 +.17 3.83 -.13 0.83 20.78 +.18 27.24 +.62 94.58 +5.62 21.46 +.88 1.80 45.88 -.62 7.94 +.16 0.44 43.19 +.44 .53 -.05 0.15 22.06 +.81 0.80 39.73 +.47 0.13 22.80 +.16 1.01 21.40 +.25 4.03 +.13 34.46 +.51 33.03 +.44 0.58 30.91 +.42 1.92 37.50 +.33 1.80 48.11 +.45 0.36 55.38 +2.26 7.29 +.23 0.96 30.31 +.70 33.26 +1.12 1.23 +.04 4.83 +.44 81.49 +3.61 5.39 +.22 19.12 +.03 0.50 45.11 +3.70 0.30 44.54 +.76 7.08 +.25 0.07 13.98 -.39 1.00 42.46 +.63 0.82 31.37 +.61 0.40 23.74 +.27 12.29 +.22 1.20 39.41 +.01 4.10 28.82 +.36 1.24 24.00 +.18 5.27 -.05 2.89 +.03 2.86 53.33 +.84 0.64 16.53 +.17 10.45 +.24 1.20 20.40 +.24 30.46 +.38 24.39 +.47 45.57 +.52 0.08 16.30 -.32 70.44 -.66 6.08 +.13 8.34 -.11 1.92 53.86 +.73 17.92 +.60 0.28 71.30 +2.18 .37 72.76 +.95 0.50 58.22 +1.15 4.86 -.03 0.24 5.45 +.03 1.38 56.96 +.59 15.31 +.53 0.40 74.12 +1.63 0.48 35.61 +.59 23.18 +.82 11.88 -.02 41.06 +.63 20.55 +.48 1.70 33.94 +.51 60.75 +1.79 0.60 74.31 +3.14 10.36 -.43 20.39 +.44 1.00 36.11 +.42 36.45 -.03 2.48 65.83 +1.54 39.98 -.03 1.33 57.43 +.86 1.10 -.02 0.51 30.14 +.66 27.01 +.06 12.53 +.33 53.30 +.59 1.80 25.10 +.35 0.12 16.51 +.02 0.28 8.03 +.20 0.02 18.84 -.78 2.24 +.04

Nm HudsCity HudsPacP HumGen Humana HuntJB HuntBnk HuntIng n Huntsmn HutchT Hyatt Hypercom Hyperdyn

D 0.32 8.20 0.50 15.53 23.57 1.00 79.74 0.52 47.12 0.04 6.26 33.31 0.40 19.35 3.24 39.85 9.58 4.92

+.18 +.08 +.49 -.73 -.86 +.17 +.11 +.40 +.06 +.85 +.40 +.54

I-J-K-L IAC Inter IAMGld g ICICI Bk ICO Glb A ICU Med IdexxLabs IHS Inc ING GlbDv ING INGPrRTr ION Geoph IPG Photon iShGold iShGSCI iSAstla iShBraz iSCan iShEMU iShGer iSh HK iShItaly iShJapn iSh Kor iSMalas iShMex iShSing iSPacxJpn iShSoAfr iSSpain iSSwedn iSSwitz iSTaiwn iSh UK iShThai iShChile iShSilver iShS&P100 iShNewZea iShDJDv iShBTips iShAsiaexJ iShChina25 iShDJTr iSSP500 iShBAgB iShEMkts iShiBxB iSh ACWI iSEafeSC iShEMBd iSSPGth iShNatRes iShSPLatA iSSPVal iShB20 T iSRTop200G iShB7-10T iShB1-3T iS Eafe iSRusMCV iSRusMCG iShRsMd iSSPMid iShiBxHYB iShSft iShs SOX iShMtg iShNsdqBio iShC&SRl iSR1KV iShPoland iSR1KG iSRus1K iSR2KV iShBarIntC iShBarc1-3 iSR2KG iShR2K iShUSPfd iShDJTel iShDJTch iShREst iShDJHm iShFnSc iShSPSm iShBasM iShPeru iShDJOE iShDJOG iShEur350 iSMsciV iStar ITC Hold ITT Corp ITT Ed Icagen rs Icon PLC IconixBr IdenixPh IDEX Ikanos ITW Illumina Imax Corp Immersion Immucor ImunoGn Imunmd ImpaxLabs Incyte IndiaFd IndoTel Inergy Infinera InfinityPh Informat InfoSvcs Infosys IngerRd IngrmM Inhibitex InlandRE InnerWkgs InovioPhm Inphi n InsightEnt InsitTc Insulet IntegLfSci IntgDv IntegrysE Intel InteractBrk IntcntlEx IntCtlHtl InterDig Intrface Intermec InterMune IBM IntFlav IntlGame IntPap IntlRectif IntTower g InterOil g Interpublic Intersil IntraLks n IntPotash Intuit IntSurg Invesco InvMtgCap InVKSrInc InvTech InvRlEst IronMtn Isis IsleCapri h iSoftStn n IstaPh ItauUnibH Itron IvanhoeEn IvanhM g Ixia JA Solar JDS Uniph JPMorgCh JPMAlerian JPMCh pfZ

37.54 +.66 0.20 21.02 -.43 0.63 47.74 +1.27 2.86 +.13 42.82 -2.33 79.12 +1.69 79.72 +.73 1.20 10.92 +.07 10.65 +.58 0.30 6.02 -.04 10.28 +.59 69.32 +2.42 15.50 -.19 35.76 +.47 1.06 25.19 +.59 3.42 69.57 +.78 0.53 32.10 +.50 1.15 35.71 +.52 0.67 25.67 +.37 0.42 18.17 +.17 0.49 15.65 +.37 0.17 10.66 +.13 0.50 65.69 +1.19 0.39 14.90 +.05 0.71 61.44 +.42 0.50 13.82 +.17 1.73 46.37 +1.00 2.41 69.99 +.79 1.92 37.92 +.56 1.04 29.74 +.89 0.53 25.78 +.10 0.29 14.90 +.20 0.48 17.48 +.19 1.55 69.39 +2.08 0.98 73.64 -.15 38.01 -1.46 1.14 59.43 +.90 1.04 33.32 +.89 1.80 52.76 +.50 4.33 112.53 +.56 1.27 61.60 +.74 0.85 41.77 +.56 1.08 96.43 +1.02 2.45 133.21 +2.19 3.86 107.66 +.23 0.84 46.79 +.67 5.12 111.48 +.54 1.02 47.69 +.74 1.48 42.40 +.50 5.58 108.84 -.18 1.24 70.89 +1.36 0.58 45.37 +.67 1.10 49.89 +.59 1.31 61.39 +.76 4.02 97.22 +1.98 0.44 32.28 +.63 3.18 98.00 +.37 0.78 84.44 1.68 58.18 +.86 0.98 47.06 +.69 0.62 62.01 +1.23 1.64 108.78 +1.89 1.03 98.09 +1.92 7.39 91.20 +.41 62.77 +1.66 0.21 53.76 +1.63 1.44 14.63 +.17 0.51 108.02 +1.86 1.97 74.69 +1.27 1.30 67.20 +.86 0.44 34.25 +.42 0.77 61.98 +1.20 1.22 73.96 +1.22 1.31 73.25 +1.33 4.35 107.50 +.10 2.67 104.78 0.53 96.08 +2.36 0.94 83.32 +1.84 2.84 39.08 +.04 0.62 24.35 +.27 0.32 67.28 +1.81 2.09 61.69 +1.05 0.07 12.50 +.37 0.70 54.92 +.67 0.75 74.15 +1.61 1.06 80.18 +1.22 1.01 42.88 +1.42 0.24 66.63 +1.74 0.30 73.43 +1.82 1.15 39.73 +.52 1.91 49.99 +.80 7.52 +.18 1.34 71.69 +.67 1.00 56.20 +.95 95.44 +5.02 7.75 -.15 23.63 -.69 25.01 +.70 6.38 +.28 0.68 46.32 +2.31 1.20 +.07 1.36 56.62 +.29 72.20 +1.07 27.77 +.79 9.82 +.32 26.88 +.05 15.21 -.34 4.14 +.07 21.49 +.33 19.72 +.28 3.87 30.28 +.47 1.50 33.35 -.12 2.82 35.28 +.13 6.57 +.37 9.98 +.85 54.94 +1.24 1.60 +.07 1.35 62.01 +1.37 0.48 44.50 +.96 17.50 +.33 4.01 +.08 0.57 9.18 +.22 8.00 -.04 .71 +.04 17.21 +.93 18.34 +.43 21.48 +.31 22.05 +.46 47.47 +1.14 7.41 +.29 2.72 51.39 +.33 0.84 23.06 +.78 0.40 15.50 +.26 127.65 +1.77 0.35 19.89 +.39 0.40 53.26+11.75 0.08 18.20 +.48 10.78 +.01 37.15 +.91 3.00 185.21 +9.93 1.08 63.35 +.61 0.24 18.07 +.33 1.05 29.79 +.49 26.72 +.76 8.10 -.15 63.89 +3.00 0.24 12.56 +.70 0.48 12.01 +.18 17.43 +.49 32.95 +1.32 48.96 +.57 374.90+12.62 0.49 21.89 +.46 3.94 21.17 +.40 0.29 4.91 -.04 11.01 +.24 0.69 8.28 +.09 1.00 34.63 +.51 8.75 -.01 8.88 +.30 13.92 -.13 8.07 +.32 0.67 20.66 +.56 47.06 +.75 1.81 +.03 1.48 26.69 +.60 10.73 +.67 4.61 +.16 14.83 +.45 1.00 40.39 +.56 1.95 37.35 +.22 2.00 26.07 +.02

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D 0.28 20.03 +.74 0.42 30.33 +.79 23.83 +.43 41.46 +.53 5.47 +.08 20.99 +.59 0.20 8.98 +.32 0.08 8.46 +.11 .30 -.01 0.35 34.08 +.88 38.48 +1.26 0.30 19.86 -.10 5.54 +.12 14.73 +.40 24.59 +.12 2.28 66.72 -.37 0.64 41.51 +.92 0.20 11.29 +.23 0.30 92.14 +1.96 51.85 +1.32 0.70 98.52 +1.85 31.58 +1.55 0.25 9.52 +.29 0.20 37.45 +1.02 11.50 -.48 0.73 14.92 -.06 0.64 9.40 -.02 1.40 42.44 +1.91 19.10 +.24 2.43 -.04 33.40 +2.15 2.45 +.47 58.30 +1.42 16.54 +.04 1.62 55.41 +.44 13.39 +.60 0.48 45.36 +1.72 4.69 -.05 19.73 +.59 0.12 8.06 +.33 1.40 40.89 +1.14 1.96 +.04 2.80 66.83 +.45 0.72 19.72 +.53 4.56 73.67 +.48 1.16 28.35 +.16 20.35 -.21 68.26 -.04 1.90 +.04 0.10 17.43 -.23 14.88 -.16 58.26 +.46 11.40 +.16 10.35 0.24 16.41 -.24 0.40 19.40 -.09 6.41 +.28 1.00 56.58 +1.47 4.59 +.12 12.57 -.11 16.07 +.12 1.16 35.25 +.07 9.45 +.28 0.42 25.83 +.42 0.60 31.55 +1.57 10.02 +.72 5.20 -.10 12.00 +.38 1.80 81.53 +.53 0.62 29.07 -.06 6.45 +.13 13.84 +.72 26.25 +.66 45.48 +1.90 6.70 +.17 8.26 +.28 9.23 +.23 96.98 +2.00 1.44 +.09 42.37 +.96 26.09 +.46 0.20 46.34 +.48 45.15 +.98 0.44 26.10 +.58 6.11 +.15 0.64 33.93 +.51 14.65 +.03 4.07 -.03 0.50 51.13 +.42 0.32 31.15 +.34 1.08 23.55 +.64 0.40 20.17 +.47 0.16 18.52 +1.15 0.72 42.17 +.91 6.38 +.85 0.25 33.29 +.38 2.35 +.09 1.79 +.06 0.46 9.01 +.17 29.15 +.50 0.33 5.13 +.07 42.63 +.38 40.78 +.42 16.50 +.06 75.93 +2.53 1.90 33.96 +.81 49.95 +.23 40.35 +.82 37.82 +.39 1.96 38.25 +.20 4.38 +.15 0.80 40.62 +1.04 0.80 26.29 -2.20 1.00 19.20 +.51 0.31 35.89 +.98 0.20 27.04 +.34 0.34 69.12 +.51 0.96 30.63 +.56 100.86 -1.58 2.64 39.96 -.08 3.21 +.24 6.96 +.15 11.38 +.27 13.08 +.42 5.53 +.15 2.76 +.14 3.65 +.02 3.00 78.40 +.96 0.25 40.61 +.50 10.12 +.47 37.90 +1.47 1.81 +.21 18.32 +.13 5.20 110.55 +.86 8.23 +.24 0.56 22.96 +.46 1.44 134.67 +.05 3.07 +.05 0.50 88.49 +1.97 63.51 +3.03 17.04 +.02 0.10 37.08 +.24

M-N-O-P M&T Bk MB Fncl MBIA MCG Cap MDC MDU Res MEMC MF Global MFA Fncl MIN h MGIC MGM Rsts MIPS Tech MKS Inst MPG OffTr MSC Ind MSCI Inc Macerich MackCali Macys MadCatz g MagelPt Magma MagnaI gs MagHRes MaidenH MaidenBrd Majesco MAKO Srg Manitowoc MannKd ManpwrGp Manulife g MarathnO s MarathP n MarinaB rs MktVGold MkVStrMet MktVRus MktVJrGld MktV Agri MktVIndo s

2.80 86.80 +1.95 0.04 19.95 +.80 9.70 -.10 0.68 6.04 +.14 1.00 24.10 +.79 0.65 22.24 +.45 7.69 +.28 7.53 +.24 1.00 7.78 +.08 0.55 6.48 -.01 4.48 -.14 15.45 +.66 6.92 +.41 0.60 25.56 +.54 3.72 +.15 0.88 65.79 +.42 37.40 +.90 2.00 54.19 +.98 1.80 34.04 +.90 0.40 30.14 +.45 1.40 +.01 1.84 +.14 8.26 +.25 1.00 51.94 +.88 7.69 +.19 0.28 9.44 +.09 28.27 +.47 2.99 -.01 32.24 +1.95 0.08 16.56 +.56 3.67 +.07 0.80 52.74 +1.66 0.52 16.73 +.48 1.00 31.23 -.17 39.74 +.62 .20 +.00 0.40 59.68 -.90 24.97 +.61 0.18 38.83 +.91 2.93 37.75 -1.32 0.33 54.28 +.84 0.27 33.11 +.15

Nm MktVCoal MarkWest MarIntA MarshM MartMM MarvellT Masco Masimo Mastec MasterCrd Mattel Mattson MaximIntg McClatchy McCorm McDrmInt s McDnlds McGrwH McKesson McMoRn MeadJohn MeadWvco Mechel Mechel pf MedAssets MedcoHlth MedProp MediCo Medicis Medidata Medifast MedQuist n Medtrnic MelcoCrwn MensW MentorGr MercadoL MercerIntl Merck Meredith MergeHlth MeridBio Meritage Meritor Metalico MetLife MetLf equn MetroPCS MetroHlth Microchp Micromet MicronT MicrosSys MicroSemi Microsoft MicroStr Micrvisn MidAApt MdwGold g MillerEnR MillerHer MincoG g MindrayM Mindspeed Minefnd g Mitcham MitekSys MitsuUFJ MizuhoFn MobileTele Mohawk Molex MolinaH s MolsCoorB Molycorp n Momenta MoneyGrm MonPwSys MonroMf s Monsanto MonstrWw Montpelr Moodys MorgStan Mosaic MotrlaSol n MotrlaMo n Motricity Move Inc Mueller MuellerWat MurphO Mylan MyriadG NABI Bio NCR Corp NETgear NFJDvInt NII Hldg NPS Phm NRG Egy NV Energy NXP Sem n NYSE Eur Nabors NalcoHld Nanomtr Nanosphere NasdOMX NBkGreece NatCineM NatFuGas NatGrid NatInstr s NOilVarco NatPenn NatRetPrp NatSemi NatusMed Navios NaviosMar Navistar NektarTh NeoStem Neoprobe Ness Tech NetLogicM NetApp Netease Netflix NetQin n NtScout NetSolTch NetSpend n NetSuite Neurcrine Nevsun g NewEnSys NwGold g NewOriEd NY&Co NY CmtyB NY Times Newcastle NewellRub NewfldExp NewmtM NewpkRes Newport NewsCpA NewsCpB Nexen g NextEraEn NiSource Nicor NielsenH n NikeB 99 Cents NipponTT NoahHld n NobleCorp NobleEn NokiaCp NorandaAl NordicAm Nordson s Nordstrm NorflkSo NoAmEn g NA Pall g NoestUt NDynMn g NthnO&G NorTrst NthgtM g NorthropG NStarRlt NwstBcsh NovaGld g Novartis Novavax Novlus NovoNord NSTAR NuSkin NuVasive

D 0.19 2.68 0.40 0.88 1.60

49.13 +.93 48.34 +.42 34.35 +.11 29.55 +.08 77.14 +.91 15.18 +.55 0.30 11.55 +.23 0.75 30.89 +.60 21.61 +.67 0.60 311.39 +3.84 0.92 27.02 +.15 2.04 +.03 0.84 23.50 +.49 2.38 -.08 1.12 49.76 +.74 20.26 +.41 2.44 86.21 +.81 1.00 43.10 +.95 0.80 81.95 +.16 17.55 -.83 1.04 69.84 +1.29 1.00 33.24 +.13 24.90 +.64 8.60 +.19 12.53 +.07 54.53 +.71 0.80 12.23 +.24 15.65 +.09 0.32 38.01 +.28 22.46 +.21 20.99 +.06 12.98 -.32 0.97 36.99 +.51 14.91 +.52 0.48 34.08 +.55 11.88 +.29 0.32 78.46 +2.46 9.96 +.25 1.52 35.79 +.30 1.02 29.88 +.56 5.37 +.20 0.76 27.32 +.94 22.62 +1.13 15.67 +.48 5.80 +.08 0.74 40.49 +.01 0.94 77.14 -.15 17.15 +.35 5.27 -.06 1.38 32.85 +.88 6.21 +.23 7.52 +.29 51.21 +1.31 19.94 +.77 0.64 27.54 +.95 175.98 +7.17 1.24 +.02 2.51 72.07 +1.42 2.57 -.17 7.85 +.02 0.09 25.96 +.21 1.89 -.10 0.30 27.36 +1.18 7.22 +.33 14.75 -.39 19.25 +.50 8.69 +.28 4.84 -.03 3.20 -.03 1.06 18.26 +.01 57.30 +1.95 0.80 24.44 +.37 26.52 +.21 1.28 44.82 +.58 55.13 +3.95 19.48 +.37 3.42 +.05 13.66 +.06 0.32 37.45 +.58 1.12 73.85 +.64 13.36 +.41 0.40 18.17 +.19 0.56 36.69 +1.17 0.20 20.98 +.29 0.20 68.49 +2.03 44.10 +.36 22.88 +1.19 6.99 +.33 2.28 +.08 0.40 46.11 +.87 0.07 3.58 +.15 1.10 65.41 +1.09 23.69 +.56 23.86 +.53 1.86 -.03 19.06 +.25 41.05 +2.36 1.80 18.70 +.18 42.06 +.81 9.78 +.18 24.79 +.60 0.48 15.12 +.04 22.10 +.93 1.20 34.23 +.16 26.88 +.84 0.14 28.87 +.32 18.66 +.63 2.12 +.06 23.36 +.59 0.29 1.24 +.02 0.80 15.26 +.24 1.42 72.25 +1.76 2.92 48.32 -.01 0.40 28.98 +.49 0.44 80.07 +2.16 0.04 7.75 +.08 1.54 26.06 +.33 0.40 24.77 -.03 13.81 +.25 0.24 4.94 +.01 1.72 17.45 -.13 54.12 +1.24 7.38 1.06 -.26 3.35 +.03 7.68 +.01 40.05 +2.49 51.80 +1.62 48.82 +.29 287.29 +8.29 6.25 +.76 16.04 +.51 1.46 -.02 7.85 +.31 40.38 +.88 7.85 -.05 0.06 6.26 -.16 3.93 +1.63 10.81 -.29 124.51 +4.65 5.78 +.45 1.00 14.95 +.12 8.57 +.15 0.40 5.99 +.17 0.32 15.44 +.29 71.33 +2.31 0.80 57.75 -.34 9.26 +.22 16.85 +.20 0.15 15.79 +.83 0.15 16.25 +.85 0.20 23.97 +.30 2.20 56.77 +.41 0.92 20.71 +.45 1.86 55.05 +.15 30.84 +.31 1.24 90.74 +.10 20.36 +.31 24.74 +.64 13.90 +.34 1.06 37.34 +.61 0.72 94.10 +2.05 0.55 5.56 +.14 13.13 -.18 1.40 21.82 +.23 0.42 55.21 +1.54 0.92 51.79 +1.82 1.60 74.63 +1.19 6.77 -.23 4.67 -.08 1.10 34.55 +.26 10.42 +.05 24.38 +1.66 1.12 43.64 +.25 3.27 -.10 2.00 64.41 +.04 0.40 4.03 +.07 0.44 12.68 +.13 10.34 -.15 2.53 62.17 +1.35 2.13 +.15 32.33 +.75 1.82 125.95 -.47 1.70 44.56 +.19 0.64 40.45 +.69 32.52 +1.55

NuanceCm Nucor NvIMO NuvMuVal NvMulSI&G NvMSI&G2 NuvQPf2 Nvidia OCZ Tech OGE Engy OReillyAu OasisPet OcciPet Oceaneer s Och-Ziff Oclaro OcwenFn OdysMar OfficeDpt OfficeMax OilSvHT OilStates Oilsands g OldDomF s OldNBcp OldRepub Olin OmegaHlt Omncre Omnicom OmniVisn Omnova OnSmcnd Oncolyt g Oncothyr ONEOK OnyxPh OpenTxt OpenTable OpnwvSy OpkoHlth Opnext OptimerPh optXprs Oracle OraSure Orbitz Orexigen OrientEH Oritani OshkoshCp OvShip OwensMin OwensCorn OwensIll Oxigne rsh PDL Bio PF Chng PG&E Cp PHH Corp PMC Sra PMI Grp PNC PNM Res PPG PPL Corp PSS Wrld PVH Corp Paccar PacEth rs PacSunwr PackAmer PaetecHld PainTher Palatin rs PallCorp PanASlv Pandora n PaneraBrd ParamTch ParaG&S Parexel ParkDrl ParkerHan PrtnrCm PartnerRe PartRe pfE PatriotCoal Patterson PattUTI Paychex PeabdyE Pegasys lf Pengrth g PnnNGm PennVa PennWst g PennantPk Penney PenRE Penske Pentair PeopUtdF PepBoy PepcoHold PepsiCo PeregrineP PerfectWld PerkElm PermFix Perrigo PerryEllis PetMed Petrohawk PetrbrsA Petrobras PetroDev PtroqstE PetsMart Pfizer PhrmAth PhmHTr PharmPdt Pharmacyc Pharmasset PhilipMor PhilipsEl PhnxCos PhotrIn PiedmOfc Pier 1 PilgrimsP PimCpOp PimcoHiI PinnclEnt PinWst PionDrill PioNtrl PitnyBw PlainsAA PlainsEx PlugPwr rs PlumCrk PluristemT Polaris Polo RL Polycom s PolyOne Polypore Popular PortGE PostPrp Potash s Power-One PSCrudeDS PwshDB PS Agri PS BasMet PS USDBull PS USDBear PwSClnEn PwSFoodBv PwSWtr PSPrivEq PSFinPf PSDvTecLd PS SP LwV PwShPfd PShEMSov PSIndia PwShs QQQ Powrwav Pozen Praxair PrecCastpt PrecDrill Prestige PriceTR PrSmrt priceline PrinFncl PrivateB ProLogis ProShtDow ProShtQQQ ProShtS&P PrUShS&P ProUltDow PrUlShDow ProUltQQQ PrUShQQQ rs ProUltSP PrUShtFn rs ProUShL20 PrUltSCh25 ProUltSEM ProUltSRE ProUltSOG ProUltSBM ProUltRE ProUltFin PrUPShQQQ ProUPShD30 PrUPShR2K ProUltO&G ProUBasM PrUPR2K s ProShtR2K PrUltPQQQ s ProUltR2K ProSht20Tr ProUSSP500 PrUltSP500 s ProSUltGold ProUSSlv rs PrUltCrde rs PrUShCrde rs ProVixSTF ProUltSGld ProSUltSilv ProUltShYen ProUShEuro ProctGam ProgrssEn ProgrsSft s ProgsvCp ProgWaste ProsHldg ProUSR2K rs ProspctCap Protalix

D 21.58 +.59 1.45 39.55 +.63 0.86 13.41 +.05 0.47 9.34 +.03 0.76 8.84 +.05 0.80 9.15 +.07 0.66 8.27 -.05 14.22 +.43 9.84 -.18 1.50 50.52 +.83 62.36 +.16 32.05 +1.27 1.84 106.97 +1.71 0.60 44.02 +1.49 1.05 12.94 +.04 6.07 +.37 13.37 +.34 2.99 -.05 3.60 +.04 6.78 +.20 1.73 156.73 +3.78 83.94 +2.43 .28 -.06 37.67 +.17 0.28 10.46 +.10 0.70 11.17 +.06 0.80 22.74 +.55 1.60 21.18 +.13 0.16 30.74 +.25 1.00 48.43 +.94 31.70 +.54 7.07 +.10 9.26 +.32 4.47 -.11 8.84 +.79 2.08 74.84 +.90 34.02 +.56 69.05 +.84 77.01 +.87 2.46 +.05 4.38 +.05 2.22 +.01 11.20 +.05 4.50 15.38 +.25 0.24 32.64 +1.15 9.89 +.03 3.02 +.02 1.67 +.06 10.10 +.34 0.40 12.93 +.07 30.34 +.29 1.75 25.38 -.71 0.80 34.55 +.50 35.90 +.56 25.19 +.89 2.14 -.01 0.60 6.34 +.02 0.96 41.17 +.43 1.82 41.91 +.27 19.20 -.01 7.39 +.35 1.10 -.01 1.40 55.83 -.10 0.50 16.80 +.30 2.28 89.24 +.53 1.40 27.57 +.03 28.41 +.26 0.15 75.29 +1.90 0.48 49.66 +1.27 .00 +.03 2.98 +.08 0.80 27.46 +.35 4.54 +.21 2.00 4.67 +.07 1.06 +.06 0.70 54.12 +1.20 0.10 33.14 -.46 17.23 +.28 131.31 +2.98 22.35 +.43 3.20 -.07 23.78 +.22 6.84 +.24 1.48 87.52 +1.62 1.94 14.45 -.15 2.40 68.87 +1.06 1.81 25.45 -.13 24.67 +.74 0.48 32.31 +.12 0.20 33.72 +.90 1.24 29.75 +.35 0.34 60.67 +.77 0.12 44.79 +.93 0.84 13.09 +.38 40.38 +.45 0.23 13.23 +.11 1.08 22.55 +.35 1.08 11.15 +.13 0.80 31.73 +.37 0.60 15.78 +.31 0.28 23.46 +.41 0.80 40.71 +.81 0.63 13.47 +.07 0.12 11.40 +.17 1.08 19.24 +.12 2.06 68.54 +.54 1.83 +.02 19.51 +.21 0.28 26.45 +.59 1.65 +.14 0.28 93.13 +2.49 25.60 +1.17 0.50 10.90 +.14 38.24 +.07 1.34 29.40 +.17 1.28 32.42 +.10 38.32 +2.18 8.32 +1.17 0.56 45.55 +1.07 0.80 19.94 +.30 2.51 -.11 3.10 70.85 +.46 0.60 30.55 -.19 12.66 +.15 129.39 +.84 2.56 68.51 +1.68 1.02 23.91 -.36 2.44 +.07 8.00 +.25 1.26 20.91 +.26 12.00 +.47 5.12 +.13 1.38 19.80 +.14 1.46 13.29 +.42 14.86 +.29 2.10 43.93 +.60 16.75 +1.25 0.08 97.41 +4.05 1.48 22.21 +.34 3.93 64.13 +.58 40.72 +1.51 2.28 +.01 1.68 40.88 +.68 3.25 -.03 1.80 118.06 +5.18 0.80 137.92 +3.38 32.13 +1.39 0.16 15.80 +.12 69.80 +2.54 2.55 +.06 1.06 25.50 +.23 0.80 43.96 +1.03 0.28 60.51 +1.74 7.38 +.15 49.61 -1.89 30.55 +.21 32.81 +.20 24.84 +.49 21.43 -.05 28.44 +.06 8.53 +.19 0.24 20.40 +.43 0.16 19.42 +.34 0.83 10.08 +.08 1.27 17.69 -.01 0.11 22.13 +.32 0.19 24.92 +.24 0.96 14.24 +.02 1.53 27.02 -.06 0.24 23.42 +.61 0.42 58.85 +1.31 2.20 +.08 4.38 -.04 2.00 106.73 +.87 0.12 162.27 +2.96 15.55 +.29 13.40 +.12 1.24 58.31 +1.06 0.60 60.09 +.67 537.50+20.84 0.55 28.27 +.63 0.04 13.65 +.36 1.12 35.09 +.69 39.75 -.64 31.32 -.75 40.62 -.68 20.32 -.68 0.28 64.93 +2.07 16.59 -.55 93.97 +4.11 47.08 -2.22 0.35 53.38 +1.67 64.22 -1.73 32.00 -1.33 28.27 -.75 29.88 -.87 13.57 -.45 26.11 -.93 16.36 -.53 0.36 62.44 +1.97 0.05 60.10 +1.57 22.30 -1.68 29.88 -1.55 16.36 -1.17 0.16 58.93 +1.93 0.01 53.47 +1.62 91.35 +5.75 29.19 -.68 90.02 +5.93 0.01 47.87 +2.01 40.96 -.88 15.16 -.76 0.05 79.42 +3.64 85.96 -2.08 14.22 +.97 44.32 +1.56 45.71 -1.72 48.64 -2.47 21.41 +.52 204.33-16.48 14.62 +.06 17.55 -.09 2.10 64.61 +.06 2.48 47.29 +.24 25.67 +.90 1.40 20.11 +.14 0.50 23.44 +.05 18.17 +1.57 40.68 -1.92 1.21 9.89 +.15 6.45 +.09

Nm

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ProtLife ProvEn g ProvidFS Prudentl Prud UK PSEG PubStrg PubSt pfQ PulteGrp PPrIT

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C OV ER S T OR I ES

Computers

ing faster than the initial plans, with a total of 195 closings now scheduled by the end of 2011. That would help lift the total by the end of 2012 to 373 data centers. The government, although late in starting, is on track for a particularly aggressive winnowing of its data centers, encouraged by the need for budgetary belt tightening. “It is ambitious,” said Darrell West, an expert in government and technology policy at the Brookings Institution. “In an era of massive deficits, the federal government has to figure out ways to get more efficient. The data center consolidation is part of that process.” The total opportunity for savings is so large, Kundra explained, because for years each government agency tended to buy and build its own technology systems. Across the federal government, he noted, hundreds of different software programs are used for financial accounting and hundreds of different ones for human resources management. The number of data centers swelled from 432 in 1998 to more than 2,000 by last year. “Redundant systems and applications sprouted like weeds,” Kundra said. “We need to shift resources away from duplicative systems and use them to improve the citizen experience.”

Continued from B1 Vivek Kundra, chief information officer for the federal government, explained that the data center consolidation was part of a broader strategy to embrace more efficient, Internet-era computing. In particular, the government is shifting to cloud computing, in which users access online applications like e-mail remotely, over the Internet. Tapping cloud computing services, Kundra said, could save the government an additional $5 billion a year, reducing the need for individual government agencies to buy their own software and hardware. Shawn McCarthy, an analyst at IDC, a research firm, said, “The data consolidation is really part of a much larger reworking of information technology by the government. You start with the technology plumbing, but the goal is more responsive and efficient government services.” This week’s announcement, analysts say, is a significant step along that path, naming 178 data centers to be closed in 2012. It is the second step in the program. In April, 137 computer centers were singled out to be shut down by the end of this year. But government officials say the federal agencies are mov-

Housing

that dealing with the aftermath of the housing bubble had been one of his chief challenges. The administration had made progress, he said, but “it’s not enough. And so we’re going back to the drawing board.” The administration is keeping an eye on how the market is evolving and what is driving distress, said an administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. An interagency group that includes senior officials from the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Treasury Department continues to collect input from outside groups and members of Congress, the official said. The administration is not preparing to launch a large new program, but is considering several options including expanding existing efforts, the official said.

Continued from B1 Yet housing remains one of the biggest drags on the economic recovery and threatens to loom over the 2012 election. Millions of borrowers are facing foreclosure, while others are stuck in homes worth less than they owe, leaving them feeling cashstrapped at a time when consumer spending is needed to fuel economic growth. “There is no money and, to some degree, we have run out of ideas. I have seen them all,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. “I don’t think there is something grand that could make a big difference.” Obama set off the speculation about another large housing program earlier this month during a Twitter town hall when he said

Google

THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 B5

building a business. Page, who declined a request for an interview, has already promised Google Ventures $200 million this year and says a virtually unlimited amount is available, Maris said, as Google reconnects with its startup roots. “I’ve had conversations with Larry when he says, ‘Do as much as you can, as fast as you can in as big and disruptive a way as possible,’” he said. Google says its approach is paying off. One of its investments, Ngmoco, was acquired by a Japanese gaming company, DeNA, for up to $400 million, and another, HomeAway, for renting vacation homes, received a warm welcome from investors when it went public last month. A third, Silver Spring Networks, a smart-grid company, filed to go public last week. Google Ventures invests in various areas — the Web, biotechnology and clean technology. It puts large amounts of money into mature companies, but it is also investing small amounts in 100 new companies this year. To make its picks, the company has built computer algorithms using data from past venture investments and academic literature. For example, for individual companies, Google enters data about how long the founders worked on startups before raising money and whether the founders successfully started companies in the past. It collects similar information about potential investments before giving them a red, yellow or green light. Google says the algorithms have taught it valuable lessons, from obvious ones (entrepreneurs who have started successful companies are more likely to do it again) to less obvious ones (startups located far from the venture capitalist’s office are more likely to be successful, probably because the firm has to go out of its way to finance the startup.) Startups backed by Google Ventures can work in a 20,000square-foot space at the Googleplex, supplied with a pingpong

Continued from B1 Corporate venture funds invested $583 million in startups in the first three months of the year, according to the National Venture Capital Association, up from $443 million in the same period last year and $245 million in 2009, before tech investing began its rapid turnaround. Today, 10 percent of venture capital dollars comes from corporations, nearing the previous bubble-era high of 15 percent in 2000. Facebook, Zynga and Amazon.com are investing in social media startups. AOL Ventures restarted last year after three previous efforts, and Intel Capital expects to invest more this year than the $327 million it invested last year. Google Ventures says it has invested as much money in the first half of this year as in all of last, and Larry Page, the company’s co-founder, who became chief executive this spring, has promised to keep the coffers wide open. Corporate venture arms have sprung into action before during boom times, like the early 1980s and the late 1990s, but they have had mixed records. “When the corporate guys get involved, it usually means that we’re at the top of the market,” said Andrew Rachleff, who teaches venture capital at Stanford and was a founder of Benchmark Capital, the venture firm. Rachleff also questioned Google’s reliance on its algorithms. “There’s no analysis to be done when you’re evaluating a company that’s creating a new market, because there’s no market to analyze,” he said. “You have to apply judgment.” Although even Maris compares venture investing to “buying lottery tickets,” Google says it has faith in its algorithms. At the same time, it is taking the unusual step of providing the chosen startups with access to its 28,770 employees for engineering, recruiting and business advice, and offering office space at the Googleplex and classes on

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even for small investments in untried companies, slows the investment process when compared with other firms. Google Ventures also turns to Google employees to find investment ideas. It offers $10,000 to anyone who suggests a startup that results in an investment. And the company has invested in three of the ex-Google employees who have been leaving as the company grows. Like the entrepreneurs, Maris has learned a lesson from Google: Meet founders, even if their startup idea sounds crazy. Fifteen years ago, a friend of his, Anne Wojcicki, suggested he finance a couple of engineers who were working on a startup in her sister’s garage, but he declined. The startup was Google, which still makes him cringe. “It’s ironic I’m running the venture business now,” Maris said, “because I missed the biggest venture idea of all time.”

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table and a snack-filled kitchen. In exchange, they make a $5-amonth donation to the barbecue fund. But the company offers a lot more than space, say the chosen entrepreneurs. Adimab, a biotech company, is using free space on Google’s enormous servers. EnglishCentral, an English-language education site, tested its coursework and accents for Japanese speakers with employees in Google’s Japan office. Google shared a contact list for airport chief information officers with Scvngr, a mobile gaming company, when it wanted to partner with airports. Craig Walker, a serial entrepreneur who recently started Firespotter Labs, backed by Google Ventures, said a Google recruiter had helped him hire engineers. “A lot of times VCs will say, ‘We’re not just money, we’re valueadd,’ and I’ve always been somewhat doubtful of those claims,” Walker said. “With Google Ventures, those claims are completely justified.” Still, some entrepreneurs who have worked with Google Ventures say Google’s drive to analyze everything exhaustively,

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Div

PE

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

1.24 .92 1.74 ... .48a ... 1.68 .12 .58f .07 1.46 .86f .52 ... .20 .50 .24 .48f ... .60

21 18 18 11 31 ... 40 23 15 16 19 10 28 9 40 13 20 12 33 ...

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

Price (troy oz.) $1584.00 $1600.90 $40.211

Pvs Day $1604.00 $1602.10 $40.333

Market recap 90.74 51.79 46.25 6.78 49.66 3.20 40.88 162.27 24.17 56.62 85.07 40.94 40.32 10.06 11.65 25.03 17.14 28.41 16.71 22.25

+.10 +1.82 +.57 +.20 +1.27 +.20 +.68 +2.96 +.55 +1.07 +1.66 +.78 +.92 +.58 +.18 +.60 +.10 +1.53 -.48 +.87

+6.2 +22.2 -.5 -61.7 -13.4 +54.6 +9.2 +16.6 +7.5 -14.7 +1.6 -9.3 +25.5 -13.9 -4.4 -7.2 +1.3 -8.3 +18.5 +17.5

Prime rate Time period

NYSE

YTD Last Chg %Chg

Percent

Last Previous day A week ago

3.25 3.25 3.25

Amex

Most Active ($1 or more) Name

Vol (00)

Last Chg

BkofAm S&P500ETF SPDR Fncl WellsFargo iShSilver

2978460 1456697 1079305 618667 563464

9.57 -.15 132.73 +2.12 14.83 +.18 28.41 +1.53 38.01 -1.46

Gainers ($2 or more) Name PtroqstE Lentuo n NetQin n Hyperdyn DrxSOXBll

Last

Chg %Chg

8.32 +1.17 +16.4 6.38 +.85 +15.4 6.25 +.76 +13.8 4.92 +.54 +12.3 41.08 +3.70 +9.9

Losers ($2 or more) Name Taomee n BkA DJ5-15 AveryD C-TrCVOL iP SER2K

Last 13.40 11.25 32.65 27.29 25.85

Indexes

Most Active ($1 or more) Name KodiakO g NthgtM g NeoStem NewEnSys CheniereEn

Name

160364 68896 54248 50276 38958

6.41 +.28 3.27 -.10 1.06 -.26 3.93 +1.63 9.58 +.01

SiriusXM Microsoft NewsCpA Intel Cisco

Vol (00) 918854 846912 652997 541245 534679

Last Chg 2.21 27.54 15.79 23.06 15.66

-.03 +.95 +.83 +.78 +.23

Gainers ($2 or more)

Name

Last

NewEnSys VoyagerOG ChinaShen FieldPnt Adventrx

3.93 +1.63 +70.9 3.22 +.41 +14.6 3.01 +.31 +11.5 3.20 +.29 +10.0 3.49 +.27 +8.4

Chg %Chg

Name

Last

ChiCera un InterDig KandiTech WebMD SemiLeds n

Chg %Chg

5.78 +1.32 53.26 +11.75 2.45 +.47 36.89 +4.41 5.60 +.61

+29.6 +28.3 +23.7 +13.6 +12.2

Losers ($2 or more)

Name

Last

Chg %Chg

Name

-16.7 -15.3 -13.6 -12.5 -12.0

Flanign GrtBasG g HelixBio g Accelr8 MdwGold g

7.00 2.08 2.72 3.78 2.57

-.57 -.16 -.19 -.26 -.17

-7.5 -7.1 -6.5 -6.4 -6.2

GeoMet pf ChinaHGS SGOCO n Rdiff.cm Zhongpin

2,414 630 88 3,132 87 33

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

293 179 27 499 8 6

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Diary Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last Chg

Gainers ($2 or more)

52-Week High Low Name

Most Active ($1 or more)

Vol (00)

Losers ($2 or more)

Chg %Chg -2.69 -2.04 -5.16 -3.90 -3.51

Nasdaq

Last

Diary

Chg %Chg

10.06 -1.52 -13.1 2.22 -.32 -12.6 3.81 -.55 -12.6 12.48 -1.46 -10.5 9.34 -.91 -8.9

Diary 2,031 547 90 2,668 83 39

12,876.00 9,936.62 Dow Jones Industrials 5,627.85 4,010.52 Dow Jones Transportation 441.86 377.78 Dow Jones Utilities 8,718.25 6,594.95 NYSE Composite 2,490.51 1,830.65 Amex Index 2,887.75 2,099.29 Nasdaq Composite 1,370.58 1,039.70 S&P 500 14,562.01 10,877.63 Wilshire 5000 868.57 588.58 Russell 2000

World markets

Last

Net Chg

12,587.42 5,347.49 431.89 8,254.38 2,387.23 2,826.52 1,326.73 14,105.88 834.62

+202.26 +63.57 +4.13 +118.85 +3.07 +61.41 +21.29 +237.54 +18.65

YTD %Chg %Chg +1.63 +1.20 +.97 +1.46 +.13 +2.22 +1.63 +1.71 +2.29

52-wk %Chg

+8.72 +4.71 +6.64 +3.65 +8.10 +6.55 +5.49 +5.58 +6.50

+23.04 +27.24 +11.87 +21.03 +27.63 +27.18 +22.45 +24.31 +33.70

Currencies

Here is how key international stock markets performed Tuesday.

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

Market

Dollar vs:

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

Close

% Change

326.17 2,402.71 3,694.95 5,789.99 7,192.67 21,902.40 35,752.02 18,229.47 3,392.02 9,889.72 2,130.21 3,096.12 4,539.40 5,403.53

+.93 s +.78 s +1.21 s +.65 s +1.19 s +.45 s -.08 t +1.92 s +.18 s -.85 t -.01 t +.56 s -.01 t +1.09 s

Exchange Rate

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

Pvs Day

1.0727 1.6120 1.0518 .002166 .1547 1.4134 .1283 .012620 .085710 .0354 .000942 .1534 1.2136 .0346

1.0603 1.6048 1.0422 .002156 .1545 1.4090 .1282 .012650 .085148 .0354 .000944 .1522 1.2221 .0345

Selected mutual funds YTD Name NAV Chg %Ret Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 20.06 +0.28 +2.9 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 19.02 +0.26 +2.6 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.41 +0.05 +3.9 GrowthI 27.68 +0.53 +7.1 Ultra 24.84 +0.45 +9.7 American Funds A: AmcpA p 20.01 +0.33 +6.7 AMutlA p 26.59 +0.32 +6.2 BalA p 18.74 +0.20 +5.7 BondA p 12.40 +0.01 +3.6 CapIBA p 51.10 +0.46 +4.3 CapWGA p 36.10 +0.50 +2.6 CapWA p 21.07 +0.02 +5.0 EupacA p 42.18 +0.50 +2.0 FdInvA p 38.43 +0.59 +5.4 GwthA p 31.96 +0.53 +5.0 HI TrA p 11.39 +5.0 IncoA p 17.14 +0.15 +5.6 IntBdA p 13.58 +2.4 ICAA p 28.85 +0.44 +3.4 NEcoA p 26.80 +0.39 +5.8 N PerA p 29.59 +0.37 +3.4 NwWrldA 55.06 +0.51 +0.9 SmCpA p 39.79 +0.52 +2.4 TxExA p 12.13 +4.9 WshA p 29.11 +0.35 +8.2 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 30.38 +0.49 +0.8 IntEqII I r 12.61 +0.22 +1.2 Artisan Funds: Intl 22.67 +0.25 +4.5 IntlVal r 27.52 +0.31 +1.5 MidCap 37.29 +0.92 +10.9 MidCapVal 21.78 +0.30 +8.5 Baron Funds: Growth 56.50 +1.04 +10.3 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.99 +0.01 +4.1 DivMu 14.51 +3.5 TxMgdIntl 15.35 +0.23 -2.4

BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 18.66 +0.24 +6.9 GlAlA r 20.18 +0.16 +3.9 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.77 +0.14 +3.5 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.71 +0.24 +7.1 GlbAlloc r 20.29 +0.15 +4.1 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 57.46 +1.29 +7.6 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 31.10 +0.64 +7.5 DivEqInc 10.43 +0.16 +4.0 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 32.10 +0.66 +7.7 AcornIntZ 40.81 +0.52 +2.2 LgCapGr 14.31 +0.37 +15.2 ValRestr 51.85 +0.80 +3.2 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.60 +0.06 +2.8 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq 11.26 +0.15 +1.6 USCorEq1 11.69 +0.21 +6.8 USCorEq2 11.60 +0.20 +6.3 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 35.10 +0.55 +2.2 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 35.52 +0.56 +2.4 NYVen C 33.81 +0.53 +1.8 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.41 NA Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq 21.93 +0.22 -0.5 EmMktV 34.89 +0.36 -3.1 IntSmVa 17.32 +0.24 +1.8 LargeCo 10.47 +0.17 +6.6 USLgVa 21.19 +0.29 +6.0 US Small 23.12 +0.53 +8.5 US SmVa 27.04 +0.56 +5.9 IntlSmCo 17.39 +0.19 +2.4 Fixd 10.36 +0.6 IntVa 18.15 +0.27 +0.7 Glb5FxInc 11.30 -0.01 +3.9 2YGlFxd 10.22 +0.7 Dodge&Cox:

Balanced 72.49 +0.97 Income 13.46 +0.01 IntlStk 35.52 +0.42 Stock 111.54 +1.96 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.09 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.51 +0.24 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.02 -0.01 GblMacAbR 10.16 +0.01 LgCapVal 18.56 +0.24 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.54 +0.20 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.81 FPACres 27.67 +0.20 Fairholme 30.95 +0.26 Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 21.24 +0.35 StrInA 12.65 +0.02 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI 21.47 +0.35 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 14.14 +0.12 FF2015 11.81 +0.10 FF2020 14.37 +0.13 FF2020K 13.59 +0.13 FF2025 12.01 +0.13 FF2025K 13.80 +0.15 FF2030 14.35 +0.16 FF2030K 13.99 +0.16 FF2035 11.96 +0.15 FF2040 8.35 +0.10 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 13.02 +0.22 AMgr50 15.87 +0.14 Balanc 19.01 +0.21 BalancedK 19.01 +0.22 BlueChGr 49.36 +1.04 Canada 61.37 +0.79 CapAp 26.80 +0.48 CpInc r 9.63 +0.04 Contra 72.40 +1.22 ContraK 72.41 +1.21

+4.4 +3.8 -0.5 +4.3 NA +2.1 +2.8 +1.2 +2.2 +6.0 +1.8 +4.2 -13.0 +6.6 +4.9 +6.8 +4.4 +4.5 +4.6 +4.7 +4.7 +4.8 +4.6 +4.7 +4.7 +4.6 +5.3 +3.8 +5.2 +5.2 +8.8 +5.5 +5.8 +5.4 +7.0 +7.1

DisEq 23.81 DivIntl 30.65 DivrsIntK r 30.65 DivGth 29.59 Eq Inc 45.20 EQII 18.69 Fidel 34.66 FltRateHi r 9.82 GNMA 11.72 GovtInc 10.65 GroCo 94.12 GroInc 18.97 GrowthCoK 94.13 HighInc r 9.08 Indepn 26.17 IntBd 10.79 IntlDisc 33.23 InvGrBd 11.67 InvGB 7.58 LgCapVal 11.85 LevCoStk 29.66 LowP r 41.70 LowPriK r 41.70 Magelln 73.59 MidCap 29.34 MuniInc 12.60 NwMkt r 15.95 OTC 61.22 100Index 9.26 Puritn 18.78 SCmdtyStrt 12.78 SrsIntGrw 11.57 SrsIntVal 10.02 SrInvGrdF 11.68 STBF 8.53 SmllCpS r 19.89 StratInc 11.32 StrReRt r 9.95 TotalBd 10.97 USBI 11.56 Value 70.81 Fidelity Selects: Gold r 51.00 Fidelity Spartan:

+0.40 +0.41 +0.41 +0.53 +0.54 +0.23 +0.64

+5.7 +1.7 +1.8 +4.1 +2.9 +3.2 +7.8 +1.8 +4.1 +0.02 +3.3 +2.09 +13.2 +0.27 +4.4 +2.09 +13.3 +0.01 +4.9 +0.57 +7.5 +0.01 +4.0 +0.41 +0.6 +0.02 +4.0 +0.01 +4.4 +0.15 +3.4 +0.58 +4.4 +0.47 +8.7 +0.46 +8.7 +1.33 +2.8 +0.60 +6.9 +5.1 +0.03 +5.0 +1.48 +11.5 +0.15 +5.9 +0.21 +5.8 +0.05 +1.1 +0.13 +2.5 +0.15 +0.8 +0.03 +4.1 +1.6 +0.45 +1.5 +0.02 +5.0 +0.05 +5.3 +0.02 +4.3 +0.03 +3.7 +1.15 +3.1 -0.46 -0.2

ExtMkIn 40.64 +0.81 +7.8 500IdxInv 46.98 +0.75 +6.6 IntlInxInv 35.77 +0.42 +2.0 TotMktInv 38.83 +0.66 +6.9 Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv 46.98 +0.75 +6.6 TotMktAd r 38.83 +0.65 +6.9 First Eagle: GlblA 48.80 +0.35 +5.3 OverseasA 23.64 +0.10 +4.3 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FedTFA p 11.73 +5.9 FoundAl p 10.78 +0.10 +4.6 HYTFA p 9.96 +6.4 IncomA p 2.22 +0.01 +5.6 USGovA p 6.82 -0.01 +3.3 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv 13.87 +0.07 +5.1 IncmeAd 2.20 +0.01 +5.2 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.24 +0.01 +5.2 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 21.36 +0.21 +3.5 Frank/Temp Temp A: ForgnA p 7.19 +0.07 +3.0 GlBd A p 13.91 +0.07 +5.0 GrwthA p 18.72 +0.24 +5.2 WorldA p 15.42 +0.19 +3.9 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.93 +0.07 +4.7 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 42.25 +0.62 +5.0 GMO Trust III: Quality 21.66 +0.30 +8.9 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 13.90 +0.16 +2.7 Quality 21.67 +0.30 +9.0 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 37.43 +0.61 +4.3 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.32 +4.6 MidCapV 37.78 +0.62 +4.5 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.35 +3.3 CapApInst 40.75 +0.86 +11.0

IntlInv t 61.50 +0.64 Intl r 62.18 +0.64 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 33.89 +0.55 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI 33.94 +0.55 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 42.85 +0.73 Div&Gr 20.46 +0.30 TotRetBd 11.29 +0.01 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.26 -0.07 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r 17.42 +0.13 Invesco Funds A: Chart p 17.15 +0.22 CmstkA 16.32 +0.23 EqIncA 8.81 +0.08 GrIncA p 19.77 +0.23 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 25.80 +0.27 AssetStA p 26.66 +0.29 AssetStrI r 26.91 +0.29 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.69 +0.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd 11.68 +0.01 HighYld 8.22 ShtDurBd 11.03 USLCCrPls 21.50 +0.35 Janus T Shrs: OvrseasT r 45.30 +0.52 PrkMCVal T 23.71 +0.29 John Hancock Cl 1: LSBalanc 13.39 +0.14 LSGrwth 13.42 +0.18 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.47 +0.24 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p 21.83 +0.24 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.89 +0.50 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.89 +0.08 StrInc C 15.53 +0.08

+2.5 +2.7 -2.1 -2.0 +1.2 +4.9 +3.6 -0.2 +4.2 +6.1 +4.4 +3.5 +3.4 +8.7 +9.2 +9.3 +3.8 +3.9 +4.5 +1.4 +4.0 -10.5 +5.1 +4.6 +4.5 -1.4 -1.6 +9.3 +7.1 +6.8

LSBondR 14.83 +0.08 +6.9 StrIncA 15.46 +0.09 +7.3 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.50 +0.04 +5.7 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.71 +0.18 +1.6 BdDebA p 7.99 +0.01 +5.7 ShDurIncA p 4.60 +2.4 Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t 4.63 +2.0 MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.54 +0.12 +4.2 ValueA 23.70 +0.30 +4.6 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.80 +0.30 +4.7 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.91 +0.12 +3.5 MergerFd 16.15 +0.04 +2.3 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.48 +3.4 TotRtBdI 10.48 +0.01 +3.6 MorganStanley Inst: MCapGrI 41.74 +0.70 +11.8 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 29.89 +0.30 +2.4 GlbDiscZ 30.29 +0.30 +2.6 QuestZ 18.33 +0.17 +3.6 SharesZ 21.56 +0.22 +3.7 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 51.34 +0.94 +11.7 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 53.13 +0.97 +11.5 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.39 NA Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 29.40 +0.32 +6.0 Intl I r 19.27 +0.07 -0.7 Oakmark 43.88 +0.64 +6.2 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.04 +0.05 +5.6 GlbSMdCap 16.04 +0.19 +5.7 Oppenheimer A: DvMktA p 35.24 +0.42 -3.4 GlobA p 63.22 +0.89 +4.7 GblStrIncA 4.34 +0.01 +4.6

IntBdA p 6.69 +0.02 MnStFdA 33.41 +0.49 RisingDivA 16.58 +0.27 S&MdCpVl 33.99 +0.52 Oppenheimer B: RisingDivB 15.03 +0.25 S&MdCpVl 29.03 +0.44 Oppenheimer C&M: RisingDvC p 14.97 +0.24 Oppenheimer Roch: RcNtMuA 6.89 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.91 +0.41 IntlBdY 6.69 +0.03 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.04 +0.02 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r 10.95 +0.04 AllAsset 12.53 +0.07 ComodRR 9.24 +0.08 DevLcMk r 10.99 +0.04 DivInc 11.61 +0.01 HiYld 9.38 InvGrCp 10.74 +0.03 LowDu 10.50 +0.01 RealRtnI 11.88 +0.07 ShortT 9.89 TotRt 11.04 +0.02 PIMCO Funds A: RealRtA p 11.88 +0.07 TotRtA 11.04 +0.02 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 11.04 +0.02 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.04 +0.02 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.04 +0.02 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 49.65 +0.29 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 42.49 +0.63 Price Funds: BlChip 41.58 +0.70 CapApp 21.53 +0.25 EmMktS 35.13 +0.35

+4.1 +3.1 +7.5 +6.1 +7.0 +5.6 +7.1 +8.3 -3.2 +4.3 +3.5 +5.4 +5.6 +7.6 +4.7 +4.7 +4.9 +5.5 +2.3 +7.4 +1.0 +3.6 +7.1 +3.4 +3.0 +3.5 +3.6 +8.4 +4.2 +9.0 +6.0 -0.4

EqInc 24.34 EqIndex 35.76 Growth 34.57 HlthSci 36.48 HiYield 6.84 IntlBond 10.34 Intl G&I 13.82 IntlStk 14.47 MidCap 62.61 MCapVal 24.84 N Asia 19.81 New Era 54.42 N Horiz 37.99 N Inc 9.61 R2010 16.08 R2015 12.49 R2020 17.28 R2025 12.67 R2030 18.20 R2035 12.89 R2040 18.35 ShtBd 4.86 SmCpStk 37.89 SmCapVal 38.57 SpecIn 12.58 Value 24.40 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.65 VoyA p 23.41 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 12.55 PremierI r 22.32 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 39.65 S&P Sel 20.85 Scout Funds: Intl 32.84 Selected Funds: AmShD 42.37 Sequoia 145.51 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 20.33 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 51.12 Thornburg Fds:

+0.28 +3.6 +0.57 +6.5 +0.61 +7.5 +0.54 +20.5 +4.9 +0.02 +5.4 +0.20 +3.8 +0.19 +1.7 +1.11 +7.0 +0.33 +4.8 +0.13 +3.3 +1.07 +4.3 +0.86 +13.4 +0.02 +3.2 +0.15 +4.8 +0.13 +5.0 +0.20 +5.1 +0.16 +5.2 +0.24 +5.3 +0.18 +5.4 +0.26 +5.3 +1.5 +0.81 +10.0 +0.83 +6.8 +0.04 +4.1 +0.37 +4.5 NA +0.44 -1.3 +0.22 +7.7 +0.30 +9.7 +0.65 +6.6 +0.33 +6.5 +0.41 +2.0 +0.66 +2.3 +1.71 +12.5 +0.22 +1.4 +0.63 -1.2

IntValA p 28.58 IntValue I 29.21 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.98 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml 22.36 CAITAdm 11.04 CpOpAdl 78.75 EMAdmr r 39.78 Energy 135.99 ExtdAdm 44.64 500Adml 122.30 GNMA Ad 10.96 GrwAdm 33.91 HlthCr 58.87 HiYldCp 5.80 InfProAd 27.00 ITBdAdml 11.55 ITsryAdml 11.71 IntGrAdm 63.23 ITAdml 13.62 ITGrAdm 10.07 LtdTrAd 11.10 LTGrAdml 9.65 LT Adml 10.97 MCpAdml 99.66 MuHYAdm 10.38 PrmCap r 72.02 ReitAdm r 87.82 STsyAdml 10.80 STBdAdml 10.66 ShtTrAd 15.92 STIGrAd 10.78 SmCAdm 37.71 TtlBAdml 10.79 TStkAdm 33.48 WellslAdm 54.63 WelltnAdm 55.65 Windsor 46.38 WdsrIIAd 47.85 Vanguard Fds: AssetA 25.76 CapOpp 34.08 DivdGro 15.38

+0.17 +2.6 +0.17 +2.8 +0.19 +0.7 +0.25 +5.7 +5.3 +1.47 +2.6 +0.44 -0.2 +2.43 +12.4 +0.90 +8.2 +1.96 +6.6 +3.9 +0.68 +7.9 +0.43 +14.8 +5.8 +0.15 +7.9 +0.02 +5.6 +0.01 +4.7 +0.89 +2.8 +4.8 +0.01 +5.0 +2.2 +0.14 +6.6 +5.3 +1.91 +8.1 +0.01 +5.5 +1.34 +5.5 +1.51 +13.7 +1.6 +2.2 +1.1 +2.1 +0.82 +8.4 +0.02 +3.7 +0.57 +6.9 +0.33 +5.8 +0.61 +5.1 +0.78 +2.5 +0.69 +6.2 +0.41 +6.0 +0.64 +2.5 +0.19 +8.0

Energy 72.41 EqInc 21.82 Explr 80.32 GNMA 10.96 GlobEq 18.72 HYCorp 5.80 HlthCre 139.48 InflaPro 13.75 IntlGr 19.86 IntlVal 32.13 ITIGrade 10.07 LifeCon 16.87 LifeGro 23.03 LifeMod 20.35 LTIGrade 9.65 Morg 19.50 MuInt 13.62 PrecMtls r 26.76 PrmcpCor 14.57 Prmcp r 69.38 SelValu r 19.81 STAR 19.81 STIGrade 10.78 StratEq 20.53 TgtRetInc 11.69 TgRe2010 23.44 TgtRe2015 13.03 TgRe2020 23.18 TgtRe2025 13.25 TgRe2030 22.79 TgtRe2035 13.77 TgtRe2040 22.62 TgtRe2045 14.21 USGro 19.89 Wellsly 22.55 Welltn 32.22 Wndsr 13.75 WndsII 26.96 Vanguard Idx Fds: TotIntAdm r 26.78 TotIntlInst r 107.14 500 122.29 MidCap 21.94 SmCap 37.65

+1.30 +12.4 +0.26 +8.6 +1.76 +10.2 +3.9 +0.28 +4.8 +5.8 +1.01 +14.8 +0.08 +7.9 +0.28 +2.7 +0.40 -0.1 +0.01 +5.0 +0.13 +4.1 +0.32 +5.1 +0.23 +4.8 +0.14 +6.5 +0.42 +8.2 +4.8 +0.39 +0.2 +0.25 +5.8 +1.29 +5.4 +0.22 +5.6 +0.24 +4.8 +2.0 +0.41 +12.1 +0.08 +4.9 +0.21 +5.1 +0.13 +4.9 +0.25 +4.9 +0.16 +5.0 +0.29 +5.1 +0.19 +5.2 +0.33 +5.2 +0.21 +5.3 +0.42 +9.0 +0.14 +5.8 +0.35 +5.0 +0.24 +2.5 +0.39 +6.1

SmlCpGth

24.41 +0.59 +11.4

SmlCpVl

16.85 +0.32 +5.3

+0.34 +1.36 +1.96 +0.42 +0.81

CorePlus I

+1.6 +1.6 +6.5 +8.0 +8.4

STBnd

10.66

TotBnd

10.79 +0.02 +3.6

+2.2

TotlIntl

16.01 +0.21 +1.6

TotStk

33.47 +0.56 +6.9

Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst

22.36 +0.25 +5.8

DevMkInst

10.19 +0.14 +2.1

ExtIn

44.64 +0.90 +8.2

FTAllWldI r

95.45 +1.23 +1.7

GrwthIst

33.91 +0.68 +7.9

InfProInst

11.00 +0.06 +8.0

InstIdx

121.47 +1.94 +6.6

InsPl

121.48 +1.95 +6.6

InsTStPlus

30.29 +0.52 +7.0

MidCpIst

22.02 +0.43 +8.2

SCInst

37.71 +0.82 +8.5

TBIst

10.79 +0.02 +3.7

TSInst

33.48 +0.56 +6.9

Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl

101.02 +1.62 +6.6

MidCpIdx

31.45 +0.60 +8.1

STBdIdx

10.66

TotBdSgl

10.79 +0.02 +3.7

TotStkSgl

32.31 +0.54 +6.9

+2.2

Western Asset: 11.01 +0.02 +4.2

Yacktman Funds: Fund p

17.81 +0.27 +7.7


B USI N ESS

B6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

M

If you have Marketplace events you would like to submit, please contact Marla Polenz at 541-617-7815, e-mail business@bendbulletin.com, or click on “Submit an Event” on our website at www.bendbulletin.com. Please allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication.

BUSINESS CALENDAR TODAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603.

THURSDAY BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF SCHWAB.COM: Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794, luiz.soutomaior@ schwab.com or www.schwab.com. GRAND OPENING OF CENTRAL OREGON TRANSIT HUB: Hawthorne Station is the new transportation center connecting passengers riding Bend Area Transit on all routes serving Bend and Cascades East Transit Community Connectors that provide public transit to all central Oregon communities; free; 4 p.m.; Hawthorne Station, 334 N.E. Hawthorne, Bend; 541-548-8163 or www.coic.org. CENTRAL OREGON INTERGOVERNMENTAL COUNCIL BOARD MEETING: Free; 5 p.m.; Hawthorne Station, 334 N.E. Hawthorne, Bend; 541-548-9523. LA PINE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AFTER HOURS: Toastmasters Club charter party to introduce the newly chartered club. Hamburgers and refreshments will be served; free; 5 p.m.; L&S Gardens and Land Clearing,

50792 S. Huntington Road; 541-5369771.

FRIDAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Tax return reviews. Call to schedule an appointment; free; 3-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666 or www.facebook.com/Zoomtax.

MONDAY OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

TUESDAY SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING ON FACEBOOK, IT’S NOT JUST A FAD: Matt Hand, owner of Pinnacle Media, will help attendees understand what social media is all about, the ins and outs of Facebook marketing, how to integrate social media marketing with traditional marketing and decide if

social media marketing is right for your business. Includes lunch buffet. RSVP required; $25 for Bend Chamber of Commerce members; $45 for others; 11 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org.

WEDNESDAY July 27 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603. OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Abby’s Pizza, 1938 S. U.S. Highway 97, Redmond; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com. POWERING CUSTOMER SUPPORT WITH SOCIAL MEDIA INTELLIGENCE: Join Zach Hofer-Shall, an analyst with Forrester Research Inc., and Mark Angel, executive vice president and chief technology officer at KANA, to discuss what social media means for consumers and brands. Register at http://tinyurl.com/6hvphw9; free; 11 a.m.; ksieck@kana.com. IS YOUR INVESTMENT STRATEGY IN THE FAIRWAY OR THE ROUGH?: Presented by Jake Paltzer, Certified Financial Planner. RSVP by July 27; free; noon-2 p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 541-389-3624. BEND CHAMBER BUSINESS AFTER

HOURS: RSVP by July 26; free; 5 p.m.; Seventh Mountain Resort, 18575 S.W. Century Drive; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org. NEIGHBORHOOD NIGHT: NorthWest Crossing businesses and restaurants will offer specials, entertainment and giveaways. Held the last Wednesday of each month; free; 5-8 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend. HOW TO START A BUSINESS: Registration is required; $15; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 or http:// noncredit.cocc.edu.

THURSDAY July 28 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Masonic Center, 1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-610-9125. ETFs EXPLAINED: Better understand ETFs. What they are, how they work and how ETFs can be useful investments. Registration required; free; noon-1 p.m.; Charles Schwab & Co., 777 N.W. Wall St., Suite 201, Bend; 541-318-1794, luiz. soutomaior@schwab.com or www.schwab.com. GREEN DRINKS: Monthly networking event for environmental professionals and anyone interested in green things; free; 5-7 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908, ext. 11 or www.envirocenter.org.

NEWS OF RECORD BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed July 12

Dwight L. Wilson, 3301 N.E. Stonebrook Loop, Bend Cade G. Cahoon and Misty N. Cahoon, 679 S.E. Tenth St., Madras Filed July 13

Dwayne A. Foster, 2505 N.E. Seventh Lane, Redmond Filed July 14

Kathryn A. Lininger, 12565 S.W. Corral Place, Terrebonne

Casey L. Carnahan, 24865 Alpine Lane, Bend Terry P. Seevers and Susan Seevers, 2964 N.E. Conners Ave., Bend Filed July 15

Roger C. Brandon, 1210 S.W. Myrtle St., Dundee John A. Rutherford, 19327 Apache Road, Bend Margie G. Weaver, 19595 Apache Road, Bend David R. Hagenbach and Ruth A. Hagenbach, 436 S.W. Forest Grove Drive, Bend Marilyn Y. Wagner, 525 S.W.

Tenth St., Redmond Tammy L. Thorpe, 21158 Claire Way Ave., Bend Filed July 18

Ashleigh N. M. Wishon, 16472 Riley Drive, La Pine James G. Anderson, 17346 Golden Eye Drive, Bend Daniel S. Griffiths, 61032 Fox Hills Drive, Bend Danita L. Sullivan, 3333 N.E. Stonebrook Loop, Bend Cody L. Nelson, 20088 Thomas Drive, Bend

a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

FRIDAY July 29 EDWARD JONES COFFEE CLUB: Current market and economic update including current rates; free; 9 a.m.; Sisters Coffee Co., 61292 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 105, Bend; 541617-8861. FREE TAX FRIDAY: Tax return reviews. Call to schedule an appointment; free; 3-4 p.m.; Zoom Tax, 963 S.W. Simpson Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-385-9666 or www.facebook.com/Zoomtax.

SATURDAY

TUESDAY Aug. 2 OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza, 1552 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www.happyhourtraining.com.

WEDNESDAY

July 30 OREGON ALCOHOL SERVER PERMIT TRAINING: Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission to obtain the alcohol server permit. Preregistration required; $35; 9

Aug. 3 BUSINESS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MEETING: Starts promptly at 7 a.m.; free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-550-6603.

GET YOUR

S: AU GU ST FA IR DATE

3 -7

Chapter 13

Official Deschutes County Fair Guide! Wednesday, July 27 in both The Bulletin and the Redmond Spokesman

Filed July 12

Dennis J. Shaw, 659 S.W. Madison St., Madras Filed July 14

Michael J. Spedick, 18665 Innes Market Road, Bend Michael G. Craig and Linda J. Craig, 52431 Day Road, La Pine Don Murphy and Emilie Dauch, 20246 Sawyer Reach Court, Bend Filed July 15

Robin N. McCain, 52419 Day Road, La Pine

Look for

Golden Tickets inserted in random copies of the guide!

Each ticket is worth 2 fair passes, 4 rides and 2 concert tickets for The Guess Who, REO Speedwagon, Clay Walker or Joan Jett and The Blackhearts! presents

The 2011 Deschutes County

& RODEO • Jam Packed Fun!


L

Inside

OREGON Hundreds of jobs to vanish with plant’s closure, see Page C2. Springfield approves potbellied pigs as pets, see Page C6.

SCHOOL’S OUT Library program teaches about other cultures, see Page C3. www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2011

IN BRIEF 2 injured in crash near Fall River site Two Bend men were sent to the hospital with non-lifethreatening injuries Monday after they crashed their car on South Century Drive near the Fall River campground entrance, the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office said. Adam Womack, 26, was driving a 2000 Ford Escape eastbound on South Century Drive with passenger Steven Kaylor, 54, when for an unknown reason, Womack lost control of the car. The car left the road and eventually rolled over. The vehicle came to rest on its top near the campground entrance. Kaylor was able to climb out after the crash, but Womack was stuck for 45 minutes in the car until fire personnel were able to extricate him. Womack was airlifted to St. Charles Bend, and Kaylor was transported to the hospital by ambulance. Police say alcohol may have been a factor in the crash, which is still under investigation.

Union to pitch in on health premiums State, AFSCME reach tentative agreement; pay freezes to be lifted By Lauren Dake The Bulletin

SALEM — After bargaining for 24 hours straight, one of the state’s largest employee unions agreed tentatively Tuesday that its members will pay a percentage of their health care premiums in return for an end to pay freezes. Under the deal struck by ne-

gotiators from the state and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 75, union members will pay 5 percent of their medical, dental and life insurance premiums. In return, cost-of-living and step increases will go back into effect. Though the deal must pass muster with AFSCME’s mem-

bers, it marks the first time in the state’s history that union employees will contribute to their health insurance premiums. In the past, state workers have avoided paying any health insurance premiums by taking pay cuts or pay freezes. But Ken Allen, the executive director of AFSCME, said pitching in for

health care costs “is no longer avoidable.” In the past 20 years, Allen said, state workers have had eight years of pay freezes, including the last two years. “It’s a trade-off,” Allen said. AFSCME represents about 6,000 state workers, including those who work for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality and the Oregon Liquor Control Commission. It’s one of the state’s largest unions. The tentative agree-

Shredding event in Sisters on Saturday Sisters-area residents can dispose of personal documents for free Saturday at a shredding event taking place at the Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office substation in Sisters. The event will take place from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 703 N. Larch St. Residents will be able to destroy paperwork, file folders and binders for free. The event also will allow residents to dispose of unwanted or outdated medication in an effort to keep drugs away from abusers, children and animals. Though the services will be free, the sheriff’s office asks those who show up Saturday to consider bringing non-perishable food donations to benefit NeighborImpact. — Bulletin staff reports

News of Record on Page C2.

HOW TO SUBMIT Civic Calendar notices: • E-mail: news@bendbulletin.com • Please write “Civic Calendar” in the subject line and include a contact name and daytime phone number. Obituaries and death notices: • Mail: Obituaries, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 • E-mail: obits@bendbulletin.com • More details inside this section.

ment affects about 3,000 union members. The other half include corrections officers, who have a separate bargaining process. The contract does not include any changes to the much-discussed 6 percent pickup, which is the percentage of salary employees must contribute toward retirement. Many public employers pay, or “pick up,” that contribution instead. See Agreement / C5

Deschutes fixing glitch that led to 911 outage

2 motorcyclists hurt in Highway 26 crash A traffic crash on U.S. Highway 26 east of Government Camp sent two motorcyclists to the hospital Monday evening, the Oregon State Police said. Bill Lopez, 62, and his wife, Ana Lopez, 61, of Fresno, Calif., were traveling west on the highway on a motorcycle when the collision occurred. A Chevrolet Acadia following behind the motorcycle attempted to pass it on the highway, but swerved abruptly back to the westbound lane in an attempt to avoid a collision with another group of motorcycles on the road. Bill Lopez tried to avoid hitting the Chevy that had swerved in front of him, and in doing so, lost control of the motorcycle. Both Ana and Bill Lopez were thrown from the bike. The couple were transported to Mountain View Hospital in Madras, and Bill Lopez was later transferred to St. Charles Bend. Both were wearing helmets at the time of the crash. Both were being treated for non-lifethreatening injuries. Highway 26 was closed for three hours during the emergency response and investigation.

C

By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin

Emma Coulthard, 12, of Hailey, Idaho, jumps over an obstacle as her trainer, Teresa Englehart, left, of Autumn Hills Farm in Hailey, watches her form while practicing Tuesday for the Oregon High Desert Classic being held the next two weeks at J Bar J Boys Ranch in Bend. Coulthard plans to compete in the hunter and equestrian events.

The gist of horse jumping Though they appear similar, each event at the High Desert Classic carries its own set of rules By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

T

o the uninitiated, most of the events at the Oregon High Desert Classic horse show may look more or less the same. Nonetheless, each competition is guided — and judged — by its own unique set of rules. The High Desert Classic, taking place this month at the J Bar J Youth Ranch in Bend, is recognized by such organizations as the United States Equestrian Federation (USEF) and the United States Hunter Jumper Association (USHJA). Exhibitors may show in three distinct kinds of competition: show jumping, hunters and equitation. According to the USEF, jumping tests the horse and rider over a course of obstacles,

and the competition is based on speed and accuracy. A scoring chart is used to determine the number of “faults” a horse and rider obtain in their round. Competitors are penalized for knocking down rails on jumps and for refusing to jump obstacles. Riders who fail to complete the course within the time allotted also incur time penalties. Riders who obtain three refusals during their course are eliminated. The fall of a rider or horse, straying off-course and jumping the course in the wrong sequence also results in disqualification. Competitors who have a “clean” round with no penalties advance to a jump-off, where the competitor with no faults and the fastest time wins. See Jump / C5

Scoring • First refusal (when the horse stops in front of or runs around a jump): 3 faults • Second refusal: 6 faults • Third refusal: elimination • Knockdown of an obstacle: 4 faults • Fall of horse or rider: elimination • Rider off course: elimination • Exceeding the time allowed: 1 ⁄4 fault per second over the time allowed • Exceeding the time allowed in the jump-off: 1 fault per second over the time allowed For more information visit, www.jbarj.org/ohdc/ spectators/frequently-askedquestions

Prineville man guilty of killing roommate By Erik Hidle The Bulletin

PRINEVILLE — A Prineville man who shot and killed his roommate inside their trailer two years ago avoided a murder conviction because he was too drunk to know what he was doing. Lawyers for 71-year-old Richard Lynn Breneman, of Prineville, argued he was far too intoxicated to be charged with an intentional act when he shot and killed 54-year-old Voy Douglas Powell on Nov. 6, 2009. A Crook County District Court jury agreed with that argument, but determined the act was still “reckless” and

convicted Breneman of manslaughter Monday. The charge is a class A felony and falls under Measure 11 mandatory sentencing. A sentencing hearing will be carried out July 28, but Crook County District Attorney Daina Vitolins said a 10year sentence, with credit for time served, is likely. “We thought the case was a murder, and that’s why a grand jury charged him with it,” Vitolins said. “But the jury decided he was too intoxicated to form intent.” At the time of the shooting the two were deep into a drinking session at their mobile home in the Easy Living Trailer Park. During the trial, a witness

testified the two were consumers of “Night Train” fortified wine. Investigators estimate Breneman’s blood alcohol content was 0.18 at the time of the shooting, while an autopsy report showed Powell’s was around 0.23. Vitolins said the two were constantly at odds, and an argument had again broken out the night Powell was shot. Powell called 911 at 6:40 p.m. on Nov. 6 just before the shooting, telling dispatch that Breneman was threatening to kill him with a Ruger .357. A gunshot was heard on the line, and Powell cried out, “Oh, damn, he (shot) my leg.” A standoff ensued, with

Breneman and police speaking by phone. After three hours police arrested Breneman and found Powell’s body with a single gunshot wound that struck both his leg and abdomen. Manslaughter convictions and shooting deaths aren’t completely unheard of in the county, but murder trials are rare. Most people charged with murder reach a plea agreement with prosecutors before a trial. Prior to Breneman’s, said Vitolins, the most recent murder trial to go before jury in Crook County took place in 1979. Erik Hidle can be reached at 541-617-7837 or at ehidle@bendbulletin.com.

Determined to keep emergency communications from faltering during future power outages, Deschutes County will spend more than $70,000 to replace a piece of equipment at its 911 dispatch center. In February, the telephone and computer systems at Deschutes County 911 shut off for 90 minutes after a power disruption caused a control circuit to turn off backup power systems. The Feb. 15 outage occurred during a major snow storm when more than 20,000 local energy customers lost power. The 911 center was designed to keep operating during power disruptions and outages. But in this case, the control circuit was wired to shut off all power sources to the computer room — including a backup system with batteries, which is designed to transition 911 systems over to an emergency generator.

Consultant hired This setup was required by the National Electric Code in place when the 911 dispatch center was built. The code changed this year to provide an exception for critical operations centers, such as 911, according to a consultant hired by the county to analyze the problem. The consultant completed a report on the cause of 911’s internal power outage in May, and the county recently released the analysis to The Bulletin in response to a public records request. The report identified the circuit as the possible root of the problem and recommended the equipment removal and replacement that the 911 district is now carrying out. When the power disruption shut down 911 telephone and computer systems in February, 911 workers could not take calls, dispatch officers nor look up criminal histories the way they normally do. The dispatchers called the Oregon State Police and had local 911 calls transferred to them. Meanwhile, managers instructed employees to go to their lockers and retrieve their cell phones, 911 Director Rob Poirier said Tuesday. State police dispatchers communicated information back to Deschutes County 911 workers on their cellphones, and the local dispatchers wrote down the information and used hand-held radios to talk to police and fire units.

No injuries No one was hurt as a result of 911’s outage, but Poirier said it was the first time he’d experienced an outage of that scale at a dispatch center. “In almost 18 years of doing this, you’ve been through minor power outages, but I’ve never really been in one where it involved a large, multi-agency (911 dispatch center) like this,” said Poirier, who was hired in October and previous worked in Stayton and Lebanon. See Outage / C5


C2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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

Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:45 a.m. July 15, in the 800 block of Northeast Watt Way. Criminal mischief — Graffiti was reported at 12:26 p.m. July 15, in the 300 block of Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive. Theft — A bicycle was reported stolen at 1:43 p.m. July 15, in the 800 block of Northeast Eighth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:39 p.m. July 15, in the 2500 block of Northeast Neff Road. DUII — Benjamin James Fortier, 18, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:10 p.m. July 15, in the area of Northeast Eighth Street and Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 8:44 p.m. July 15, in the 100 block of Northeast 13th Street. DUII — Caleb Herman Kennedy, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:16 a.m. July 16, in the 800 block of Northwest Wall Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:38 a.m. July 16, in the 1400 block of Northeast Williamson Boulevard. Theft — A theft was reported at 12:27 p.m. July 16, in the 61400 block of Southeast 27th Street. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 2:05 p.m. July 16, in the 100 block of Northeast Craven Road. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 3:08 p.m. July 16, in the 1300 block of Northeast Second Street. Theft — Two bicycles were reported stolen at 5:45 p.m. July 16, in the 300 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:04 p.m. July 16, in the 61000 block of Parrell Road. DUII — Galen Ray McConnell, 59, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:58 p.m. July 16, in the area of Butler Market and Deschutes Market roads. Criminal mischief — Slashed tires were reported at 6:16 a.m. July 17, in the 61000 block of Brosterhous Road. Theft — Three bicycles were reported stolen at 9:14 a.m. July 17, in the 700 block of Northwest Bond Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:39 a.m. July 17, in the 300 block of Southwest Century Drive. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:40 a.m. July 17, in the 1000 block of Northwest Union Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:47 a.m. July 17, in the 60800 block of Brookswood Boulevard.

DUII — Rodney Gene Sanner, 48, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:30 p.m. July 17, in the area of Northeast Third Street and Northeast Revere Avenue. DUII — Isaac Garcia Jr., 55, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:56 p.m. July 17, in the area of Egypt Drive and Northeast 18th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5 p.m. July 17, in the 300 block of Southwest Powerhouse Drive. Criminal mischief — Graffiti was reported at 8:56 a.m. July 18, in the 19600 block of Mountaineer Way. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:15 a.m. July 18, in the 63000 block of OB Riley Road. Unlawful entry — A vehicle was reported entered at 11:07 a.m. July 18, in the 1100 block of Northwest Columbia Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:43 a.m. July 19, in the 1800 block of Northeast Monterey Avenue.

MEDFORD

Suspect in deaths has criminal history 6; Andrew Criado, 5, and Aurora Criado, 2. Police said that the fire, which is considered arson, was started in several locations around the house.

By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press

MEDFORD — An Oregon man suspected of killing his wife and four children and setting fire to their house had been convicted of molesting children in California 21 years ago, court records show. Jordan Adam Criado, 51, remained hospitalized Tuesday in a hospital in Medford, where police planned to arrest him as soon as he had recovered enough to leave. Criado’s wife and children — ages 2, 5, 6 and 7 — had stab wounds when they were pulled from their burning home on Monday, police said. Criado had reported his wife, Tabasha Paige-Criado, 30, missing that morning. Police Chief Tim George said

Arrested in 1989 Jordan Adam Criado

Tabasha Paige-Criado

she was found later Monday and was returned home by officers, who saw her talking with Criado. Two hours later, firefighters were working frantically to resuscitate her and her four children on the front lawn before taking them to the hospital, where they were pronounced dead. The children were identified as Elijah Criado, 7; Isaac Criado,

Redmond Police Department

Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 5:39 p.m. July 18, in the area of the railroad tracks and Southeast Evergreen Avenue. Criminal mischief — A smashed window was reported at 8:47 a.m. July 18, in the 1600 block of West Antler Avenue in Redmond. Prineville Police Department

Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 6:53 a.m. July 18, in the area of Northeast Holly Street. DUII — Bradley M. Gibson, 50, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:58 p.m. July 18, in the area of Northwest Locust Street. Deschutes County Sheriff’s Office

Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at 8:06 p.m. July 18, in the 56100 block of Sandpiper Road in La Pine. Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 4:34 p.m. July 18, in the area of Third Street and Lava Drive in La Pine. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3:27 p.m. July 18, in the area of South Century Drive and milepost 15. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 1:19 p.m. July 18, in the 51000 block of U.S. Highway 97 in La Pine. Black Butte Police Department

Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 3:10 p.m. July 18, in the area of Camp Sherman Junction and U.S. Highway 20 in Sisters. Theft — License plates were reported stolen at 9:14 a.m. July 18, in the 70900 block of Meadow Grass Circle in Black Butte Ranch.

Many will lose jobs when chemical depot wraps up The Associated Press PENDLETON — About 680 people will lose their jobs when the Army finishes work at the Umatilla Chemical Depot, and Eastern Oregon is poised to feel the economic fallout. The East Oregonian reports an Army demilitarization contractor is expected to finish destroying chemical munitions at the depot in November. After that, security guards, military leaders, clerks and contractors will likely be looking for work.

$17 million loss Oregon State economist Bruce Sorte estimated the total economic loss will be about $17 million. Sorte said about 680 jobs will be lost in Umatilla and Morrow counties. “It’s pretty phenomenal,” he said. “It feels funny to me to come up with numbers that large and not have everyone just going crazy.” The depot was created to store World War II munitions. It’s been incinerating chemical weapons such as VX, sarin and mustard agents since 2004.

Court records in California’s Sacramento County showed that Criado was arrested in December 1989 and pleaded guilty in August 1990 to eight counts of lewd and lascivious acts with a child under 14. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison. The allegations involved three victims, Deputy District Attorney Cindy Bessemer told The Associated Press. The convictions were first reported Tuesday by the Medford Mail Tribune. Court records from Kern County, Calif., also showed Criado went back to jail for 91 days for failing

to register as a sex offender. Laurie Grow, a clerk at the Minute Mart convenience store where police found Paige-Criado, said the woman came in talking calmly on her telephone. Grow said the woman bought three packets of fruit-flavored cigar wrappers, then sat at a table until police pulled into the parking lot. When she saw them, she got up and went outside. Police said officers gave her a ride home, and that she did not appear frightened or nervous before police left.

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About 450 locals will lose jobs, and Sorte estimates that about 70 related jobs will be lost, along with another 160 among the businesses such as food services, nursing and retail stores. The Army is helping many of the depot’s employees find jobs or helping to retrain them for civilian employment. But though many of the federal employees with specialized job training will find work in other parts of the country, those who stay will find smaller schools, a shrinking clientele for local businesses and homes for sale without a ready buyer. “It’s tough out there, especially for those who want to stay local,” depot commander Lt. Col. Kris Perkins told the Hermiston School District board last week. The military is expected in the fall to decide whether the depot will be governed by its own baseclosing process or will be turned over to the General Services Administration, the property management agency known as the government’s landlord. Sorte said the economic loss of the depot will take about three years to play out. A previous closure of a potato processing plant in the area happened more suddenly, but most of the workers stayed in the area.

In 1976, America’s Viking 1 lands on Mars T O D AY IN HISTORY

The Associated Press Today is Wednesday, July 20, the 201st day of 2011. There are 164 days left in the year. TODAY’S HIGHLIGHT IN HISTORY On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin became the first men to walk on the moon after landing their lunar module. ON THIS DATE In 1861, the Congress of the Confederate States convened in Richmond, Va. In 1917, the draft lottery in World War I went into operation. In 1944, an attempt by a group of German officials to assassinate Adolf Hitler with a bomb failed as the explosion at Hitler’s Rastenburg headquarters only wounded the Nazi leader. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for an unprecedented fourth term of office at the Democratic convention in Chicago. In 1951, Jordan’s King Abdullah I was assassinated in Jerusalem by a Palestinian gunman who was shot dead on the spot by security. In 1954, the Geneva Accords divided Vietnam into northern and southern entities. In 1976, America’s Viking 1 robot spacecraft made a successful, first-ever landing on Mars.

TEN YEARS AGO Ira Einhorn, who was convicted in absentia of killing his girlfriend, Holly Maddux, was flown from France and handed over to Philadelphia police after 20 years on the run. (Einhorn was convicted in a retrial and sentenced to life in prison.) FIVE YEARS AGO The Senate voted 98-0 to renew the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act for another quarter-century. ONE YEAR AGO The Senate Judiciary Committee voted almost totally along party lines, 13-6, to approve Elena Kagan to be the Supreme Court’s fourth female justice. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS Actress-singer Sally Ann Howes is 81. Rockabilly singer Sleepy LaBeef is 76. Actress Diana Rigg is 73. Rock musician John Lodge is 68. Singer Kim Carnes is 66. Guitarist Carlos Santana is 64. Rock musician Paul Cook (The Sex Pistols, Man Raze) is 55. Country singer Radney Foster is 52. Actor Frank Whaley is 48. Rock singer Chris Cornell is 47. Rock musician Stone Gossard (Pearl Jam) is 45.

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Singer Vitamin C is 42. Actor Omar Epps is 38. Actor Simon Rex is 37. Actress Judy Greer is 36. Actor Charlie Korsmo is 33. Singer Elliott Yamin (American Idol) is 33. Supermodel Gisele Bundchen is 31. Rock musician Mike Kennerty (The All-American Rejects) is 31. Actor Percy Daggs III is 29. Actor John Francis Daley is 26. Country singerballroom dancer Julianne Hough is 23. Actress Billi Bruno is 15. THOUGHT FOR TODAY “We may well go to the moon, but that’s not very far. The greatest distance we have to cover still lies within us.” — Charles de Gaulle, French statesman (1890-1970)

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THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 C3

S ’ O On an imaginary journey

A special section featuring news from schools in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties

Students learn about the world during library’s summer program

By Kenneth Chang New York Times News Service

By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin

T

he Brooks Room at the Deschutes Public Library was more reminiscent of a Hawaiian airport terminal than a quiet place of study Thursday afternoon. “I like learning about the different islands,” Nevaeh Clawson, 6, said, making a lei out of twine and tissue paper. “I might want to go to Tahiti someday.” Thursday afternoon, students at the library huddled around librarian Josie Hanneman as she read folk tales from the South Pacific. During the hourlong program, students even got to make colorful leis out of tissue paper and branch out on their own learning journeys to different islands in the South Pacific. As part of the Deschutes Public Library’s Adventure Corps program offered weekly to children ages six through 11, students get a chance to learn about the world during their summer break. In weeks before, students learned about Canada and New York in the free program offered at most branches of the Deschutes Public Library system. “He just loves all the stories,” Parent Karie Woolery said of her 6-year-old son, Tyler Ortega. “It gives him something to look forward to every week.” The afternoon of fun started with Hanneman reading to students from several picture books based on classic South Pacific folktales. Hanneman proceeded to tell students the traditional tale of how a Hawaiian boy named Maui slowed the sun from crossing so quickly across the sky. Hanneman finished the story by telling students this was how the ancient Hawaiians explained why the daylight lasted longer half of they year.

Interisland voyages After Hanneman taught students how to say, “I love you” and “Be quiet” in Samoan, students participated in an activity that taught them about how people migrated throughout the many islands of the Pacific. Hanneman taught students that in order to successfully travel between islands, people of the South Pacific would have to bring key items like coconuts, taro, livestock and water with them. Then Hanneman asked students to gather into groups of five and imagine that they were Polynesian voyagers on their way to another island. Hanneman randomly spread out laminated strips of paper around the room representing the different necessary items

C O N TAC T U S SCHOOL BRIEFS: Items and announcements of general interest. Please include details and contact information. Phone: 541-617-7831 E-mail: pcliff@bendbulletin.com TEEN FEATS: The Bulletin wants to recognize high school students’ achievements off the playing fields. Do you know of teens who have been recognized recently for their academic achievements or who have won an award or certificate for their participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups? If so, please submit the information and a photo. Phone: 541-383-0358 Mail: P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 E-mail: youth@bendbulletin.com

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

New look proposed for science curriculum

Photos by Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Deschutes County Library community librarian Josie Hanneman reads a story to the Adventure Corps class participants from a book on the theme of the islands of the South Pacific. Students in the program learn about a different culture with stories, crafts and cultural items.

“My team went to Easter Island. I liked learning about all the kind of things they took on trips, like coconuts.” — Emily Blackwell, 10; student in Adventure Corps class for the journey and told students that the first group to collect five of each item would get to go to the island of their choice via the giant map in the front of the classroom. When Hanneman said “go,” students scurried around the classroom, collecting the pieces of paper that were crucial for the survival of their boats. Groups that collected all of them got dibs on placing a tack on the island of their choice on the map. “My team went to Easter Island,” Emily Blackwell, 10, said. “I liked learning about all the kind of things they took on trips, like coconuts.” Once the activity was completed, the adventure to the South Pacific ended with students making leis. Hanneman went around, translating students’ names into their Samoan equivalents. “I hope that if anything, they had a good time,” Hanneman said. “If maybe they remember this when they’re 25 years old and they’re journeying around the world, that would be pretty cool, too.” Megan Kehoe can be reached at 541-383-0354 or at mkehoe@bendbulletin.com.

Above, Emily Blackwell, 10, places flowers made of tissue paper onto a string while making a lei Thursday at the Deschutes County Library in downtown Bend. At left, Hanneman helps an Adventure Corps student with a map of the islands of the South Pacific.

A new framework for improving U.S. science education calls for paring the curriculum to focus on core ideas and teaching students more about how to approach and solve problems rather than just memorizing factual nuggets. “That is the failing of U.S. education today, that kids are expected to learn a lot of things but not expected to be able to use them,” said Helen Quinn, a retired physicist from the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park, Calif., who led an 18-member committee that spent more than a year devising the framework. One of the big goals, the committee said in a 282-page report said, is “to ensure that by the end of 12th grade, all students have some appreciation of the beauty and wonder of science.” The report, released Tuesday by the National Research Council, also pushes for incorporating engineering into what is taught to students in elementary school through high school. It is the latest in decades of efforts to improve the science knowledge of U.S. students, who have typically ranked in the middle of the pack on international comparison tests. The research council, which is the operating arm of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering, last weighed in on science education standards in 1996. Now that the council has finished a framework, a nonprofit education group, Achieve Inc., will expand it into a set of standards. Similar efforts produced standards for math and language arts that have been adopted by 44 states. Achieve is aiming to finish work by the end of next year, with drafts available publicly before then. Putting the standards into the classroom would take several more years as textbooks and lesson plans are rewritten. While Achieve is working with states to come up with standards, the core science — including evolution — is not up for debate. “What we’re not going to do is compromise the science just to get states comfortable,” said Michael Cohen, the president of Achieve. States will have the final say on whether to adopt the new approach. The Carnegie Corporation of New York financed most of the $2.26 million effort, and the National Science Teachers Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science also participated.


C4 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

E

The Bulletin AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

BETSY MCCOOL GORDON BLACK JOHN COSTA RICHARD COE

Chairwoman Publisher Editor-in-chief Editor of Editorials

Bend workers can mend the budget

T

he city of Bend has asked its employees for pay sacrifices and benefit changes. It’s close to getting them. What’s left is finalizing the agreement with the police and working

through issues with the City of Bend Employees Association. The city had discussions with COBEA on Monday.

The employees should agree. The city is just asking for common sense. The city expects revenue to hold steady over the next five years. The estimated revenue for the general fund is about $34 million a year. Anything that increases city expenditures bumps against that ceiling. Employee health insurance is one threat. Pay increases are another. The council is scheduled to discuss health costs at tonight’s meeting. Over the past 10 years, the average rate of health premium increases for the city has been 7 percent. That’s a lower increase than many premiums in the private sector. It’s still an increase. City firefighters were the first to agree to a new, high-deductible insurance plan that saves the city money on premiums. The city is working toward getting all its employee groups to switch. Continuing the existing plan for those other employees would cost the city $1,507 per individual or family. That’s a premium increase of 3.3 percent over the previous year. The proposed switch has a premium of $432 for single employees and $1,079 for families. The city has about 430 full-time employees, so the savings add up.

Savings in health care combined with no pay increases helps keep the city from having to let go of more people or reduce services. The city already cut its workforce by about 18 percent over the past year. Not so long ago, the city looked out the next five years and presented itself as facing a projected general fund shortfall. It could be as low as $17 million or as high as $27 million. The reasons are many. On the revenue side, if you wanted to pick one reason, about 62 percent of the city’s general fund revenue comes from property taxes. Obviously, the economic downturn has driven down property values. The city’s budget is still very tight, but Finance Director Sonia Andrews says assumptions about city hiring have changed. And how the city looks at the future is different. She said instead of thinking about a shortfall, the city is budgeting for the $34 million a year it thinks it will have. The city’s budget must be balanced. Projecting a shortfall highlights the city’s challenges. It doesn’t fix them. And what will help the city fix them is if employees agree to what the city is asking.

Brave 12-year-old makes a difference I

f you’re not used to it, speaking in public is a nerve-racking proposition no matter what your age. If you’re 12, it must be that much worse. Yet nerves didn’t stop Kendra Matlock, 12, of Redmond, from addressing the Redmond City Council last week and asking it to do the right thing. Matlock is familiar with the problems getting around that a person in a wheelchair can face — her brother uses one — and she knows firsthand the difficulties high curbs, stairs and steep slopes can present. So as she watched her friend, 14-year-old Katelynn Miller, who also uses a wheelchair, struggle with a curb near Obsidian Middle School each day, she decided to do something about it. Last fall she wrote the city, asking when the curb would be brought up to the standard required by the Americans with Disabilities Act. City officials responded, saying the curb would be fixed this spring. By the second week in July nothing had happened. That’s when Matlock went to the Redmond City Council and asked her question. Why, she wanted to know,

So as she watched her friend, 14-year-old Katelynn Miller, who also uses a wheelchair, struggle with a curb near Obsidian Middle School each day, she decided to do something about it.

was the curb not fixed? The situation is not fair to her friend, she said. Then she thanked city leaders for their time. Her polite public plea paid off. Mayor George Endicott told City Engineer Mike Caccavano he wants to see the job done before school starts in September, and apparently it will be. And all because Kendra Matlock wasn’t afraid to stand up and ask the city to do right by her friend and others with mobility problems. All of which just proves what the civics books tell us: A single person, even a very young person, armed with courage and working for a good cause, can make a difference in this world.

Greed undermines free market IN MY VIEW

By Kenneth H. Swipies Bulletin guest columnist

S

ome people seem to think we are a “free market capitalist” system when it is “capitalism,” a perverted system of increasingly limited market relationships, not to mention a market process that is repressed by government controls and regulations. The system of today is actually based on the ideologies of mercantilism, socialism and welfare state-ism. For all practical purposes, the policies and basic elements necessary for a truly free market economy have been either undermined or prevented from emerging. And the principles, along with the actual meaning of a free-market economy, are misunderstood and ignored. It is the principles and the meaning of a free-market economy that must be renewed if liberty is to be restored for all people. As the country grew, more businesses found it in their interest to combine with their competitors in huge trusts or cartels in order to control prices and production. Competition, which had been expected to regulate the market, came to be encouraging monopoly. The principle of “separation of state and corporation” was discarded. Thus the practice of laissez-faire was “modified.” The theory itself was not discarded; it just became a tenet of the opponents and supporters of socialism. It was said to lower consumer prices by eliminating the high costs of competition. Thus the ideals of laissez-faire theory were shifted from competition to the importance of profit as an incentive to production, and individual entrepreneurship was deemed unnecessary to economic progress. It became the purview of the “rich” and the

corporation. Whether people want to agree or not is irrelevant. Our free market economic system depends on ethical behavior by corporate officials as well as government officials to provide for the public good. Absent these values — honesty, objectivity and integrity — the system will allocate resources in what it determines to be the best interests of society. It will allocate those limited resources to the ones most powerful to obtain them. Ultimately, the cause of these problems is greed — when one’s concern is more with self and ignores the needs of others. Most accept the fact that the financial crisis that started in 2007 resulted in large part from the unethical conduct that allowed mortgage loans when financial institutions knew that borrowers were not qualified — a fact that was ignored so that these institutions could earn large profits from closing fees and other transaction costs. Before that we had other corporate frauds that shredded billions of dollars of shareholder wealth while top management pay packages at these companies were in the multimillions. One should remember that Adam Smith taught ethics in economics. Smith, who is recognized as the founder of free market economics, understood that rational self-interest could only exist if moral judgments were based on fairness and justice that would lead to promoting the best interests of society. These ethics no longer exist. “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you” evidently does not apply to the rich or the CEO. If it did, then one would ask, “What are the ob-

ligations of CEOs and boards of directors to others?” How is it in the best interest of the economy and the nation for CEOs to walk away with multimilliondollar salaries while the employee is fired or forced to work harder for less? The nature of the present economic crisis illustrates the need for departure from greed for the good of society. We should demand a return to the ethics that do not benefit the few to the detriment of the many, nor increase government interference. Unrestrained greed is not what Smith had in mind when he wrote “Sentiments,” nor was it a disparity of wealth that Thomas Jefferson and the founders had in mind when establishing the country. The ultimate solution is ethical behavior, not just legal action, because the rich and powerful can easily manipulate the legal system — as can be seen in the Kelo decision, the ruling in Citizens United, or the numerous tax breaks and subsidies given to the rich. It is the sense of ethics that comes from within a person, and a desire to do what is right for society and not to act solely in one’s “self interest.” If opposition to corporatism or globalism or a belief in the teachings of Christ when he said “To whom much is given, from him much will be required” (which some pervert to mean welfare for all), or an expectation that America should be the example to the world in matters of ethics or that one should have an equal opportunity to seek what their desires may be, makes one a socialist, then so be it. Those who try to blame all of the troubles of the country on government, unions or even the less fortunate are being blind to their own depravity. Kenneth H. Swipies lives in La Pine.

Letters policy

In My View policy

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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 Op-Ed 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

Harry Potter’s power comes from recycling great myths LONDON — rguably the most famous living Englishman is, technically, not alive. But Harry Potter now determines the American conception of Britishness as thoroughly as Sherlock Holmes ever did. Rather than making the disappointing pilgrimage to Baker Street, a generation will visit King’s Cross station asking for Platform 9 3/4 and expect to exchange dollars for Galleons at Gringotts. The mythic geography of England — always as important as its actual hills and streets — has been reshaped by J.K. Rowling. Young Potter is invariably taken either too seriously or not seriously enough. Modern witch-hunters believe his spells and potions are an invitation to the occult — forgetting the equally potent magic of Narnia or Middle Earth. Literary critics dismiss Rowling’s writing as banal, her stories as derivative — a rummage sale of mythological crea-

A

tures and conventional themes. Neither snobs nor fundamentalists have prevented the sale of 450 million Harry Potter books, which places the series in the best-selling company of “The Book of Mormon” and the “Quotations of Chairman Mao.” The books, in fact, are gloriously derivative, providing an introduction not to magic but to mythology. Harry’s world is populated by centaurs, dragons, werewolves, grindylows, veela, Cornish pixies, sphinxes, phoenixes, goblins and hippogriffs. It is as though Egyptian, Greek and Roman mythology, European folklore and Arthurian legend suddenly discovered the same playground. “I’m one of the very few,” Rowling has observed, “who has ever found a practical application for their classics degree.” The world’s great stories — of heroic journeys, of peril, testing and courage, of nature enchanted, of happy endings — get reincarnated for a reason. Created

MICHAEL GERSON to explain the world, myths eventually began to explain us and our prerational values and culture. When these strings are touched, we feel the vibrations deep down. And we know that myths are not the same as lies. In his essay “On Fairy-Stories,” J.R.R. Tolkien — who knew something of the subject — describes the highest achievement of the teller of stories as “subcreation.” The sub-creator fashions “a Secondary World which your mind can enter. Inside it, what he relates is ‘true’: it accords with the laws of that world.” Tolkien calls this “a special skill, a kind of elvish craft.” The creator of Harry

Potter practices this craft well — an achievement her detractors cannot understand or duplicate. To read Rowling is to pack a bag and make a visit. In the last of the series, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” and in the current movie based upon it, Rowling reaches the turn. A boy who has played Quidditch, discovered girls, broken curfew and cheated death again and again discovers that he was intended for death, “marked for slaughter,” all along. A scarred hero — his birth prophesied, his character tested by the temptation of dark power — realizes he must sacrifice himself for the sake of his friends. The “chosen one,” it turns out, was not chosen for honor but for extermination. Death, he finds, can only be defeated when it is embraced. Harry’s destiny requires a “coldblooded walk to his own destruction.” These are the ambitions of Rowling’s brand of children’s literature. Harry’s walk toward the Forbidden Forest gains

the reflected emotional power of the walk from Gethsemane to Golgotha. It is the recycling of the greatest myth — a myth that some also regard as true. And the final delivery from death is the culmination of all happy endings. Rowling seems to anticipate the objections of those who dismiss myths as lies. Harry’s enemy, Voldemort, does the same. “That which Voldemort does not value,” she writes, “he takes no trouble to comprehend. Of house-elves and children’s tales, of love, loyalty and innocence, Voldemort knows and understands nothing. Nothing. That they all have a power beyond his own, a power beyond the reach of any magic, is a truth he has never grasped.” Rowling’s children’s tale — like the best that came before it — has a sliver, a glimpse, of that power, beyond the reach of magic. Michael Gerson is a columnist for The Washington Post.


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 C5

O D N Albert Bonotto, of Bend Sept. 25, 1918 - July 18, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, (541) 318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A graveside service will be held on Thursday, July 21, 2011 at 3:00 PM at Mt. Calvary Catholic Cemetery in Klamath Falls, Oregon.

Archie Wayne Binam, of Prineville Mar. 30, 1935 - July 17, 2011 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459 Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday July 21, 2011 at 1:00 p.m. at the Prineville Eagles Lodge. Contributions may be made to:

The charity of one’s choice in his honor.

Bernard "Barney" A. Ahern, of Madras Jan. 7, 1925 - July 18, 2011 Arrangements: Bel-Air Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Recitation of the Rosary: Wednesday, July 20, 2011 at 7:00 PM at Saint Patrick's Catholic Church, Madras. Mass of Christian Burial: Thursday, July 21, 2011 at 10:00 AM at Saint Patrick's Catholic Church. Burial will follow at Mt. Jefferson Memorial Park.

Kelly Michelle Skjold, of La Pine Aug. 26, 1957 - July 12, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: No Services will be held at this time.

Claudia “Newton” Rogers, of Reno, Nevada Jan. 11, 1939 - June 29, 2011 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382-2471, www.niswonger-reynolds.com

Services: Graveside Service will be held on Saturday July 23, 2011 at 11:00 a.m. at Greenwood Cemetery. Contributions may be made to:

Nevada Breast Cancer Society/American Cancer Society.

Margaret B. Burnham, of Bend Nov. 29, 1915 - July 17, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, (541)318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held at her request. Contributions may be made to:

Black Butte Ranch Art Guild, P.O. Box 8000, Black Butte Ranch, OR 97759.

Robert Dean Jenkins, of Sunriver Nov. 13, 1927 - July 15, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: A Celebration of life will be held Friday July 22, 2011 2:00 P.M. At the Moose Lodge, 52510 Drafter Drive, La Pine, Oregon.

Cindy Christine Kleffner, of Powell Butte April 5, 1971 - July 14, 2011 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals-Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: 2:00pm Friday, July 22, Powell Butte Community Church, Powell Butte.

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

Agreement Continued from C1 The initial contract proposal from the state called for an end to the 6 percent pickup and had state workers taking seven furlough days per year. Depending on their salaries, workers will have to take 14 unpaid furlough days over two years, which is two more than required by the previous twoyear contract. And COLAs are capped at a 1.5 percent increases for 2012 and 1.45 increase for 2013. State workers who earn less

Jump Continued from C1 Jumping courses at the event range in height from 2 feet in classes such as the “hopeful jumpers” to more than 4 feet in the “grand prix.” The hunters competition is based on the foxhunting tradition. Hunter riders model the image of a foxhunter through the use of traditional clothing consisting of a dark colored hunt coat, beige breeches, tall black or brown boots and a black helmet. Not all hunter classes require horses to be braided, but it is encouraged as a sign of respect for the judges. Hunters at the High Desert Classics will be judged on movement, jumping ability, fluidity and temperament. Horses should be well-man-

than $2,696 a month will receive a $30 subsidy to help offset the increase in health insurance premiums. Gov. John Kitzhaber called it a “fair deal for both taxpayers and public employees.” The state’s largest public employee union, Service Employees International Union, which represents 23,000 workers, is still negotiating with the state. The union is expected to be back at the bargaining table Friday. Lauren Dake can be reached at 541-419-8074 or at ldake@bendbulletin.com.

nered and suitable, meaning they jump and move with accurate form. Participants aspire to exhibit the elegance and ease of the traditional fox hunter. Equitation is a level of competition open only to amateur riders, who are judged on their ability, position and style both over fences and on the “flat,” which refers to their riding skill at various gaits, including the walk, trot, canter and hand gallop without jumps. The USEF describes the over-fences competition as one in which riders “are trying to execute a smooth and consistent round, using invisible aids, and trying to make their round seem completely effortless.” Rachael Rees can be reached at 541-617-7818 or at rrees@bendbulletin.com.

Albert Bonotto

Debra L. Stolz

Sept. 25, 1918 - July 18, 2011

December 9, 1958 – July 9, 2011

Albert Bonotto passed away of natural causes in Bend, Oregon, peacefully in the presence of his daughters, Andrea McCart and Linda Bonotto on July 18, 2011. Born of Italian immigrants, on September 25, l918, Albert was raised both in Sacramento, California and Albert Bonotto Klamath Falls where he lived until moving to Bend to be closer to his family in 2008. Albert was one of four sons, all of whom served in the Armed Services during WWII with the exception of his youngest brother. Al, as he was known to his family and friends, finished his military service as a Corporal serving in the National Guard in Hawaii and the Army in Europe until after the end of the war in 1946. Married to Lorraine Ervin on April 13, l940, they spent 67 years together in Klamath Falls. Al worked for Thomson Diggs Wholesale Hardward Company for many years before becoming the owner of Al’s Toy Houses in both Klamath Falls and Medford. Al always enjoyed the challenge of his work. He not only sold toys and bikes but was a certified Locksmith and generous Santa Claus during Christmas. In his leisure time, Al was an avid fisherman with a boat, “The Bon-otto” he kept in Gold Beach. With his brothers, Leo and Botch, or friends, he went deep sea fishing, mostly for salmon as the season and weather permitted. Also, with his wife Lorraine, he enjoyed fishing and camping in their motor home mainly at Diamond Lake every summer. Upon retiring Al and Lorraine purchased a home in Mesa, Arizona where they spent many winters. During that time, Al perfected his golf game and enjoyed the sport well into his 80s. They also enjoyed their three grandchildren, Chelsea, Blake and Brendan and were always eager for their visits and to share time with them. Albert is survived by his daughters, Andrea McCart and Linda Bonotto of Bend; three grandchildren, Chelsea Boeck of Bend, Blake Hanson of Colorado Springs, and Brendan Hanson of Aspen, Colorado; and four curly haired great-granddaughters, Lila and Cora Boeck and Ava and Luciana Hanson; and one bonus great-grandson, Warren Stephenson. He is preceded in death by his wife, Lorraine Bonotto; and three brothers, Leo, Alfred and Idro Bonotto. The family will be forever grateful for all his generosity and gifts. He fed us with his garden, he enriched our lives with his steadfast love and acceptance, and his honesty, loyalty, and work ethic have become a part of all of our lives. His presence on this earth will not be forgotten as he represented all the good and noble characteristics of “The Greatest Generation”. We also extend our appreciation to Silver Crest Adult Family Home, especially caregivers, Tracy Rife and Amy Thompson for their kind and compassionate treatment of Al and to Partners In Care (Hospice). In lieu of flowers, please plant a rose bush or fruit tree in his memory or donations can be made to Partners In Care (Hospice), 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701.

Debra L. Stolz was born December 9, 1958, in Fort Benning, Georgia, to Donald J., Tusten and Gloria (Wong). Debra graduated high school at Valley High School in Kentucky. Debra loved yard sales, and watching her favorite Soap Opera “The Young and the Restless,” she also loved Debra L. Stolz spending time with her grandchildren and nieces and nephews. Debra is survived by her husband, Troy Dale Stolz of Hermiston, Oregon; son, Christopher M. Pierce; and daughter, Lisa M. Pierce; brothers, David Lee Myers, Walter Lee Tusten, and Robert Lee Tusten; sisters, Sabrina Lee TenEyck, Heidi Lee Maurer and Susan Lee Ryberg; and three grandchildren; her father, Donald; and wife, Patty Tusten. Debra was preceded in death by her mother, Gloria; sister, Fredericka; and husband, Terry Tompkins. A Celebration of Debra’s Life and graveside service have already been held. “Don’t cry because it is over smile because it happened.” Dr. Seuss. A special thanks to Dr. Calomeni and all the staff at St. Charles Cancer and Medical Center. They made sure our sister got the best care and comfort. We thank you so much! Autumn Funerals has been entrusted with arrangements. Please sign the guestbook online at www.autumnfunerals.net

Robert D. Jenkins Nov. 13, 1927 - July 15, 2011 Robert D. Jenkins, beloved husband and father, passed away early Friday morning, July 15, 2011. Bob, born in Collison, Kansas, but a Sunriver resident for over 20 years, is survived by his devoted wife, Alice; sons, Ken, Kevin, John, and Doug; daughter, Julie; and sisters, Fontella, Marcella, and Evelyn; along with many grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A celebration of life service will be held for Bob on Friday, July 22, at 2:00 pm, at the Moose Lodge in La Pine.

Outage Continued from C1 The company that produced the outage report, Eidam and Associates Consulting Engineers of Boise, Idaho, suggested that 911 install a second backup power unit to avoid similar problems in the future and estimated this would cost $180,000 to $240,000. However, the dispatch center does not have enough space to add another of these large units, so it will instead replace the current system with a new $70,000 unit that has separate backup compartments built in. If one section fails, there will be 11 more to back it up, county Property & Facilities Director Susan Ross said. The unit is expected to ship in early August.

Control circuit out The county will also follow the consultant’s recommendation to remove the control circuit that shut off power to 911 systems, Ross said. “It made us look at, ‘If this ever happens again, do we have everything in place

• New saver programs • New lower fee programs • Interest rates are still low

61310 Columbine Lane Bend, OR 97702

NMLS 57716

Alex Steinweiss, 94, who originated the artistic album cover By Steven Heller New York Times News Service

Alex Steinweiss, an art director and graphic designer who brought custom artwork to record album covers and invented the first packaging for longplaying records, died on Sunday in Sarasota, Fla. He was 94. His death was confirmed by his son, Leslie. The record cover was a blank slate in 1939, when Steinweiss was hired to design advertisements for Columbia Records. Most albums were unadorned, and on those occasions when art was used, it was not original. (Albums then were booklike packages containing multiple 78 rpm discs.) “The way records were sold was ridiculous,” Steinweiss said in a 1990 interview. “The covers were brown, tan or green paper. They were not attractive, and lacked sales appeal.” Despite concern about the added costs, he was given the approval to come up with original cover designs. His first cover, for a collection of Rodgers and Hart songs performed by an orchestra, showed a high-contrast photo of a theater marquee with the title in lights. The new packaging concept was a success: Newsweek reported that sales of Bruno Walter’s recording of Beethoven’s “Eroica” symphony increased ninefold when the album cover was illustrated. “It was such a simple idea, really, that an image would become attached to a piece of music,” said Paula Scher, who designed record covers for Columbia in the 1970s and is now a partner in the design company Pentagram. “When you look at your music collection today on your iPod, you are looking at Alex Steinweiss’ big idea.” Steinweiss preferred metaphor to literalism, and his covers often used collages of musical and cultural symbols. For a Bartok piano concerto, he rejected a portrait of Bartok, using instead the hammers, keys and strings of a piano placed against a stylized backdrop. For a recording of Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue,” he used an illustration of a piano on a dark

to prepare for it?’ ” Ross said. “We’ve got to make sure nothing like this can ever happen again, and this is one of the ways.” Poirier said he’s also learned from the power disruption, and now 911 tests its emergency generator on a monthly basis and conducts “load testing” on a

blue field illuminated only by an abstract street lamp, with a stylized silhouetted skyline in the background. Alex Steinweiss was born March 24, 1917, in Brooklyn. His father, a women’s shoe designer from Warsaw, and his mother, a seamstress from Riga, Latvia, moved to the Lower East Side of Manhattan and eventually settled in the Brighton Beach section of Brooklyn. On the strength of his high school portfolio, Steinweiss earned a scholarship to the Parsons School of Design. After graduation he worked for three years for the Austrian poster designer Joseph Binder, whose flat color and simplified human figures were popular at the time and influenced his own work. During World War II, Steinweiss became Columbia’s advertising manager. He left for a job at the Navy’s Training and Development Center in New York City, where he produced teaching materials and cautionary posters. After the war, Steinweiss freelanced for Columbia. During one lunch meeting there, the company’s president, Ted Wallerstein, introduced him to an innovation that the company was about to unveil: the long-playing record. But there was a problem. The heavy, folded kraft paper used to protect 78 rpm records left marks on the vinyl microgroove when 33 1⁄3 rpm LPs were stacked. Steinweiss was asked to develop a jacket for the new format and, with help from his brotherin-law, found a manufacturer willing to invest about $250,000 in equipment. Steinweiss had the original patent for what became the industry packaging standard (he did not develop the inner sleeve, only the outer package), but under his contract with Columbia he had to waive all rights to any inventions made while working there. Steinweiss left the music business at 55, when he realized his design ideas were out of step with the rock era. He turned to his own art, making ceramic bowls and pots and later paintings, often with a musical theme.

quarterly basis. Load testing involves completely disconnecting regular power, to test the backup power systems. Hillary Borrud can be reached at 541-617-7829 or at hborrud@bendbulletin.com.

Heather S. Eggleston September 14, 1935 - July 15, 2011 Heather S. Eggleston of Redmond, died in Bend on Friday, July 15, 2011. She was born to parents, Robert A. and Blanche Mae (Goodwin) Scott in Wallace, Idaho on September 14, 1935. On June 11, 1955 in Seattle, WA., she was united in marriage to Paul Eggleston and he survives her at the family home in Redmond. They came to Redmond in 1970. Heather has been very active in the community, among things she was involved in were Start Here Preschool, Redmond Friends of the Library, Redmond Library Commission, Cascade Child Center, Deschutes Co. Historical Society, Oregon Assoc. for the Education of Young Children. In 2009 she was named Citizen of the Year for the Redmond Chamber of Commerce. She was a member of the Unitarian Church. Also surviving Heather are her daughters, Janet Reid of New York, NY, Cynthia (Tim) Larkin of Redmond, and Sarah (John) Prell of Portland. Her sister Roberta S. Lechner lives in Mathow, WA. There are 6 grandchildren. She is preceeded in death by daughter Kathryne Eggleston in Aug. 1993 and her parents. Memorials may be sent in Heather’s name to: Humane Society of Redmond, Salvation Army Shelter, St. Vincent de Paul Community Food Program in care of St. Thomas Catholic Church and Partners In Care of Bend. A public Celebration of Life will be held on Thursday, July 21, 2011 at 1 :00 P.M. at 6268 West Hwy. 126. Jeff Larkin residence. Redmond Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements.


W E AT H ER

C6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

THE BULLETIN WEATHER FORECAST

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

TODAY, JULY 20

THURSDAY

Today: Mostly sunny and mild.

Ben Burkel

Bob Shaw

FORECASTS: LOCAL

LOW

76

46

STATE Western Ruggs

Condon

Maupin

Government Camp

81/50

74/50

81/53

54/43

Warm Springs

Marion Forks

79/51

72/43

Willowdale 70s Mitchell

Madras

Camp Sherman 71/43 Redmond Prineville 76/46 Cascadia 73/47 75/47 Sisters 74/45 Bend Post 76/46

73/45

72/43

73/42

66/36

70s Chemult 71/40

65/56

Calgary

74/44

Hampton Fort Rock

60s Seattle Missoula

Portland

71/43

80s

Helena

Eugene 75/52

Bend

Grants Pass

Boise

76/46

79/52

81/53

Redding

Elko

95/66

Christmas Valley

Salt Lake City

Reno

79/42

Skies will be partly to mostly sunny today.

63/38

79/48

89/50

75/45

Crater Lake

78/49

70s

Idaho Falls

74/44

Silver Lake

77/48

90/58

San Francisco 74/54

80s

87/67

90s

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Pcp

HIGH

Last

New

First

Full

July 22

July 30

Aug. 6

Aug. 13

Wednesday Hi/Lo/W

LOW

Astoria . . . . . . . .65/58/trace . . . . . . 71/53/c. . . . . . 69/52/sh Baker City . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . 77/46/pc. . . . . . . 74/42/s Brookings . . . . . . 70/56/0.12 . . . . . . 67/54/s. . . . . . . 69/51/s Burns. . . . . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . . 81/49/s. . . . . . . 79/44/s Eugene . . . . . . . . 67/58/0.04 . . . . . 75/52/pc. . . . . . 73/52/pc Klamath Falls . . . 68/45/0.28 . . . . . 77/46/pc. . . . . . . 75/47/s Lakeview. . . . . . . 72/46/0.00 . . . . . . 80/47/s. . . . . . . 80/50/s La Pine . . . . . . . . 65/47/0.28 . . . . . . 73/42/s. . . . . . 75/38/pc Medford . . . . . . . 73/59/0.48 . . . . . 84/58/pc. . . . . . . 85/56/s Newport . . . . . . .64/55/trace . . . . . 61/54/pc. . . . . . 59/53/sh North Bend . . . . . 68/57/0.00 . . . . . 64/53/pc. . . . . . 65/54/pc Ontario . . . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . . 82/59/s. . . . . . . 83/54/s Pendleton . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . 83/53/pc. . . . . . 82/52/pc Portland . . . . . . . 68/59/0.03 . . . . . 71/57/pc. . . . . . 69/56/pc Prineville . . . . . . . 63/53/0.17 . . . . . . 73/47/s. . . . . . 77/44/pc Redmond. . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . 79/47/pc. . . . . . 78/44/pc Roseburg. . . . . . . 67/57/1.06 . . . . . 77/54/pc. . . . . . 76/55/pc Salem . . . . . . . . .70/60/trace . . . . . 74/54/pc. . . . . . 72/52/pc Sisters . . . . . . . . . 63/55/0.30 . . . . . . 74/45/s. . . . . . 73/44/pc The Dalles . . . . .MM/MM/NA . . . . . 79/56/pc. . . . . . 78/53/pc

WATER REPORT

Mod. = Moderate; Ext. = Extreme

To report a wildfire, call 911

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

0

MEDIUM 2

4

7

HIGH 6

V.HIGH 8

10

POLLEN COUNT Updated daily. Source: pollen.com

LOW

PRECIPITATION

Yesterday’s weather through 4 p.m. in Bend High/Low . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64/52 24 hours ending 4 p.m.. . . . . . . . 0.19” Record high . . . . . . . . . . . . .97 in 1979 Month to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.24” Record low. . . . . . . . . . . . . .33 in 1964 Average month to date. . . . . . . . 0.38” Average high . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82 Year to date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.65” Average low. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47 Average year to date. . . . . . . . . . 6.54” Barometric pressure at 4 p.m.. . . 30.11 Record 24 hours . . . . . . . 0.35 in 1944 *Melted liquid equivalent

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

LOW

LOW

87 49

TEMPERATURE

FIRE INDEX Thursday Hi/Lo/W

Partly cloudy and warm. HIGH

87 48

PLANET WATCH

Moon phases

SUNDAY Mostly sunny and significantly warmer.

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury . . . . . .8:07 a.m. . . . . . .9:47 p.m. Venus . . . . . . . .5:04 a.m. . . . . . .8:20 p.m. Mars. . . . . . . . .2:49 a.m. . . . . . .6:14 p.m. Jupiter. . . . . . .12:39 a.m. . . . . . .2:27 p.m. Saturn. . . . . . .12:01 p.m. . . . . .11:47 p.m. Uranus . . . . . .11:17 p.m. . . . . .11:34 a.m.

OREGON CITIES City

66/56

71/57

Burns

73/42

71/41

Vancouver

69/43

La Pine

Crescent

Crescent Lake

BEND ALMANAC Sunrise today . . . . . . 5:41 a.m. Sunset today . . . . . . 8:42 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow . . 5:42 a.m. Sunset tomorrow. . . 8:41 p.m. Moonrise today . . . 10:59 p.m. Moonset today . . . 11:27 a.m.

LOW

77 41

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Paulina

Brothers

Sunriver

63/34

HIGH

NORTHWEST

Central

Partly to mostly sunny skies can be expected today. Eastern

LOW

An upper-level disturbance will produce scattered showers across western Washington today.

71/49

73/44

Mostly sunny and mild.

74 38

75/48

77/49

Oakridge Elk Lake

Skies will be partly cloudy today.

78/50

HIGH

Yesterday’s state extremes • 74° McMinnville • 45° Klamath Falls

SATURDAY

Mostly to partly sunny, afternoon breezes.

Tonight: Increasing cloudiness, not as cold.

HIGH

FRIDAY

MEDIUM

HIGH

The following was compiled by the Central Oregon watermaster and irrigation districts as a service to irrigators and sportsmen. Reservoir Acre feet Capacity Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38,556 . . . . .55,000 Wickiup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51,248 . . . .200,000 Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 85,845 . . . . .91,700 Ochoco Reservoir . . . . . . . . . 39,017 . . . . .47,000 Prineville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 140,169 . . . .153,777 River flow Station Cubic ft./sec Deschutes RiverBelow Crane Prairie . . . . . . . . . . . 399 Deschutes RiverBelow Wickiup . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,170 Crescent CreekBelow Crescent Lake . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Little DeschutesNear La Pine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 269 Deschutes RiverBelow Bend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,019 Deschutes RiverAt Benham Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,956 Crooked RiverAbove Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Crooked RiverBelow Prineville Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 314 Ochoco CreekBelow Ochoco Res. . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.2 Crooked RiverNear Terrebonne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 142 Contact: Watermaster, 388-6669 or go to www.wrd.state.or.us

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

TRAVELERS’ FORECAST NATIONAL

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

S

S

Yesterday’s U.S. extremes

S

S

S

Vancouver 65/56

S

S

Calgary 71/49

S

Saskatoon 68/53

Seattle 66/56

S Winnipeg 89/66

S

S

Thunder Bay 89/69

S

S

S

S S

Quebec 86/67

Halifax 79/61 Portland Billings (in the 48 To ronto Portland 79/68 85/58 contiguous states): 95/75 71/57 Green Bay Boston Rapid City 94/77 Boise 88/72 Buffalo St. P aul 91/66 Detroit 79/52 • 112° 90/75 New York 96/75 94/79 Cheyenne 89/74 Salt Lake Des Moines Needles, Calif. 87/61 Philadelphia City 99/77 Chicago 94/76 • 35° 87/67 98/83 Omaha San Francisco W ashington, D. C. 99/78 Stanley, Idaho Columbus 74/54 95/73 95/78 Las Denver Louisville • 4.73” Kansas City Vegas 94/65 94/78 98/77 St. Louis Akron Canton, Ohio 106/78 99/78 Charlotte 96/73 Albuquerque Los Angeles Oklahoma City Nashville Little Rock 98/69 75/64 104/81 96/77 99/77 Phoenix Atlanta 109/86 Honolulu 95/74 Birmingham 88/74 Dallas Tijuana 94/76 102/80 78/64 New Orleans 93/78 Orlando Houston 95/76 Chihuahua 95/79 95/66 Miami 89/80 Monterrey La Paz 95/74 94/75 Mazatlan Anchorage 88/76 68/49 Juneau 63/47 Bismarck 86/61

FRONTS

IN FOR SOME ELBOW GREASE

The Eugene Register-Guard

SPRINGFIELD — While she didn’t exactly squeal with delight, Springfield resident Sarah Wood-Snapp was plenty pleased Monday night when the City Council approved an ordinance allowing her and other city residents to snuggle up to their favorite potbellied pig. “It feels pretty good,” WoodSnapp said after the meeting. In a 6-0 decision, the council agreed to revise the city’s animal control ordinance, permitting residents to own potbellied pigs — with a limit of one per residence — inside city limits. The ordinance takes effect in 30 days. Wood-Snapp brought the issue before the city in September, working with the City Attorney’s Office, police department and Community Services Division to draft the ordinance that would allow the keeping of a pig under several conditions. Over the months, as the council weighed the ordinance, Wood-Snapp had to put her pig affection on hold. Last year,

Elaine Thompson / The Associated Press

Yesterday WednesdayThursday Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Grand Rapids . . .93/75/0.00 . 93/77/pc . . 94/73/pc Rapid City . . . . .102/73/0.00 . . .91/66/s . . . 88/66/s Green Bay. . . . . .89/73/0.00 . . .94/77/s . . . .92/68/t Reno . . . . . . . . . .86/57/0.00 . . .90/58/s . . . 90/58/s Greensboro. . . . .90/71/0.00 . . .96/73/t . . 98/77/pc Richmond . . . . . .93/72/0.00 . 97/75/pc . . 99/79/pc Harrisburg. . . . . .94/74/0.00 . . .92/73/s . . 98/75/pc Rochester, NY . . .83/69/0.00 . . .93/74/s . . 97/75/pc Hartford, CT . . . .90/72/0.00 . . .89/69/s . . . 96/75/s Sacramento. . . . .88/58/0.00 . . .95/62/s . . . 93/63/s Helena. . . . . . . . .95/57/0.16 . 78/49/pc . . 81/51/pc St. Louis. . . . . . . .98/81/0.00 . . .99/78/s . 100/83/pc Honolulu . . . . . . .85/75/0.00 . . .88/74/s . . . 89/76/s Salt Lake City . . .91/70/0.20 . . .87/67/s . . . 92/69/s Houston . . . . . . .85/75/0.50 . . .95/79/t . . 95/79/pc San Antonio . . . .99/75/0.67 . 97/77/pc . . 99/77/pc Huntsville . . . . . .92/73/0.00 . . .94/73/t . . . .95/76/t San Diego . . . . . .75/67/0.00 . . .77/63/s . . . 75/62/s Indianapolis . . . .96/79/0.00 . . .95/77/s . . 96/77/pc San Francisco . . .69/57/0.00 . . .78/54/s . . . 76/54/s Jackson, MS . . . .94/71/0.00 . . .95/75/t . . . .95/75/t San Jose . . . . . . .80/61/0.00 . . .87/59/s . . . 86/57/s Madison, WI . . . .93/71/0.00 . . .97/77/s . . 92/71/pc Santa Fe . . . . . . .94/62/0.00 . . .91/62/t . . . .89/61/t Jacksonville. . . . .91/65/0.00 . 93/76/pc . . 92/76/pc Juneau. . . . . . . . .56/51/0.16 . .63/47/sh . . 70/52/pc Kansas City. . . .100/74/0.00 . . .98/77/s . 101/79/pc Amsterdam. . . . .57/57/0.00 . .65/56/sh . . 65/55/sh Lansing . . . . . . . .93/73/0.00 . 93/76/pc . . 96/74/pc Athens. . . . . . . . .93/80/0.00 . . .99/78/s . . . 92/73/s Las Vegas . . . . .107/87/0.00 106/78/pc . . 105/80/s Auckland. . . . . . .55/50/0.00 . .60/50/sh . . . .59/54/r Lexington . . . . . .88/73/0.02 . 91/74/pc . . 94/76/pc Baghdad . . . . . .113/87/0.00 112/88/pc . 113/86/pc Lincoln. . . . . . . . .98/73/0.00 . .101/78/s . . . .93/77/t Bangkok . . . . . . .81/79/0.00 . . .91/79/t . . . .89/78/t Little Rock. . . . . .96/76/0.00 . 99/77/pc . . 99/79/pc Beijing. . . . . . . . .73/70/0.00 . . .86/70/t . . . .88/71/t Los Angeles. . . . .76/64/0.00 . . .75/64/s . . . 73/63/s Beirut. . . . . . . . . .79/79/0.00 . . .86/78/s . . . 87/78/s Louisville . . . . . . .93/79/0.00 . 94/78/pc . . 96/78/pc Berlin. . . . . . . . . .63/63/0.00 . .69/58/sh . . 69/57/sh Memphis. . . . . . .95/78/0.00 . 98/82/pc . . 98/82/pc Bogota . . . . . . . .66/52/0.00 . .66/51/sh . . 67/50/sh Miami . . . . . . . . .90/77/0.28 . . .89/80/t . . . .90/79/t Budapest. . . . . . .90/66/0.00 . . .80/61/t . . 71/57/sh Milwaukee . . . . .85/72/0.00 . . .97/78/s . . 92/72/pc Buenos Aires. . . .54/45/0.00 . . .57/41/s . . . 61/42/s Minneapolis . . . .96/73/0.28 . . .96/75/s . . . 88/71/s Cabo San Lucas .90/79/0.00 . 89/77/pc . . 90/77/pc Nashville . . . . . . .94/72/0.00 . 96/77/pc . . 98/76/pc Cairo . . . . . . . . . .81/81/0.00 . . .96/74/s . . . 96/75/s New Orleans. . . .90/75/0.00 . . .93/78/t . . . .93/78/t Calgary . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . .71/49/sh . . 65/48/sh New York . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . . .89/74/s . . . 95/76/s Cancun . . . . . . . .88/70/0.00 . . .87/75/t . . 88/75/pc Newark, NJ . . . . .95/79/0.00 . . .90/75/s . . 96/76/pc Dublin . . . . . . . . .61/50/0.00 . .62/50/sh . . 62/49/sh Norfolk, VA . . . . .92/73/0.00 . 95/76/pc . . 98/79/pc Edinburgh . . . . . .64/54/0.00 . .61/51/sh . . 61/48/pc Oklahoma City . .98/75/0.00 104/81/pc . . 104/81/s Geneva . . . . . . . .54/54/0.00 . .66/53/sh . . 70/55/sh Omaha . . . . . . . .98/80/0.00 . . .99/78/s . . . .90/76/t Harare . . . . . . . . .52/52/0.00 . . .71/49/s . . . 72/47/s Orlando. . . . . . . .91/71/0.00 . 95/76/pc . . 95/77/pc Hong Kong . . . . .84/79/0.00 . . .90/81/t . . . .88/80/t Palm Springs. . .111/79/0.00 . .111/78/s . . 108/76/s Istanbul. . . . . . . .79/77/0.00 . . .92/75/s . . . 91/72/s Peoria . . . . . . . . .97/79/0.00 . . .96/78/s . . . 96/78/s Jerusalem . . . . . .88/68/0.00 . . .88/68/s . . . 91/70/s Philadelphia . . . .95/73/0.57 . . .94/76/s . . . 98/77/s Johannesburg . . .52/52/0.00 . . .66/40/s . . . 67/41/s Phoenix. . . . . . .106/88/0.00 109/86/pc . 109/87/pc Lima . . . . . . . . . .64/61/0.00 . 66/62/pc . . 67/62/pc Pittsburgh . . . . . .85/71/0.24 . . .92/72/s . . 94/73/pc Lisbon . . . . . . . . .75/63/0.00 . . .81/64/s . . . 79/63/s Portland, ME. . . .87/66/0.00 . . .79/68/s . . . .86/65/t London . . . . . . . .68/52/0.00 . .69/55/sh . . 69/54/sh Providence . . . . .88/70/0.00 . . .86/69/s . . . 91/75/s Madrid . . . . . . . .82/68/0.00 . . .90/64/s . . . 94/64/s Raleigh . . . . . . . .95/70/0.00 . . .98/73/t . . 99/79/pc Manila. . . . . . . . .82/81/0.00 . . .91/79/t . . . .92/79/t

Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Savannah . . . . . .90/70/0.00 . 96/76/pc . . . .96/77/t Seattle. . . . . . . . .70/55/0.00 . .66/56/sh . . 64/54/sh Sioux Falls. . . . . .94/79/0.00 . 98/68/pc . . 87/69/pc Spokane . . . . . . .69/60/0.04 . 75/52/pc . . 73/48/sh Springfield, MO. .98/72/0.00 . 98/75/pc . . 98/77/pc Tampa . . . . . . . . .90/76/0.00 . 93/77/pc . . . .92/77/t Tucson. . . . . . . .101/76/0.00 . . .99/78/t . . .101/79/t Tulsa . . . . . . . . .101/79/0.00 106/80/pc . 105/79/pc Washington, DC .96/79/0.24 . . .95/78/s . . . 99/80/s Wichita . . . . . . .101/74/0.00 . .105/80/s . 105/79/pc Yakima . . . . . . . .77/60/0.15 . 81/53/pc . . 79/50/pc Yuma. . . . . . . . .109/88/0.00 110/80/pc . 111/81/pc

INTERNATIONAL Mecca . . . . . . . . .91/90/0.00 . .106/87/s . . 107/86/s Mexico City. . . . .79/55/0.00 . . .71/56/t . . . .74/56/t Montreal. . . . . . .81/66/0.00 . 89/71/pc . . . .92/75/t Moscow . . . . . . .66/64/0.00 . . .84/65/t . . . .85/66/t Nairobi . . . . . . . .73/59/0.00 . . .79/55/t . . . .77/56/t Nassau . . . . . . . .95/79/0.00 . 93/81/pc . . 93/80/pc New Delhi. . . . . .88/84/0.00 . . .92/81/t . . . .90/80/t Osaka . . . . . . . . .82/81/0.00 . . .82/76/r . . 85/77/sh Oslo. . . . . . . . . . .55/55/0.00 . .66/53/sh . . 69/52/pc Ottawa . . . . . . . .81/61/0.00 . 90/72/pc . . 93/75/pc Paris. . . . . . . . . . .61/55/0.00 . .69/56/sh . . 69/55/sh Rio de Janeiro. . .77/70/0.00 . . .79/66/s . . . 80/66/s Rome. . . . . . . . . .70/70/0.00 . 77/63/pc . . . 82/64/s Santiago . . . . . . .55/28/0.00 . 60/35/pc . . . 65/38/s Sao Paulo . . . . . .77/59/0.00 . 79/61/pc . . 77/60/sh Sapporo. . . . . . . .63/63/0.00 . . .76/64/s . . . 70/59/s Seoul . . . . . . . . . .79/72/0.00 . 85/71/pc . . 84/69/pc Shanghai. . . . . . .79/79/0.00 . . .89/79/t . . . .88/78/t Singapore . . . . . .82/81/0.00 . . .90/81/t . . . .90/80/t Stockholm. . . . . .61/61/0.00 . 74/59/pc . . 74/61/sh Sydney. . . . . . . . .57/55/0.00 . .61/52/sh . . 61/53/sh Taipei. . . . . . . . . .86/82/0.00 . . .90/80/t . . . .92/81/t Tel Aviv . . . . . . . .77/77/0.00 . . .88/76/s . . . 90/77/s Tokyo. . . . . . . . . .81/79/0.00 . . .84/77/t . . 79/70/sh Toronto . . . . . . . .84/72/0.00 . 95/75/pc . . 96/76/pc Vancouver. . . . . .68/57/0.00 . .65/56/sh . . 63/55/sh Vienna. . . . . . . . .70/70/0.00 . .69/59/sh . . 70/58/sh Warsaw. . . . . . . .77/57/0.00 . . .79/62/t . . . .80/60/t

Potbellied pigs get Springfield’s OK By Stefan Verbano

The floating oil-drilling platform Kulluk is seen briefly bathed in light as it passes an otherwise cloudy and dark downtown Seattle, including the 932-foot Columbia Center tower behind, while being moved by tugs to a maintenance facility Tuesday. The Kulluk, owned by Shell, had been stored in Alaska but was brought to Vigor Shipyard for modifications to install more advanced air emission control systems. It was built in 1983 and been idle for more than a decade after years of Arctic drilling. It was most recently based in Dutch Harbor, Alaska. It left there July 1.

Yesterday WednesdayThursday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX . . . .102/79/0.00 101/77/pc . 101/77/pc Akron . . . . . . . . .88/71/4.73 . . .92/73/s . . 95/74/pc Albany. . . . . . . . .84/65/0.00 . . .90/70/s . . 96/74/pc Albuquerque. . . .96/68/0.00 . . .98/69/t . . . .99/70/t Anchorage . . . . .62/50/0.01 . 68/49/pc . . 65/52/pc Atlanta . . . . . . . .89/73/0.03 . . .95/74/t . . . .94/75/t Atlantic City . . . .95/77/0.11 . . .88/73/s . . . 89/78/s Austin . . . . . . . . .81/81/0.00 . . .97/77/t . . 98/76/pc Baltimore . . . . . .95/74/0.16 . . .95/77/s . . . 99/80/s Billings. . . . . . . . .97/72/0.00 . 85/58/pc . . 89/60/pc Birmingham . . . .94/72/0.00 . . .94/76/t . . . .95/75/t Bismarck . . . . . . .96/73/0.00 . . .86/61/s . . . 85/65/s Boise . . . . . . . . . .84/60/0.00 . 79/52/pc . . 82/49/pc Boston. . . . . . . . .88/74/0.00 . . .88/72/s . . . 94/76/s Bridgeport, CT. . .87/71/0.00 . . .85/71/s . . . 91/76/s Buffalo . . . . . . . .88/75/0.00 . . .90/75/s . . 93/75/pc Burlington, VT. . .82/63/0.00 . . .89/71/s . . 93/75/pc Caribou, ME . . . .77/55/0.00 . 82/62/pc . . . .78/63/t Charleston, SC . .93/70/0.00 . . .94/77/t . . . .94/78/t Charlotte. . . . . . .94/68/0.00 . . .96/73/t . . . .98/76/t Chattanooga. . . .93/73/0.00 . . .96/74/t . . . .96/76/t Cheyenne . . . . . .88/64/0.00 . 87/61/pc . . 87/58/pc Chicago. . . . . . . .92/78/0.00 . . .98/83/s . . 96/76/pc Cincinnati . . . . . .96/78/0.02 . 95/73/pc . . 96/75/pc Cleveland . . . . . .85/72/3.54 . . .92/77/s . . 95/76/pc Colorado Springs 94/64/0.00 . 91/61/pc . . 87/62/pc Columbia, MO . .94/74/0.00 . . .97/76/s . . . 99/80/s Columbia, SC . . .99/72/0.00 . . .98/75/t . . .100/76/t Columbus, GA. . .90/76/0.00 . . .93/74/t . . . .95/75/t Columbus, OH. . .92/75/0.04 . . .95/73/s . . 96/76/pc Concord, NH . . . .87/61/0.00 . . .87/67/s . . 94/71/pc Corpus Christi. . .96/75/0.00 . 87/81/pc . . 90/80/pc Dallas Ft Worth 100/80/0.00 102/80/pc . 101/79/pc Dayton . . . . . . . .94/78/0.01 . . .93/74/s . . 95/75/pc Denver. . . . . . . . .94/60/0.00 . 94/65/pc . . 91/65/pc Des Moines. . . . .98/78/0.00 . . .99/77/s . . 92/75/pc Detroit. . . . . . . . .93/75/0.00 . 94/79/pc . . 97/79/pc Duluth . . . . . . . . .75/65/0.12 . 89/66/pc . . . 83/60/s El Paso. . . . . . . .100/79/0.00 101/78/pc . 102/77/pc Fairbanks. . . . . . .59/49/0.00 . 73/44/pc . . 77/53/pc Fargo. . . . . . . . . .95/71/1.18 . . .92/65/t . . . 83/67/s Flagstaff . . . . . . .77/50/0.02 . . .80/55/t . . . .82/54/t

The ordinance states that potbellied pigs are “clean, intelligent and affectionate animals, and when properly cared for are desirable to some persons as household pets.” she befriended a stiff-haired, black and white potbellied pig named Beni that had been saved from an unfit home and put up for adoption by a family living southwest of Eugene. WoodSnapp, 28, had hoped to eventually bring Beni home with her. But in the lengthy interim, Beni ended up with a different owner. So now, for the time being, Wood-Snapp must find another pig. “The original plan didn’t work,” Wood-Snapp said, “(but) I’m happy that, in the future, if we want one, we can get one.” Despite missing her opportunity with Beni, Wood-Snapp said she is happy that the issue finally came to a vote. “For a while there I thought it was going to be tabled indefinitely,” she said. The council ap-

proved the ordinance with little discussion. The ordinance states that potbellied pigs are “clean, intelligent and affectionate animals, and when properly cared for are desirable to some persons as household pets.”

Requirements set Under the new rules, the pets must be certified by a veterinarian as spayed or neutered, and meet weight and height requirements. Then, owners must arrange with a veterinarian or other person to retrieve the pig should it escape and become “at large” while its keeper is unavailable. Owners must also pay a fee of $10 to obtain the necessary city license, valid for one year.

Springfield reached out to a handful of Lane County veterinary clinics — including South Willamette Vet Clinic and Four Hooves, both in Creswell — that say they are capable of treating potbellied pigs. Going one step further, Santa Clara Animal Hospital in Eugene has agreed to provide short-term housing for any escaped pigs. Pet pigs must wear license tags on their collars and be no taller than 18 inches at the shoulder and weigh no more than 95 pounds. Only one animal is allowed per residence, and owners are responsible for grooming so that no tusks appear outside the pig’s mouth when closed. Violations of the provisions can include a maximum fine of $720. As part of its review, the city commissioned a survey of 13 Oregon and Washington cities, examining their policies pertaining to pig ownership. Eugene, Roseburg and Albany were the only cities surveyed that prohibit pigs on the grounds that they are farm animals.


S

Football Inside A new NFL collective bargaining agreement is nearing a vote by players and owners, see Page D4.

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2011

WEST COAST LEAGUE BASEBALL Elks top Gems, win fifth straight Cullen Hendrickson was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded in the 10th inning Tuesday night, giving the Bend Elks a 4-3 walk-off win over the Klamath Falls Gems in a West Coast League baseball game at Vince Genna Stadium. Bend extended the longest active winning streak in the West Coast League to five games and improved its record to 22-15 in league play. Klamath Falls fell to 14-22. Gems left fielder Turner Gill, a 2010 Madras High graduate, opened the scoring in the top of the first inning with an RBI single. Elks third baseman Tyler Christian answered with a sacrifice fly in the bottom half of the inning to make the score 1-1. Klamath Falls scored two runs in the top of the fourth inning to take a 3-1 lead, but Bend came back in a hurry. Collins hit a solo home run in the fifth inning, while Ryan Dunn’s sixth-inning double drove in Michael Benjamin Jr. Dunn went four for five with three doubles on the night, while Stetson Olson and Bo Walter recorded two hits apiece for the Elks. Bend reliever Cameron Cuneo picked up the win, striking out four in 2 2⁄3 innings. The second game of the three-game series begins today at 6:35 p.m. at Vince Genna. — Bulletin staff report

C YCLING

D

CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC

CCC kicks off with prologue in Bend Former world track champ leads pro women’s race; Argentinian rider takes top spot for pro men The Bulletin

Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

A look at what’s happening in the Cascade Cycling Classic, a six-stage cycling race held in Central Oregon:

TUESDAY

By Mark Morical

Tara Whitten races to the line to win the Old Mill Prologue for the pro women’s division of the Cascade Cycling Classic Tuesday night along Shevlin Hixon Drive in Bend. Whitten, a former world track champion, will wear the leader’s jersey in today’s first stage.

CCC at a glance

The race was short and to the point — just two miles. But with more than 300 pro riders at the 2011 Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic, it dragged on into near darkness. The 32nd edition of the CCC kicked off Tuesday night with the Old Mill Prologue, a two-mile out-and-back individual time trial along Shevlin Hixon Drive, starting and finishing near the Deschutes Brewery warehouse in southwest Bend. Riders raced one at a time in 30-second intervals in front of a crowd of somewhat subdued spectators on a nippy July evening. Argentinian rider Fernando Atogna, of the Jamis Sutter Home team, won the men’s prologue with a time of 3 minutes, 35.62 seconds. Roman Van Uden, of Pureblack Racing, finished second in 3:35.98. Timothy Gudsell, also of Pureblack Racing, took third in 3:37.81. See CCC / D4

The CCC kicked off with the Old Mill Prologue, a twomile out-and-back time trial along Shevlin Hixon Drive in southwest Bend.

TODAY Stage 1 for the pro men and women is the McKenzie Pass Road Race, a 74-mile stage that finishes at Three Creek Sno-park south of Sisters. The race features two prominent climbs — one up McKenzie Pass, and the finishing climb up Three Creeks Road. (See map, Page D4.)

TEE TO GREEN CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSE TOUR

Juniper Golf Course The municipal track in Redmond is a spectacular test for golfers of all levels ZACK HALL Editor’s note: This is another in a seasonlong series visiting each public and semiprivate golf course in Central Oregon.

Ryder Hesjedal celebrates as teammate Thor Hushovd wins the 16th stage of the Tour de France, Tuesday.

Tour de France at a glance GAP, France — A brief look at Tuesday’s 16th stage of the Tour de France: Stage: A warm-up for the harsh Alpine stages to come, Tuesday was a rainy, bumpy route of 101 miles from SaintPaul-Trois-Chateaux to Gap. Winner: Norwegian world champion Thor Hushovd won a sprint after a three-man breakaway, ahead of his compatriot, Edvald Boassen Hagen. Yellow Jersey: Thomas Voeckler, of France, remains in yellow, but he dropped time on the big winners of the day, defending champion Alberto Contador and Australian challenger Cadel Evans. Evans is second, 1:45 back, while brothers Frank and Andy Schleck are third and fourth, but lost time. Next stage: The first of three mountain stages that may well prove decisive takes the riders into Italy today. The 111-mile route from Gap to Pinerolo contains five climbs, including the first-category climb up to the ski resort of Sestrieres. • More coverage, Page D2. — The Associated Press

INDEX Scoreboard ................................D2 Cycling ......................................D2 MLB ...........................................D3 NFL ........................................... D4 NBA .......................................... D4 Tee to Green....................... D5-D6

REDMOND — n more than four years of living in Bend, my golf partner had never once played a round at Juniper Golf Course. He had heard about the high quality of Redmond’s municipal golf course, but until he accompanied me there for a recent round, he had never found the time for the relatively quick trip to southeast Redmond. We had not yet reached the parking lot after 18 holes — played in rainy and breezy conditions, no less — when my partner said: “We should play this course more.” His reaction was no surprise to me, as I recall thinking the same thing after playing Juniper the first time years ago. Juniper reopened as a completely new design in 2005. (The old Juniper was situated on land owned by Redmond Airport. It opened in the 1950s but is now closed for good.) And though it has been popular — Juniper is among the busiest Central Oregon courses, hosting roughly 40,000 rounds of golf a year — it is under new management after missing debt payments to the city of Redmond in 2009. But California-based CourseCo Inc., which was hired by the city in 2010 to manage Juniper, has changed little of how the course plays. See Juniper / D5

I

The San Francisco Giants typify the new model for success in baseball, with less offense and better pitching, with hurlers like closer Brian Wilson, right. Lenny Ignelzi / The Associated Press

Pete Erickson / The Bulletin

A golfer putts on the par-4 ninth hole at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond, Monday.

The basics

Breaking down the course

General information about Juniper Golf Course: Number of holes: 18 Status: Open year-round, weather permitting Location: 1938 S.W. Elkhorn St., Redmond Tee times: 541-548-3121 Course stats: Par 72, 7,186 yards Green fees: Through Sept. 19, $59 weekdays, $65 weekends/holidays before noon; $44 weekdays, $54 weekends/holidays from noon until 4 p.m.; $39 weekdays, $49 weekends/holidays including cart after 4 p.m.; Nov. 1-28, $39. After Sept. 20, $49 before noon; $39 after noon. Power cart: $15 Head golf professional: Bruce Wattenburger Course designer: John Harbottle III (2005) Extras: Driving range, putting green, practice pitching green, restaurant, banquet facility Website: www.playjuniper.com

A closer look at Juniper. For more information on the items below, see Page D5.

DIFFICULTY At 7,186 yards from the back tees and with lightning-fast greens, Juniper has the chops to challenge a golfer of even the highest skill level. But with seven tees, including one at 5,500 yards, and generous fairways, the municipal course is playable for novices.

STRATEGY Aggressiveness from the tee is encouraged by Juniper’s generous fairways. But be mindful of the course’s firm, fast greens, which hold the key to a good score. Aim for below the hole on approach, allowing for the momentum of the shot to roll the ball toward the cup.

EXTRAS Juniper’s short-game area, just behind the clubhouse, offers plenty of room for golfers to work on their chipping. The course’s restaurant offers a spacious back patio area that overlooks the ninth, 16th and 18th greens and has wonderful mountain views.

With scoring down in baseball, teams learning to adjust quickly By Thomas Boswell The Washington Post

O

ne trend in baseball now dominates all others: Better pitching, plus swifter defense, equals lower scoring. Not just this year or last year. We’re watching a sea change, not a brief cycle. The sport is now in its sixth straight season with fewer runs scored. And the lines on this graph are still dropping — fast.

Soon, baseball may have a problem if offensive shrinkage continues at its recent rate: 9.72 total runs per game, 9.60, 9.30, 9.22, 8.76 and so far in 2011 just 8.38. That’s a plummet from the very top of the range of aesthetically acceptable offense to somewhere within sight of “arrrgghhh, too low!” And the big drops the past two seasons have been dramatic to traumatic. See Scoring / D4


D2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

O A

SCOREBOARD

TELEVISION TODAY CYCLING 5 a.m. — Tour de France, Stage 17, Versus network.

BASEBALL 4 p.m. — MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at New York Mets, ESPN. 4 p.m. — MLB, Seattle Mariners at Toronto Blue Jays, Root Sports.

SOCCER 8 p.m. — Real Madrid at Chivas USA, ESPN2.

THURSDAY CYCLING 4 a.m. — Tour de France, Stage 18, Versus network.

GOLF 6 a.m. — European PGA Tour, Nordea Masters, first round, Golf Channel. 9 a.m. — Senior British Open, first round, ESPN2. 9:30 a.m. — Nationwide Tour, Children’s Hospital Invitational, first round, Golf Channel. Noon — PGA Tour, Canadian Open, first round, Golf Channel. 3:30 p.m. — LPGA Tour, Evian Masters, first round, Golf Channel.

BASEBALL 9 a.m. — MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at New York Mets or San Diego Padres at Florida Marlins, MLB Network. 9:30 a.m. — MLB, Seattle Mariners at Toronto Blue Jays, Root Sports. 4 p.m. — MLB, New York Yankees at Tampa Bay Rays or Detroit Tigers at Minnesota Twins (5 p.m. start), MLB Network.

SOFTBALL 5 p.m. — World Cup, United States vs. Czech Republic, ESPN.

WEST COAST LEAGUE ——— League standings East Division Wenatchee AppleSox Bellingham Bells Walla Walla Sweets Kelowna Falcons

West Division

Corvallis Knights Bend Elks Cowlitz Black Bears Kitsap BlueJackets Klamath Falls Gems Tuesday’s Games Kitsap 10, Cowlitz 2 Bend 4, Klamath Falls 3 Wenatchee 8, Kelowna 7 Corvallis 3, Bellingham 1 Today’s Games Kitsap at Cowlitz, 6:35 p.m. Klamath Falls at Bend, 6:35 p.m. Wenatchee at Kelowna, 6:35 p.m. Corvallis at Bellingham, 7:05 p.m. Thursday’s Games Wenatchee at Kelowna, 6:35 p.m. Klamath Falls at Bend, 6:35 p.m. Kitsap at Cowlitz, 6:35 p.m.

W 26 18 15 10

L 8 17 21 27

W 23 22 19 16 14

L 14 15 18 21 22

Elks 4, Gems 3 Klamath Falls 100 200 000 0 — 3 5 0 Bend 001 011 000 4 — 4 10 2 Staples, Burright (6), Ferrell (8), O’Rourke (9) and Cornish. Wilson, King (7), Cuneo (8) and Buchanan, Demello. W — Cuneo. L — O’Rourke. 2B — Bend: Walter 2, Dunn 3. HR — Bend: Collins.

TENNIS ATP

RADIO TODAY BASEBALL 6:30 p.m. — WCL, Klamath Falls at Bend, KPOV-FM 106.7.

THURSDAY BASEBALL 6:30 p.m. — WCL, Klamath Falls at Bend, KPOV-FM 106.7. Listings are the most accurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changes made by TV or radio stations.

S B Basketball • Boy buried after crash involving NBA’s Odom: Neighbors have buried a teenage pedestrian who died when a motorcycle collided with a vehicle carrying Los Angeles Lakers player Lamar Odom and hurtled onto a New York sidewalk. Odom, who stars in a reality TV show with his wife, Khloe Kardashian, was visiting his native Queens on Thursday afternoon when a motorcycle tried to turn left in front of the chauffeured Cadillac Escalade sport-utilityvehicle he was riding in, police said. Mourners gathered on the sidewalk in front of the Jam-e-Masjid mosque on Monday and bowed their heads in prayer around Awsaf Alvi Islam’s plain wooden casket.

Baseball • Rangers to raise railings after fan death: The Texas Rangers plan to make all the protective railings at their stadium the same height, raising some as much as a foot to make their stadium safer following the death of a fan during a recent game. Rangers executive vice president Rob Matwick said Tuesday that the team’s intention is for all rails in the front of seating sections to be 42 inches throughout Rangers Ballpark. Architectural and engineering studies are already under way at 17-year-old Rangers Ballpark to determine how to do the work. Railings around the ballpark now are 30 or 34 inches in most areas, with 42-inch rails already at the base of aisles that lead to the front row. City building requirements are that guardrails must be at least 26 inches high.

Track & field • Double amputee qualifies for worlds: Double amputee Oscar Pistorius qualified Tuesday for the athletics world championships next month and could be on his way to the 2012 Olympics in London. The South African clocked a personal best of 45.07 seconds in the 400 meters in the northern Italian town of Lignano on the Adriatic Sea. He needed a time of 45.25 to qualify for the worlds for the first time. The championships begin Aug. 27 in Daegu, South Korea. The time also puts him on track to fulfill his dream of competing at the Olympics. Having achieved the “A” qualifying time, he now only needs to be selected for the South African team.

Football • NCAA gives LSU probation: LSU committed major violations while recruiting a junior college football player, the NCAA ruled Tuesday. The governing body also placed the school on probation for a year and cited a former assistant coach for unethical conduct. The investigation found that ex-assistant coach D.J. McCarthy improperly arranged for transportation and housing for former defensive lineman Akiem Hicks, then later tried to cover up those actions. The NCAA accepted LSU’s self-imposed reduction of two scholarships, as well as a 10 percent reduction in official visits and reductions in recruiting calls.

Hockey • Devils name new coach: Peter DeBoer has been named the New Jersey Devils’ coach. The 43-year-old DeBoer spent the past three seasons as the coach of the Florida Panthers. He was fired after failing to lead the team to the playoffs during his tenure. DeBoer succeeds Jacques Lemaire, who came out of retirement in midseason after rookie coach John MacLean was fired in December. However, Lemaire’s return could not prevent the Devils from missing the playoffs for the first time since 1996. • Detroit goalie Osgood retires: After more than 400 wins and three Stanley Cups, Chris Osgood figures he has nothing left to prove. The occasionally-maligned goaltender who eventually earned the admiration of Detroit’s passionate fans announced his retirement Tuesday, ending a career in which he helped the Red Wings to two championships as a starter and another as a backup. Although he was often overshadowed by his talented teammates, Osgood accomplished enough to start an interesting discussion about his Hall of Fame chances. Osgood’s Hall of Fame case is based on his 401 career wins — he’s 10th on the NHL’s career list — and his performance in the postseason. — From wire reports

ASSOCIATION OF TENNIS PROFESSIONALS ——— German Open Tuesday At Rothenbaum Sport GmbH Hamburg, Germany Purse: $1.58 million (WT500) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Marsel Ilhan, Turkey, def. Philipp Petzschner, Germany, 6-2, 4-6, 7-6 (5). Radek Stepanek, Czech Republic, def. Andreas Beck, Germany, 7-5, 7-6 (2). Juan Monaco, Argentina, def. Simone Bolelli, Italy, 6-3, 7-5. Daniel Gimeno-Traver, Spain, def. Marcel Granollers, Spain, 6-3, retired. Pablo Andujar, Spain, def. Julien Benneteau, France, 6-2, 6-2. Cedrik-Marcel Stebe, Germany, def. Juan Carlos Ferrero, Spain, 6-3, 6-2. Philipp Kohlschreiber, Germany, def. Andrey Golubev, Kazakhstan, 7-5, 6-3. Second Round Tobias Kamke, Germany, def. Juan Ignacio Chela (7), Argentina, 6-1, 6-4. Gilles Simon (5), France, def. Sergiy Stakhovsky, Ukraine, 6-2, 6-1. Jarkko Nieminen, Finland, def. Alexandr Dolgopolov (10), Ukraine, 6-3, 1-6, 6-4. Mikhail Youzhny (4), Russia, def. Carlos Berlocq, Argentina, 7-5, 7-6 (7). Fabio Fognini (15), Italy, def. Victor Crivoi, Romania, 6-1, 7-5. Julian Reister, Germany, def. Guillermo Garcia-Lopez (14), Spain, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Atlanta Championships Tuesday At The Atlanta Athletic Club Norcross, Ga. Purse: $600,000 (WT250) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, def. Phillip Simmonds, United States, 6-4, 6-4. Yen-hsun Lu, Taiwan, def. Matthias Bachinger, Germany, 7-5, 7-6 (4). Marinko Matosevic, Australia, def. Igor Kunitsyn (6), Russia, 6-7 (3), 6-2, 7-5. Ryan Harrison, United States, def. Yuichi Sugita, Japan, 6-1, 7-6 (5). Nicolas Mahut, France, def. Richard Berankis, Lithuania, 7-6 (5), 6-2. Robby Ginepri, United States, def. Tommy Haas, Germany, 6-4, 7-5. Rajeev Ram, India, def. Grigor Dimitrov (5), Bulgaria, 6-4, 6-4.

WTA WOMEN’S TENNIS ASSOCIATION ——— Baku Cup Tuesday At Baki Tennis Akademiyasi Baku, Azerbaijan Purse: $220,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Aravane Rezai, France, def. Kamilla Farhad, Azerbai-

50. George Hincapie, United States, BMC, 48:24. 70. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, HTC-Highroad, 1:14:08. 120. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC, 1:59:11. 158. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, 2:24:56. 168. Danny Pate, United States, HTC-Highroad, 2:36:04.

Jan. 28 at Utah, 6 p.m. Feb. 1 Charlotte, 7 p.m. Feb. 2 at Sacramento, 7 p.m. Feb. 4 Denver, 7 p.m. Feb. 6 Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. Feb. 8 Houston, 7 p.m. Feb. 10 at New Orleans, 5 p.m. Feb. 11 at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Feb. 14 Washington, 7 p.m. Feb. 16 L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 18 Atlanta, 7 p.m. Feb. 21 San Antonio, 7 p.m. Feb. 22 at Utah, 6 p.m. Feb. 29 at Denver, 6 p.m. March 1 Miami, 7:30 p.m. March 3 Minnesota, 7 p.m. March 5 New Orleans, 7 p.m. March 7 at Minnesota, 5 p.m. March 9 at Boston, 4:30 p.m. March 11 at Toronto, 10 a.m. March 13 at Cleveland, 4 p.m. March 14 at New York, 4:30 p.m. March 16 at Orlando, 4 p.m. March 18 at Miami, 3 p.m. March 20 Milwaukee, 7 p.m. March 22 Memphis, 7 p.m. March 23 at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. March 25 Golden State, 6 p.m. March 27 Oklahoma City, 7 p.m. March 29 New Orleans, 7 p.m. March 30 at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. April 1 Sacramento, 6 p.m. April 4 New Jersey, 7 p.m. April 6 at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. April 7 at Memphis, 5 p.m. April 9 Houston, 7 p.m. April 11 Golden State, 7:30 p.m. April 13 Dallas, 7:30 p.m. April 15 at Sacramento, 3 p.m. April 18 Utah, 7:30 p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

BASEBALL WCL

DEALS Transactions

CYCLING Tour de France jan, 6-0, 6-2 Monica Niculescu (5), Romania, def. Eirini Georgatou, Greece, 5-1 retired. Tatia Mikadze, Georgia, def. Nina Khrisanova, Russia, 6-0, 6-0. Elena Bovina, Russia, def. Zarina Diyas, Kazakhstan, 6-0, 3-6, 7-5. Elena Vesnina (3), Russia, def. Yana Buchina, Russia, 6-2, 3-6, 7-5. Anna Tatishvili, Georgia, def. Evgeniya Rodina (8), Russia, 6-4, 6-2. Ksenia Pervak (7), Russia, def. Noppawan Lertcheewakarn, Thailand, 3-6, 6-1, 7-5. Anastasiya Yakimova, Belarus, def. Valeria Savinykh, Russia, 6-3, 6-4. Ekaterina Makarova (4), Russia, def. Anne Kremer, Luxembourg, 6-1, 6-4. Kateryna Bondarenko, Ukraine, def. Lesia Tsurenko, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-2. Kristina Kucova, Slovakia, def. Tetyana Arefyeva, Ukraine, 6-3, 6-3. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (2), Russia, def. Valeria Solovieva, Russia, 7-5, 6-4. Vera Zvonareva (1), Russia, def. Nigina Abduraimova, Uzbekistan, 6-1, 7-5.

SOCCER MLS MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER All Times PDT ——— EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Philadelphia 8 4 7 31 24 16 New York 6 4 11 29 34 24 Columbus 7 5 7 28 21 19 Houston 5 6 9 24 24 23 Sporting Kansas City 5 6 8 23 24 25 D.C. 5 5 8 23 24 29 Chicago 2 6 12 18 20 25 Toronto FC 3 9 9 18 17 36 New England 3 9 7 16 16 27 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Los Angeles 10 2 9 39 27 16 Seattle 10 4 8 38 32 23 FC Dallas 10 5 5 35 26 19 Real Salt Lake 8 3 6 30 23 12 Colorado 6 6 9 27 25 27 Chivas USA 5 7 8 23 24 23 San Jose 5 6 8 23 22 21 Portland 6 9 3 21 22 31 Vancouver 2 10 8 14 19 28 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. ——— Today’s Games New England at D.C. United, 4:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Toronto FC, 5 p.m. New York at Colorado, 6:30 p.m. Columbus at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. Vancouver at San Jose, 7:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games FC Dallas at New York, 3 p.m. Portland at Columbus, 5 p.m. Toronto FC at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m. New England at Colorado, 6 p.m. San Jose at Real Salt Lake, 7 p.m. Houston at Chivas USA, 7:30 p.m.

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL

ASSOCIATION All Times PDT ——— Eastern Conference W L Connecticut 9 5 Indiana 10 6 New York 9 7 Chicago 8 8 Atlanta 5 9 Washington 3 10 Western Conference W L Phoenix 10 4 Minnesota 9 4 San Antonio 9 4 Seattle 7 7 Los Angeles 6 8 Tulsa 1 14 ——— Tuesday’s Games Atlanta 84, Indiana 74 Chicago 78, Seattle 69 Connecticut 85, New York 79 Today’s Games Atlanta at Washington, 8:30 a.m. Minnesota at Phoenix, 12:30 p.m.

Pct GB .643 — .625 — .563 1 .500 2 .357 4 .231 5½ Pct GB .714 — .692 ½ .692 ½ .500 3 .429 4 .067 9½

NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION 2011 Portland Trail Blazers Schedule All Times PDT ——— Nov. 3 Denver, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4 at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 6 at Phoenix, 5 p.m. Nov. 9 at Denver, 6 p.m. Nov. 10 San Antonio, 7:30 p.m. Nov. 12 Detroit, 7 p.m. Nov. 14 Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Nov. 16 Chicago, 7 p.m. Nov. 18 at Indiana, 4 p.m. Nov. 19 at Milwaukee, 5:30 p.m. Nov. 21 at Charlotte, 4 p.m. Nov. 23 at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Nov. 25 Utah, 7 p.m. Nov. 28 at Dallas, 5:30 p.m. Nov. 30 at Atlanta, 4:30 p.m. Dec. 2 Indiana, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 4 at L.A. Lakers, 6:30 p.m. Dec. 5 Minnesota, 7 p.m. Dec. 8 Boston, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 12 Sacramento, 7 p.m. Dec. 14 Toronto, 7 p.m. Dec. 16 at Phoenix, 6 p.m. Dec. 18 at Memphis, 3 p.m. Dec. 19 at San Antonio, 5:30 p.m. Dec. 23 Phoenix, 7:30 p.m. Dec. 26 L.A. Clippers, 7 p.m. Dec. 29 New York, 7 p.m. Dec. 31 at Houston, 5 p.m. Jan. 3 at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Jan. 4 at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Jan. 6 Memphis, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 8 Cleveland, 6 p.m. Jan. 11 Orlando, 7 p.m. Jan. 13 at San Antonio, 5 p.m. Jan. 14 at Houston, 5 p.m. Jan. 16 at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Jan. 18 at New Jersey, 4:30 p.m. Jan. 20 at Washington, 4 p.m. Jan. 21 at Chicago, 5 p.m. Jan. 24 L.A. Lakers, 7 p.m. Jan. 25 at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Jan. 27 Phoenix, 7 p.m.

Tuesday At Gap, France 16th Stage 101 miles in the rain from Saint-Paul-Trois-Chateaux to Gap in the southern Alps, with a Categorie 2 climb up the Col de Manse near the finish 1. Thor Hushovd, Norway, Garmin-Cervelo, 3 hours, 31 minutes, 38 seconds. 2. Edvald Boasson Hagen, Norway, Sky Procycling, same time. 3. Ryder Hesjedal, Canada, Garmin-Cervelo, 2 seconds behind. 4. Tony Martin, Germany, HTC-Highroad, :38. 5. Mikhail Ignatyev, Russia, Katusha, :52. 6. Alan Perez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 1:25. 7. Jeremy Roy, France, Francaise des Jeux, same time. 8. Marco Marcato, Italy, Vacansoleil-DCM, 1:55. 9. Dries Devenyns, Belgium, Quick Step, same time. 10. Andriy Grivko, Ukraine, Astana, 1:58. 11. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC, 4:23. 12. Alberto Contador, Spain, Saxo Bank Sungard, 4:26. 13. Samuel Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, same time. 14. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Movistar, 4:44. 15. Philippe Gilbert, Belgium, Omega Pharma-Lotto, same time. 16. Rein Taaramae, Estonia, Cofidis, same time. 17. Peter Velits, Slovakia, HTC-Highroad, same time. 18. Thomas Voeckler, France, Europcar, 65 hours, same time. 19. Rob Ruijgh, Netherlands, Vacansoleil-DCM, same time. 20. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Sky Procycling, same time. Also 22. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek, same time. 28. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, 5:02. 30. Ivan Basso, Italy, Liquigas-Cannondale, 5:17. 34. Christian Vande Velde, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, same time. 36. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek, 5:32. 62. George Hincapie, United States, BMC, 7:26. 68. Levi Leipheimer, United States, RadioShack, 8:08. 87. Brent Bookwalter, United States, BMC, 12:14. 140. Danny Pate, United States, HTC-Highroad, 15:06. 144. Tejay Van Garderen, United States, HTC-Highroad, 15:25. 151. Tyler Farrar, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, same time. Overall Standings (After 16 stages) 1. Thomas Voeckler, France, Europcar, 69 hours, 0 minutes, 56 seconds. 2. Cadel Evans, Australia, BMC, 1:45. 3. Frank Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek, 1:49. 4. Andy Schleck, Luxembourg, Leopard-Trek, 3:03. 5. Samuel Sanchez, Spain, Euskaltel-Euskadi, 3:26. 6. Alberto Contador, Spain, Saxo Bank Sungard, 3:42. 7. Ivan Basso, Italy, Liquigas-Cannondale, 3:49. 8. Damiano Cunego, Italy, Lampre-ISD, 4:01. 9. Tom Danielson, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, 6:04. 10. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Sky Procycling, 7:55. 11. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 8:20. 12. Kevin De Weert, Belgium, Quick Step, 9:00. 13. Rein Taaramae, Estonia, Cofidis, 9:02. 14. Pierre Rolland, France, Europcar, 9:53. 15. Peter Velits, Slovakia, HTC-Highroad, 10:01. 16. Arnold Jeannesson, France, Francaise des Jeux, 10:05. 17. Haimar Zubeldia, Spain, RadioShack, 10:38. 18. Jelle Vanendert, Belgium, Omega Pharma-Lotto, 12:06. Also 26. Levi Leipheimer, United States, RadioShack, 20:12. 30. Christian Vande Velde, United States, Garmin-Cervelo, 21:39.

BASEBALL COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE—Suspended Cincinnati minor league RHP Daniel Tuttle 50 games for a second violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program for a drug of abuse. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL—Suspended St. Louis INF Ryan Theriot two games and fined him an undisclosed amount for his inappropriate actions during Sunday’s game at Cincinnati. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Activated RHP Alfredo Simon from the restricted list. Optioned INF Josh Bell to Norfolk (IL). Transferred 2B Brian Roberts to the 60day DL. DETROIT TIGERS—Agreed to terms with OF Tyler Collins. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Recalled LHP Danny Duffy from Omaha (PCL). Sent LHP Everett Teaford to Omaha. NEW YORK YANKEES—Placed RHP Sergio Mitre on the 15-day DL. Recalled LHP Steve Garrison from Trenton (EL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Designated LHP Jerry Blevins for assignment. Recalled RHP Guillermo Moscoso from Sacramento (PCL). TEXAS RANGERS—Traded LHP Zach Phillips to Baltimore for INF/OF Nick Green and cash considerations. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Activated RHP Casey Janssen from the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP Luis Perez to Las Vegas (PCL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Recalled RHP Barry Enright from Reno (PCL). Released RHP Aaron Heilman. HOUSTON ASTROS—Traded 2B Jeff Keppinger to San Francisco for RHP Henry Sosa and RHP Jason Stoffel. Selected the contract of INF Jose Altuve from Corpus Christi (TL). NEW YORK METS—Activated SS Jose Reyes from the 15-day DL. Placed C Josh Thole on the paternity leave list. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Activated OF Shane Victorino from the 15-day DL. Optioned INF Pete Orr to Lehigh Valley (IL). ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Agreed to terms with OF C.J. McElroy and assigned him to the GCL Cardinals. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS—Transferred INF Freddy Sanchez from the 15- to the 60-day DL. Agreed to terms with RHP Kyle Crick, LHP Bryce Bandilla, RHP Derek Law, RHP Clayton Blackburn, RHP Paul Davis, RHP Cody Hall, RHP DeMondre Arnold, LHP Steven Snodgrass, LHP Philiip McCormick, RHP Danny Sandbrink, LHP Brian Maloney, INF Joseph Panik, INF Jean Delgado, INF Kelby Tomlinson, INF Garrett Buechele, INF Jonathan Jones, INF Ben Thomas, INF Bryan Nicholson, OF Kentrell Hill, OF Christian Diaz, OF Eldred Barnett, OF Michael Mergenthaler, OF Rashawn Payne and OF Elliot Blair. WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Reinstated RHP Chad Gaudin from the 15-day DL and designated him for assignment. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Signed C Andrew Cogliano to a three-year contract. BUFFALO SABRES—Re-signed D Andrej Sekera and F Matt Ellis to multiyear contracts. DALLAS STARS—Agreed to terms with F Raymond Sawada on a one-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS—Announced the retirement of G Chris Osgood, who will remain with the team as a goaltending consultant. NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Named Peter DeBoer coach. PHOENIX COYOTES—Signed F Brett MacLean, F Kyle Chipchura, F Marc-Antoine Pouliot and F Mathieu Beaudoin to one-year contracts. SAN JOSE SHARKS—Signed C Andrew Murray to a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Agreed to terms with F Steven Stamkos on a five-year contract. WINNIPEG JETS—Agreed to terms with F Jason Jaffray. COLLEGE NCAA—Placed LSU on probation for a year and cited former assistant football coach, D.J. McCarthy, for unethical conduct. NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BASKETBALL COACHES—Added Syracuse’s Jim Boeheim, North Carolina State’s Mark Gottfried, Pittsburgh’s Jamie Dixon and Butler’s Brad Stevens to the board of directors. NEW MEXICO—Announced sophomore QB Stump Godfrey was granted a conditional release from the program. XAVIER—Announced F Andre Walker has transferred from Vanderbilt.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 835 357 3,182 1,750 The Dalles 913 439 1,600 906 John Day 1,125 383 939 466 McNary 980 255 468 192 Upstream year-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook, steelhead and wild steelhead at selected Columbia River dams last updated on Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 266,232 97,533 39,307 18,898 The Dalles 195,949 74,894 15,381 7,527 John Day 169,056 70,029 10,835 5,304 McNary 162,374 56,065 8,267 3,539

CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE

Contador back in action in Stage 16 By Jamey Keaten The Associated Press

GAP, France — Alberto Contador has finally put the hammer down at the Tour de France — and now, the race is really on. Minutes behind the race leader, the defending champion surprised key rivals with a brazen attack on a relatively easy climb in the alpine foothills in Tuesday’s Stage 16, won by Thor Hushovd of Norway in a breakaway. Contador, baring his teeth as his tires sizzled on the rain-slick roads, surged out of the pack on the midgrade Col de Magne climb, and held on through a treacherous downhill to the finish of the 101-mile ride from Saint-Paul-Trois-Chateaux to Gap. “I knew I needed to attack,” Contador said. “I couldn’t care less if someone kept on my wheel — I knew one of them would fail. I’m so happy. It has been a major gap, much bigger than I expected.” The unexpected surge by the Spaniard shook up the leaderboard at cycling’s greatest race, which ends Sunday in Paris after a jaunt Wednesday into Italy, then two days in the Alps, and a time-trial Saturday in Grenoble. Among the contenders, only Cadel Evans kept up. The Australian actually outpaced the Spanish three-time champion by 3 seconds at the end. But Contador, who lost time with crash trouble earlier in the race — had trimmed 18 seconds off his deficit to overall race leader Thomas

Christophe Ena / The Associated Press

Three-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador, of Spain, right, Samuel Sanchez, of Spain, left, and Cadel Evans, of Australia, center, break away from the pack on the Col de Manse pass near Gap during the 16th stage of the Tour de France, Tuesday. Voeckler of France, down to 3 minutes, 42 seconds. More importantly, the Spaniard recovered more than a minute on his runner-up at the last two Tours, Andy Schleck of Luxembourg, a top climber who almost inexplicably didn’t keep up on the relatively easy final ascent. Schleck conceded he was “disappointed,” but that “there are other chances to take back time.” His biggest ally — his older brother and Leopard Trek teammate Frank

Schleck — said they hadn’t foreseen the attack. “We were a bit surprised that Contador went on the climb,” Frank Schleck said. “We know that he is a rider that attacks when he has good legs, but we had anticipated he would wait for the Alps.” “Contador knows all too well that the Schlecks don’t perform at their best in the cold and rainy conditions,” he added. “It’s all part of the game — knowing your opponents and knowing their weaknesses.”

Contador’s Saxo Bank team could hardly contain their joy. “He put the hammer down and showed he’s still there in the game,” manager Bjarne Riis said. “I’m happy for that.” Aside from the aggressive Contador, the other standout of Tuesday’s stage was Evans, a two-time runner-up who has so far had a nearly flawless race — and showed he’s not giving up to the Spaniard without a fight. “Today was an opportunity for us to see what could happen,” said Jim Ochowicz, manager of Evans’ BMC squad. “We assumed that at some point Contador was going to try to take some time back. His move, when he made it, was the perfect opportunity for Cadel to counter.” Voeckler, a dogged Frenchman who has been one of the revelations of this year’s Tour, knows that Contador is often better than he is in mountain climbs and the time trial — and expects to lose the yellow jersey soon. “I kept it by a handful of seconds, but that shows that I’ve hit my ceiling,” he said. Hushovd, a Garmin-Cervelo rider who wore yellow for six days in the first week, and also won Stage 13, led a three-man breakaway to win the stage — edging out a compatriot, Edvald Boassen Hagen, in second, and his own teammate: Ryder Hesjedal of Canada. They were among 10 breakaway riders who had pressed the pace through most of the stage.


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 D3

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL AL BOXSCORES Orioles 6, Red Sox 2 Boston Ellsbury cf Pedroia 2b Ad.Gonzalez 1b Youkilis 3b Reddick lf C.Crawford dh Saltalamacchia c J.Drew rf Scutaro ss Totals

AB 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 2 32

R 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 2

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

SO 0 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 4

Avg. .314 .294 .337 .282 .367 .243 .249 .223 .265

Baltimore AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Angle lf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Hardy ss 3 0 0 0 1 1 .278 Markakis rf 3 1 0 0 1 0 .293 Ad.Jones cf 4 1 2 0 0 1 .288 Wieters c 3 2 2 1 1 0 .273 D.Lee 1b 4 1 1 2 0 0 .239 Mar.Reynolds 3b 4 1 3 2 0 0 .227 Reimold dh 3 0 0 1 1 0 .241 B.Davis 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .222 Andino 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .260 Totals 31 6 8 6 4 3 Boston 000 020 000 — 2 8 0 Baltimore 021 000 03x — 6 8 0 LOB—Boston 4, Baltimore 5. 2B—Reddick (6), Mar. Reynolds (18). HR—Saltalamacchia (8), off Guthrie; D.Lee (10), off Aceves; Mar.Reynolds (21), off Aceves. RBIs—Saltalamacchia 2 (27), Wieters (37), D.Lee 2 (34), Mar.Reynolds 2 (51), Reimold (16). SB—C.Crawford (9). CS—Scutaro (1). Runners left in scoring position—Boston 2 (Saltalamacchia, Pedroia); Baltimore 2 (B.Davis, D.Lee). Runners moved up—C.Crawford, Reimold. GIDP— Ellsbury, Ad.Gonzalez, B.Davis. DP—Boston 1 (Pedroia, Scutaro, Ad.Gonzalez); Baltimore 2 (B.Davis, Hardy, D.Lee), (B.Davis, Hardy, D.Lee). Boston IP H R ER Weiland L, 0-1 6 6 3 3 Aceves 2 2 3 3 Baltimore IP H R ER Guthrie W, 4-13 7 8 2 2 Ji.Jhnsn S, 1-5 2 0 0 0 T—2:37. A—32,314 (45,438).

BB 3 1 BB 1 0

SO 2 1 SO 4 0

NP 100 35 NP 110 22

ERA 8.10 3.44 ERA 4.35 2.64

SO 1 3 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 6

Avg. .308 .283 .265 .216 .247 .200 .229 .245 .228 .244

Tigers 8, Athletics 3 Oakland AB R H J.Weeks 2b 5 0 0 Sweeney lf 5 1 1 Crisp cf 5 1 2 Matsui dh 4 0 2 S.Sizemore 3b 1 0 0 1-Sogard pr-3b 2 0 0 DeJesus rf 3 0 2 C.Jackson 1b 4 0 0 K.Suzuki c 4 1 1 Pennington ss 4 0 3 Totals 37 3 11

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

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

Detroit AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Jackson cf 5 2 2 0 0 1 .247 Boesch lf 5 1 3 1 0 0 .301 Kelly lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .239 Ordonez rf 3 0 1 1 0 0 .223 C.Wells rf 1 0 0 0 0 0 .257 Mi.Cabrera 1b 4 1 1 2 0 2 .310 V.Martinez dh 4 2 2 0 0 0 .316 Jh.Peralta ss 4 1 1 1 0 0 .313 Guillen 2b 3 1 2 2 1 0 .400 Avila c 3 0 0 0 1 1 .283 Inge 3b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .177 Totals 36 8 12 7 2 5 Oakland 000 030 000 — 3 11 1 Detroit 000 161 00x — 8 12 2 1-ran for S.Sizemore in the 4th. E—C.Jackson (2), Inge (9), Mi.Cabrera (8). LOB— Oakland 9, Detroit 7. 2B—Crisp (19), K.Suzuki (14), Boesch 2 (24), V.Martinez (23). HR—Mi.Cabrera (20), off Moscoso; Guillen (1), off Moscoso. RBIs—Sweeney (11), Matsui 2 (40), Boesch (46), Ordonez (15), Mi.Cabrera 2 (63), Jh.Peralta (51), Guillen 2 (3). CS—J.Weeks (5). SF—Ordonez. Runners left in scoring position—Oakland 6 (C.Jackson 2, Sogard, Matsui, K.Suzuki, Crisp); Detroit 3 (Inge, Avila, Mi.Cabrera). Runners moved up—C.Jackson. GIDP—C.Jackson 2. DP—Detroit 2 (Inge, Guillen, Mi.Cabrera), (Jh.Peralta, Guillen, Mi.Cabrera). Oakland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Moscoso L, 3-5 4 2-3 9 7 6 1 3 86 2.96 Breslow 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 14 3.24 De Los Santos 1 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 20 2.16 Fuentes 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 4.62 Detroit IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Porcello W, 9-6 6 8 3 3 0 3 107 4.76 Coke 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 23 4.74 Alburquerque 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 26 2.59 Inherited runners-scored—De Los Santos 1-0, Alburquerque 1-0. HBP—by Porcello (DeJesus, S.Sizemore). T—3:10. A—31,980 (41,255).

Rays 3, Yankees 2 New York Jeter ss Granderson cf Teixeira 1b Cano 2b Swisher rf Posada dh Martin c Gardner lf E.Nunez 3b Totals

AB 4 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 2 32

R 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2

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

SO 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 2 9

Avg. .264 .271 .242 .294 .252 .224 .219 .290 .259

Tampa Bay AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Damon dh 3 0 0 1 0 2 .273 Zobrist rf 2 0 0 0 1 1 .265 c-Joyce ph-rf 1 0 0 0 0 1 .292 Longoria 3b 3 0 0 0 1 1 .231 Kotchman 1b 4 0 0 0 0 2 .331 B.Upton cf 3 0 1 0 1 1 .237 Chirinos c 3 1 1 0 1 1 .333 Shoppach c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .173 S.Rodriguez 2b 4 1 1 0 0 2 .221 Fuld lf 2 1 1 0 0 0 .243 a-Ruggiano ph-lf 1 0 1 0 0 0 .267 Brignac ss 2 0 1 1 0 0 .197 b-E.Johnson ph-ss 1 0 0 1 0 0 .200 Totals 29 3 6 3 4 11 New York 002 000 000 — 2 6 2 Tampa Bay 000 010 20x — 3 6 0 a-singled for Fuld in the 7th. b-reached on error for Brignac in the 7th. c-struck out for Zobrist in the 7th. E—Granderson (3), Logan (1). LOB—New York 5, Tampa Bay 7. 2B—Teixeira (15). 3B—Fuld (3). HR— Cano (16), off Hellickson. RBIs—Cano 2 (61), Damon (42), Brignac (10), E.Johnson (14). SB—Granderson (18), Gardner 2 (29), E.Nunez (11). CS—Brignac (1). SF—Damon. Runners left in scoring position—New York 4 (Cano, E.Nunez, Jeter 2); Tampa Bay 3 (Joyce 2, S.Rodriguez). GIDP—Cano. DP—Tampa Bay 1 (Longoria, S.Rodriguez, Kotchman). New York IP H R ER BB SO Colon L, 6-6 6 1-3 5 3 2 2 9 Logan BS, 1-1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Wade 1 0 0 0 2 1 Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO Hllckson W, 9-7 7 5 2 2 1 7 McGee H, 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Jo.Pralta S, 1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Inherited runners-scored—Logan 2-2. Hellickson (Granderson). T—3:05. A—22,780 (34,078).

NP ERA 105 3.43 13 3.38 26 1.32 NP ERA 119 3.17 13 4.00 12 3.92 HBP—by

Twins 2, Indians 1 Cleveland AB R Carrera cf 3 0 O.Cabrera 2b 4 0 A.Cabrera ss 3 0 C.Santana 1b 4 0 LaPorta dh 4 0 Kearns rf 2 0 Hannahan 3b 4 0 Marson c 3 1 T.Buck lf 1 0 1-Valbuena pr-lf 2 0 Totals 30 1

H BI BB 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 1 4

Minnesota Revere cf A.Casilla 2b Mauer 1b-c Cuddyer rf-1b Thome dh 2-L.Hughes pr Valencia 3b D.Young lf Nishioka ss Butera c a-Plouffe ph-rf Totals Cleveland

H BI BB SO Avg. 0 0 0 0 .261 0 0 0 1 .253 1 0 1 0 .291 2 0 0 0 .298 0 0 1 1 .208 0 0 0 0 .237 1 2 0 2 .232 1 0 0 1 .266 1 0 0 0 .224 0 0 0 0 .179 0 0 0 1 .211 6 2 2 6 000 — 1 5 1

AB 4 4 3 4 3 0 4 3 3 2 1 31 000

R 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 010

SO 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 9

Avg. .217 .244 .289 .228 .245 .222 .217 .250 .243 .167

Minnesota 000 000 002 — 2 6 0 One out when winning run scored. a-struck out for Butera in the 8th. 1-ran for T.Buck in the 5th. 2-ran for Thome in the 9th. E—A.Cabrera (9). LOB—Cleveland 8, Minnesota 6. 2B—Cuddyer (17). RBIs—A.Cabrera (60), Valencia 2 (50). CS—Carrera (1). SF—A.Cabrera. Runners left in scoring position—Cleveland 5 (A.Cabrera 2, C.Santana 2, Marson); Minnesota 1 (Valencia). Runners moved up—Hannahan. GIDP—Valencia. DP—Cleveland 1 (Hannahan, O.Cabrera, C.Santana); Minnesota 1 (Butera, Butera, A.Casilla). Cleveland IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Masterson 7 2-3 4 0 0 0 6 104 2.64 Sipp H, 18 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 4 2.56 C.Perez L, 2-5 1-3 2 2 2 2 0 20 3.03 Minnesota IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Liriano 6 4 1 1 4 5 99 4.56 Dumatrait 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 21 5.49 Capps 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 9 4.79 Perkins W, 2-1 1 0 0 0 0 2 8 1.72 Inherited runners-scored—Sipp 1-0, Capps 1-0. IBB—off C.Perez (Thome). HBP—by Liriano (T.Buck). WP—Liriano. T—2:34. A—38,473 (39,500).

Royals 4, White Sox 2 Chicago AB R Pierre lf 3 1 Al.Ramirez ss 3 1 Konerko 1b 3 0 Quentin dh 4 0 Rios cf 4 0 Lillibridge rf 3 0 a-Teahen ph 1 0 Beckham 2b 4 0 Flowers c 3 0 b-Pierzynski ph 1 0 Morel 3b 3 0 Totals 32 2

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

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

Avg. .277 .274 .314 .260 .211 .250 .217 .255 .000 .289 .240

Kansas City AB R H BI BB SO Avg. A.Gordon lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .296 Me.Cabrera cf 4 1 2 1 0 0 .296 Butler dh 4 1 1 0 0 2 .288 Francoeur rf 4 1 1 0 0 2 .264 Hosmer 1b 3 1 2 0 1 0 .264 Treanor c 4 0 2 2 0 1 .225 Moustakas 3b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .198 A.Escobar ss 3 0 0 1 0 0 .254 Getz 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .250 Totals 33 4 10 4 1 7 Chicago 200 000 000 — 2 6 1 Kansas City 010 002 10x — 4 10 1 a-grounded out for Lillibridge in the 9th. b-grounded into a double play for Flowers in the 9th. E—Beckham (2), A.Escobar (12). LOB—Chicago 6, Kansas City 6. 2B—Rios (15), Francoeur (22), Treanor (6). HR—Me.Cabrera (12), off Sale. RBIs—Quentin (56), Rios (23), Me.Cabrera (54), Treanor 2 (20), A.Escobar (30). SB—Hosmer (4). CS—A.Gordon (6), Getz (6). Runners left in scoring position—Chicago 4 (Beckham, Lillibridge 2, Pierre); Kansas City 3 (Getz, A.Escobar, Moustakas). Runners moved up—Morel, A.Escobar. GIDP— Quentin, Pierzynski. DP—Kansas City 2 (Moustakas, Getz, Hosmer), (Moustakas, Getz, Hosmer). Chicago IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Peavy L, 4-4 6 7 3 3 1 5 96 5.19 Sale 1 2 1 1 0 0 10 3.46 Bruney 1 1 0 0 0 2 21 2.30 Kansas City IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Duffy W, 2-4 7 5 2 2 2 6 94 4.58 G.Holland H, 7 1 0 0 0 0 1 16 1.00 Soria S, 17-22 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 3.83 IBB—off Peavy (Hosmer). HBP—by Duffy (Pierre). T—2:28. A—20,126 (37,903).

Blue Jays 6, Mariners 5 (14 innings) Seattle AB I.Suzuki rf 7 Ryan ss 6 Ackley 2b-1b 7 Olivo c 6 Smoak 1b 4 1-Ja.Wilson pr-2b 2 F.Gutierrez cf 4 Carp dh 6 Figgins 3b 4 Halman lf 5 Totals 51

R H 0 1 2 3 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 1 1 1 1 5 14

BI 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 5

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

SO 1 0 2 3 0 0 1 0 0 1 8

Avg. .260 .254 .275 .216 .228 .233 .186 .244 .184 .274

Toronto AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Y.Escobar ss 4 2 3 1 1 1 .304 2-R.Davis pr-cf 2 1 1 0 0 0 .235 E.Thames rf 4 0 1 1 0 0 .306 Jo.McDonald ss 1 0 0 1 0 0 .219 Bautista dh 6 0 1 1 0 2 .332 Lind 1b 6 1 1 2 0 1 .297 Encarnacion 3b 4 0 1 0 2 0 .265 3-McCoy pr-3b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .219 Snider cf-lf 6 0 0 0 0 4 .245 A.Hill 2b 5 1 2 0 1 0 .233 Arencibia c 6 0 0 0 0 3 .211 C.Patterson lf-rf 5 1 2 0 1 0 .254 Totals 49 6 12 6 5 11 Sea. 140 000 000 000 00 — 5 14 2 Tor. 200 000 300 000 01 — 6 12 1 Two outs when winning run scored. 1-ran for Smoak in the 8th. 2-ran for Y.Escobar in the 9th. 3-ran for Encarnacion in the 13th. E—Figgins (11), Olivo (8), Camp (1). LOB—Seattle 10, Toronto 9. 2B—Ryan (13), Carp 2 (4), Y.Escobar (16), A.Hill (14). HR—Halman (2), off Cecil; Ryan (1), off Cecil; Lind (17), off Pineda. RBIs—Ryan (27), Ackley (10), Halman 3 (6), Y.Escobar (36), E.Thames (15), Jo.McDonald (15), Bautista (66), Lind 2 (54). SB—Ryan (7), R.Davis 3 (28), McCoy (4). CS—Carp (1), A.Hill (2), C.Patterson (8). S—F.Gutierrez. SF—E.Thames, Jo.McDonald. Runners left in scoring position—Seattle 3 (F.Gutierrez, Figgins, Olivo); Toronto 3 (E.Thames 2, Arencibia). GIDP—Olivo, Carp, Lind. DP—Seattle 1 (Ryan, Ackley, Smoak); Toronto 2 (A.Hill, Y.Escobar, Lind), (Jo.McDonald, A.Hill, Lind).

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

W 58 56 51 48 39 W 51 51 47 45 39 W 56 51 43 42

L 37 38 44 49 55 L 45 45 50 51 58 L 41 46 53 55

Pct .611 .596 .537 .495 .415 Pct .531 .531 .485 .469 .402 Pct .577 .526 .448 .433

NATIONAL LEAGUE GB — 1½ 7 11 18½ GB — — 4½ 6 12½ GB — 5 12½ 14

Tuesday’s Games Baltimore 6, Boston 2 Detroit 8, Oakland 3 Toronto 6, Seattle 5, 14 innings Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 2 Minnesota 2, Cleveland 1 Texas 7, L.A. Angels 0

WCGB — — 5½ 9½ 17 WCGB 6 6 10½ 12 18½ WCGB — 6½ 14 15½

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

BB 0 2 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 6

SO 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 3

Avg. .254 .283 .301 .270 .321 .241 .262 .261 .347

Los Angeles AB R H BI BB SO Avg. M.Izturis 2b 4 0 0 0 0 0 .268 Tor.Hunter rf 3 0 0 0 1 3 .237 Abreu dh 4 0 0 0 0 1 .271 V.Wells cf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .218 Callaspo 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .289 H.Kendrick lf 3 0 0 0 0 0 .291 Aybar ss 3 0 1 0 0 0 .285 Trumbo 1b 3 0 2 0 0 0 .259 Mathis c 2 0 0 0 0 1 .191 a-Branyan ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .170 Bo.Wilson c 0 0 0 0 0 0 .235 Totals 29 0 4 0 3 6 Texas 100 110 022 — 7 13 0 Los Angeles 000 000 000 — 0 4 1 a-walked for Mathis in the 8th. E—Kohn (1). LOB—Texas 10, Los Angeles 5. 2B— J.Hamilton (17), A.Beltre (26), Napoli (12), Aybar (19), Trumbo 2 (17). HR—En.Chavez (4), off Kohn; J.Hamilton (13), off Kohn; A.Beltre (20), off Kohn. RBIs—Kinsler (37), J.Hamilton (53), A.Beltre 2 (74), Mi.Young (63), En.Chavez 2 (15). SB—Andrus (28), Tor.Hunter (3). CS—En.Chavez (2). Runners left in scoring position—Texas 4 (N.Cruz, Mi.Young, Andrus 2); Los Angeles 3 (Abreu 2, M.Izturis). Runners moved up—J.Hamilton. GIDP—A.Beltre, H.Kendrick. DP—Texas 1 (Andrus, Moreland); Los Angeles 1 (M.Izturis, Aybar, Trumbo).

W 60 57 48 48 47 W 51 52 50 47 39 32 W 57 52 46 42 42

L 36 40 48 49 50 L 44 46 46 50 59 65 L 41 45 51 55 55

Pct .625 .588 .500 .495 .485 Pct .537 .531 .521 .485 .398 .330 Pct .582 .536 .474 .433 .433

Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh 1, Cincinnati 0 San Diego 4, Florida 0 N.Y. Mets 4, St. Louis 2 Philadelphia 4, Chicago Cubs 2 Houston 7, Washington 6 Colorado 12, Atlanta 3 Milwaukee 11, Arizona 3 San Francisco 5, L.A. Dodgers 3

GB — 3½ 12 12½ 13½ GB — ½ 1½ 5 13½ 20 GB — 4½ 10½ 14½ 14½

WCGB — — 8½ 9 10 WCGB — 5½ 6½ 10 18½ 25 WCGB — 5 11 15 15

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

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

Home 34-15 30-19 21-25 28-18 22-29 Home 25-22 33-14 25-21 25-22 22-30 16-36 Home 30-16 26-21 25-25 23-27 20-30

Away 26-21 27-21 27-23 20-31 25-21 Away 26-22 19-32 25-25 22-28 17-29 16-29 Away 27-25 26-24 21-26 19-28 22-25

Today’s Games Cincinnati (Cueto 5-3) at Pittsburgh (Karstens 8-4), 9:35 a.m. Washington (L.Hernandez 5-9) at Houston (Myers 3-10), 11:05 a.m. Philadelphia (Worley 5-1) at Chicago Cubs (Dempster 7-6), 11:20 a.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 10-4) at San Francisco (Lincecum 8-7), 12:45 p.m. San Diego (Harang 7-2) at Florida (Nolasco 6-6), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (McClellan 6-6) at N.Y. Mets (Dickey 4-8), 4:10 p.m. Atlanta (T.Hudson 9-6) at Colorado (Nicasio 4-2), 5:40 p.m. Milwaukee (Narveson 6-6) at Arizona (J.Saunders 6-8), 6:40 p.m.

National League roundup

• Orioles 6, Red Sox 2: BALTIMORE — Jeremy Guthrie allowed two runs over seven innings in an effort that belied his title as the losingest pitcher in the majors, and Baltimore beat Boston to end a seven-game losing streak against the Red Sox. • Rays 3, Yankees 2: ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Jeremy Hellickson pitched seven strong innings and Tampa Bay took advantage of sloppy New York defense to rally past the Yankees. Hellickson (9-7) retired 13 of 15 batters after giving up a two-run homer to Robinson Cano in the third, helping his team stay close until the sputtering Rays offense could finally break through against Bartolo Colon (6-6) in the seventh. • Twins 2, Indians 1: MINNEAPOLIS — Danny Valencia hit a two-run single off All-Star closer Chris Perez in the ninth inning, sending Minnesota to a victory over Cleveland. Perez (2-5) walked Joe Mauer and gave up a double to Michael Cuddyer. Jim Thome was intentionally walked to load the bases, and Valencia followed with a bloop single. • Tigers 8, Athletics 3: DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera and Carlos Guillen each hit a two-run homer in Detroit’s six-run fifth inning against Oakland. The Tigers trailed 3-1 before they grabbed control in the fifth against Guillermo Moscoso (3-5). • Royals 4, White Sox 2: KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Danny Duffy returned from the minors to toss seven sharp innings, Matt Treanor delivered a go-ahead, two-run single and light-hitting Kansas hung on to beat the Chicago White Sox. Melky Cabrera homered and Alcides Escobar drove in the other run for Kansas City, which came into the game batting .196 while scoring a measly eight runs during a recent three-game skid. • Blue Jays 6, Mariners 5: TORONTO — Rajai Davis stole two bases before scoring on John McDonald’s sacrifice fly in the 14th inning and Toronto extended Seattle’s losing streak to 10 games. It is the Mariners’ longest slide since a 12game skid in 2008. • Rangers 7, Angels 0: ANAHEIM, Calif. — Alexi Ogando extended an extraordinary run by Texas’ pitching staff with eight innings of four-hit ball and the streaking Rangers beat the sputtering Los Angeles Angels for their 12th straight victory. Texas increased its AL West lead to a season-best five games over the Angels.

• Pirates 1, Reds 0: PITTSBURGH — James McDonald and three relievers combined on a sixhitter to help Pittsburgh shut out Cincinnati for the second straight night. McDonald (6-4) won for the first time in five starts, pitching effectively into the seventh inning before getting bailed out of a basesloaded jam by Joe Beimel and Chris Resop. • Phillies 4, Cubs 2: CHICAGO — Michael Martinez hit a tiebreaking two-run double with two out in the ninth inning, leading Philadelphia to the victory. Starlin Castro’s two-run homer off Cliff Lee in the first inning held up until Philadelphia chased Matt Garza in the eighth, and Chase Utley tied with a two-run double against Sean Marshall. • Mets 4, Cardinals 2: NEW YORK — Mets shortstop Jose Reyes made a huge impact in the field in his return from a hamstring injury, turning a difficult double play with the bases loaded in the eighth inning after making a diving stop that saved a run. • Padres 4, Marlins 0: MIAMI — Tim Stauffer pitched six innings and four relievers completed a six-hitter for San Diego. Ryan Ludwick and Orlando Hudson hit consecutive two-out RBI doubles in the first inning for the Padres. • Astros 7, Nationals 6: HOUSTON — Clint Barmes homered and drove in three runs for Houston, and J.A. Happ picked up his first win in two months. Happ (4-11) yielded five runs and seven hits in 5 2⁄3 innings. The left-hander was 0-7 with a 6.08 ERA in 10 starts since he beat the Mets on May 14. • Brewers 11, Diamondbacks 3: PHOENIX — Ryan Braun returned to the Milwaukee lineup and hit the second of the Brewers’ three first-inning home runs in a rout of Arizona. Corey Hart and Yuniesky Betancourt also homered in the first inning for Milwaukee. • Rockies 12, Braves 3: DENVER — Ubaldo Jimenez brushed aside Atlanta’s powerful bats along with all that trade talk, and Troy Tulowitzki and Carlos Gonzalez homered as Colorado routed the Braves. • Giants 5, Dodgers 3: SAN FRANCISCO — Brandon Belt hit a tiebreaking two-run double in the seventh inning in his first game back in the majors and San Francisco finally gave Madison Bumgarner some run support at home while beating the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Texas IP H R ER Ogndo W, 10-3 8 4 0 0 D.Oliver 1 0 0 0 Los Angeles IP H R ER Chtwood L, 5-6 5 7 3 3 R.Thompson 2 2-3 2 0 0 Kohn 1 1-3 4 4 4 WP—Ogando. T—3:03. A—43,103 (45,389).

BB 3 0 BB 4 0 2

SO 5 1 SO 1 2 0

NP 115 16 NP 108 32 39

ERA 2.72 2.38 ERA 3.71 2.87 7.30

NL BOXSCORES

Pittsburgh AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Presley lf 3 0 1 0 1 0 .351 J.Harrison 3b 4 1 1 0 0 0 .266 Walker 2b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .277 A.McCutchen cf 2 0 0 1 1 0 .277 G.Jones rf 2 0 0 0 0 1 .237 1-Paul pr-rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .256 Overbay 1b 3 0 1 0 0 1 .239 Br.Wood ss 2 0 0 0 1 1 .221 McKenry c 3 0 0 0 0 1 .238 Ja.McDonald p 2 0 0 0 0 0 .088 Beimel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Resop p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Diaz ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .271 Hanrahan p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 25 1 4 1 3 5 Cincinnati 000 000 000 — 0 6 1 Pittsburgh 100 000 00x — 1 4 0 a-struck out for Leake in the 7th. b-grounded out for Resop in the 8th. c-singled for Ondrusek in the 9th. 1-ran for G.Jones in the 7th. 2-ran for R.Hernandez in the 9th. E—Hanigan (2). LOB—Cincinnati 9, Pittsburgh 4. 2B—Hanigan (4), Presley (4), Walker (17). RBIs— A.McCutchen (58). SB—Heisey (4). CS—Presley (2), Paul (3). S—Heisey. Runners left in scoring position—Cincinnati 5 (Hanigan, Stubbs 3, Bruce); Pittsburgh 2 (Overbay, J.Harrison). Runners moved up—Leake, A.McCutchen. GIDP— Ja.McDonald. DP—Cincinnati 1 (Leake, Cozart, Votto).

BI 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 2 7

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

American League roundup

Rangers 7, Angels 0 R H 0 2 1 0 2 3 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 2 1 2 7 13

Away 30-20 26-19 28-20 26-25 14-30 Away 24-27 22-24 26-25 21-29 14-30 Away 25-23 25-23 20-27 16-33

Philadelphia IP H R ER BB Cl.Lee 6 8 2 2 0 Stutes W, 4-1 2 2 0 0 1 Bastardo S, 7-7 1 0 0 0 0 Chicago IP H R ER BB Garza 7 4 1 1 3 Marshall L, 5-4 2 5 3 3 0 Garza pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Marshall Stutes (C.Pena). T—3:14. A—38,857 (41,159).

SO 6 3 3 SO 5 3

NP 89 37 18 NP 117 37

ERA 2.83 3.24 0.99 ERA 3.80 3.18

1-1. IBB—off

Astros 7, Nationals 6

Pirates 1, Reds 0

AB 5 3 5 5 3 5 5 3 4 38

Home 28-17 30-19 23-24 22-24 25-25 Home 27-18 29-21 21-25 24-22 25-28 Home 31-18 26-23 23-26 26-22

Today’s Games Boston (A.Miller 3-1) at Baltimore (Arrieta 9-6), 9:35 a.m. Cleveland (Tomlin 11-4) at Minnesota (Blackburn 7-6), 10:10 a.m. Oakland (McCarthy 2-5) at Detroit (Below 0-0), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (Vargas 6-7) at Toronto (Morrow 6-4), 4:07 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (F.Garcia 7-7) at Tampa Bay (Price 9-7), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Danks 3-8) at Kansas City (Chen 5-3), 5:10 p.m. Texas (D.Holland 8-4) at L.A. Angels (Haren 10-6), 7:05 p.m.

Seattle IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Pineda 6 1-3 7 5 5 2 6 102 3.24 Laffey H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 5 1.82 Gray BS, 1-1 2 1-3 3 0 0 1 2 34 2.36 Pauley 3 1 0 0 0 2 32 1.75 J.Wright L, 2-3 1 2-3 1 1 1 2 1 34 3.52 Toronto IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Cecil 7 9 5 5 1 2 109 5.77 Camp 1 1 0 0 1 0 17 4.10 Rauch 1 0 0 0 0 1 14 4.12 Frasor 1 1-3 3 0 0 1 1 26 3.12 Dotel 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 3 3.33 Rzepczynski 2 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 25 2.75 Janssen W, 3-0 1 0 0 0 1 2 17 2.83 Inherited runners-scored—Laffey 2-1, Gray 1-1, Dotel 1-0, Rzepczynski 1-0. IBB—off J.Wright (A.Hill). HBP—by Cecil (Halman). WP—Cecil. T—4:21. A—15,957 (49,260).

Texas Kinsler 2b Andrus ss J.Hamilton lf A.Beltre 3b Mi.Young dh N.Cruz rf Moreland 1b Napoli c En.Chavez cf Totals

Str L-1 L-1 W-1 W-1 W-1 Str L-1 W-2 L-1 W-1 W-1 Str W-12 L-3 L-10 L-1

Chicago AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Re.Johnson rf 5 1 3 0 0 2 .336 S.Castro ss 5 1 2 2 0 2 .305 Ar.Ramirez 3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .302 Je.Baker 2b 3 0 0 0 0 1 .295 b-DeWitt ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .263 Barney 2b 0 0 0 0 0 0 .299 Byrd cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 .304 A.Soriano lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .252 C.Pena 1b 3 0 2 0 1 0 .230 Soto c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .236 Garza p 3 0 0 0 0 2 .028 Marshall p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --e-Fukudome ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .269 Totals 37 2 10 2 1 12 Philadelphia 000 000 022 — 4 9 0 Chicago 200 000 000 — 2 10 1 a-flied out for Cl.Lee in the 7th. b-flied out for Je.Baker in the 7th. c-grounded out for Do.Brown in the 9th. dsingled for Stutes in the 9th. e-struck out for Marshall in the 9th. E—Soto (8). LOB—Philadelphia 7, Chicago 9. 2B— M.Martinez (2), Utley (9), Do.Brown (9), Re.Johnson 2 (17), Ar.Ramirez (24), C.Pena (9). HR—S.Castro (3), off Cl.Lee. RBIs—M.Martinez 2 (15), Utley 2 (20), S.Castro 2 (42). SB—M.Martinez (1), Utley (10). Runners left in scoring position—Philadelphia 4 (Ruiz, Cl.Lee, Howard, Gload); Chicago 4 (A.Soriano, S.Castro, Je.Baker, DeWitt).

Cincinnati AB Stubbs cf 4 Cozart ss 4 Votto 1b 4 B.Phillips 2b 4 Cairo 3b 3 Heisey rf-lf 3 F.Lewis lf 2 Masset p 0 Ondrusek p 0 c-R.Hernandez ph 1 2-Arroyo pr 0 Hanigan c 3 Leake p 2 a-Bruce ph-rf 2 Totals 32

R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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

SO 2 1 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 9

Avg. .253 .333 .320 .278 .287 .244 .262 ----.312 .176 .258 .257 .262

Cincinnati IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Leake L, 8-5 6 2 1 1 2 4 90 4.11 Masset 1 1 0 0 1 1 20 2.98 Ondrusek 1 1 0 0 0 0 19 1.60 Pittsburgh IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA McDnld W, 6-4 6 1-3 4 0 0 3 7 87 4.15 Beimel H, 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 5 5.02 Resop H, 13 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 11 3.30 Hnrhn S, 28-29 1 2 0 0 0 0 14 1.24 Inherited runners-scored—Beimel 3-0, Resop 3-0.

Balk—Ja.McDonald. Catchers’ interference—Hanigan. T—2:44. A—26,058 (38,362).

Mets 4, Cardinals 2 St. Louis Theriot ss Jay cf Pujols 1b Holliday lf Berkman rf Freese 3b Y.Molina c Lohse p Valdes p M.Boggs p b-Descalso ph T.Miller p Motte p Schumaker 2b Totals

AB 4 3 4 4 3 4 3 2 0 0 1 0 0 2 30

R 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2

H BI BB 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 5 2 2

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

Avg. .279 .310 .274 .316 .286 .317 .270 .146 --.000 .261 ----.262

New York AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Jos.Reyes ss 5 1 2 0 0 0 .355 Turner 2b 5 2 2 0 0 0 .269 Beltran rf 3 1 3 0 2 0 .293 Dan.Murphy 3b 5 0 1 2 0 0 .310 Pagan cf 5 0 1 2 0 0 .240 Bay lf 4 0 1 0 0 1 .233 Duda 1b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .250 R.Paulino c 4 0 3 0 0 0 .315 Gee p 3 0 0 0 0 0 .036 a-Harris ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .265 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Isringhausen p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 38 4 14 4 3 1 St. Louis 000 010 100 — 2 5 0 New York 000 022 00x — 4 14 0 a-flied out for Gee in the 7th. b-singled for M.Boggs in the 8th. LOB—St. Louis 4, New York 13. 2B—Beltran 2 (30), Dan.Murphy (22), Pagan (11), R.Paulino (10). HR—Berkman (26), off Gee. RBIs—Berkman (65), Lohse (1), Dan. Murphy 2 (40), Pagan 2 (31). Runners left in scoring position—St. Louis 3 (Schumaker, Pujols 2); New York 9 (Dan.Murphy 2, Gee 3, R.Paulino 2, Pagan 2). GIDP—Pujols 2. DP—New York 2 (Jos.Reyes, Turner, Duda), (Jos. Reyes, Duda). St. Louis IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Lohse L, 8-7 5 2-3 10 4 4 3 1 102 3.45 Valdes 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 9 3.38 M.Boggs 1 1 0 0 0 0 12 3.15 T.Miller 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4.02 Motte 1 1 0 0 0 0 18 2.43 New York IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gee W, 9-3 7 3 2 2 2 2 96 3.67 Parnell H, 5 1 2 0 0 0 1 16 2.70 Isrnghsn S, 1-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 11 2.93 T.Miller pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. Inherited runners-scored—Valdes 2-2, Motte 1-0. HBP—by Parnell (Schumaker). T—2:35. A—35,448 (41,800).

Padres 4, Marlins 0 San Diego Venable rf E.Cabrera ss Qualls p M.Adams p c-Guzman ph

AB 5 3 0 0 1

R 1 0 0 0 0

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

SO 2 1 0 0 1

Avg. .242 .125 ----.300

Gregerson p 0 H.Bell p 0 Maybin cf 4 Ludwick lf 5 O.Hudson 2b 4 Rizzo 1b 3 Alb.Gonzalez 3b-ss 4 Ro.Johnson c 4 Stauffer p 1 a-Forsythe ph-3b 2 Totals 36

0 0 0 0 1 2 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 4 11

0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 3

0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 3 10

----.263 .241 .238 .144 .205 .180 .167 .176

Florida AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bonifacio 3b 3 0 1 0 1 0 .290 Infante 2b 4 0 1 0 0 0 .256 Morrison lf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .258 H.Ramirez ss 4 0 0 0 0 1 .252 G.Sanchez 1b 4 0 2 0 0 0 .283 Stanton rf 4 0 0 0 0 2 .255 Cameron cf 3 0 0 0 1 1 .148 J.Buck c 4 0 1 0 0 0 .224 Ani.Sanchez p 1 0 1 0 1 0 .194 Cishek p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Dobbs ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .302 Sanches p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .200 Totals 32 0 6 0 3 6 San Diego 200 000 101 — 4 11 0 Florida 000 000 000 — 0 6 1 a-singled for Stauffer in the 7th. b-grounded into a double play for Cishek in the 7th. c-struck out for M.Adams in the 9th. E—Cishek (1). LOB—San Diego 9, Florida 8. 2B—Ludwick (15), O.Hudson 2 (8). RBIs—Maybin (22), Ludwick (57), O.Hudson (21). SB—Venable (16), E.Cabrera (2), Maybin 2 (16). S—Stauffer. Runners left in scoring position—San Diego 6 (Rizzo, Ludwick 4, Ro.Johnson); Florida 5 (Morrison 2, Cameron, J.Buck 2). Runners moved up—Maybin. GIDP—Ludwick, Dobbs. DP—San Diego 1 (O.Hudson, Alb.Gonzalez, Rizzo); Florida 1 (H.Ramirez, Infante, G.Sanchez). San Diego IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Stauffer W, 6-6 6 4 0 0 2 4 101 2.83 Qualls H, 8 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 2.66 M.Adams H, 20 1 0 0 0 0 1 9 1.23 Gregerson 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 21 2.70 H.Bell S, 27-29 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 8 2.52 Florida IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA A.Snchez L, 6-3 6 7 2 2 2 7 119 3.52 Cishek 1 1 1 0 1 1 24 2.31 Sanches 2 3 1 1 0 2 35 3.97 Inherited runners-scored—H.Bell 2-0. IBB—off Cishek (Maybin). WP—Stauffer, H.Bell. T—3:09. A—17,101 (38,560).

Phillies 4, Cubs 2 Philadelphia Rollins ss M.Martinez 3b Utley 2b Howard 1b Victorino cf Ibanez lf Do.Brown rf c-Mayberry ph-rf Ruiz c Cl.Lee p a-Gload ph Stutes p d-B.Francisco ph Bastardo p Totals

AB 5 4 4 4 4 3 2 1 4 2 1 0 1 0 35

R 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4

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

SO 0 1 1 3 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 8

Avg. .272 .228 .263 .246 .299 .244 .245 .241 .262 .209 .266 --.228 ---

Washington Espinosa 2b Desmond ss Zimmerman 3b Morse 1b 1-Ankiel pr Werth rf W.Ramos c Bernadina cf Hairston Jr. lf Zimmermann p a-Cora ph Coffey p S.Burnett p c-L.Nix ph Mattheus p Totals

AB 5 5 4 3 0 3 5 4 4 1 0 0 0 1 0 35

R H 0 0 0 2 1 0 2 3 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 11

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

BB 0 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5

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

Avg. .242 .226 .248 .314 .230 .212 .251 .264 .270 .172 .233 --1.000 .272 ---

Houston AB R H BI BB SO Avg. Bourn cf 5 0 3 3 0 2 .294 Ang.Sanchez 2b 5 0 0 0 0 2 .251 Wallace 1b 4 0 0 0 0 1 .281 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 0 1 .315 Ca.Lee lf 3 2 2 0 1 0 .275 C.Johnson 3b 4 1 2 0 0 1 .246 Barmes ss 4 2 2 3 0 0 .250 Quintero c 4 2 2 1 0 0 .254 Happ p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .233 Fe.Rodriguez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Bogusevic ph 0 0 0 0 1 0 .200 Da.Carpenter p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --S.Escalona p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --W.Lopez p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --d-Michaels ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .208 Melancon p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 35 7 11 7 2 7 Washington 002 003 100 — 6 11 1 Houston 020 401 00x — 7 11 0 a-walked for Zimmermann in the 6th. b-walked for Fe.Rodriguez in the 6th. c-grounded out for S.Burnett in the 8th. d-flied out for W.Lopez in the 8th. 1-ran for Morse in the 9th. E—Zimmerman (7). LOB—Washington 9, Houston 7. 2B—Desmond (14), Morse 2 (20), Hairston Jr. (11), Bourn 2 (24), C.Johnson (20). HR—Morse (17), off Happ; Hairston Jr. (3), off Happ; Barmes (5), off Zimmermann. RBIs—Desmond (25), Morse 2 (52), Hairston Jr. 2 (19), Bourn 3 (31), Barmes 3 (18), Quintero (12). S—Zimmermann, Happ. Runners left in scoring position—Washington 6 (W.Ramos 3, Espinosa 2, Werth); Houston 4 (Ang.Sanchez 3, Barmes). GIDP—W.Ramos. DP—Houston 1 (Da.Carpenter, Ang.Sanchez, Barmes, Wallace). Washington IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Zmrmann L, 6-8 5 7 6 6 0 5 86 3.00 Coffey 1 2 1 1 1 2 26 3.82 S.Burnett 1 1 0 0 1 0 17 5.50 Mattheus 1 1 0 0 0 0 13 1.62 Houston IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Happ W, 4-11 5 2-3 7 5 5 4 3 107 5.88 Fe.Rdrguez H, 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 10 2.49 Da.Crpnter H, 1 1 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 16 1.59 S.Escalona H, 3 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 2 2.45 W.Lopez H, 9 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 3 2.91 Mlncon S, 8-11 1 0 0 0 1 1 23 2.98 Inherited runners-scored—Fe.Rodriguez 1-1. HBP— by Melancon (Morse). WP—Fe.Rodriguez. T—3:12. A—32,418 (40,963).

Rockies 12, Braves 3 Atlanta AB R Schafer cf 4 0 Prado 3b 5 0 McCann c 3 1 Linebrink p 0 0 Freeman 1b 4 0 Uggla 2b 4 2 Hinske lf 4 0 Ale.Gonzalez ss 2 0 Proctor p 0 0 a-D.Ross ph-c 1 0 McLouth rf 4 0 Beachy p 2 0 Gearrin p 0 0 Lugo ss 2 0 Totals 35 3

H BI BB 1 0 1 2 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 3 3

SO 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 1 1 0 0 9

Avg. .230 .279 .313 --.278 .192 .259 .226 --.290 .223 .050 --.095

Colorado AB R H BI BB SO Avg. C.Gonzalez lf 3 2 1 2 1 2 .287 J.Herrera ss 1 0 0 0 0 0 .251 M.Ellis 2b 6 0 2 0 0 0 .297 Helton 1b 3 3 1 0 2 0 .324 Wigginton 1b 1 0 0 0 0 0 .252 Tulowitzki ss 4 3 3 3 1 0 .277 Spilborghs lf 0 0 0 0 0 0 .238 S.Smith rf 4 1 2 3 0 0 .297 I.Stewart 3b 3 1 0 0 2 0 .145 Iannetta c 3 1 1 1 2 0 .226 Fowler cf 4 1 3 3 1 0 .239 Jimenez p 3 0 1 0 1 2 .118 Mat.Reynolds p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .000 Lindstrom p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 36 12 14 12 10 4 Atlanta 000 101 010 — 3 9 0 Colorado 321 004 20x — 12 14 0 a-flied out for Proctor in the 8th. LOB—Atlanta 8, Colorado 12. 2B—Freeman (21), Helton (19), Tulowitzki (23), S.Smith (25), Iannetta (11). 3B—S.Smith (6), Fowler (6). HR—Uggla 2 (17), off Jimenez 2; Tulowitzki (18), off Beachy; C.Gonzalez (14), off Beachy. RBIs—Uggla 2 (37), Hinske (23), C.Gonzalez 2 (54), Tulowitzki 3 (64), S.Smith 3 (40), Iannetta (35), Fowler 3 (21). SB—McCann (3), Fowler (4). CS—I.Stewart (2). SF—S.Smith. Runners left in scoring position—Atlanta 3 (Freeman 2, D.Ross); Colorado 6 (Jimenez, S.Smith, C.Gonzalez, M.Ellis 2, Mat.Reynolds). Runners moved up—Hinske, I.Stewart. GIDP—Schafer. DP—Colorado 1 (Helton, Tulowitzki). Atlanta IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Beachy L, 3-2 4 2-3 9 6 6 5 3 102 3.75 Gearrin 1 2 4 4 4 1 32 7.85 Proctor 1 1-3 3 2 2 1 0 36 6.00 Linebrink 1 0 0 0 0 0 7 3.11 Colorado IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Jimenez W, 6-8 6 2-3 7 2 2 2 9 120 4.00 Mat.Reynolds 1 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 28 3.44 Lindstrom 1 1 0 0 0 0 11 2.84 Inherited runners-scored—Gearrin 2-0, Proctor 30, Mat.Reynolds 1-0. IBB—off Gearrin (I.Stewart), off Beachy (Fowler). HBP—by Gearrin (C.Gonzalez). T—3:00. A—36,460 (50,490).

Brewers 11, Diamondbacks 3 Milwaukee AB R C.Hart rf 5 1 Morgan cf-lf 3 1 Braun lf 3 1 C.Gomez cf 1 0 Fielder 1b 5 0 Loe p 0 0 R.Weeks 2b 4 1 McGehee 3b-1b 5 2 Y.Betancourt ss 5 3 Lucroy c 5 1

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

SO 2 1 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0

Avg. .260 .333 .316 .222 .295 --.275 .228 .245 .282

Gallardo p 2 a-Counsell ph 1 Estrada p 0 c-Jo.Wilson ph-3b 1 Totals 40

1 0 0 0 11

1 0 0 0 14

0 0 0 0 11

1 0 0 0 4

0 0 0 0 7

.227 .162 .222 .288

Arizona AB R H BI BB SO Avg. R.Roberts 3b 4 1 0 0 0 1 .259 S.Drew ss 4 0 0 0 0 3 .251 J.Upton rf 3 1 2 1 0 0 .284 d-Bloomquist ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .273 C.Young cf 3 0 1 0 0 1 .261 e-Nady ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 .249 Montero c 3 0 1 1 0 0 .271 K.Johnson 2b 3 0 0 0 1 0 .215 Allen 1b 3 1 1 1 0 0 .286 G.Parra lf 3 0 0 0 0 3 .280 Enright p 1 0 0 0 0 1 .167 Duke p 1 0 0 0 0 0 .267 Brazoban p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Owings p 0 0 0 0 0 0 .143 Paterson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --b-Burroughs ph 1 0 0 0 0 1 .250 Demel p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 31 3 5 3 1 10 Milwaukee 501 003 002 — 11 14 1 Arizona 200 010 000 — 3 5 0 a-grounded out for Gallardo in the 7th. b-struck out for Paterson in the 8th. c-popped out for Estrada in the 9th. d-grounded out for J.Upton in the 9th. e-grounded out for C.Young in the 9th. E—Y.Betancourt (11). LOB—Milwaukee 8, Arizona 3. HR—C.Hart (13), off Enright; Braun (17), off Enright; Y.Betancourt (6), off Enright; R.Weeks (19), off Enright; Y.Betancourt (7), off Demel; Allen (2), off Gallardo. RBIs— C.Hart 2 (31), Morgan (21), Braun 2 (64), C.Gomez (19), R.Weeks (42), Y.Betancourt 4 (34), J.Upton (47), Montero (47), Allen (4). SB—K.Johnson (9). CS—C.Young (7). SF—Montero. Runners left in scoring position—Milwaukee 2 (R.Weeks 2); Arizona 1 (Enright). Runners moved up—S.Drew. GIDP—Fielder. DP—Arizona 1 (Owings, Montero, Allen). Milwaukee IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Gllardo W, 11-6 6 4 3 1 1 6 102 3.96 Estrada 2 0 0 0 0 4 31 4.55 Loe 1 1 0 0 0 0 7 4.44 Arizona IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Enright L, 1-4 3 7 6 6 0 2 60 7.41 Duke 2 3 3 3 2 2 50 5.77 Brazoban 0 0 0 0 2 0 15 6.00 Owings 2 1 0 0 0 0 22 2.76 Paterson 1 0 0 0 0 2 14 3.68 Demel 1 3 2 2 0 1 19 2.49 Duke pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Brazoban pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. Inherited runners-scored—Brazoban 3-3, Owings 30. HBP—by Brazoban (Morgan), by Paterson (Morgan). T—3:00. A—17,831 (48,633).

Giants 5, Dodgers 3 Los Angeles Gwynn Jr. lf Furcal ss J.Rivera rf Kemp cf Miles 2b-3b b-Ethier ph Uribe 3b MacDougal p Loney 1b Barajas c R.De La Rosa p Jansen p Kuo p Carroll 2b Totals

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

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

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

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

Avg. .262 .167 .250 .312 .311 .299 .208 --.263 .209 .273 ----.290

San Francisco AB R H BI BB SO Avg. An.Torres cf 4 2 2 0 0 1 .239 Fontenot 2b-3b 4 0 2 0 0 1 .242 P.Sandoval 3b 3 0 2 1 1 0 .315 1-Burriss pr-2b 1 1 0 0 0 1 .214 Schierholtz rf 5 0 1 0 0 2 .289 C.Ross lf 3 0 0 0 1 2 .264 Belt 1b 4 1 2 3 0 0 .230 B.Crawford ss 2 1 1 0 2 0 .201 Whiteside c 4 0 1 0 0 1 .238 Bumgarner p 3 0 0 1 0 1 .121 a-Rowand ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 .241 Br.Wilson p 0 0 0 0 0 0 --Totals 34 5 12 5 4 9 Los Angeles 003 000 000 — 3 5 1 San Francisco 020 010 20x — 5 12 0 a-singled for Bumgarner in the 8th. b-flied out for Miles in the 9th. 1-ran for P.Sandoval in the 7th. E—R.De La Rosa (2). LOB—Los Angeles 2, San Francisco 11. 2B—Gwynn Jr. (9), Loney (13), An.Torres (20), Fontenot (10), Belt (2), Whiteside (6). HR—Belt (2), off R.De La Rosa. RBIs—Gwynn Jr. (13), Furcal 2 (9), P.Sandoval (34), Belt 3 (7), Bumgarner (1). SB—Burriss (9). S—Fontenot. Runners left in scoring position—Los Angeles 1 (Kemp); San Francisco 6 (C.Ross 2, Bumgarner, Whiteside 2, Schierholtz). Runners moved up—Whiteside, Bumgarner. GIDP—C.Ross. DP—Los Angeles 1 (Furcal, Miles, Loney). Los Angeles IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA R.De La Rosa 5 9 3 2 0 5 88 3.73 Jansen 1 0 0 0 1 1 15 4.13 Kuo L, 0-1 2-3 2 2 2 3 1 27 9.26 MacDougal 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 2 18 1.62 SanFran IP H R ER BB SO NP ERA Bmgrner W, 5-9 8 4 3 3 0 7 105 3.72 Wlson S, 29-33 1 1 0 0 0 0 18 2.96 Inherited runners-scored—MacDougal 3-0. IBB—off Kuo (P.Sandoval, C.Ross). HBP—by MacDougal (An.Torres), by Bumgarner (Barajas). T—2:48. A—42,391 (41,915).

LEADERS Through Tuesday’s Games ——— AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING—AdGonzalez, Boston, .337; Bautista, Toronto, .332; MiYoung, Texas, .321; VMartinez, Detroit, .316; Ellsbury, Boston, .314; Konerko, Chicago, .314; JhPeralta, Detroit, .313. RUNS—Granderson, New York, 84; Bautista, Toronto, 74; Ellsbury, Boston, 68; Kinsler, Texas, 67; AdGonzalez, Boston, 66; MiCabrera, Detroit, 65; Pedroia, Boston, 63; Zobrist, Tampa Bay, 63. RBI—AdGonzalez, Boston, 78; Beltre, Texas, 74; Konerko, Chicago, 69; Granderson, New York, 68; Youkilis, Boston, 68; Teixeira, New York, 67; Bautista, Toronto, 66. HITS—AdGonzalez, Boston, 130; Ellsbury, Boston, 121; MiYoung, Texas, 121; MeCabrera, Kansas City, 120; Markakis, Baltimore, 114; ACabrera, Cleveland, 112; AGordon, Kansas City, 110. DOUBLES—AdGonzalez, Boston, 29; Zobrist, Tampa Bay, 28; MiYoung, Texas, 27; Beltre, Texas, 26; Ellsbury, Boston, 26; Youkilis, Boston, 26; Quentin, Chicago, 25. TRIPLES—Granderson, New York, 8; AJackson, Detroit, 7; Bourjos, Los Angeles, 6; RDavis, Toronto, 6; Aybar, Los Angeles, 5; Cano, New York, 5; Crisp, Oakland, 5; Gardner, New York, 5; Zobrist, Tampa Bay, 5. HOME RUNS—Bautista, Toronto, 31; Granderson, New York, 25; Teixeira, New York, 25; Konerko, Chicago, 22; NCruz, Texas, 21; MarReynolds, Baltimore, 21; Beltre, Texas, 20; MiCabrera, Detroit, 20. STOLEN BASES—Gardner, New York, 29; Andrus, Texas, 28; RDavis, Toronto, 28; Ellsbury, Boston, 28; Crisp, Oakland, 27; ISuzuki, Seattle, 23; BUpton, Tampa Bay, 22. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING—JosReyes, New York, .355; Helton, Colorado, .324; Votto, Cincinnati, .320; Braun, Milwaukee, .316; Pence, Houston, .315; Morse, Washington, .314; McCann, Atlanta, .313. RUNS—RWeeks, Milwaukee, 70; JosReyes, New York, 66; CYoung, Arizona, 62; CGonzalez, Colorado, 61; Bourn, Houston, 60; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 60; Braun, Milwaukee, 59; Votto, Cincinnati, 59. RBI—Fielder, Milwaukee, 73; Howard, Philadelphia, 73; Kemp, Los Angeles, 72; Berkman, St. Louis, 65; Braun, Milwaukee, 64; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 64; Walker, Pittsburgh, 62. HITS—JosReyes, New York, 126; SCastro, Chicago, 124; Pence, Houston, 117; Votto, Cincinnati, 115; Bourn, Houston, 113; Kemp, Los Angeles, 109; RWeeks, Milwaukee, 108. DOUBLES—Beltran, New York, 30; CaLee, Houston, 27; CYoung, Arizona, 26; SCastro, Chicago, 25; Headley, San Diego, 25; SSmith, Colorado, 25; Bourn, Houston, 24; Pence, Houston, 24; ArRamirez, Chicago, 24; RWeeks, Milwaukee, 24. TRIPLES—JosReyes, New York, 15; Victorino, Philadelphia, 9; SCastro, Chicago, 8; Bourn, Houston, 7; Fowler, Colorado, 6; Maybin, San Diego, 6; Rasmus, St. Louis, 6; SSmith, Colorado, 6. HOME RUNS—Berkman, St. Louis, 26; Kemp, Los Angeles, 24; Fielder, Milwaukee, 22; Bruce, Cincinnati, 21; CPena, Chicago, 20; Pujols, St. Louis, 20; Stanton, Florida, 20. STOLEN BASES—Bourn, Houston, 35; JosReyes, New York, 30; Kemp, Los Angeles, 27; Stubbs, Cincinnati, 23; Bartlett, San Diego, 20; Desmond, Washington, 20; Braun, Milwaukee, 19; Rollins, Philadelphia, 19.


D4 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

FOOTBALL

AP sources: Players review parts of deal By Howard Fendrich and Barry Wilner The Associated Press

Photos by Rob Kerr / The Bulletin

Above, Bend’s Ian Boswell competes in the pro men’s division in the Cascade Cycling Classic’s Old Mill Prologue in Bend.

Today, Stage 1: McKenzie Pass Road Race 22

Maxwell and Big Springs Sno-parks

Start Santiam Pass 126

20

McK enzi e Ri ver H w

y.

20

126

20 126

MILES 0

Former Olympic champion Kristin Armstrong pedaled to a thirdplace finish Tuesday night in the pro women’s division during the prologue of the Cascade Cycling Classic.

CCC Continued from D1 Antogna, who does not speak English, spoke through team manager Sebastian Alexandre, who served as a translator. “He says he felt good today,” Alexandre said of Antogna. “These kinds of short races are good for him, so he was confident coming into today. We came a few times to check the course yesterday and today. So he did the laps a few times to know the tricky corners and check the course carefully. He was feeling good and he was confident.” Antogna will wear the leader’s jersey for today’s first stage, the McKenzie Pass Road Race. “He’s not a climber, but he was feeling very good today, so he’s going to try to defend the jersey tomorrow if it’s possible,” Alexandre said. Tara Whitten, of Team Tibco, won the women’s prologue with a time of 3:52.81. Clara Hughes,

of Cycling B.C., finished second in 3:55.71. Reigning Olympic time trial gold medalist Kristin Armstrong, of Peanut Butter & Co., placed third in 3:55.73. Whitten, the 2010 track cycling world champion in the omnium and the points race, said the short prologue course was suited to her strengths. “I really like that distance,” Whitten said. “On the track, that’s kind of my thing. I was really excited about the prologue, and really happy with how I felt out there. This is where I can take advantage of my track skills.” The 31-year-old from Edmonton, Alberta, is racing in her second Cascade Classic. She competes in road races during the summer to stay in shape for the track. “The track is my No. 1 focus, but it’s really great for my fitness and my skills to do road racing in the summer,” Whitten said. “It’s a pretty strong field here. I expected to be one of the contenders (in the prologue), but I knew I’d have to

Dee Wright Observatory 5

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The NFL Players Association’s executive committee reviewed only portions of a proposed deal to end the lockout and not enough to warrant a vote Tuesday, two people familiar with the league’s labor negotiations told The Associated Press. A full agreement in principle hadn’t been completed as of Tuesday night, and another person familiar with the talks said there was no guarantee a full document would be finished today, either. The people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the process is supposed to remain confidential. While lawyers from both sides worked on contract language in New York with a court-appointed mediator for the second day in a row, the NFLPA’s leadership met for about nine hours at the group’s headquarters in Washington. “Every day the last two years has been a long day,” NFLPA head DeMaurice Smith said as he left. If the four-month lockout — the NFL’s first work stoppage since 1987 — is going to end this week, in time to keep the preseason completely intact, the best-case scenario is that the players OK a new contract today, and the owners do so the next day. Player representatives from all 32 teams were expected in Washington today — when they could vote, if a settlement is ready for their consideration. One of the people who spoke to the AP said lawyers for owners and players planned to continue discussions today via telephone, instead of the sort of face-to-face talks that produced so much progress last week. The owners’ labor committee, meanwhile, is set to meet in

Atlanta today. All owners are expected to gather Thursday for a special meeting when they could ratify the deal and decide to lift the lockout they put in place March 12. Executives from all 32 teams then would be briefed there Thursday and Friday on how the terms would affect league business. Clubs were told topics would include the 2011 NFL calendar, rookie salary system and guidelines for player transactions. Still unresolved Tuesday was what it would take to get the 10 plaintiffs — including quarterbacks Tom Brady, Peyton Manning and Drew Brees, Chargers receiver Vincent Jackson and Patriots guard Logan Mankins — to sign off on a settlement to their antitrust lawsuit against the NFL that is pending in federal court in Minnesota. Late Tuesday, Jackson tweeted: “I have made no demands, I wanna play ball like the rest of my peers!” Another pending issue has been the TV networks case, in which players accused owners of setting up $4 billion in “lockout insurance.” After joining the talks in New York for about seven hours, Hall of Fame defensive end Carl Eller thought an agreement would be reached this week. He also said retired players won’t stand in the way. After leaving negotiations, Eller headed to a meeting with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. “They want to get these games going, and they want to have a season. That’s their focus,” Eller said. “Our issues are very, very critical — very important — but they don’t really have much to do with whether the game goes on or not.” He said “there’s still a lot more to be done” when it comes to benefits for former players, but that could be resolved after the main dispute is settled.

70 mi.

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

have a good ride to win it, so I’m really happy.” Whitten said she is looking for a strong showing in Thursday’s Skyliners Time Trial, too, but last year she was exhausted from the road stage the day before. She is hoping to maintain some energy after today’s McKenzie Pass Road Race. “I’m really excited about our team and what we can do this week,” Whitten said. “Last year I was so cooked from the road race the day before (the time trial). I’m hoping to pull off a better (time trial) this year. “I love this race. It was a priority for me to come back this year

— great scenery, great terrain,\ and great competition.” The Cascade Cycling Classic, which runs through Sunday, continues today with the pro men’s and women’s McKenzie Pass Road Race, a 74-mile stage that finishes at Three Creek Sno-park south of Sisters. The race features two prominent climbs, the first up switchbacking state Highway 242 to the top of McKenzie Pass, and the finishing climb up Three Creeks Road. Mark Morical can be reached at 541-383-0318 or at mmorical@ bendbulletin.com. Jacquelyn Martin / The Associated Press

Scoring Continued from D1 For now, no migraines yet. This year’s scoring is about like 1952, ’73, ’83 or — in the last season when runs were near this level — ’92. But get used to it. Through history, when scoring drops to this level, it stays there for years — unless it goes even lower. Who defines how many runs are enough? We do. And history does. For 136 years, the average is 9.07 per game. When scoring gets above 10 runs (’96, ’99, ’00) or below eight (7.54 in ’67 and 6.84 in ’68), everybody goes nuts. Rules change. The ball is (secretly) tweaked. For the moment, we’ve returned to a palatable balance familiar to fans from ’73 through ’92 (8.54 runs). But different eras favor different styles of play. The current trend is so pervasive that the teams that don’t heed it will probably be on the wrong side of history. “Just look at the players,” Nats General Manager Mike Rizzo said when he took charge in ‘09. “They are built more like they used to be. I’m not saying why. But we have to adapt to it. The game will be played more like it was in the past. Not home run derby. So, adjust.” Several teams already have. Last year’s world champion San Francisco Giants exemplify it with their four-deep postseason

The reasons for the current drop in offense make a nice but inconclusive debate. However, one practical implication is clear: In hindsight, steroids and human growth hormone helped hitters more than pitchers. Why? More strength instantly results in more bat speed.

rotation, super closer Brian Wilson and just enough offense to win tense games. The Phillies, this season’s best team, are built on pitching with Roy Halladay, Cole Hamels and Cliff Lee curing an offense that ranks 14th in runs. If you want archetypes for teams that dominated in periods of comparable offense, look back to the 1972-73-74 champion Athletics, the ’86-88 Mets powerhouses of Davey Johnson or the ’91-93 Braves. All were defined by rotations with famous aces: Catfish Hunter, Dwight Gooden or Tom Glavine. But those behind them, always to the third and

sometimes to the fourth starter, were almost as dominant. Pitching was the core. Just as pertinent, all three teams blended power and speed in their three peak years: A’s (average of 138 homers, 126 steals), Mets (164, 139) and Braves (149, 139). That athleticism meant “plus” range at most defensive spots. No player on any of those teams ever hit 40 homers! And there were just four 30-homer seasons out of the nine seasons. The reasons for the current drop in offense make a nice but inconclusive debate. However, one practical implication is clear: In hindsight, steroids and human growth hormone helped hitters more than pitchers. Why? More strength instantly results in more bat speed. (The bat literally feels lighter in your hands.) And that quickness, like swinging a broomstick instead of a club, means that it’s easier to hit fastballs. It just is. So, as overall bat speeds decline, what pitch immediately becomes more valuable? The fastball. In recent years, every power arm in the minors who lacked the repertoire, command or temperament to be in a big league rotation got sent to the bullpen. Last season, the 90-win Padres had five relievers who averaged almost 95 mph on fastballs. Of this season’s young promising teams — such as the Indians, Pirates and Nationals — perhaps none is as consciously modeled on the “traditional” teams of the

pre-steroid era as Rizzo’s Nats. He’s looking for the same kind of players whom his dad, the lifelong scout, searched for a generation ago and whom he himself sought until muscle mass ruled everything. The GM practically has his tenets nailed to his office door. Get me more power arms. Find more athletic, less bulky players with some power and enough speed. That syncs with better defense up the middle. Get catchers to stop the running game, because it will soon return to fashion. Goodbye, Adam Dunn. Hello, Wilson Ramos and Ivan Rodriguez. Rizzo wanted pitchers who “miss the bat.” So far he’s only found Stephen Strasburg and Jordan Zimmermann as starters. But he’s packed the bullpen with four high-K men. Players with several of the five classic tools — not just “hit for power” — are central to this slightly subnormal offensive era. Big bucks go to Carl Crawford, Jayson Werth or Adrian Beltre, who seem multitalented. Welcome to baseball as it is today. The game stopped being home run derby several years ago. But, now, as scoring has dropped to levels not seen in 20 years, we must adapt again. Last October, San Francisco introduced to its new motto. Giants baseball: Torture. Embrace the pain. The lowscoring nail-biter is the wave of the present.

Kevin Mawae, left, president of the NFL Players Association, and DeMaurice Smith, executive director, NFL Players Association, leave the NFL Players Association offices where talks to end the NFL football lockout have been taking place, Tuesday, in Washington.

BASKETBALL

Optimistic NBA releases schedule for new season By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The NBA champion Dallas Mavericks will open the season — if it begins on time — at home on Nov. 1 against MVP Derrick Rose and Chicago, then host Miami in a finals rematch Christmas Day. The NBA released its complete 2011-12 schedule Tuesday despite being in a lockout that could last months and cause it to be scrapped. The Portland Trail Blazers open with the Denver Nuggets at home on Nov. 3. Owners and players are still well apart in negotiations on a collective bargaining agreement to replace the one that expired June 30, and there is a fear that regular-season games could be lost to a work stoppage for the second time in league history. If not, Utah will host Hous-

ton in the Rockets’ first game under Kevin McHale and without Yao Ming, and Oklahoma City will visit new coach Mike Brown and the Lakers to conclude the opening-night schedule. Most teams begin Nov. 2, with LeBron James, Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh starting their second season together on the Heat and facing a Knicks team led by Carmelo Anthony and Amare Stoudemire. Also, Golden State hosts the Lakers in its first game under rookie coach Mark Jackson. No. 1 pick Kyrie Irving would make his pro debut that night when Cleveland visits Boston. The first meeting between the Mavs and Heat since Dallas’ six-game victory in the finals highlights the Dec. 25 schedule. The Celtics visit the Knicks to open the tripleheader and the Lakers welcome the Bulls in the nightcap.


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 D5

Juniper Continued from D1 That is wise. The gem of a desert links course, designed by John Harbottle III in 2005, is a spectacular test of golf. What makes it so? First, Juniper is among the better-conditioned municipal golf courses anywhere. And Juniper’s putting surfaces, which have been purposely slowed down a touch by course management in recent years, are still the fastest and firmest greens of any public course in Central Oregon. For golfers of at least moderate skill level, such greens provide an exhilarating challenge. Play the wrong line or speed, and a three-putt is imminent. Such surfaces force a golfer to think about every putt — even the gimmes. Novices may struggle with the quickness of the greens, but not so much that lesser-skilled golfers should be deterred from playing the course. Juniper’s holes range from monstrous (the 651-yard par5 sixth hole, 483-yard par-4 ninth and 471-yard par-4 17th, for instance), to terribly interesting (the 449-yard par-4 fifth hole), to welcome reprieves (the 150-yard par-3 13th) from the course’s more challenging holes. Few courses offer more variety in one round of golf than Juniper. The most interesting hole is the fifth, a long hole with a large rock outcropping that juts out and cuts off the right side of the fairway, creating a blind approach into a long, narrow green with a lava-rock backdrop. Any golfer not able to keep his or her tee shot left on No. 5 is in for an adventure. The hole is visually spectacular, and a bit intimidating. Or as my playing partner put it as we walked off the fifth: “That entire hole is scary.” Juniper offers plenty more frightening shots. But with seven tee combinations from which to choose, golfers not ready for such a challenge can avoid such flirtations with disaster. For me, I enjoy taking on those challenges — even if my game is not always up to it. That is the joy of playing Juniper, a course far superior to what its “municipal golf course” tag may suggest.

Difficulty of course At 7,186 yards from the back tees, Juniper is a tough test of golf even for the most skilled golfers. The course winds through the high desert, utilizing numerous hills, lava-rock outcroppings, juniper trees and other impediments native to this region’s desert. Its greens are nearly PGA Tour-caliber, and they can run as fast as 12 or higher on the Stimpmeter. Thankfully, with seven sets of tees — ranging in distance from 5,500 yards to nearly 7,200 yards — golfers can choose how difficult Juniper will play. For novices who play the appropriate tee, Juniper offers wide fairways and no forced carries. However, Juniper’s greens will be a challenge for those inexperienced with playing firm, fast putting surfaces.

Favorite hole Juniper’s par-4 17th hole is the toughest hole because of its sheer length at 478 yards. But the par-4 fifth hole, a 449yard beauty, is among the most impressive golf holes in the region. From the tee, golfers are greeted not only by a panoramic view of the Cascades, but also by a massive rock outcropping that juts into the fairway and protects the green. The fairway has plenty of room for tee shots to miss right, but the optimal play is down toward the left of the fairway. Shots that do miss right will leave a blind, uphill approach shot over the outcropping. From the left side, golfers will have a wide-open look into the green, an elongated putting surface with two bunkers to its left and lava rock that can be used as a backstop for shots that sail long.

Strategy For the most part, playing aggressively from the tee is not only rewarded, but on many holes doing so is neces-

GOLF

Scorecard The scorecard for Juniper Golf Course: Hole Par Yardage No. 1 Par 4 446 yards No. 2 Par 4 388 yards No. 3 Par 3 178 yards No. 4 Par 4 366 yards No. 5 Par 4 449 yards No. 6 Par 5 651 yards No. 7 Par 5 564 yards No. 8 Par 3 234 yards No. 9 Par 4 483 yards Out Par 36 3,759 yards No. 10 Par 5 519 yards No. 11 Par 4 429 yards No. 12 Par 4 270 yards No. 13 Par 3 150 yards No. 14 Par 4 419 yards No. 15 Par 4 438 yards No. 16 Par 3 198 yards No. 17 Par 4 478 yards No. 18 Par 5 526 yards In Par 36 3,427 yards *All distances from back tees sary just to reach greens in regulation. For instance, the par-4 17th hole, a 478-yard beast, takes two extremely long shots just to reach the elevated green safely. The good news is that Juniper’s fairways are generous, including on No. 17, allowing golfers to reach for a little extra yardage with their drivers. Controlling approach shots into the firm and fast greens is paramount. Play the ball short of the pin and let the ball work toward the target. Drifting too far from the pin can make three putts a virtual certainty. Though putting is almost always the difference between a good round and a mediocre round of golf at any course, the difference can be more pronounced at Juniper. Not only are its greens speedy, but subtle breaks can be difficult to read for those not accustomed to playing at the desert course.

Extras Juniper’s short-game practice area — which rests behind the clubhouse and just off the 16th green — is one of the best in the area, with a spacious green and plenty of room around the putting surface to work. Juniper’s driving range is a shade narrow, but it still has room for most golfers on all but the busiest days. Its practice putting green, between the driving range and the clubhouse, is large and gives a golfer a true read on the speed of the greens. That is important to adjust to, because the putting greens at Juniper typically are among the speediest in the region. The restaurant and bar area has ample space, including a back patio that overlooks the golf course and offers a spectacular view of the Cascades.

Value Juniper has kept its peak green fees relatively level in recent years — $59 during weekdays, $65 on weekends. Redmond residents have it better still: $10 off Juniper’s regular rate. That is reasonable for such a high-quality golf course. But the municipal facility has far more bargain offerings than in the past. The rate after noon drops to $44 on weekdays, $54 on weekends; and after 4 p.m. it falls to $39 (weekdays) and $49 (weekends), including the use of a golf cart. In addition, golfers can occasionally find better deals at Juniper at golfnow.com. For a golf course that ranks among the best Central Oregon has to offer, Juniper is certainly one of the region’s better values. Zack Hall can be reached at 541-617-7868 or at zhall@ bendbulletin.com.

AP File photos

Despite being hailed as one of the most talented American golfers, Dustin Johnson, left, has yet to win a major. England’s Lee Westwood, center, and Spain’s Sergio Garcia are in the same boat.

Talent may not ensure success In men’s professional golf, a promising start to a career does not always translate into a major win By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

SANDWICH, England — Dustin Johnson probably doesn’t think he’ll have to wait 15 years to win a major. He already has won four times in his four years on the PGA Tour, and he has played in the final group at three of the past six majors. That doesn’t happen by accident. To say Johnson is the most talented American golfer won’t get much of an argument. Then again, a young Darren Clarke might have thought the same thing. Clarke was among the new faces in European golf that helped inspire a slow revival in the late 1990s. He might not have had the raw skill of someone like Johnson, but a major figured to be in his future. He played in the final group at Royal Troon in 1997. He took down Tiger Woods at the 2000 Match Play Championship when Woods was at the absolute top of his game. Then came another close call a year later in the British Open. His major finally arrived Sunday, a month before he turns 43, his head full of gray hair and his belly bulging. But at least he got there. “The hardest thing with Darren was that he’s been slightly labeled an underachiever. And he was,” his agent, Chubby Chandler, said in the glowing aftermath Sunday evening. “He had the talent to win a major, an Open, but it didn’t happen. For it to happen like this is just amazing. Now he’s no longer an underachiever.” Clarke became the third-oldest player to win his first major, trailing only 45-year-old Jerry Barber in the 1961 PGA Championship and Roberto De Vicenzo at 44 in the 1967 British Open. There are others like Clarke

—Darren Clarke, 2011 British Open champion who were on the downside of their prime years when they won a major. Two that come to mind are Tom Kite, who was 42 when he won the U.S. Open, and Mark O’Meara, who was 41 when he won the Masters and British Open. One reminder from this British Open is that there are no guarantees in golf. The game owes nothing to anyone. Johnson would seem to be a lock to win a major, simply by the experience he has been gaining, even if it’s the kind he’d rather forget. But hard knocks also raise questions. There was that atrocious start at Pebble Beach last year on his way to an 82, his dubious twoshot penalty on the final hole of Whistling Straits last year at PGA Championship when he didn’t realize he was in a bunker, and that 2-iron on the 14th hole of Royal St. George’s on Sunday. Surely, he’ll figure it out soon. But wasn’t that also said of Sergio Garcia? Garcia had it far more difficult, playing in an era when Woods was winning majors just about every year. The Spaniard is only 31, although it seems as though he’s been around much longer because he has been in the mix at majors so much. As a 19-year-old rookie, he nearly came from behind to catch Woods at Medinah. He played with Woods in the final

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Foot in 2006 when Montgomerie, at age 42, had a chance to win a U.S. Open. From the middle of the 18th fairway, he chunked a 7-iron and made double bogey. That shot might explain why Monty never won a major. Everyone makes blunders in the majors — Kite, O’Meara, Tom Watson — and they eventually figure it out. But not always. “The game is fickle,” Clarke said. “It hammers you, it hammers you, and then it gives you something. Of all people, I think Lee Westwood deserves something to be given to him. And I’m very sure that he will win majors, and not just a major.” That’s what was said of Rory McIlroy before he won the U.S. Open last month by eight shots with a record score. Some players — with an Irish accent, it should be noted — began the countdown to Jack Nicklaus’ 18 majors. Then came the British Open, and a curious complaint from McIlroy that he doesn’t like playing in the wind. Adding to the pressure of Westwood is that four players from Chandler’s stable at International Sports Management have won the past five majors — Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel, McIlroy and now Clarke. Everyone but Westwood. “That will be hard on him,” Clarke said. “But if I was a gambling man ... I would have a substantial bet on Lee Westwood winning the PGA in Atlanta. I hope he does.” Hope isn’t enough.

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group twice more in majors, and when Woods wasn’t around, Garcia found another nemesis while losing two majors to Padraig Harrington. A dozen years after he roared onto the scene, Garcia still hasn’t won the big one. And this year, his game reached a point that he was happy just to be playing in the last two majors. And then there’s 38-year-old Lee Westwood. As happy as he was for one of his best friends winning the Open, part of Westwood had to be asking, “When will it be my turn?” Twice in the past four years, he missed out on a playoff in the majors by one shot. He had the 54-hole lead at the Masters last year and was beaten by better golf from Phil Mickelson. Westwood kept getting better to the point that he reached No. 1 in the world. But still no major. “Lee has done everything he can do to get himself into contention to win,” Clarke said. “Unfortunately, he’s had guys that have played better than him on quite a few occasions, or they’ve had the bounce of the ball or things going their way. Right now, things haven’t gone his way, but I’m sure that they will go his way because he’s too good a player to not go his way.” True. But the same could have been said of Colin Montgomerie. He won a record eight money titles on the European Tour. He twice got into a playoff at the majors, losing both of them. Then came what appeared to be a Clarke-type moment at Winged

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T

D6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

EE T O

G R EEN

GOLF SCOREBOARD LOCAL The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf results listings and events calendar. Clearly legible items should be faxed to the sports department, 541-3850831, e-mailed to sports@bendbulletin.com, or mailed to P.O. Box 6020; Bend, OR 97708.

Club Results AWBREY GLEN Saturday Men’s Game, July 16 Best Ball 1, Bill Long/Bud Johnson, 59. 2, Bert Larson/Ed Hagstrom, 63. Individual British Open Pick Bert Larson, 142; Tony Kent, 142; Larry Haas, 142. BEND GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Men’s Daily Game, July 14 Net Skins 1st Flight (11 handicap or less) — Carl Ryan, Nos. 9, 15; Andy West, No. 1; Kevin Rueter, No. 3; Bob Roach, No. 6; Mike Chase, No. 7; Jim Keller, No. 13. 2nd Flight (12-15) — Greg Vernon, Nos. 6, 10; Brad Patrick, Nos. 17, 18; Bobby Lockrem, No. 9; Brad Chambers, No. 16. 3rd Flight (16 and higher) — Joe Rodgers, Nos. 11, 12, 17; Chip Cleveland, Nos. 2, 18; Ron Tokuyama, Nos. 5, 7; Keith Frankland , No. 4; Gary Christensen, No. 3; Mike Goldstein, No. 13; Rich Gagne, No. 15. BROKEN TOP Men’s Gathering, July 13 Two Best-Ball ABCD 1, Bob Newberry/Bob Abraham/Ron Wilhelm/Harold Ashford, 200. 2, Stephen Dandurand/Brian Wagar/Kim Seneker, 200. 3, Tom Strange/Greg Newton, 204. 4, Rick Cortese/Gary Heck/Jon Tompkins/ Ed Perkins, 206. 2011 BTWGA President’s Cup, July 12, 14 Flight 1 — Sandy Dougharty/Michelle Harmount, 18. Flight 2 — Jeanne Raudman/Charlene Moeckel, 19. Flight 3 — Bellva Abraham/Jerry Stoltz, 17½. Flight 4 — Sharlie Lemma/Patty Felton, 16½. 2011 President’s Cup Champions — Sandy Dougharty/Michelle Harmount. Best Team vs. Par — Peggy Grimm/Marge VanCamp. CROOKED RIVER RANCH Central Oregon Senior Women’s Golf Association, July 11 Stroke Play Class A — Gross: 1, Jan Sandburg, 80. 2, Melinda Bailey, 81. 3, Debbie Hehn, 83. 4, Kay Case, 84. Net: 1 (tie), Deborah Fitzpatrick, 67; Janet King, 67. 3, Linda Wakefield, 68. 4, Myrna Harris, 69. Class B — Gross: 1, Jody Chapman, 89. 2, Carmen West, 90. 3, Karen Jamison, 92. 4, Terry Markham, 93. Net: 1, Lael Cooksley, 67. 2, Kathy Hoffman, 69. 3 (tie), Bonnie Gaston, 70; Moe Bleyer, 70. Class C — Gross: 1, Charlene Kenny, 94. 2, Sally Hennessey, 95. 3, Joan Sheets, 97. 4, Jackie Yake, 98. Net: 1, Juanice Schram, 69. 2 (tie), Valerie Collins, 71; Shirley Cowden, 71; Peggy O’Donnell, 71; Paula Reents, 71; Ruth Thoren, 71. Class D — Gross: 1, Deborah Cox, 97. 2, Pat Porter, 100. 3, Ellie Rutledge, 102. 4, Darlene Ross, 104. Net: 1, Lori Black, 68. 2, Phyllis Bear, 70. 3 (tie), Dianne Concannon, 71; Kathy Snavely, 71. KPs — Class A: Debbie Hehn. Class B: Donna Loringer. Class C: Juanice Schram. Class D: Darlene Ross. Accurate Drives — Class A: Sally Martin. Class B: Mary Clark. Class C: Shirley Cowden. Class D: Joyce Heater. Eagle Crest Men’s Club, July 12 One Net Best Ball A Flight — 1 (tie), Eric Peterson/Hank McCauley, 61; Angelo Radatti/Jim Kelly, 61; Gary Jackson/Ken Wellman, 61. 4 (tie), Jim Hawkes/Roger Palmer, 63; Ken Benshoof/Tom Johnson, 63; Dennis Flinn/Ron Cady, 63. B Flight — 1 (tie), Bill Martin/Larry Clark, 59; Phil Chappron/ Terry Black, 59; Billy Balding/Ernie Brooks, 59. 4, Bill Hurst/Mark Osborn, 61; 5, Don Sheets/Ray Dupuis, 61. DESERT PEAKS

Wednesday Ladies Club, July 13 Best Nine 1, Teresa Lindgren, 34.5. 2 (tie), Vicki Moore, 35.5; Margaret Sturza, 35.5. KP — Vicki Moore. Wednesday Twilight League, July 13 Team Match Play Standings The Good, Bad & Ugly, 24-8. Brunoe Logging, 18-14. Try To Farms, 13-19. Cental Oregon Insurance, 24-8. Earnest Electric, 17-15. Gruner Chevrolet, 10-22. Oregon Embroidery, 21-11. Billy Baroo’s, 12-20. Schmidt House, 12-20. Willow Creek Driving Range, 16-16. Bel Air Funeral Home, 14-18. Good Old Boys, 19-13. Shielding International, 15-17. Keith Manufacturing, 9-23. KPs — Flight 1: Chuck Schmidt, Brian Ringering. Flight 2: Dean Hunt, Kurt Ocker. Flight 3: Shane Henning, Jim Manion. LDs — Flight 1: Clifford Reynolds, Ed McDaniel. Flight 2: Sid Towell, Corey Browne. Flight 3: Mike McKay, Mark Simmons. Thursday Men’s Club, July 14 Net Red, White & Blue 1, Jordan Kelley, 63. 2, Val Paterson, 65. 3, Dick Pliska, 66. KP — Mke Funk. LD — Joe Stanfield. Friday Night Couples, July 15 Net Chapman 1, Carl & Teresa Lindgren, 32.6. 2, Dean Ditmore & Juanita Hawkins, 33.7. 3, Ed & Carol McDaniel, 39.1. Sunday Group Play, July 17 Stroke Play Gross: 1, Francisco Morales, 71. 2, Ed McDaniel, 74. 3, Brad Mondoy, 77. 4, Jim Wyzard, 78. Net: 1 (tie), Rawlin Richardson, 66; Bobby Brunoe, 66; Rich Vigil, 66. 4, Mike Funk, 68. KP — Mike Funk. LD — Francisco Morales.

Westerman/K. Wintermyre/L. Baker/D. Houston, 119. 2, D. Keller/P. Koller/S. McCaffery/L. Davis, 125. Division 2 — Gross: 1, J. Laws/K. Cochran/J. Voth/C. O’Rear, 181. 2, L. Scott/R. Walker/T. Smith/J. Kirk, 185. Net: 1, Y. DunnRigotti/J. Means/A. Fullerton/J. Tonn, 119. 2, L. Temple/C. Doeleman/J. Story/B. Becker, 120.

THE GREENS AT REDMOND Men’s Club, July 14 Stroke Play A Flight — Nine Holes: 1, Jerry Kuchta, 29. 2, Phil Weimar, 30. 3 (tie), Marv Bibler, 30.5; Tony Rosengarth, 30.5; Woody Wallis, 30.5. 18 Holes: 1, Darwin Thies, 53. 2, Norm Olson, 55. 3, Woody Wallis, 56. 4, Marv Bibler, 58. B Flight — Nine Holes: 1, Dennis Gillett, 24. 2, Terry Lucas, 25. 3, Phil Backup, 26.5. 4, Bob Sarasin, 27.5. 18 Holes: 1, Terry Lucas, 52. 2, Kent Leary, 54 . 3 (tie), Phil Backup, 55; Dennis Gillett, 55. A Flight Least Putts — Nine Holes: Jeff Strauser, 14. 18 Holes: Jeff Strauser, 29. B Flight Least Putts — Nine Holes: 1 (tie), Terry Lucas, 14; Scott Mcmillin, 14. 18 Holes: Terry Lucas, 30. Golfer Of The Week —Dennis Gillett.

July 7 EAGLE CREST CHALLENGE Marjorie Matthews, Redmond No. 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . driver

MEADOW LAKES Men’s League, July 16 Two-Man Scramble Gross: 1, Pat O’Gorman/Dustin Conklin, 60. 2 (tie), Jim Montgomery/Jeff Storm, 67; Jake Shinkle/Caleb Henry, 67; Clay Smith/Rob Dudley, 67; Todd Goodew/Riley Cransont, 67. Net: 1, John McCulloch/Ken Hussemen, 59. 2, Les Bryan/Dewey Springer, 60. 3, George Lienkaemper/Fred Bushong, 61. Skins — Gross: Dave Barnhouse/Jon Wilber, Nos. 1, 8; Scott Grasle/Tony Ashcraft, No. 10; George Lienkaemper/Fred Bushong, No. 13. Net: Dave Barnhouse/Jon Wilber, No. 15; John McCulloch/Ken Hussemen, No. 13; Scott Grasle/Tony Ashcraft, No. 10. KPs — A Flight: Pat O’Gorman, No. 4; Gene Taylor, No. 13. B Flight: Gene Taylor, No. 8; Roy Webb, No. 17. Couples Golf League, July 17 Mix n’ Match Scramble Men — Gross: 1, Don Bedient/Gene Taylor, 33. Net: 1 (tie), Ken Hanfland/Wayne Looney, 28; Richard Koon/Jay Jones, 28. Women — Gross: 1, Deanna Alacano/Karen Peterson, 38. Net: 1, Verna Bedient/Sharon Taylor, 25. KPs — Men: Gene Taylor, No. 4; Jay Jones, No. 8. Women: Karen Peterson, No. 4; Deanna Alacano, No. 8. RIVER’S EDGE Ladies League Member-Guest, June 22 Two Best Balls Division 1 — Gross: 1, M. Sturza/T. Burnside/S. Anderson/W. Pelley, 170. 2, K. Queen/S. Adams/S. Martin/M. King, 172. Net: 1, A.

SUNRIVER Women’s Golf Club Partnership Tournament, July 13 Best Ball Flight 1 — 1, Christi Alvarez/Nancy Cotton, 64-61—125. 2, Nancy Snyder/Rita Brundage, 63-67—130. Flight 2 — 1, Barbara Weybright/Joan Haynes, 59-64—123. 2, Liz Haberman/Katie Hall, 60-64—124. Men’s Golf Club, July 13 Three Net Best Balls at Meadows 1, Dan Frantz/Dave Hennessy/Dixon Freeman/Tom Gleason, 118. 2, Robert Hill/Paul Grieco/Richard Imper/Tom Ellis, 125. 3, Jeff Ruttenberg/Scott Lucas/Gary Johansen/Woodie Thomas, 125. 4, Mike Calhoun/Alan Crisler/Charlie Wellnitz/Blind Draw, 127. Individual Stroke Play — Gross: 1, Scott Brown, 68. Net: 1, Dixon Freeman, 64. KPs — Tom Ellis, No. 4; Jeff Ruttenberg, No. 8; Greg Cotton, No. 13; Virgil Martin, No. 16. Skins (0-18 handicap) — Gross: Scott Brown, 2; Dan Frantz, Mike Calhoun. Net: Tim Sweezey, 3; Charlie Wellnitz, 2; J. Ruttenberg, P. Grieco, C. Spaulding, R. Hill. Skins (19-36 handicap) — Net: Dennis Wood, 4; Tom Gleason, 2; Jow Woischke, Woodie Thomas, Howard Potts, Gary Brooks, Don Larson.

Hole-In-One Report

July 15 THE GREENS AT REDMOND Randy Bishop, Redmond No. 10. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-iron July 16 JUNIPER Roger Aikin, Bend No. 3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-wood July 17 EAGLE CREST CHALLENGE Jean Finch, Redmond No. 7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 yards. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-iron July 17 SUNRIVER MEADOWS Ron Bures, Sunriver No. 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195 yards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-iron

Calendar The Bulletin welcomes contributions to its weekly local golf events calendar. Items should be mailed to P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; faxed to the sports department at 541-385-0831; or e-mailed to sports@bendbulletin.com. ——— CLINICS OR CLASSES Mondays — Adult beginner golf clinics at Juniper Golf Course. Cost is $20. For more information, call Stuart Allison at 480-5403015 or e-mail him at pro@stuartallisongolf.com. Mondays and Wednesdays — Junior Golfer Classes at Juniper Golf Course are open to golfers ages 8-17 through Aug. 3. Classes for beginners are scheduled from 1:30-2:45 p.m.; intermediate golfers from 3:30-4:45 p.m. Cost is $75 and classes are limited to 20 students. For more information or to register, call Juniper pro Stuart Allison at 541-548-3121 or email him at pro@stuartallisongolf.com. Mondays and Wednesdays — Tournament Player Classes at Juniper Golf Course are open to advanced golfers ages 8-17 through

Aug. 3. Classes begin at 5 p.m. Cost is $35 and classes are limited to four students. For more information or to register, call Juniper pro Stuart Allison at 541-548-3121 or email him at pro@stuartallisongolf.com. Fridays and Saturdays — Junior golf camp for advanced golfers at Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond. Camps are designed to prepare experienced golfers for competitive golf. Camps are scheduled to run 3-4:30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Camp dates: July 22-23, Aug. 5-6, Aug. 19-20. Cost is $50 per student. To register or for more information, contact Eagle Crest director of instruction Tam Bronkey at 541-504-3879 or e-mail him at tamb@ eagle-crest.com. Mondays, Tuesdays — Two-day junior golf clinics at Widgi Creek Golf Club in Bend. Instructional camps open for golfers ages 6 to 16. Camps are scheduled to run 1:30-3 p.m. or 3:30-5 p.m. Camp dates: July 25-26, Aug. 8-9, Aug. 22-23. Cost is $49 per student. To register or for more information, call Widgi Creek at 541-382-4449 or e-mail Widgi assistant golf pro Josh Bowles at jbowles@pga.com. Mondays through Fridays — Pee Wee Golf Clinics at Juniper Golf Course are open to beginning golfers ages 5-7. Classes begin at noon each day and are expected to last between 30 to 40 minutes each. Camp dates: July 25-28, Aug. 1-4. Cost is $25 per student. For more information or to register, call Juniper pro Stuart Allison at 541-5483121 or email him at pro@stuartallisongolf.com. Tuesdays through Thursdays — Ladies-only golf school at Black Butte Ranch creates a comfortable learning environment for women golfers of all skill levels. Three-day school runs from 9-11:30 a.m. each day. Dates for school include July 26-28, and Aug. 2-4. Cost is $425 and includes lunch, nine holes of golf each day, and on-course instruction. For more information or to register, visit www. blackbutteranch.com or call 541-595-1500. July 31-Aug. 4 — Oregon State University’s Junior Golf Camp in Corvallis is for boys and girls ages 12 through 18. Camp attendees will recieve instruction by Oregon State women’s golf coach Risë Alexander, and assistant Kailin Downs, a former professional golfer and Mountain View High School standout. Cost is $995, and includes instruction, room, board, t-shirt, green fees and practice ball expenses). Cost is $845 for golfers who do not need room and board. For more information or to register, visit www.oregonstategolfcamp. com/junior-golf-camp.cfm. Aug. 8-12 — Junior Golf Camp at Crooked River Ranch is open to intermediate golfers ages 11 to 17. Instructors will teach the fundamentals of putting, chipping, approach shots, and tee shots. Classes run Monday through Thursday, from 7:30-10 a.m. and 7 a.m.-noon on Friday. Tournament to follow on Friday afternoon. Cost is $95 per child and includes lunch each day. For more information or to register, call Crooked River Ranch at 541-923-6343. Wednesdays through Fridays — Adult-child three-day golf camp at Black Butte Ranch. Camp includes two hours of instruction each day and one round of golf. Classes from 9 to 11 a.m. each day. Cost is $350 and includes instruction for one adult and one child. Additional children $150 each. Camp dates: Aug. 10-12, Aug. 17-19. For more information or to register, visit www.blackbutteranch.com or call 541-595-1500. ——— TOURNAMENTS July 21 — Central Oregon Golf Tour event at Sunriver Resort’s Crosswater Club. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. July 21 — Couple’s Nine-Hole Golf Outing at Aspen Lakes Golf Course. Golf begins with 4:30 p.m. shotgun start and three-course dinner at Brand 33 Restaurant begins at 7 p.m. Cost is $90 per couple and includes golf and dinner. For more information or to register, call the Aspen Lakes pro shop at 541-549-4653. July 25 — U.S. Amateur sectional qualifying tournament at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. Event is open to any amateur male player with a handicap index of 2.4 or lower. Top finishers qualify for the 110th U.S. Amateur Championship to be held Aug. 22-28 at Erin Hills Golf Course in Erin, Wis. Download a registration form at www. usga.org and click on the “championships” link. July 25 — Central Oregon Golf Tour event at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize

pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. July 25 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at Tokatee Golf Club in Blue River. Tee times begin at 11 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, e-mail cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. July 26 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association’s Summer Golf Experience at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend. Event is for 6to 8-year-olds. Players must be at Awbrey Glen by 3 p.m., and golf begins at 3:30 p.m. Cost is $15 to register for three events, plus an $8 per-event fee. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, e-mail cojga@hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga. com. July 27 — The Rude Rudy Golf Tournament at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend benefits the Hunger Prevention Coalition of Central Oregon and St. Vincent de Paul Food Pantry of Bend. Individual stroke-play event for men and women competing in morning and afternoon flights based on handicap index. Entry fee of $150 includes a luncheon and a barbecue dinner. Contact: Marie Gibson, 541-385-9227. July 30 — Golf Channel Am Tour event at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. The Am Tour’s Central Oregon chapter is a competitive golf series held at different Central Oregon golf courses. Flighted tournaments open to all amateur golfers of all abilities and prize pool awarded to both gross and net winners. Membership information: 541-389-7676 or www.thegolfchannel.com/amateurtour. July 31 — United Way Golf Classic at Sunriver Resort’s Crosswater Club. Scramble begins with a noon shotgun start. Cost is $175 per player or $700 per foursome and includes golf, cart, lunch, and awards barbecue. Sponsorships also available. Proceeds benefit the Deschutes County United Way. For more information or to register, call the Crosswater clubhouse at 541-593-1145 or visit www. sunriver-resort.com. Aug. 1 — Central Oregon Seniors Golf Organization event at Valley Golf Course in Burns. The format is individual gross and net best ball, as well as team best ball. Cash prizes awarded at each event. Tournament series is open to men’s club members at host sites, and participants must have an Oregon Golf Association handicap. Cost is $110 for the season plus a $5 per-event fee. For more information, call Ron Meisner at 541-548-3307. Aug. 1 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at River’s Edge Golf Club in Bend. Tee times begin at 8 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, e-mail cojga@ hotmail.com, or visit www.cojga.com. Aug. 2 — Central Oregon Golf Tour event at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www. centraloregongolftour.com. Aug. 4 — Kah-Nee-Ta Ladies Invitational at Kah-Nee-Ta High Desert Resort & Casino near Warm Springs. Two Best Net of Four 18-hole tournament begins with a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Cost is $95 per person and includes golf, cart, range balls, and lunch banquet. Discounted rates at Kah-Nee-Ta Spa Wanapine are also available. For more information or to register, visit www.kahneeta.com or call 541-553-4971. Aug. 8 — Central Oregon Junior Golf Association tournament at Broken Top Club in Bend. Tee times begin at 8 a.m. For more information, call Woodie Thomas at 541-598-4653, e-mail cojga@hotmail. com, or visit www.cojga.com. Aug. 11 — Central Oregon Golf Tour event at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool

awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www.centraloregongolftour.com. Aug. 11 — Central Oregon Golf Tour event at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. The Central Oregon Golf Tour is a competitive golf series held at golf courses throughout Central Oregon. Gross and net competitions open to all amateur golfers of all abilities. Prize pool awarded weekly, and membership not required. For more information or to register: 541-633-7652, 541-318-5155, or www.centraloregongolftour.com. Aug. 11-12 — The Ghost Tree Invitational at Crosswater Club in Sunriver is a four-person scramble tournament that is open to the public. Double-shotgun tournament begins at 7:45 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. Cost is $2,100 for foursome bidding in celebrity auction; $2,500 for a non-bidding foursome. Price includes golf for four and four dinner tickets to Dinner on the Range Saturday night. Additional $500 per foursome for teams that register after June 1. Individual golfer and sponsorship packages also available. Proceeds benefit Bend/La Pine Hospice and the Assistance League of Bend. For more information or to sign up, visit www.ghosttreeinvitational.com. Aug. 12 — The Sixth Annual Dogleg Golf Classic at Bend Golf and Country Club benefits the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Foursomes play in a scramble, and tournament begins with noon shotgun. Sponsorship opportunities are available.Cost is $125 per player or $475 per team. Entry fee includes green fee, cart, barbecue and prizes. Field is limited to the first 36 foursomes to register. To register or for more information, visit www.hsco.org.

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Locally • Bend junior repeats performance at California junior tournament: Bend’s Madison Odiorne finished in a tie for 62nd place in her division last week at the 2011 Callaway Junior World Golf Championships.

Odiorne, 14, started strong with rounds of 77 and 78 before shooting a 12-over-par 84 to finish the 54-hole tournament at 23 over at Sycuan Resorts Oak Glen Course in El Cajon, Calif. That left her tied for 62nd in a field of 97 golfers competing in the 13- and 14-year-old

girls division. Odiorne was playing for the second year in a row in the Callaway Junior World tournament, which attracts top junior golfers from all over the world. She also finished in a tie for 62nd place in 2010. —Bulletin staff report

G W PGA TOUR CANADIAN OPEN Site: Vancouver, British Columbia. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday. Course: Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club (7,212 yards, par 71). Purse: $5.2 million. Winner’s share: $918,000. Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Friday, noon-3 p.m.) and CBS (SaturdaySunday, noon-3 p.m.). Last year: Carl Pettersson rallied to win at St. George’s in Toronto, following his tournament-record 60 with a 67 for a one-stroke victory over Dean Wilson. Pettersson was six strokes behind with 11 to play. Last week: Northern Ireland’s Darren Clarke won the British Open for his first major title, finishing at 5 under for a three-stroke victory over Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson. The 42-year-old Clarke shot 68-68-69-70 at Royal St. George’s. ... Chris Kirk won the Viking Classic in Madison, Miss., for his first PGA Tour title, beating Tom Pernice Jr. and George McNeill by a stroke. Notes: Top-ranked Luke Donald is in the field along with Jim Furyk, the 2006 and 2007 winner, and Masters champion Charl Schwartzel, Rickie Fowler, Lucas Glover, Ernie Els, Geoff Ogilvy, Louis Oosthuizen and Anthony Kim. ... Mark Calcavecchia won in 2005 at Shaughnessy. He’s skipping the tournament to play in the Senior British Open.

the Imperial Springs LPGA in China. ... Golfweek magazine reported last week that the event will become the LPGA Tour’s fifth major and likely move to the fall. The tournament became an official LPGA Tour event in 2000. ...Sweden’s Helen Alfredsson won in 1994, 1998 and 2008. ... Topranked Yani Tseng leads the tour with three victories.

CHAMPIONS TOUR SENIOR BRITISH OPEN

pions Tour lead with three victories, also tied for 22nd in the British Open. ... Langer is making his first Champions Tour start since having surgery on his left thumb. He missed the cut last week in the British Open. ... Walton Heath was the site of the 1981 Ryder Cup. ... The U.S. Senior Open is next week at Inverness in Toldeo, Ohio.

EUROPEAN TOUR NORDEA MASTERS

Site: Surrey, England.

Site: Stockholm.

Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.

Schedule: Thursday-Sunday.

Course: Walton Heath Golf Club, Old Course (7,394 yards, par 72).

Course: Bro Hof Slott Golf Club (7,603 yards, par 72).

Purse: $2 million. Winner’s share: $315,000.

Purse: $2.11 million. Winner’s share: $351,110.

Television: ESPN2 (Thursday-Sunday, 9-11 a.m.).

Television: Golf Channel (ThursdayFriday, 6-9 a.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 4:30-7:30 a.m.).

Last year: Germany’s Bernhard Langer won his first senior major title, holding off Corey Pavin by a stroke at Carnoustie. Langer won the U.S. Senior Open the following week. Last event: Jeff Sluman won the First Tee Open at Pebble Beach for the third time, finishing with a 2-under 70 on July 10 for a two-stroke victory. He also won in 2008 and 2009. Notes: Tom Watson won in 2003, 2005 and 2007. The five-time British Open champion tied for 22nd last week at Royal St. George’s. ... Tom Lehman, tied with John Cook for the Cham-

Last year: Sweden’s Richard S. Johnson made a 30-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a one-stroke victory over Argentina’s Rafa Echenique. Notes: Dustin Johnson is in the field along with fellow Americans Bubba Watson and Todd Hamilton. ... Former Arizona State star Scott Pinckney is making his pro debut. ... Jesper Parnevik won in 1995 at Barseback to become the first Swede to win a European tour event in Sweden. He also won in 1998 at Kungsangen. ... The course is the longest on the European

Tour. ... The Irish Open is next week at Killarney Golf and Fishing Club.

NATIONWIDE TOUR NATIONWIDE CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL INVITATIONAL Site: Columbus, Ohio. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday. Course: Ohio State University Golf Club, Scarlet Course (7,455 yards, par 71). Purse: $800,0000. Winner’s share: $144,000. Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Friday, 9:30-11:30 a.m.; Saturday, 3:306:30 p.m.; Sunday, 4-6:30 p.m.). Last year: D.J. Brigman won his second career Nationwide Tour title, finishing with a 7-under 64 for a one-stroke victory over Jamie Lovemark. Last week: Scotland’s Russell Knox won the Chiquita Classic in Maineville, Ohio, for his first Nationwide Tour title, beating Billy Hurley by three strokes. Knox finished at 25 under. Notes: In 2007, Daniel Summerhays won the inaugural event to become the first amateur champion in tour history. In 2009, Derek Lamely beat amateur Rickie Fowler with a par on the second hole of a playoff. ... The Utah Championship is next week, followed by the Cox Classic in Omaha, Neb. ——— All Times PDT

LPGA TOUR EVIAN MASTERS Site: Evian-Les-Bains, France. Schedule: Thursday-Sunday. Course: Evian Masters Golf Club (6,345 yards, par 72). Purse: $3.25 million. Winner’s share: $487,500. Television: Golf Channel (Thursday-Friday, 3:30-5:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-1 p.m.). Last year: South Korea’s Jiyai Shin won the first of her two 2010 LPGA Tour titles, finishing with a 5-under 67 for a one-stroke victory over Morgan Pressel, Na Yeon Choi and Alexis Thompson. Last event: So Yeon Ryu won the raindelayed U.S. Women’s Open in a Monday finish July 11, beating South Korean rival Hee Kyung Seo by three shots in a three-hole playoff at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs. Ryu birdied the final hole of regulation to tie Seo at 3 under. Notes: The Women’s British Open is next week at Carnoustie, followed by

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SAVVY SHOPPER

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THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 2011

Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Shoppers mill around the Bend Farmers Market in Drake Park last week. The market provides a plethora of local goods.

Food thoughtful

VENDORS AT BEND’S WEDNESDAY FARMERS MARKET

for the

The numbers, at right, correspond to the map. We talked to vendors about what they grow, raise or make, and how they do it. We focused on produce, meat and dairy, although there are also vendors offering coffee, jams, baked goods, fresh-cut flowers and more. 1) ROCKIN DAVES BAGEL BISTRO

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2) FIELDS FARM

Footpath

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8 Numerous varieties of potatoes and onions are for sale.

Berries are now in season and available at farmers markets.

Green beans are a popular choice.

Is it organic? Grass-fed? Know the farmers market By Heidi Hagemeier The Bulletin

O

n Wednesdays, the biggest shopping event in Central Oregon isn’t in a warehouse or on a sidewalk. Bend’s Wednesday Farmers Market in Drake Park is the largest of its kind in the region. It draws producers from all over the state and can fulfill food needs from asparagus to zucchini. And the time to start visiting is now: Favorites like cherries and tomatoes are now available, and there’s plenty of opportunity to try something new, like goat meat or Japanese eggplant. And to better know what you ingest, check out the map and corresponding descriptions of what these producers grow, raise or make, and how they do it. We focused on produce, meat and dairy, although there are also vendors offering coffee, jams, baked goods, freshcut flowers and more. Quite a number of farmers at the market said they adhere to organic practices, even if they’re not certified by the U.S. Department of Agriculture or Oregon Tilth. The main reason cited for not getting certified was time and expense: Certification requires a lot of paperwork and

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DRAKE PARK BEND

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significant fees, making it difficult for some smaller farmers to achieve. Sustainable farming practices is a less defined term. While some link it to long-term health of the land, others believe it’s more about practices that keep farmers in business. “It’s all in interpretation, and there’s not a lot of communication between the farmer and the consumer,” said Jim Fields, owner of Fields Farm, which has a stand at the market. There are still a few more things to know before grabbing a basket and heading downtown. Bring cash, and possibly a checkbook. Numerous stands take both cash and local personal checks, but only a few accept credit cards. Some vendors have been granted a spot at the market but don’t choose to come every week. Feel free to inquire on when your favorite will be there the next week. Also, don’t be afraid to ask questions. After all, it’s not every day you get to chat with the person who grew your food.

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Parking west of Brooks Street

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Heidi Hagemeier can be reached at 541-617-7828 or at hhagemeier@bendbulletin.com.

3) JUNIPER GROVE FARM Location: Redmond Distance from market: 16 miles Contact: www.juniper grovefarm.com What’s for sale: About a dozen different varieties of goats milk cheese, with half soft and half hard. Varieties include chevres, peccorino-style, Gruyere-style, and others How’s it grown/raised/ made: Milk goats are pastureraised and fed hay in winter. They receive no hormones and are taken off the milking line if needing antibiotics. A significant number of the cheeses are made with unpasteurized milk

4) RAIN FOREST MUSHROOM CO.

26 27

Info

Location: Bend Distance from market: 3 miles Contact: www.fieldsfarm.org What’s for sale: Arugula, asparagus, beans, beets, brussels sprouts, specialty broccolis and cauliflowers, cabbage, carrots, collards, corn, cucumbers, garlic, greens, lettuce and lettuce mix, kale, kohlrabi, leeks, peppers, potatoes, onions, scallions, summer squash, tomatoes and 10 varieties of potatoes How’s it grown/raised/made: Formerly Oregon Tilth certified, presently uses organic practices

Jennifer Montgomery / The Bulletin

Location: Eddyville Distance from market: 159 miles Contact: www.rainforest mushrooms.com What’s for sale: Maitake, shitake, yellow oyster, blue oyster, lion’s mane and others How’s it grown/raised/made: Certified Oregon Tilth. Raised on racks with no dirt, compost or animal products – only hard woods and grain See Vendors / E6

These audio ‘white noise’ products are all hush-hush

Men’s dress shoes are back, this time with color

By Farhad Manjoo

By David Colman

New York Times News Service

Before my son was born last fall, I’d always been puzzled by the idea of “white noise.” Have you seen those CDs and expensive alarm clocks (usually sold in airline catalogs) that offer the sounds of nature: waves crashing, rain drizzling, and so on? The products claim that a flat, featureless, continuous sound somehow encourages slumber. The idea seemed bizarre

to me: When I sleep, I want quiet, not noise — not even the pitter-patter of angels dancing in the clouds. But babies do like sound in order to sleep, it turns out. And so do their parents. At the baby shower last year, my wife and I received several white-noise-enabled toys; you turn over the cuddly giraffe or sheep to reveal a control panel for a variety of soothing sounds. See White noise / E3

New York Times News Service

Illustration by David Needleman / New York Times News Service

Sneakerheads, rejoice. A decade ago, you grabbed the fashion moment (and probably your parents’ credit cards) to forge a brave new world that turned the humble tennis shoe into a polychromed, status-conscious work of art that could go toe-to-toe with a Gucci loafer and even face down a Fendi python clutch. Now that you’re gainfully employed, and have literally and stylistically outgrown your 87 pairs of sneakers (surely they’ll be worth a lot on eBay one day), you are in luck. Not only have men’s shoes

undergone a renaissance of elegance, with old-school styles like saddle shoes, wingtips and crepe-sole suede bucks coming back into style, but those same styles (and their designers) have gone your grandfather one better by stealing a page from the sneaker playbook. In short, color. It’s everywhere. On dress shoes. For grown men. Suddenly, uppers are as far from downers as they can get. “Just when you thought Americana couldn’t get any bigger, all these shoes are coming back,” said Eric Jennings, the men’s fashion director of Saks Fifth Avenue. See Shoes / E6


T EL EV ISION

E2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Teenage ‘squares’ exhibit courage when they say no Dear Abby: My best friend, “Brianna,” often invites me to big parties at her older friends’ homes. At first I was thrilled because I’m only 15. At the parties I saw some people doing bad things — but I didn’t, at first. Soon, Brianna pressured me into doing some things that I didn’t feel comfortable doing. My parents are very strict about these things, and I knew it was wrong. I have tried to get out of going to the parties, but Brianna says bad things to me. I have even had to lie to my parents about where I’m going. Every girl my age wants to go to these parties, but I don’t. Am I weird for not wanting to get involved in inappropriate things? I’m afraid if I stand up to Brianna, she’ll make everyone hate me. Please help. What should I do? — Feeling Pressured in California Dear Feeling Pressured: You’re not weird, and “every” girl your age does NOT want to attend the parties you have mentioned. You appear to be a lot more intelligent than your “friend” Brianna, who sounds more like a bully than a friend. Because Brianna does things that could land her in serious trouble doesn’t mean that you should do them. As I say in my booklet, “What Every Teen Should Know”: “... when it comes to being enticed into acts that are senseless, dangerous, illegal or immoral, it’s the ‘squares,’ the kids who care about their reputations (and their school and/or police records), who really show courage by saying, ‘No thanks, I’ll pass.’” Today, it’s not unusual to hear about teens engaging in adult activities at much younger ages than the teenagers of previous generations. That is why it is so important for parents (and guardians) to take the time to discuss alcohol, drugs, sex and family values with their children well

DEAR ABBY before they start experimenting. My teen booklet provides the answers to frequently asked questions such as: How old must a girl be before she can get pregnant? Can she get pregnant the first time she has sex? What time of the month is a girl 100 percent safe? How old must a boy be before he can father a child? Another important topic that’s included is how to avoid date rape and what to do if it happens. To order “What Every Teen Should Know,” send your name and address, plus check or money order for $6 (U.S. funds), to Dear Abby Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 610540447. Shipping and handling are included in the price. My booklet also contains information on contraception and sexually transmitted diseases and how to recognize them. It has been distributed in doctors’ offices and used to promote discussion by educators and religious leaders, and is often used by parents who find it difficult to discuss sex with their children. Dear Abby: There’s a question I have been pondering for years and I have never seen it addressed in your column. Which came first, the chicken sandwich or the egg salad? I need to make a decision soon. — Chicken Lover in Portland Dear Chicken Lover: Your question is out of my area of expertise because I’m a peanut butter-and-jelly girl. But I know baloney when I’m handed a portion, so chew on that until you figure out the answer. 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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Cedric joins ranks of game-show hosts By Rick Bentley McClatchy-Tribune News Service

PASADENA, Calif. — The big trend with game shows is to have a stand-up comic as the host: Howie Mandel on “Deal or No Deal,” Drew Carey on “The Price is Right,” Jeff Foxworthy on “Are You Smarter Than a Sixth Grader?” and Steve Harvey on “Family Feud.” You can add Cedric the Entertainer to that list. He’s the host of the new NBC primetime game show “It’s Worth What?” Contestants must guess the price of items in an effort to win $1 million. These aren’t ordinary items — the show could include anything from an early Spider-Man comic to William Shatner’s kidney stone. Cedric the Entertainer talked about the new game show. Why host a game show? This really falls in line for me. It is the closest thing to what I started with, as far as standup, because of the live audience participation, the opportunity to play along with the contestants and be there right there with them.

Q: A:

Q: A:

You had burned out on TV. What got you

back? This show attracted me because it’s a big, fun game show. And after watching Howie do “Deal or No Deal” and Jeff Foxworthy, comedians playing in that world

of prime-time game shows, this was just really exciting. And it was fun. It’s a game show, but a variety of show. I get to do some characters on here and compare some really expensive, very cool items and be a part of the NBC family. How will the team version work? These teams are made up of brother and Cedric the sister, husEntertainer band and wife. We have the example of a landlord and a tenant. It’s going to be a fun thing because it’s always about how one person gives something value and the other one doesn’t. The perspective of what something costs and how you kind of come up with the evaluation to win this money is also a challenge. On some of the games I actually try to mislead them. I try to send people away and save the network a little cash.

Q: A:

just can’t believe that somebody would spend that kind of money for it. You’d be like, “Really?” What was the last time you bought where the cost shocked you? Birkin bag. I thought it was a purse. OK? I’m going to be a guy about it. And I was like, “Sure, get my wife a purse.” And then the man came out, and he said some astronomical price. And I was like, “It’s worth what? Do you have the miniature?”

Q: A:

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What do you own that someone would say “It’s Worth What?” I have a little trinket here (pointing to his watch). My other diamond earring. I only wear one.

Q: A:

Do the prices of items on the show surprise you? Yeah, we’re all surprised. We all kind of play this game where you see something and you

Q: A:

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KATU News at 5 ABC World News News Nightly News KOIN Local 6 at 5 News The Nate Berkus Show ‘PG’ Å America’s Funniest Home Videos Old Christine Old Christine Electric Comp. Fetch! With Ruff News Nightly News King of Queens King of Queens P. Allen Smith Barbecue Univ.

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KATU News at 6 (N) ’ Å NewsChannel 21 at 6 (N) Å KOIN Local 6 at 6 Evening News KEZI 9 News ABC World News Two/Half Men Two/Half Men The Office ’ ‘14’ The Office ’ ‘14’ Travelscope ‘G’ Nightly Business News News That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Steves’ Europe Travels to Edge

7:00

7:30

Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’ Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’ Wheel of Fortune Old Christine Scrubs ‘14’ Å Entertainment The Insider ‘PG’ The Simpsons ’ The Simpsons ’ The Simpsons ’ The Simpsons ’ PBS NewsHour (N) ’ Å Live at 7 Å Inside Edition (N) Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ Garden Smart ‘G’ This Old House

8:00

8:30

9:00

9:30

The Middle ‘PG’ Modern Family Modern Family Happy Endings Minute to Win It (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å America’s Got Talent (N) ‘PG’ Å Big Brother (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Criminal Minds Out of the Light ‘14’ The Middle ‘PG’ Modern Family Modern Family Happy Endings So You Think You Can Dance The top 10 dancers perform. (N) ‘PG’ Å News on PDX-TV Burn Notice Long Way Back ’ ‘PG’ Secrets of the Dead ’ ‘PG’ NOVA The Great Inca Rebellion ‘PG’ Minute to Win It (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å America’s Got Talent (N) ‘PG’ Å America’s Next Top Model ’ ‘PG’ America’s Next Top Model ’ ‘PG’ For Your Home Katie Brown Lap Quilting ‘G’ Painting Wild

10:00

10:30

Primetime Nightline: Beyond Belief Love in the Wild (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å CSI: Crime Scene Investigation ‘14’ Primetime Nightline: Beyond Belief News Channel 21 TMZ (N) ’ ‘PG’ Burn Notice Violent con men. ‘PG’ Conquistadors With Michael Wood Love in the Wild (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å House of Payne Meet the Browns Test Kitchen Lidia’s Italy ‘G’

11:00

11:30

KATU News at 11 (11:35) Nightline News Jay Leno News Letterman KEZI 9 News (11:35) Nightline Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘14’ King of Queens King of Queens Conquistadors With Michael Wood News Jay Leno Roseanne ‘PG’ Roseanne ‘PG’ P. Allen Smith Barbecue Univ.

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

Parking Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars (N) Storage Wars (N) Gene Simmons Family Jewels ‘PG’ 130 28 18 32 Parking Wars (3:30) › “Texas ›› “Flight of the Phoenix” (2004, Adventure) Dennis Quaid, Giovanni Ribisi, Tyrese Gibson. Plane-crash ›› “Broken Arrow” (1996, Action) John Travolta, Christian Slater, Samantha Mathis. A renegade Air Force ›› “Broken Arrow” (1996) John Travolta. A renegade Air Force 102 40 39 Rangers” (2001) survivors endure hardships in the Gobi desert. Å pilot commandeers two nuclear bombs. Å pilot commandeers two nuclear bombs. Å Untamed and Uncut ’ ‘14’ Å Untamed and Uncut ’ ‘14’ Å I Shouldn’t Be Alive ’ ‘PG’ Å Hostage in Paradise (N) ’ ‘PG’ I Shouldn’t Be Alive ’ ‘PG’ Å Hostage in Paradise ’ ‘PG’ 68 50 26 38 The Most Extreme Slime Balls ‘G’ Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Rocco’s Dinner Party ‘14’ Housewives/NJ Flipping Out New York or Bust ‘14’ Rocco’s Dinner Party (N) ‘14’ Rocco’s Dinner Party ‘14’ 137 44 Extreme Makeover: Home Edition The Singing Bee ’ ‘PG’ Å Ron White’s Celebrity Salute to the Troops ‘PG’ Å Ron White’s Celebrity Salute to the Troops ‘PG’ Å Blue Collar TV ’ Blue Collar TV ’ 190 32 42 53 Extreme Makeover: Home Edition American Greed Arthur Nadel Nightmare in the City That Mad Money American Greed Arthur Nadel Nightmare in the City That Wealth-Risk Recession Profits 51 36 40 52 BMW: A Driving Obsession Piers Morgan Tonight Ryan O’Neal. Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å Piers Morgan Tonight Ryan O’Neal. Anderson Cooper 360 Å 52 38 35 48 In the Arena (N) Tosh.0 ‘14’ Å Scrubs ‘14’ Å Scrubs ‘14’ Å Daily Show Colbert Report Chappelle Show Chappelle Show South Park ‘14’ South Park ‘MA’ South Park ‘MA’ Jon Benjamin Daily Show Colbert Report 135 53 135 47 South Park ‘14’ Bend La Pine U of O Today Bend City Council Work Session Bend City Council (N) (Live) Epic Conditions Word Travels ’ Paid Program Visions of NW Ride Guide ‘14’ Outside Presents 11 Capital News Today Today in Washington 58 20 12 11 Tonight From Washington Wizards-Place Phineas and Ferb Good-Charlie Phineas and Ferb Phineas and Ferb Good-Charlie Shake It Up! ‘G’ ››› “Ratatouille” (2007) Voices of Patton Oswalt, Ian Holm. Å A.N.T. Farm ‘G’ My Babysitter 87 43 14 39 PrankStars ‘G’ Cash Cab ‘PG’ Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Sons of Guns ’ Sons of Guns ’ Sons of Guns Anniversary Bash ‘14’ Sons of Guns AK-Sniper Rifle ‘14’ One Man Army (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Sons of Guns AK-Sniper Rifle ‘14’ 156 21 16 37 Cash Cab ’ ‘G’ Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å Baseball Tonight NFL Live (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å 21 23 22 23 (4:00) MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals at New York Mets (N) (Live) Å Soccer Real Madrid vs. Club Deportivo Chivas USA (N) (Live) 2011 ESPY’s Å 22 24 21 24 2011 World Series of Poker Down to 9, Part II From Las Vegas. Boxing: 1971 Ali vs. Blin Boxing From July 15, 2011. Å SportsCentury Å UWF Wrestling UWF Wrestling College Football 1975 Rose Bowl -- Ohio State vs. Southern California 23 25 123 25 SportsCentury Å SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express Highlight Express 24 63 124 Still Standing ’ Still Standing ‘14’ State of Georgia Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey State of Georgia “Cyberbully” (2011, Drama) Emily Osment, Kelly Rowan. ‘14’ The 700 Club (N) ‘G’ Å 67 29 19 41 Secret Life of American Teen Hannity (N) On the Record, Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Å Hannity On the Record, Greta Van Susteren The Five 54 61 36 50 The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å Best Dishes Iron Chef America Cora vs. Stupak Cupcake Wars Tony Awards Chopped ‘G’ Food Network Star ‘G’ Restaurant: Impossible Sweet Tea Diners, Drive Diners, Drive 177 62 98 44 B’foot Contessa Forget Sarah Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men Two/Half Men ›› “The Proposal” (2009, Romance-Comedy) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. Premiere. Rescue Me Menses (N) ‘MA’ Rescue Me Menses ‘MA’ 131 Get It Sold ‘G’ My First Place My First Place Hunters Int’l House Hunters Property Virgins Income Property Income Property Property Brothers ‘G’ Å Hunters Int’l House Hunters Property Virgins 176 49 33 43 Get It Sold ‘G’ Weird Warfare ‘PG’ Å Third Reich The Rise A look at the rise of Nazi Germany. ‘PG’ Å Third Reich The Fall The downfall of the Third Reich. ‘PG’ Å 155 42 41 36 Modern Marvels ‘PG’ Å Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Pawn Stars ‘PG’ Roseanne’s Nuts Roseanne’s Nuts Dance Moms (N) ‘PG’ Å How I Met How I Met 138 39 20 31 Roseanne’s Nuts Roseanne’s Nuts Pawn Stars ‘PG’ The Rachel Maddow Show (N) The Ed Show (N) The Last Word The Rachel Maddow Show The Ed Show Hardball With Chris Matthews Å 56 59 128 51 The Last Word That ’70s Show That ’70s Show That ’70s Show 16 and Pregnant Checking in following the season. ‘14’ Awkward. ’ Teen Mom The Last Straw ’ ‘PG’ The Challenge: Rivals (N) ’ ‘14’ (11:02) The Challenge: Rivals ‘14’ 192 22 38 57 That ’70s Show iCarly ‘G’ Å SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob BrainSurge My Wife and Kids George Lopez ’ George Lopez ’ That ’70s Show That ’70s Show Married... With Married... With 82 46 24 40 iCarly ‘G’ Å Mariners Post. MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Toronto Blue Jays From Rogers Centre in Toronto. The Dan Patrick Show Ball Up Streetball 20 45 28* 26 (4:00) MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Toronto Blue Jays (N) (Live) Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Deadliest Warrior (N) ’ ‘14’ Å Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Å 132 31 34 46 Deadliest Warrior ’ ‘14’ Star Trek: Enterprise Home ’ ‘PG’ Ghost Hunters ’ Å Ghost Hunters Pennsylvania Asylum Ghost Hunters International (N) ’ Legend Quest (N) (11:01) Ghost Hunters International 133 35 133 45 Stargate SG-1 Sentinel ‘PG’ Å Behind Scenes David Jeremiah Joseph Prince Manna-Heaven Praise the Lord Å Easter Exper. Jesse Duplantis Thru History Changing-World Praise the Lord Å 205 60 130 Love-Raymond King of Queens King of Queens Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ Seinfeld ’ ‘PG’ Meet the Browns Meet the Browns House of Payne House of Payne House of Payne House of Payne Conan (N) ‘14’ 16 27 11 28 Love-Raymond (7:15) ›››› “Madame Bovary” (1949, Romance) Jennifer Jones, Van Heflin. A (9:15) ››› “Anna Karenina” (1935, Drama) Greta Garbo, Fredric March. Tolstoy’s ››› “Pride and Prejudice” (1940, Romance-Comedy) Greer Garson, Laurence Ol›› “Little Women” (1949) June Allyson, 101 44 101 29 ivier. Sisters seek husbands in 1800s England. Å (DVS) woman defies social conventions in her pursuit of love. Å story of a married Russian woman’s blind passion. Å Peter Lawford. Å (DVS) Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Å My Addiction My Addiction Hoarding: Buried Alive ‘PG’ Å Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Å Toddlers & Tiaras (N) ’ ‘PG’ Å Toddlers & Tiaras ’ ‘PG’ Å 178 34 32 34 Fabulous Cakes ’ ‘G’ Å Bones The Dentist in the Ditch ‘14’ The Mentalist Scarlett Fever ’ ‘14’ The Mentalist Bloodshot ‘14’ Å Franklin & Bash The Bangover ‘14’ Bones The Devil in the Details ‘14’ Franklin & Bash The Bangover ‘14’ 17 26 15 27 Bones The Proof in the Pudding ‘14’ MAD ‘PG’ Looney Tunes Scooby-Doo Johnny Test ‘Y7’ Johnny Test ‘Y7’ Hole in the Wall Would Happen Destroy Build King of the Hill King of the Hill American Dad ’ American Dad ’ Family Guy ‘14’ Family Guy ‘PG’ 84 Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food’s Greatest Moments Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v Food Man v Food Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ Man v. Food ‘G’ 179 51 45 42 Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations Sanford & Son Sanford & Son Sanford & Son All in the Family All in the Family All in the Family Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Hot in Cleveland Happily Divorced Happily Divorced Hot in Cleveland 65 47 29 35 Good Times ‘PG’ The Jeffersons NCIS Death of a petty officer. ‘PG’ NCIS Women’s prison riot. ‘14’ Å NCIS Deliverance ’ ‘PG’ Å Royal Pains An erratic ex-con. ‘PG’ Necessary Roughness (N) ‘PG’ Burn Notice No Good Deed ‘PG’ 15 30 23 30 NCIS Suspect is presumed dead. ‘14’ Famous Food Pressure Cooker ‘PG’ Famous Food (N) ’ ‘PG’ Basketball Wives ’ ‘14’ Behind the Music Nelly ‘PG’ Å Behind the Music Lil Wayne ’ ‘14’ 191 48 37 54 40 Greatest Pranks 3 Practical jokes from television and the Internet. ‘PG’ PREMIUM CABLE CHANNELS

(4:35) › “Legion” 2010 Paul Bettany. ’ ‘R’ Å (6:20) ›› “Lost and Found” 1998 Michael Landes. ‘R’ › “Old Dogs” 2009 John Travolta. ’ ‘PG’ Å ›› “Robin Hood: Men in Tights” 1993 Cary Elwes. (11:15) ›› “Easy Money” 1983 ‘R’ (1:30) Around the World in 80 Days ›› “Unfaithfully Yours” 1984, Comedy Dudley Moore. ‘PG’ Å ›› “For the Boys” 1991, Musical Bette Midler, James Caan, George Segal. ‘R’ Å ››› “Courage Under Fire” 1996 Denzel Washington. Thrillbillies ‘14’ Thrillbillies ‘14’ Thrillbillies ‘14’ Bruce Lee Lives! Bruce Lee Lives! Ellismania ‘14’ The Daily Habit Shark Fights 2011 Bruce Lee Lives! Bruce Lee Lives! Thrillbillies ‘PG’ The Daily Habit Moto: In Out Masters Highlights Tiger Woods. Feherty Feherty Feherty 19th Hole Golf Central Quest-Card Feherty Feherty Feherty 19th Hole Quest-Card 19th Hole The Waltons The Fawn ‘G’ Å Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘PG’ Little House on the Prairie ‘G’ Å Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ Frasier ’ ‘PG’ (4:00) ›› “Wall Street: Money Never (6:15) ›› “Starsky & Hutch” 2004, Comedy Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson. Two detectives ›› “The Wolfman” 2010 Benicio Del Toro. A nobleman becomes Cowboys & Aliens: True Blood I’m Alive and on Fire Alcide Real Time With Bill Maher Entrepreneur HBO 425 501 425 10 Sleeps” 2010 ’ ‘PG-13’ Å First helps Sookie look for Eric. ‘MA’ Mark Cuban. ’ ‘MA’ Å investigate a cocaine dealer. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å the embodiment of a terrible curse. ’ ‘R’ ››› “Sin City” 2005, Crime Drama Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel. ‘R’ Å ››› “American Psycho” 2000, Horror Christian Bale. ‘R’ Å (9:45) ››› “Sin City” 2005, Crime Drama Jessica Alba, Devon Aoki, Alexis Bledel. ‘R’ Å IFC 105 105 (4:30) › “All About Steve” 2009 Sandra (6:10) ›› “The Lovely Bones” 2009, Drama Mark Wahlberg, Rachel Weisz, Susan Sarandon. A young mur- › “The Final Destination” 2009 Bobby Campo. Death stalks ›› “Sex and the City 2” 2010, Romance-Comedy Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall. MAX 400 508 7 Bullock. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å der victim watches over her family from heaven. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å friends who escaped a fatal racetrack accident. Carrie Bradshaw and the gals visit Abu Dhabi. ’ ‘R’ Å Breakout Ohio’s Most Wanted ‘14’ Locked Up Abroad ‘14’ Locked Up Abroad (N) ‘14’ Breakout Ohio’s Most Wanted ‘14’ Locked Up Abroad ‘14’ Locked Up Abroad ‘14’ Alaska State Troopers ‘14’ NGC 157 157 Dragon Ball Z Kai Iron Man: Armor Iron Man: Armor Avatar: Airbender Avatar: Airbender Avatar: Airbender Dragon Ball Z Kai Iron Man: Armor Iron Man: Armor OddParents Fanboy-Chum Fanboy-Chum Dragon Ball Z Kai Iron Man: Armor NTOON 89 115 189 Gun Nuts Shooting USA Å Impossible Shots Amer. Rifleman Gun Stories Shooting Gallery Gun Nuts Shooting USA Å Best Defense Gun Stories Impossible Shots Amer. Rifleman OUTD 37 307 43 Inside NASCAR Weeds A Hole in The Franchise: Inside NASCAR The Franchise: The Green Room (4:30) ›› “Letters to Juliet” 2010 Amanda Seyfried. A young “The Last International Playboy” 2008, Comedy Jason Behr, The Green Room Penn & Teller: SHO 500 500 (iTV) (N) ‘PG’ Her Niqab ‘MA’ Giants (iTV) ‘PG’ Giants woman finds an old note to someone’s lover. Monet Mazur, Krysten Ritter. iTV. ‘NR’ Bulls...! ’ ‘MA’ Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ The Car Show (N) Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ Pinks ‘PG’ The Car Show NASCAR Race Hub SPEED 35 303 125 (4:15) ›› “The Last Song” 2010 (6:10) ›› “Burlesque” 2010, Drama Cher, Eric Dane. ’ ‘PG-13’ Å (8:10) › “Law Abiding Citizen” 2009, Suspense Jamie Foxx. ’ ‘R’ Å Torchwood: Miracle Day ‘14’ Å › “Grown Ups” 2010 ‘PG-13’ Å STARZ 300 408 300 ›› “Youth in Revolt” 2009 Michael Cera. A teen goes on a car- “Remarkable Power” 2008 Kevin Nealon. A late-night talk-show (11:05) › “The Janky Promoters” 2009, (4:40) ›› “The Escapist” 2008, Drama Brian Cox. A longtime (6:25) › “Crossroads” 2002 Britney Spears. Three young TMC 525 525 inmate tries to break out of prison. ’ ‘NR’ women hit the road on a trek to Los Angeles. ’ nal quest to lose his virginity. ’ ‘R’ Å host hatches a devious scheme. ’ ‘R’ Å Comedy Ice Cube. ’ ‘R’ Å 2011 Tour de France Stage 17 From Gap to Pinerolo. World of Adventure Sports ’ ‘PG’ 2011 Tour de France Stage 17 From Gap to Pinerolo. VS. 27 58 30 ››› “Under the Tuscan Sun” 2003, Romance Diane Lane, Sandra Oh. ‘PG-13’ Å ››› “Under the Tuscan Sun” 2003, Romance Diane Lane, Sandra Oh. ‘PG-13’ Å Ghost Whisperer ’ ‘14’ Å Braxton Family Values ‘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 • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 E3

CALENDAR TODAY HIGH DESERT CLASSIC I: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-3891409 or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 74-mile McKenzie Pass Road Race stage begins at Maxwell Sno-park for women and Big Springs Sno-park for men; both end at Three Creeks Sno-park; free for spectators; 10 a.m.541-3880002 or www .cascade-classic.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free; 3-7 p.m.; Drake Park, eastern end; 541-408-4998 or www. bendfarmersmarket.com. ALIVE AFTER 5: Featuring a performance by singer-songwriter Nicki Bluhm; refreshments available; located off of northern Powerhouse Drive; free; 5 p.m.; Old Mill District, 661 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-389-0995 or www. aliveafterfivebend.com. PICNIC IN THE PARK: Featuring a pop performance by Brady Goss; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 N.E. Third St., Prineville; 541-4471209 or recreation@ccprd.org. “THE METROPOLITAN OPERA, TOSCA”: Starring Karita Mattila, Marcelo Alvarez and George Gagnidze in an encore presentation of Puccini’s masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $15; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. BEND ELKS GAME: The Elks play Klamath Falls; $5-$9; 6:35 p.m.; Vince Genna Stadium, Southeast Fifth Street and Roosevelt Avenue; 541312-9259 or www.bendelks.com. TOWN MOUNTAIN: The Asheville, N.C.-based bluegrass band performs; part of the McMenamins Residency Series; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. LOCH LOMOND: The Portland-based chamber-pop group performs, with Laurel Brauns; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www.silvermoonbrewing.com. PRAYERS FOR ATHEISTS: The Providence, R.I.-based punk and hiphop band performs, with Tuck & Roll; free; 9 p.m.; Madhappy Lounge, 850 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-388-6868.

THURSDAY HIGH DESERT CLASSIC I: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-3891409 or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 16-mile Time Trial stage begins and ends at Summit High School; free for spectators; 10 a.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www. cascade-classic.org. GOOD CHAIR, GREAT BOOKS: Read and discuss “Half Broke Horses” by Jeanette Wells; bring a lunch; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1092 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jean Nave reads from her children’s book “Harry and Lola at the Sisters Rodeo”; free; 12:30 p.m.; Sisters

Elementary School, 611 E. Cascade Ave.; 541-549-8755, navebbr@aol. com or www.harryandlola.org. MUNCH & MUSIC: Event includes a performance by reggae act Rootz Underground, food and arts and crafts booths, children’s area and more; dogs prohibited; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 N.W. Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. munchandmusic.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: The authors of “The Guys’ Home Relationship Maintenance and Improvement Poetry Manual” read from their work; 6 p.m.; The Nature of Words, 224 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; 541-647-2233, info@ thenatureofwords or www.thenature ofwords.org. SOURDOUGH SLIM: The Vaudeville and western music entertainer performs, with Robert Armstrong; free; 6-9 p.m.; Slick’s Que Co., 240 E. Cascade Ave., Sisters; 541-719-0580. BEND ELKS GAME: The Elks play Klamath Falls; $5-$9; 6:35 p.m.; Vince Genna Stadium, Southeast Fifth Street and Roosevelt Avenue; 541312-9259 or www.bendelks.com. TOWN MOUNTAIN: The Asheville, N.C.-based bluegrass band performs; part of the McMenamins Residency Series; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. HILLSTOMP: Portland-based junkyard blues duo performs; $8; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331 or www. silvermoonbrewing.com. VOKAB KOMPANY: The San Diegobased hip-hop act performs; free; 9 p.m.; Madhappy Lounge, 850 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-388-6868.

FRIDAY BALLOONS OVER BEND: Balloons launch over Bend, weather permitting; free; 6 a.m.; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541-323-0964, info@layitoutevents. com or www.balloonsoverbend.com. HIGH DESERT CLASSIC I: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-3891409 or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. RUMMAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the St. Thomas Altar Society; free admission; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; St. Thomas Parish Hall, 12th Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-3390 or topcat21@q.com. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The 84-mile and 71mile Cascade Lakes Road Race stage begins at Summit High School for men and at Wanoga Sno-park for women; both end at Mt. Bachelor ski area; free for spectators; 10 a.m.541-3880002 or www.cascade-classic.org. TOUR OF HOMES: Featuring selfguided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; refer to website for tour map; free; noon-6 p.m.541-3891058 or www.coba.org. BEND FARMERS MARKET: Free; 2-6 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-408-4998 or www.bendfarmersmarket.com. REDMOND FRIDAY FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 3-7 p.m.; Redmond Greenhouse, 4101 S. U.S. Highway 97; 541-604-5156 or redmondfridaymarket@gmail.com. SISTERS FARMERS MARKET: 3-7 p.m.; North Ash Street

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.

and West Main Avenue; www. sistersfarmersmarket.com. EVERCLEAR: The Grammy-nominated alternative rockers perform; $29 in advance, $34 at the door; 6 p.m. doors; Century Center, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-480-1414 or www.bendliveandlocal.com. SOURDOUGH SLIM: The Vaudeville and western music entertainer performs, with Robert Armstrong; free; 6-9 p.m.; Slick’s Que Co., 212 N.E. Revere Ave., Bend; 541-647-2114. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Kim McCarrel talks about her book “More Oregon Trails and Horse Camps,” with a slide show; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. CARINNE CARPENTER: The acoustic roots musician performs; free; 6:308:30 p.m.; Scanlon’s, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; 541-382-8769. “STEFANIE HERO”: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the story of a young princess who becomes a hero; $15, $10 students ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beattickets.org. BENEFIT CONCERT: Featuring performances by The Selfless Riot and Shane Simonsen; proceeds benefit a trip to Ukraine through Youth With A Mission; donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Green Plow Coffee Roasters, 436 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-516-1128 or www.greenplow coffee.com. MISTY MAMAS: The bluegrass act performs during the Wild Trails Horse Expo; $12 in advance, $15 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Brasada Ranch, 16986 S.W. Brasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte; 541-447-8165 or www. wildtrailshorseexpo.com. SUMMER SOIREE: Food, drinks and dancing with DJ Dave Clemens; proceeds benefit the Kurera Foundation; $10; 8-11 p.m.; Weekend Trunk Show, 50 S.E. Scott St., Suite 6, Bend; 541-306-0864. TORNADO RIDER: The San Francisco-based rock band performs, with Judgement Day; $5; 9 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend.

SATURDAY BALLOONS OVER BEND CHILDREN’S FESTIVAL: Balloons launch over Bend, followed by a festival with bounce houses, face painting, crafts and more; event concludes with the Night Glow; proceeds benefit Saving Grace; free, fees for activities, donations accepted for the Night Glow; 6 a.m. launch, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. festival, night glow at dusk; Riverbend Park, Southwest Columbia Street and Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive; 541323-0964, info@layitoutevents.com or www.balloonsoverbend.com. PRINEVILLE FARMERS MARKET: Free; 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 N.E. Third St.; 503739-0643. BABCOCK GARDEN SHOW: Featuring flowers that can be grown in Central Oregon and water features; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Babcock home, 61769 Fargo Lane, Bend; 541-420-9062. NEWBERRY’S ANNUAL GARDEN SHOW: Featuring flowers that can be grown in Central Oregon and water features; free; 9 a.m.4 p.m.; Newberry home, 1968 N.E. Hollowtree Lane, Bend; 541-280-4376. RUMMAGE SALE FUNDRAISER: Proceeds benefit the St. Thomas Altar Society; free admission; 9 a.m.-noon; St. Thomas Parish Hall, 12th Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-3390 or topcat21@q.com.

TUMALO FARMERS MARKET: Free admission; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Tumalo Garden Market, 19879 Eighth St., Bend; 541-728-0088. CENTRAL OREGON SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts from local artisans; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Bend Public Library, 600 N.W. Wall St.; 541-420-9015 or www. centraloregonsaturdaymarket.com. HARVEST TOURNEY: The Society for Creative Anachronism’s Shire of Corvaria presents merchants, demonstrations of heavy fighting, archery, spinning and more; free with garden admission ($4.50$1 depending on age, free ages 6 and younger); 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Petersen Rock Gardens, 7930 S.W. 77th St., Redmond; 541-382-5574 or harveststeward@gmail.com. NORTHWEST CROSSING FARMERS MARKET: Free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives, Bend; valerie@brooksresources.com or www.nwxfarmersmarket.com. SISTERS ARTS & CRAFTS FESTIVAL: Featuring arts, crafts, food, entertainment, a classic car cruise in and a silent auction; proceeds benefit the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Creekside Park, U.S. Highway 20 and Jefferson Avenue; 541-549-8905. TOUR OF HOMES: Featuring selfguided tours of homes throughout Central Oregon; refer to website for tour map; free; 10 a.m.-6 p.m.541389-1058 or www.coba.org. HOMETOWN FAMILY FAIR: With a barbecue, live music, bounce house, face painting, contests and more; free; 11 a.m.3 p.m.; C.E. Lovejoy’s Brookswood Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-388-1188. HIGH DESERT CLASSIC GRAND PRIX: A class AA hunter-jumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 5-8 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409 or www.jbarj.org/ohdc. VFW DINNER: A dinner of lasagna and salad; proceeds benefit local veterans; $7; 5 p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 N.E. Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC: The Twilight Downtown Criterium takes place on Wall and Bond streets, between Oregon and Idaho avenues; preceded by a junior criterium; free for spectators; 5:45 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-388-0002 or www. cascade-classic.org. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Kim McCarrel talks about her book “More Oregon Trails and Horse Camps,” with a slide show; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. CARINNE CARPENTER: The acoustic roots musician performs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; Scanlon’s, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; 541-382-8769. PINK MARTINI: The cosmopolitan pop band performs; $33 or $63 reserved, plus fees; 6:30 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-318-5457 or www.bendconcerts.com. “GISELLE”: The Central Oregon School of Ballet presents the tragic ballet about a young maiden who tries to save her beloved; $10; 7 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-389-9306. “STEFANIE HERO”: Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the story of a young princess who becomes a hero; $15, $10 students ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-419-5558 or www.beattickets.org.

M T For Wednesday, July 20

REGAL PILOT BUTTE 6 2717 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347

BEGINNERS (R) 2, 4:20, 6:40 BUCK (PG) 2:25, 4:45, 7 HORRIBLE BOSSES (R) 2:20, 4:40, 6:55 LARRY CROWNE (PG13) 2:05, 4:25, 6:45 MIDNIGHT IN PARIS (PG13) 2:10, 4:30, 6:50 THE TREE OF LIFE (PG-13) 2:30, 6:15

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

BAD TEACHER (R) 12:55, 5:05, 8, 10:25 BRIDESMAIDS (R) 3:50, 6:55, 10 CARS 2 (G) 12:10, 3:55 CARS 2 3-D (G) 1:40 FURRY VENGEANCE (PG) 10 a.m. HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 3-D (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 4:35, 6:30, 7:35, 9:30, 10:40 HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (PG-13) Noon, 3:05, 6:05, 9:05 HARRY POTTER AND THE

DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (DP — PG-13) 1:05, 1:45, 4:05, 4:50, 7:05, 7:50, 10:05, 10:45 HORRIBLE BOSSES (R) 12:20, 1:30, 3:25, 4:20, 6:15, 7:55, 9:35, 10:20 LARRY CROWNE (PG-13) 1:15, 4:40, 7:25, 9:45 THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: TOSCA (no MPAA rating) 6:30 SHREK FOREVER AFTER (PG) 10 a.m. SUPER 8 (PG-13) 1:10, 5, 7:40, 10:15 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:15, 6:35, 9:55 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON 3-D (PG-13) 12:25, 3:45, 7:10, 10:30 WINNIE THE POOH (G) 11:35 a.m., 1:25, 3:40, 6:20, 9 ZOOKEEPER (PG) 11:40 a.m., 12:40, 3, 6, 9:15 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. EDITOR’S NOTE: There is an additional $3.50 fee for 3-D movies.

MCMENAMINS OLD ST. FRANCIS SCHOOL 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562

(After 7 p.m. shows 21 and over only. Under 21 may attend screenings before 7 p.m. if accompanied by a legal guardian.) KUNG FU PANDA 2 (PG) 3 PRIEST (PG-13) 9:15 X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (PG-13) 6

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

CARS 2 (G) 12:45, 3:30, 6:15, 9:15 HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 HORRIBLE BOSSES (R) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 TRANSFORMER: DARK OF THE MOON (PG-13) 1:30, 5, 8:30

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

BAD TEACHER (R) 8 HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (PG-13) 5, 7:45 LARRY CROWNE (PG-13) 5 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF

THE MOON (PG-13) 7:15 WINNIE THE POOH (G) 5:30, 7:15 ZOOKEEPER (PG) 5:30

MADRAS CINEMA 5 1101 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (PG-13) 3:20, 9:20 HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 3-D (PG-13) 12:15, 6:20 HORRIBLE BOSSES (R) 1, 3:05, 5:15, 7:20, 9:35 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON (PG-13) 12:05, 6:10 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON 3-D (PG-13) 3:05, 9:05 WINNIE THE POOH (G) 12:10, 1:55, 3:50, 5:55, 7:35, 9:20 ZOOKEEPER (PG) Noon, 2:15, 4:35, 7, 9:20

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

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2 (PG-13) 4, 7 TRANSFORMERS: DARK OF THE MOON (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 6 EDITOR’S NOTE: Pine Theater’s upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

Seeking friendly duplicate bridge? Go to www.bendbridge.org Five games weekly

White noise Continued from E1 We’ve also each downloaded White Noise, an iPhone app that costs about $2 and has a sprawling menu of sleep-aiding noises. The app has been indispensable to our son Khalil’s sleep; with the sound on, he sleeps fitfully, but without it we have the sort of disaster that would make Jerry Bruckheimer proud. Over the last few weeks, I have tested several other gadgets designed to help you sleep or save your ears. Used correctly, these gadgets could change your life — you might finally get a reprieve from your snoring spouse, or vice versa; you might finally get your baby to sleep (so you can spend more time with your snoring spouse). The most basic gadget is the Marpac Sound Screen 980A, a small beige cylinder about the size of a large salad bowl, creates white noise mechanically: It uses an internal fan and has no electronics at all. The device, which costs about $50 on Amazon, has two switches — one for a soft sound, one for a loud one — and air vents that you can adjust to change the pitch of the noise. My wife and I found the Sound Screen’s sound to be less tinny, and thus more soothing, than that of other, cheaper whitenoise devices. What makes such white-noise devices effective? Tom Bergman, the marketing director at the Ear Plug Superstore, a site which sells a variety of noise-masking devices, said white noise works by “raising your threshold of hearing.” Your ears automatically get less acute as the level of ambient sound rises, he explained; that’s why you can’t hear a dripping faucet in the daytime, when there are many other noises, but at night, when everything’s still, the faucet becomes ear-shattering. At the same time, because white noise does not have any recognizable variance, most people eventually don’t notice they are hearing anything at all. Now, imagine this scenario: One half of a couple snores interminably, but can’t stand a whitenoise machine. The other half can’t stand the snoring. What should our incompatible couple do? Try foam earplugs first, Bergman suggested. The best earplugs (rated NRR 33, meaning they reduce ambient noise by 33 decibels) will provide significant relief from unwanted sound, but only if they are worn properly. “You have to roll it carefully into a thin cylinder, push it into your ear, and hold it there until it expands to fill your ear canal,” Bergman said. For some snoring victims, though, earplugs are not enough. Enter the SnoreMasker Pro, which combines an earplug with white noise. The SnoreMasker is a hearing-aid-size earpiece that fits snugly, blocking most outside sound. But it also has a small speaker inside; as you turn the tiny volume knob on the earpiece, you hear soothing white noise, right inside your head. I don’t have a snoring spouse, so I can’t comment on the SnoreMasker’s effectiveness. But I can say that when I inserted it and turned it on, I did feel enveloped in white noise, an entirely pleasing sensation. But it is an expensive one: Ear Plug Superstore sells the SnoreMasker Pro for $399 a pair. Another sophisticated noise-

White noise devices

The Sound Screen, a device that creates the sound of rushing air.

The SnoreMasker earplug has a white-noise device used to mask snores.

The BlastBuster earplugs allows the user to hear in low noise environments but blocks out loud noises.

Photos via New York Times News Service

The Etymotic ER-20 earplugs are designed to reduce loud noise to safe levels while preserving clarity of sounds. suppression product is the “filtered earplug,” a plastic device that reduces the volume of outside sound but does not alter its character. This can be useful in many scenarios. For instance, The BlastBuster Variable Noise Reduction Shooter’s Ear Plugs, which sell for $8.75 a pair at Ear Plug Superstore, let you hear all sounds at a normal conversation level. But they block extremely loud sounds. Another device, the Etymotic ER-20 high-fidelity earplugs, are best for listening to music: They reduce the volume of outside sound but preserve the pitch — meaning that tunes won’t sound muffled when these are in your ears. They cost about $13 a pair. Then there’s the high-tech take on the BlastBuster concept, the Etymotic EB-15 earplugs, about $500 a pair. These plugs, which have a tiny acoustic chip, allow all quiet sounds to pass through; at low or normal levels of sound. But when the outside sound spikes (like a loud crash on a construction site), the EB15’s sound-blocking kicks in, and your ears are saved. And Mack’s Ear Saver, about $10, reduces the volume coming through your music player’s headphones. The Ear Saver is a small wire that sits between your player and your headphones. You plug the Ear Saver into your player, and you plug your headphones into the Ear Saver, and that’s it: no matter how high you turn the volume, you will never hear sound at a damaging level.


E4 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN TUNDRA

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE

HEART OF THE CITY

SALLY FORTH

FRAZZ

ROSE IS ROSE

STONE SOUP

LUANN

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

DOONESBURY

PICKLES

ADAM

WIZARD OF ID

B.C.

SHOE

GARFIELD

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

PEANUTS

MARY WORTH


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 E5 BIZARRO

DENNIS THE MENACE

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

CANDORVILLE

H BY JACQUELINE BI GA R

GET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR

SAFE HAVENS

SIX CHIX

ZITS

HERMAN

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, July 20, 2011: This year, you advance a key interest. You have energy working for you. Express interest in your community, work and key family members. Though there could be surprises along the way, you will gain because of your diligence and strong insights. Once you are focused on a goal, it is as good as done. Network and expand your immediate circle. If you are single, if you would like a committed relationship, it is yours to have. You do need to know what you want in order to manifest it. If you are attached, the two of you will want to socialize and share even more together. ARIES pushes you to responsibility but also growth. 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) HHHH Reach out for someone. Your fiery side emerges when dealing with ideas, children and a potential loved one. A quirky communication or event poses a problem. Don’t push against an authority figure. It will be a no-go. Tonight: All smiles. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Keep reaching out for others. You might not understand what is happening, especially as the unexpected plays a significant role. Read between the lines if you want to resolve a power play. You also can head for the hills, if you so choose. Tonight: Where your friends are is where you want to be.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH A meeting might expose a different perspective, which could shake you up. Listen to news. Consider alternative scenarios with care. At that point, you can make a strong decision. Don’t let it go too long. Tonight: Togetherness. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHH Take a stand, and understand what is happening with someone you look up to. This person might not be revealing what really ails him or her. Your sensitivity counts. A power play gives you more information. Tonight: In the limelight. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Reach out for more information; the unexpected opens a new door, allowing greater giveand-take with someone you really care about. You might be working or pushing too hard. Take your time when on new turf. Tonight: Tap into your imagination. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Deal with others directly. Hold back and understand what is happening behind the scenes. The unexpected occurs when dealing with one person in particular. By now, hopefully you are used to this behavior. Follow-through counts. Tonight: You have a decision to make. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Defer to others once more. Their unanticipated behavior could be making you shaky. Pressure builds between you and a family member or roommate. Zero in on your priorities. Tonight: Don’t let someone get to you. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

HHH Communication fizzles, forcing an either/or situation, which you might not want to play into. Focus on what must be done, giving this situation less attention. You might be surprised by what happens if you let go. Tonight: Play it easy. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Learn to read between the lines. What you see happening could allow movement in a desired direction. The unexpected plays out with a child or loved one. A head-on collision might be inevitable. Avoid a power play. Tonight: Talk about taking a break for a few days. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Honor what is important. Trying to buck tradition or a domestic matter could cause more problems than you realize. Are you really ready for that? Be more sensitive to the factions around you. Tonight: Beam in what you want. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH You could be more fluid and easygoing than you have been in a long time. Therefore, an unanticipated jolt energizes you rather than causes a problem. Intellect and energy meet when facing this stimulus. Tonight: Brainstorm away. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Realize what is on the map for the present moment. Move in a new way as you attempt to understand a situation. Be ready for the unusual, especially financially. Remember, not all assets are financial. Be careful as to what you offer. Tonight: Your treat. © 2010 by King Features Syndicate


C OV ER S T OR I ES

E6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

Vendors

Shoes

Continued from E1

Continued from E1 “A few years ago, guys began wanting to look a bit more serious, probably more serious about being employed, and we started selling more sober shoes and fewer of the high-end sneakers we’d been selling. And now shoes from established American brands like Walkabout are coming out in these colors — in fluorescent suede, or even a colored sole — that have a more casual feeling but are still dressy,” Jennings said. If the colorized shoes that have emerged from establishment brands like Alden, Florsheim and Walkabout, and fashionable ones like Mark McNairy and Rag & Bone, seem influenced by sneakermania, it’s no accident. “I used to be a total sneakerhead when I was a kid, back before it was a thing,” said McNairy, whose rad-trad (you know, radically traditional) footwear is bench-made in Northampton, England. “I was into all of them: Stan Smiths, Nike Blazers. One of my early shoes, white bucks with a green sole, was inspired by Adidas Rod Lavers.” McNairy found colored rubber and leathers to change up his soles, uppers and saddles in contrasting colors galore. “I’m selling all kinds of shoes now,” he said. “Stuff with a little splash of color to chukka boots in leopard- and zebra-pattern cowhide.” This trend was enabled by the fact that shoemakers like Alden can make as few as a dozen pairs in a given color, said Chris Gibbs, the owner of Union Los Angeles, which sells the McNairy line. That means less risk for a merchant. Tom Park, who owns the Leather Soul men’s shoe boutiques in Honolulu and Beverly Hills, Calif., added that limited production creates greater appeal for customers, many of whom learned the seductive lessons of supply and demand from special-edition Nikes. “The whole sneaker trend made it OK for men to collect fashionable goods,” he said. “Guys want the limited-edition things.”

5) HAPPY HARVEST FARM Location: Mount Angel Distance from market: 135 miles Contact: hppyhvst@mtangel.net What’s for sale: Nine varieties of berries, heirloom tomatoes, corn, peppers, cantaloupe, zucchini How’s it grown/raised/made: Uses some organic practices, including no pesticides or herbicides, drip irrigation

6) SPARROW BAKERY 7) LONE PINE COFFEE 8) PACKER ORCHARDS Location: Hood River Distance from market: 143 miles Contact: http://packer orchardsandbakery.com What’s for sale: Several varieties of cherries and peaches, blueberries, apples, pears How’s it grown/raised/made: Sustainable farm, not organic

9) RICK STEFFEN FARM Location: Salem Distance from market: 132 miles Other local markets: Bend Farmers Market at St. Charles on Fridays Contact: aaltjetulips@aol.com What’s for sale: Berries, dwarf cherries, apricots, plums, peppers, green beans, zucchini, cucumbers, several potato varieties grown near Sisters How’s it grown/raised/made: Greenhouse-grown. Uses some commercial fertilizer no pesticides or herbicides. Drip irrigation

10) PINE MOUNTAIN RANCH Location: Bend Distance from market: 9 miles Contact: www.pmrbuffalo.com What’s for sale: Chicken, turkey, duck, rabbit, lamb, pork, beef, five varieties of yak, bison. Various cuts, bones and organ meats available. Chicken, duck and turkey eggs. Sausages and meats like pastrami How’s it grown/raised/made: Grass-fed only. No grain. Uses organic practices. No hormones, antibiotics

11) QUAIL RUN RANCH Location: Tumalo Distance from market: 10 miles Other local markets: Bend Farmers Market at St. Charles on Fridays Contact: www.quailrunpds.com

Duck, turkey and chicken eggs are at various vendors at the Bend Farmers Market in Drake Park on Wednesdays. What’s for sale: Lamb in a variety of cuts, ground and in specialty sausage. Premade and seasoned lamb burger patties How’s it grown/raised/made: Grass-fed, no hormones or antibiotics. Fed hay from property grown without pesticides

12) NUTMASTERS 13) SAND LILY FARMS Location: Bend Distance from market: 8 miles Other local markets: Redmond Farmers Market on Fridays, NorthWest Crossing Farmers Market on Saturdays Contact: www.sandlilygoatfarmllc.com What’s for sale: South African Boer goats, a meat variety, in various cuts, burger, sausages, and in ravioli with spinach and feta. Also pet food and bones for dogs How’s it grown/raised/made: Pastureraised, no grain. No hormones or additives. Goats must have antibiotics are taken out of food chain. Processed on the farm at a certified facility

14) THE LAST STAND FARM Location: Prineville Distance from market: 35 miles Other local markets: Redmond Farmers Market on Fridays Contact: www.loc alharvest.org/ csa/M34279 What’s for sale: Veal, eggs, mixed greens, onions, radishes, lettuces, kale, squash, tomatoes, peppers, herbs How’s it grown/raised/made: Veal is humanely raised. For vegetables, organic practices including companion planting, integrated pest management and chemicals or sprays. Uses biodynamic practices

THE CENTRAL OREGON

Photos by Andy Tullis / The Bulletin

Meats, like this jerky, are also on sale from several vendors.

15) ISLAND WILD SEAFOODS

Multiple kinds of mushrooms are for sale at Rain Forest Mushroom, which travels over the Cascades to attend the market.

20) GREAT AMERICAN EGG

16) THE TACO SHOP

Location: Powell Butte Distance from market: 18 miles Other local markets: Bend Farmers Market at St. Charles on Fridays, Redmond Farmers Market on Fridays Contact: www.greatamericanegg.com What’s for sale: Chicken, duck eggs. Chickens. Pork in various cuts, four types of bacon, sausages, pepperoni sticks How’s it grown/raised/made: Laying hens and meat chickens live outside, receiving local, special-order feed. Pigs on pasture. No hormones or antibiotics. Processed in certified facility on site

17) KOMBUCHA MAMA

21) BACKPORCH COFFEE

18) CANDY’S FARM

22) CRAZY DAVE’S ORGANIC SODAWORKS

Location: Toldeo Distance from market: 174 miles Contact: www.islandwildseafoods.com What’s for sale: Mahi-mahi, ahi tuna, escolar, swordfish, other varieties. Smoked, sashimi and sushi-grade available How’s it grown/raised/made: Wild, Pacific-caught using hooks, no nets, with sustainable quotas. Flash-frozen right after catch on ship. Fileted and cut in Oregon

Location: Salem Distance from market: 132 miles Contact: candyapr@yahoo.com What’s for sale: Asian vegetables, including bok choy, Chinese broccoli, Japanese eggplant, fresh herbs How’s it grown/raised/made: Uses organic practices, natural fertilizers

19) GOURMET GOAT MEATS Location: Tumalo Distance from market: 11 miles Other local markets: Bend Farmers Market at St. Charles on Fridays Contact: jcoledvm@qwestoffice.net What’s for sale: Various goat meat cuts including shanks, osso buco, ground. Pepperoni sticks with no nitrates, msg or gluten. How’s it grown/raised/made: South African Boer goats, raised specifically for meat. Raised on pasture in warmer months and hay in winter. No grain. Also no hormones or antibiotics

23) WINTER GREEN FARM Location: Noti Distance from market: 150 miles Contact: www.wintergreenfarm.com What’s for sale: Herbs, beets, blueberries, broccoli, cabbages, carrots, collard greens, fennel, garlic, green beans, onions, kale, lettuces, potatoes, radishes, spinach, strawberries, chard, bok choy, turnips, and more How’s it grown/raised/made: Oregon Tilth certified. Biodynamic practices

24) THE VILLAGE BAKER 25) GROUNDWORK ORGANICS Location: Junction City Distance from market: 138 miles Contact: www.groundworkorganics.com What’s for sale: Berries, melons, asparagus, potatoes, tomatoes, onions, carrots, beets, bok choy, onions,

cucumbers, English peas, fava beans, artichokes, herbs How’s it grown/raised/made: Oregon Tilth certified

26) H&S FARMS Location: Halsey Distance from market: 117 miles Contact: Unavailable What’s for sale: Berries, peas, beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, squash, beets, carrots, onions How’s it grown/raised/made: No pesticides. Some chemical fertilizers used

27) THOMAS ORCHARDS Location: Kimberly Distance from market: 132 miles Contact: thomasorchards@hotmail. com What’s for sale: Cherries, apricots, peaches, plums, nectarines, pears, apples How’s it grown/raised/made: Oregon Tilth certified

28) TUMALO LAVENDER 29) TUMALO FARMS Location: Tumalo Distance from market: 9 miles Other local markets: Bend Farmers Market at St. Charles on Fridays Contact: www.tumalofarms.com What’s for sale: Versions of classic Dutch and Italian cheeses, semi-soft and semi-hard varieties. Most made from goats milk, several both goat and cow How’s it grown/raised/made: Made from pasteurized milk. Cow milk is local and organic, goat milk from grass-fed goats raised on farm. No hormones used in goats or additives to the milk

BUILDERS ASSOCIATION

11

A SHOWCASE OF THE FINEST HOMES IN CENTRAL OREGON

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208

Pets and Supplies

Pets and Supplies

205

Items for Free Sony Trinitron TV, works, picture is a little fuzzy, FREE. 541-318-6049

Virginia Creeper Vines Free! Call 541-548-2879

208

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

DACHSHUND STANDARD pups ready 7-27-shots-dewormed blk/tan-.$375..541-923-7259 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.

2 Chihuahua puppies, 1 male, 1 female, $200 each. Call Carolyn, 541-279-1829 4 wk old baby rats, + 2 adult males, very socialized, need homes , free! 541-279-5367

German Shepherd pups, black, 1 male, 1 female, parents on site. $250. 541-536-5538

cabin creek gun dogs.com talltimberpudelpointers.com Professional training all breeds Pudel Pointer and Yellow Lab pups available. now ! 541-459-9798 541-680-0009

German Shorthair AKC pups. Champion hunters/pets. M’s, $400; F’s $500. 541-330-0277

Lab Puppies, purebred yellows! 5 males, $200 ea; 3 females, $250 ea. Call 541-548-1667 LAB PUPS AKC, black & yellow, titled parents, performance pedigree, OFA cert hips & el bows, $500. 541-771-2330 www.royalflushretrievers.com Labradoodles, Australian Imports - 541-504-2662 www.alpen-ridge.com Lhasa Apso Pups, 8 weeks, males, 1st shots, & dewormed, $300, 541-548-5772.,

Loveable lap cats need a home. We are moving overseas, have 2 cuddly older males free to a good home. 541-610-3511

POODLE Pups, AKC Toy or Teacup, B & W, red, black. POMAPOOS too! 541-475-3889 Poodle Pups, Black Standard, gorgeous females, all champion bloodlines, athletic & fun loving, very smart & well mannered, don’t shed, non-alergenic, great in the home, 541-601-3049

Pug Puppy, one left, black male, $300. Please call 503-863-6755; 503-928-9511

Goldendoodle puppies, kid conditioned, sweet, health guarantee. $500/each 541-548-4574 541-408-5909

Golden Retriever, AKC, pups, ready 7/16, wormed, $400-$450. 541-408-8438.

A v e . ,

B e n d

O r e g o n

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210

246

247

255

260

Furniture & Appliances

Guns, Hunting and Fishing

Sporting Goods - Misc.

Computers

Misc. Items

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.

Wanted - paying cash for Hi-fi audio & studio equip. McIntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808

Yorkie Puppies, 8 wks. old, 3 females, 2 males, vet checked. $600. Will deliver to Central OR. 1-541-792-0375, Mt. Vernon.

Yorkshire Terrier 2½-yr female darling personality, shots current, $250. 541-647-4430

210

Furniture & Appliances Air conditioners, It’s Hot! 4 window units all w/remotes, 2 small $50 ea., 2 large $75 ea., 541-548-7137, Redmond !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.

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.

212

Antiques & Collectibles Antique vanity waterfall design, excellent condition, $80. 503-933-0814 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

Bar Stools (3), cushion seats & back, wood legs/frame, exc. cond. $160, 541-923-6487. Bosch Dishwasher, lightly used. Model SHU33A built-in. Madras 541- 777-9366 Dining set w/matching lighted china hutch in washed oak. $500. 541-388-8470.

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neighborhood! Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 541-385-5809. Kenmore Bagless canister vacuum cleaner, almost new $200. 541-923-5622.

‘One of a Kind’ Juniper lamps. $150-$200 each. 377 SW Century Dr., Suite #204 above Prudential Realty. By appt. only or go see at showroom. 541-408-4613. Oriental Rug, 9x12 Elephant foot style. Some fringe dmg. $499/ofr, cash 541-389-0371

541-598-4643.

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 tube lrge deluxe, with backboard and multi-compartments, $75. 503-933-0814 GUNS Buy, Sell, Trade 541-728-1036.

New unused SportCraft 4x8 pool table and accessories. Paid $1250. First $750 takes. Possible delivery. 541-504-1123 Yakima pick-up Canoe Kayak Rack, great shape, $250. Cash only. 541-389-0371

248

Health and Beauty Items

AR15 Carbine. DPMS lower/ Bushmaster upper 16" chrome lined barrel, M4 stocks, detach colt M4 CH, 4 spare milspec mags. Nice basic low round ct carbine. $650. 404-307-0754 Bushmaster AR-15 M-4, Browning 12ga auto clay, $1500. Belgium Browning 20ga auto, 541-480-8080

Camping: Dome tent, mattress, stove, lantern, ice chest, BBQ, $100 all. 503-933-0814 Electronic dart board with darts, $12. Bottelsen professional set of darts, $15. 541-410-4596

Musical Instruments Peavey amp, small used twice 503-933-0814.

like new, $60.

263

Tools 5500 Watt Homelite Generator, great shape, $300. Cash only. Call 541-389-0371 GENERATOR: Coleman 1850W, exc. cond., $150. (541) 526-6212, (541) 410-1292 Generator, Generac 5000 watt, gently used, $300. 503-933-0814, Bend

Yamaha personal electronic piano with chair, $80 503-933-0814 Chronic Pain & Fatigue, insomnia, brain fog, anxiety, migraines?

260

Misc. Items

There is Hope! Call for FREE DVD Farewell To Fibromyalgia

Call 866-700-2424 Rem 1187 12 ga., 3” chamber, Exercise Equipment choke set,mossy oak cammo & gun sleeve,$495 541-410-8704 PRIDE GO-GO ON YOUR OWN Fitmaster Massage Table, porexc. condition, affordable at table, like new, $225. Remington Woodmaster 81 $495. 541-516-8623 300 Savage with Hensoldt 541-536-8130 Wetzlar 3x Scope. $250 obo Self-care healing crystals with NordicTrack E-7 Elliptical in Call 541-848-8770 9am-9pm. instruction manual & CD, great shape, pulse, counter, $155. 541-788-7372 Rifles (2), 1903 Springfield, $200 OBO. 541-312-4144. Sporterized, $450; 1864 US 251 Springfield, very good cond, Rowing machine Stamina Air $900 OBO, 541-383-1782. Rower, $400 brand new, too Hot Tubs and Spas large for apt. mint cond, Ruger Mini 14, excellent, $500. Asking $200. 541-633-6790 Escort semi-auto 12 ga. Columbia Hot Tub, Aspen model, 32 jets, lounger, exc. shotgun $250. 541-504-0279 Treadmill, Weslo, used, $100. cond. $1995. 541-848-2214 LaPine. Call Pat at Sig Sauer P239 .40 Cal Pistol. 541-536-7959 Like new. Less than 150 rnds 253 thru pistol. Extra clip and 246 over 400 rnds of FMJ ammo TV, Stereo and Video plus two holsters $600. Guns, Hunting HDTV, Philips 60”, big screen, 541-408-2482. and Fishing floor model, just serviced, new, was, $1500, now $595 U.C. light 38 special CHARTER 1895 Modern Winchester 405 OBO, 541-408-7908. ARMS with holster & box of take down model like new shells. $325. 541-279-8815 Magnavox 4-Channel Security with five boxes of ammo and Monitor with 4 surveillance reloading dies. $950. Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call cameras $200; Q-See Sur541-382-0321. 541-678-5753, 503-351-2746 veillance system includes 22LR Jennings semi-auto pisDVR, Monitor, 4-color cam247 tol w/ammo, like new, $200. eras, $400. 541-923-5622 541-647-8931 Sporting Goods

- Misc.

257

Phase linear 2000 amplifier and stereo console, solid state, $100 both. 503-933-0814

242

Large Armoire for only $225. Was used as a T.V. stand. 30-06, Remington 700-BDL hunting rifle, beautiful wood, Contact 541-771-2178 like new $450. 541-647-8931 Lighted contemporary Bassett 300 Win. Remington 770, syn wood hutch, excellent cond, stock hunting rifle, w/scope, $500 OBO. 541-388-8966 like new $450. 541-647-8931

Second Hand Mattresses, sets & singles, call

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

541-385-5809

Generator, Yamaha EF2400IS, used once, $800, 541-815-0395,714-743-1630 All-Metal Trigger & friend, Stihl 20” chain saw, $250. Nancy. $700 firm. Craftsman 12” miter saw & 541-549-8660 stand, $250. Both great cond. BUYING AND SELLING Cash only. 541-389-0371 All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding 265 sets, class rings, sterling silBuilding Materials ver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill 4 sets of new pre-mitered door Fleming, 541-382-9419. casing trim, $10 each. New Buying Diamonds windows: (1) 36x42 & (3) /Gold for Cash 48x42, $250 all. 7 sheets 1/2” 4x8 floor underlayment, SAXON'S FINE JEWELERS $8/sheet. CCR Terrebonne, 541-389-6655 406-980-1907 704-530-4051 BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191.

Cabinet Refacing & Refinishing. Save Thousands! Over 40 Years Experience in Carpet Upholstery & Rug Cleaning Call Now! 541-382-9498 CCB #72129 www.cleaningclinicinc.com Tabletop shotgun microphone for conferences, meetings, $50. 503-933-0814

Most jobs completed in 5 days or less. Best Pricing in the Industry.

541-647-8261 MADRAS Habitat RESTORE Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW PRICES 84 SW K. St. 541 475-9722 Open to the public.

$895. sport made $500.

Carry concealed in 33 states. Sun. July 24th 8 a.m, Red mond Comfort Suites. Qualify For Your Concealed Hand gun Permit. Oregon & Utah permit classes, $50 for Or egon, $60 for Utah, $100 for both. www.PistolCraft.com. Call Lanny at 541-281-GUNS (4867) to Pre-Register.

Sectional Couch, excellent condition, neutral color, 2 yrs old, $750. 541-815-0395 Washer/Dryer, Whirlpool, good cond., white, 6 yrs., $375 OBO, 541-389-9268.

Queensland Heelers Standards & mini,$150 & up. 541-280-1537 http://rightwayranch.wordpress.com/ Scottie Female, 19 weeks, papers, 1st/2nd shots, parents on site, $400. 541-317-5624

Golden Retriever, AKC, 5 mo male, all shots, vet checked, $300. 509-281-0502 Chihuahua, absolutely tiniest teacup, rare colors, 1st shots, wormed $250, 541-977-4686

Kittens & cats need forever homes! Rescue group open Sat/Sun 1-5, other days by appt. Low adoption fees. Altered, shots, ID chip, vet visit & carrier. Discount for 2! 65480 78th St, Bend, 389-8420, 647-2181, map/ photos: www.craftcats.org.

ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPPIES

Foster Cats & Kittens, young, playful adults; kittens ready soon! 541-548-5516

Birdcage, large, 40” wide x30” Deep x 66” high, $150 OBO cash only, Call 541-388-5679

Golden Retriever Pups AKC, ready to go, $600. Shots, wormed vet-checked. More pictures avail. 509-281-0502

C h a n d l e r

Pets and Supplies

GAS RANGES (2) newer, $125, and one at $50, 541-604-4316.

Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

AKC registered, champion lines. Accepting deposits now, ready to go home with you in late August. $2000. 541-416-0375

S . W .

Dryer, newer Maytag, electric, great shape, $175. 541-788-7372

CHUG Puppies (Chi & mini-pug) Est 3 to 5 lbs full grown Females $350 - Males $250. Taking Deposits Now! 541-233-3534

Cockatiels (3), Pied, Lutino, white face, $25ea; Parakeets 202 (2), $5, hand -fed baby green cheeks, $135; Hand-fed Baby Want to Buy or Rent blue quaker, $300, 541-318-9178 Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume Jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold & Silver. I buy by the Estate, Honest Artist. Elizabeth, 541-633-7006 Wanted: Old Oriental Rugs, any size or condition, call toll free, 1-800-660-8938.

1 7 7 7

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

Shih-tzu puppies, no shedding; dew claws removed, ready to go, 1st shots. Females $300, males, $250. 541-433-5261

Shih Tzu Puppies Purebred, 8 weeks! Have first shots, so cute. 209-986-3291 Teacup Yorkie Pup, 6 wks, 1 female vet check, will deliver to Central OR, $800, 541-792-0375, Mt. Vernon.

We Service All Vacs! Free Estimates! Oreck XL Outlook Upright Only $229 (Was $399) While supplies last. Hurry Last Week!

Bend’s Only Authorized Oreck Store. In the Forum Center

541-330-0420

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


F2 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD

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PLACE AN AD

Edited by Will Shortz

Monday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. Tuesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Mon. Wednesday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Tues. Thursday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Wed. Friday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00am Fri. Saturday . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3:00 Fri. Sunday. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Noon Sat. PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines *UNDER $500 in total merchandise 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16.00

Place a photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 per week.

Garage Sale Special

OVER $500 in total merchandise 4 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $17.50 7 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23.00 14 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32.50 28 days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $60.50

4 lines for 4 days. . . . . . . . . $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

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

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

*Must state prices in ad

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702 PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace each Tuesday. 265

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269

Building Materials

Fuel and Wood

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

The Hardwood Outlet Wood Floor Super Store

Central Oregon Mix, semi-dry, split, delivered, Bend. $135 for one cord or $260 for two. Cash, Check or Credit. 541-420-3484

269

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

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

Heating and Stoves

BarkTurfSoil.com Wholesale Peat Moss Sales

541-389-9663

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

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’

SUPER TOP SOIL www.hersheysoilandbark.com Screened, soil & compost mixed, no rocks/clods. High humus level, exc. for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight screened top soil. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-548-3949.

• Receipts should include,

20-30 Individuals Wanted Immediately

Oregon Medical Training PCS

Due to new equipment line our company has a massive growth & expansion openings. Various positions for full time & long term employment. $300 Week paid training provided. Call Brittany, 541-617-6109

325

Hay, Grain and Feed

FOUND Diamond Ring in Sunriver, call 971-322-9293, or Sunriver Police Dept. to identify.

Horses and Equipment

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

LOST HORSE in Marks Creek area of Ochocos - Bay Pinto, full tack, 541-504-7085 or 541-315-0109.

LOST HORSE in Marks Creek area of Ochocos - Bay Pinto, full tack, 541-504-7085 and 541-315-0109. LOST: Jackson Kayak, area of Sisters/Indian Ford. Reward! Call 541-749-0620 Lost long haired all-orange adult male cat, name is ‘Red’, lost in NE Bend area. Reward PLEASE HELP! 541-633-0482 Lost: Men’s dark sunglasses,7/11, Smith, Safeway on 3rd or Wal Mart, reward, 541-389-0049 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.

341

Phlebotomy classes begin Aug 29th. 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

454

Looking for Employment Administrative Assistant for hire Call 541-382-6939 Attn Employers: hire me! You Pay 1/2 my wages 6 mo,. no workers comp 3 yrs. Call Justin, 541-480-1373

476

Employment Opportunities

347

Llamas/Exotic Animals

CAUTION

Alpaca dispersal sale, all reg., quality breeding stock to ribbon winners. All Reasonable offers considered. For info call 541-385-4989.

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.

350

Horseshoeing/ Farriers NILSSON HOOF CARE - Certified natural hoof care practitioner with www.aanhcp.net 541-504-7764.

358

Farmers Column 10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB #173684. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net 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

READERS:

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

541-322-7253

All Year Dependable Firewood: Dry , split lodgepole, 1 for $155 or 2 for $300. No limit. Cash, check, or credit. Bend 541-420-3484

281

421

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

FOUND Keys on O’Neil Hwy, Redmond 7/17, attached is 2009 photo. 541-350-6306

476

Employment Opportunities

Schools and Training

FOUND big round Master lock on Armour Rd, Bend, 7/14. Call 541-318-8080

The Bulletin

I provide in-home Caregiving. Experienced; some light housekeeping. 541-508-6403

308

Lost and Found

270

Looking for Employment

Farm Equipment and Machinery

Quality Hay For Sale Delivery Available Please Call 541-777-0128

Stolen: Kelly Green Pacific Tandem Bicycle. Anyone with information please call 541-388-4064. Reward offered for return.

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

Fundraiser Sales

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

Employment

300 400 Premium orchard grass 3x3 mid-size bales, no rain, no weeds. $90 per bale. 541-419-2713.

Instant Landscaping Co. BULK GARDEN MATERIALS

Beckwell Pellet Stove, excel- Craftsman Lawn Tractor, bagger & trailer, 9 yrs old, runs lent working cond., w/ pipe, well, $250. 541-815-2042 pad & manual. $850. CCR Terrebonne, 406-980-1907 or 704-530-4051 JUNIPER TIES & BOARDS Full Measure Timbers NOTICE TO ADVERTISER “ Rot Resistant ” Since September 29, 1991, Raised Bed Garden Projects advertising for used woodInstantlandscaping.com stoves has been limited to 541-389-9663 models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the fedFor newspaper delivery , eral Environmental Proteccall the Circulation Dept. tion Agency (EPA) as having at 541-385-5800 met smoke emission stanTo place an ad, call dards. A certified woodstove 541-385-5809 or email may be identified by its cerclassified@bendbulletin.com tification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified John Deere woodstoves. Riding Lawnmower Model year 2000 GT 225 267 Blade, trailer, sprayer, and Fuel and Wood aerator/fertilizer included $1500 OBO Call Andrew 541-579-0365

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...

Your Backyard Birdfeeding Specialists!

454

Farm Market

Administrative Assistant Part time, 15 hours week, exp. with Windows Suite office programs including Excel & Word, some accounting. No benefits. Send resume and cover letter Attn: linda.bailey@fnf.com Cable TV/ Internet/ Phone Installer Crestview Cable Communications seeks a

personable Cable TV/ Internet/Phone Installer in Madras. Electronics, computer or cable TV experience preferred. Pole/ladder climbing/lift 65 lbs. $10-$13/hr. DOE, plus benefits. License/good driving record, drug and background check. Bilingual preferred. Must live or be willing to relocate to our Madras system. Resume to aashcraft@crestviewcable.com, or to 374 SW 5th Street, Madras, OR. EOE Need Help? We Can Help! REACH THOUSANDS OF POTENTIAL EMPLOYEES EVERY DAY! Call the Classified Department for more information: 541-385-5809 Caregiver Prineville senior care home looking for Care Manager for two overnight shifts per week. Must be mature and compassionate & pass criminal background check. Ref. required. 541-447-5773.

Counterperson, part-time. Please apply in person at:

Ford Cleaners, 541-383-0398

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288

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend

Moving Sale - Sat 7/23, 8:30-4. Furniture, kitchenware, books, toys/games, & more. Ready to make good deals! 166 NW St. Helens Place, (CVF) is currently collecting near Broadway & Tumalo. household and office donations for their Step Above Your Average Garage Multi-Family Yard Sale, Sat., Sale on July 22, 23 & 8-4. Women’s & kids’ clothes, toys, Christmas items, 1979 24th and July 29 & 30th, Dodge Pickup & more! 65111 at the Bend Factory Stores. 85th Place, about ½ mile Proceeds will go directly west of Deschutes Junction. towards supporting Central Oregon’s children vision screenings and will also be 284 providing free seven step vision screenings for chil- Sales Southwest Bend dren ages 5 and older during event.. Your donations are 4 Seniors Down Sizing - Snow tax deductible. For more intires, Serger, large wool rugs, wooden doll house, sm appliformation and donations ances, stamping supplies, linpickup, please call ens, game cart, dinette set, (541) 330-3907 TVs and much more, priced to 282 sell! 59878 Navajo Rd, Fri-Sat, 7/22-23, 8am-4pm. Sales Northwest Bend

H H H H

The Children’s Vision Foundation

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

Combining Households Sale: 10-2, Sat., 20815 Tamar Ln., from Reed Mkt, so. on 15th, left on Golden Gate, follow signs (The Bridges) Community Yard Sale: Fri. & Sat. 8-3, Suntree Village, 1001 SE 15th St, lots of great stuff,something for everyone!

651 NW 6th St., Redmond, OR

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

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Customer Service Representative, part-time Midstate Electric Cooperative located in La Pine, Oregon seeks qualified applicants for the position of part-time customer service representative in our operations/dispatch department. Qualified applicants must be a high school graduate or equivalent with a minimum of one year office experience. This is a challenging position that requires familiarity with computers and ability to multi-task. Must have public contact experience and the ability to establish sound customer relations in person and over the phone. Ability to independently establish files and maintain records accurately and efficiently. Must possess working knowledge of personal computer (MS Office – Word and Excel). Must possess Oregon drivers license. This position requires a flexible schedule of 20 to 40 hours per week. Flex position – hours to be determined based upon work schedule.

This position is an Hourly/ Non-Exempt Bargaining Unit Position – IBEW Local 125. SUBMIT RESUME WITH COVER LETTER TO: Human Resources Midstate Electric Cooperative PO Box 127 La Pine, OR 97739 Fax: 541-536-1423 E-mail: smiesen@midstateelectric.coop DEADLINE TO APPLY IS TUESDAY, JULY 26, 2011 AT 5:00 P.M. NO TELEPHONE CALLS WILL BE ACCEPTED. EEOE

DO YOU NEED A GREAT EMPLOYEE RIGHT NOW? Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and get an ad in to publish the next day! 385-5809. VIEW the Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin is your

Employment Marketplace Call

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

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

Customer Service Representative

Crestview Cable Communications is an Oregon based company in the business of selling cable TV, phone and internet services. We are looking for a bilingual (Spanish/English) Customer Service Representative for full-time work in our Prineville office, Monday - Friday, 8:00 am - 5:00 pm. Must be able to do accurate work in a busy office environment, have good oral communication skills, the ability to learn job-specific computer software, handle cash, and use a 10 key. Benefit package includes health insurance, paid holidays, vacation, sick time and more. Applications available at 350 NE Dunham St., Prineville, at www.crestviewcable.com or email resume to agautney@crestviewcable.com. Mandatory pre-employment drug testing, background check, and a good driving record required. Crestview Cable Communication is an equal opportunity Employer Proprietary.

290

Sales Redmond Area HUGE GARAGE SALE, 927 NW Redwood Place. Fri. and Sat., 9-3. Canoe, water heater, desks and much more. MEGA SALE! Furniture, kitchenware, quilting fabric, craft books, Beanie Babies, clowns, holiday decorations, 7/22, 9-5, 7/23, 9-4. 5365 NW Zamia Ave., Redmond

Garage/Moving Sale Pre-Moving Sale! 2 new 9’ oars, Household items, lawn tools, $75 ea. Bathroom cabinet, rabbit hutch, coffee maker, over toilet shelving, charcoal juicer, lots of stuff! Sat., BBQ, Little Chef smoker, 7/23, 8am-1pm. Take Richqueen size brass headboard, ard Rd to Bozeman Trail, 4-drawer dresser, 2 cabinets, right on Bozeman, left on RCA stereo w/turntable & Butterfield Trail, to 23364. speakers, electric keyboard, NO EARLY BIRDS - CASH ONLY. lawnmower, Sat 7/23, 10-5, 244 SW Rimrock Way. Huge Moving Sale! Fishing FIND IT! Equip, Furniture, Exercise BUY IT! Equip. & Much More. Fri .& Sat., 7/22-7/23, 8 am-5 pm. SELL IT! 1715 SE Virginia Rd., Bend The Bulletin Classiieds

ESTATE SALE: Books, clothes, furn. hand and power construction tools. Everything goes! Fri. 7/22 8-5. 1731 NW Rimrock Rd.

Multiple Partcipant Parking Lot Garage Sale! Sat. only, 8am3pm, 61419 S Hwy 97. Fishing, tools, offc equip, hsehld.

Garage Sale, 9am-2pm Fri-Sat. Some antiques, tools clothing, some fly tying, & misc! 2999 NE Rock Chuck Dr.

290

292

Sales Redmond Area

Sales Other Areas

Moving Sale - Everything must go! Fri-Sat 9-4, 2801 NW Golf Course Drive S. Furnishings, household, you name it!

Yard Sale, Friday only, 9-7. Cleaning house! Yardage, collectibles, misc goodies! 19397 River Woods Dr., DRW

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

FRI. & SAT. 8-4. Moving Sale. Kitchen table and chairs, dishes, glasses, computer desk, TV stand, lots misc. SW Metolius Meadow Ct.

Storage Unit Sale in Sisters! Furniture, dishes, washer/ dryer, refrigerator, clothing. Wed-Sun, 7/20-24. Call for directions: 661-979-0999

Driver/Warehouse Clerk National wholesale distributor of waterworks products in Redmond is looking for a motivated and hard working individual with a good attitude. Candidate must have good communication skills, be professional, is punctual, a self starter, and work as a team player. Primary job duties are driving and all warehouse functions. Secondary duties involve counter sales, answering phones, and various other duties. Class A CDL is preferred, class B w/airbrake endorsement required. Ability to operate a forklift, climb a ladder, manipulate tools and equipment, lift up to 100 lbs, and type a minimum of 20-29 words per minute is required. We are looking to fill this position very quickly, so please email your resume to aaron.bondi@ferguson.com if you are interested in working for a great company.

541-385-5809


THE BULLETIN • Wednesday, July 20, 2011 F3

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809 476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Finance & Business

500 600

Experienced garage door in- Remember.... staller wanted for installaAdd your web address to tion, repair, and sales of resiyour ad and readers on dential garage doors and The Bulletin's web site will openers. Fax resume (503) be able to click through au336-3761 or email: tomatically to your site. dewayne.campbell@searsgaragedoors.com

SERVICE WRITER

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

McMenamins Old St. Francis School McMenamins Old St. Francis School in Bend, OR is now hiring a Sous Chef. Desired experience includes; culinary education, high-volume line-cooking, fine-dining, catering, supervisory, menu planning, recipe development, strong communication skills, stellar organizational skills, and a very flexible schedule including days, evenings, weekends and holidays! Interested applicants can apply on line at www.mcmenamins.com or submit a resume and cover letter to: Attn: HR, 430 N. Killingsworth St, Portland, OR 97217 or fax: 503-221-8749. Deadline to apply is Friday, July 22nd. Please no phone calls or emails to individual locations! E.O.E. Housekeeper Needed StoneRidge Townhomes in Sunriver has immediate part time positions, incl. some weekends call 541-593-1502

LOGGING Openings for feller buncher, loader/grinder operator, log truck, and fire patrol. 530-258-3025.

position. Part-time employment, 15-20 hrs weekly. Must have Quickbooks exp. and be good with customers. Pay DOE. Send resume to: gserandy@gmail.com The Bulletin Recommends extra caution when purchasing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit information may be subjected to F R A U D. For more information about an advertiser, you may call the Oregon State Attorney General’s Office Consumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.

630

528

Rooms for Rent

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.

ROOM FOR RENT in mfd home in Bend, $300 mo. Call 253-241-4152. Roommate Wanted to share 3 Bdrm home near everything in La Pine. Rent negotiable; must have references. Call Tim, 541-410-1153. STUDIOS & KITCHENETTES Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro. & fridge. Util. & linens. New owners, $145-$165/wk. 541-382-1885

631

Long term townhomes/homes for rent in Eagle Crest. Appl. included, Spacious 2 & 3 bdrm., with garages, 541-504-7755.

632

Apt./Multiplex General

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.

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

634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

FREE BANKRUPTCY EVALUATION visit our website at

1 Bdrm., $525. In quiet complex. close to shopping. On-site laundry, no smoking, no pets. 1000 NE Butler Mkt. Rd. 541-633-7533

Alpine Meadows Townhomes

www.oregonfreshstart.com

1, 2 and 3 bdrm apts. Starting at $625.

541-330-0719

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

Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

541-382-3402 LOCAL MONEY We buy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 extension 13.

(Private Party ads only) Independent Contractor

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. $610$650/mo. 541-385-6928.

Close to downtown! 1 Bdrm 1 bath triplex. Very quiet nbrhd. Gas stove. W/S & hot water paid. No pets/smkg. $495. 541-419-4520

Call for Specials!

H Supplement Your Income H Operate Your Own Business

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. Renovated 2 bdrm., 1 bath, blocks from St. Charles & Pilot Butte. W/S/G paid. Laundry onsite. Parking. No pets/ smoking.$600. 541-410-6486

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 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

636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 2 Bdrm., 2 bath, 2 car garage, detached apt., with W/D, no pets/smoking, 63323 Britta, $750/mo., $1000 dep., 541-390-0296.

A

LARGE COZY 1 BDRM CONDO, 754 sq.ft., wood stove, W/S/G pd, utility hook ups, front deck storage, $595 541-480-3393 or 610-7803 NICE quiet one bdrm, w/s/g/ cable paid, carport, laundry facilities. No smoking. $510 mo. $500 dep. 541-383-2430.

Call 541-385-5809 to promote your service • Advertise for 28 days starting at $140 (This special package is not available on our website)

Building/Contracting

Electrical Services

Home Improvement

Landscaping, Yard Care

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

Quality Builders Electric

Kelly Kerfoot Construction: 28 years exp. in Central OR, Quality & Honesty, from carpentry & handyman jobs, to quality wall covering installations & removal. Senior discounts, licenced, bonded, insured, CCB#47120 Call 541-389-1413 or 541-410-2422

Nelson Landscape Maintenance

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.

Concrete Construction JJ&B Construction - Quality Concrete work, over 30 yrs experience. Sidewalks, RV Pads, Driveways... Call Grant, 541-279-3183 • CCB190612

• Remodels • Home Improvement • Lighting Upgrades • Hot Tub Hook-ups 541-389-0621 www.qbelectric.net CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C

Excavating

Levi’s Dirt Works:RGC & CGC Landscaping, Yard Care Residential & Commercial subcontracting for all your dirt & excavation needs. • Small & large jobs for contractors & home owners by the job - or hour. • Driveway grading (low cost get rid of pot holes & smooth out your driveway) • Custom pads large & small • Operated rentals & augering • Wet & dry utilities • Concrete CCB#194077 541-639-5282.

Handyman K.A. Veltman Concrete L L C Custom Concrete Work Foundations and Flatwork No Job Too Big or Too Small! 541-923-2168 • CCB #191425

Computer/Cabling Install QB Digital Living •Computer Networking •Phone/Data/TV Jacks •Whole House Audio •Flat Screen TV & Installation 541-280-6771 www.qbdigitalliving.com CCB#127370 Elect Lic#9-206C

ERIC REEVE HANDY SERVICES Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting, Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. Small or large jobs. On-time promise. Senior Discount. All work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463 Bonded & Insured CCB#181595

Debris Removal JUNK BE GONE l Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel 541-389-8107

All types remodeling/handyman Decks, Painting, Carpentry Randy Salveson, 541-306-7492 CCB#180420

Drywall

I DO THAT! Home Repairs, Remodeling, Professional & Honest Work. Rental Repairs. CCB#151573 Dennis 541-317-9768

ALL PHASES of Drywall. Small patches to remodels and garages. No Job Too Small. 25 yrs. exp. CCB#117379 Dave 541-330-0894

Bend’s Reliable Handyman Lowest Rates / Sr. Discounts Repairs, yard care, clean-ups, disposal, paint, fences, odd jobs CCB#180267 541-419-6077

648

658

Houses for Rent General

Houses for Rent Redmond

Real Estate For Sale

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275. 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

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 3-car garage, lg storage shed, fenced yard. Very clean, great location; no smoking. $1095/mo + $950 dep. 541-420-6667

700

SUMMER BLAST! Studios $375 1 Bdrm $400 Free Move-in Rent! • Lots of amenities. • Pet friendly • W/S/G paid THE BLUFFS APTS. 340 Rimrock Way, Redmond Close to schools, shopping, and parks! 541-548-8735 Managed by

GSL Properties

Cottage-like large 1 bdrm in quiet 6-plex in old Redmond, SW Canyon/Antler. Hardwoods, W/D. Refs, $550+ utils, avail now! 541-420-7613

If you haven’t seen us lately...

Condo / Townhomes For Rent

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

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

Rentals

642

Apt./Multiplex Redmond

J. L. SCOTT

Serving Central Oregon Residential & Commercial • Sprinkler installation & repair • Aerate • Trimming • Summer Clean up • Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly & monthly maint. •Flower bed clean up •Bark, Rock, etc. •Senior Discounts

LAWN & LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE

Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB#8759

SPECIAL 20%OFF Lawn Re-seeding or Summer Aeration Services!

Ferris Building & Landscape Maintenance Remodeling, Pole Barns, Landscape Maint., Tree Service & Haul Away. CCB #68496 Harry Ferris 541-408-2262

Weekly Maintenance • Thatching • Aeration • Lawn Over-seeding Bark • Clean-ups Commercial / Residential Senior Discounts

Providing full service maintenance for over 20 years! FREE FERTILIZATION with new seasonal Mowing Service!

“Because weekends WERE NOT made for yard work!”

541-382-3883 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.

Summer Maintenance! Monthly Maint., Weeding, Raking, One Time Clean Up, Debris Hauling 541-388-0158 • 541-420-0426 www.bblandscape.com

Call The Yard Doctor for yard maint., thatching, sod, hydroseeding, sprinkler sys, water features, walls, more! Allen 541-536-1294 LCB 5012 Collins Lawn Maintenance Weekly Services Available Aeration, One-time Jobs Bonded & Insured Free Estimate. 541-480-9714

Painting, Wall Covering WESTERN PAINTING CO. Richard Hayman, a semiretired painting contractor of 45 years. Small Jobs Welcome. Interior & Exterior. 541-388-6910. ccb#5184 Picasso Painting All Phases Exterior interior 25 yrs exp. CCB# 194351 Affordable • Reliable. Bruce Teague 541-280-9081,

Tile, Ceramic Steve Lahey Construction Tile Installation Over 20 Yrs. Exp. Call For Free Estimate 541-977-4826•CCB#166678

LOOK AT US NOW! DELUXE 2 BEDROOM Includes storage room &carport, smoke free bldg., fenced dog run, on-site laundry, close to schools, parks and shopping. O BSIDIAN APARTMENTS www.redmondrents.com 541-923-1907 Triplex, Very Clean, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, 1200 sq.ft., W/D, dishwasher, micro., garage w/opener, $650 +$800 dep, W/S/G paid, 541-604-0338

Where buyers meet sellers.

Your Future Is Here. Whether you’re looking for a home or need a service, your future is in these pages.

Thousands of ads daily in print and online. To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.com or call 385-5809

650

Houses for Rent NE Bend 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1200 sq.ft., big wood stove, util. room, 1/2 acre lot, RV parking, dbl garage w/openers, $895. 541-480-3393 or 610-7803 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, dbl garage, fenced yard, gas heat, W/D hookup (gas). Close to hospital. No smoking, no pets. 541-388-2250 541-815-7099 A newer 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1590 sq. ft, gas fireplace, great room, huge oversize dbl. garage w/openers, big lot, $1095, 541-480-3393 or 610-7803 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

A Newer 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 1168 sq.ft., newer paint & carpet, patio, large lot, RV parking, dbl. garage, w/opener, $850, 541-480-3393, 541-610-7803

740

Condo / Townhomes For Sale

Crooked River Ranch, 5 acres horse property fenced, 2 bdrm., 2 bath, W/D hookup, $800 plus deps. 541-420-5197,209-402-3499

MT. BACHELOR VILLAGE CONDO remodeled, furnished, vaulted ceiling, end unit, sleeps 6. Price reduced $159,900. 541-749-0994.

Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Homes for Sale

Newer 3/2, 1600 sq.ft., dbl. car, fenced yard, RV-parking,A/C, 2560 SW Wikiup, $1000 mo. +dep,credit check, small dog ? no smoking, 541-322-8718.

687

Commercial for Rent/Lease Office / Warehouse 1792 sq.ft. & 1680 sq.ft. spaces, 827 Business Way, Bend. 30¢/sq.ft.; 1st mo. + $300 dep. 541-678-1404 Office/Warehouse located in SE Bend. Up to 30,000 sq.ft., competitive rate, 541-382-3678. Office/Warehouse Space, 6400 sq.ft., (3) 12x14 doors, on Boyd Acres Rd, 541-382-8998.

The Bulletin offers 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

693

Ofice/Retail Space for Rent An Office with bath, various sizes and locations from $200 per month, including utilities. 541-317-8717 Approximately 1800 sq.ft., perfect for office or church south end of Bend $750, ample parking 541-408-2318.

541-322-7253

745 BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics! www.BendRepos.com steve scott realtors 685se 3rd, bend, or

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

746

Northwest Bend Homes 4 Bdrm,west side, large corner lot, newly remodeled, concrete counters, hardwood & slate throughout. 1159 NW Rockwood $419,900, 541-280-2828

755

Sunriver/La Pine Homes Brand New! Custom finished home with 1000 ft river frontage on just under 5 acres. Mtn views. Gourmet kitchen, 4 large bdrms with walk-in closets. 3.5 baths, large bonus rm, ready to move in! Bank owned. $398,500. Bend River Realty, Rob Marken, Broker/ Owner. Call 541-410-4255

762

Homes with Acreage Fleetwood 1512 sq ft double wide on 1.34 acres, Crooked River Ranch. Heat pump, 2 bdrms, den, 2 full baths, separate guest room & garage with half bath. Great view. $126,500. Call for appointment, 541-923-0574 Advertise your car! Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds

773

Acreages ***

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 *** Powell Butte: 6 acres, 360° views in farm fields, septic approved, power, OWC, 10223 Houston Lake Rd., $114,900, 541-350-4684.

775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Beautiful custom home on Awbrey Butte. Award winning Moving - must sell! 1991 Fubuilder. 3 bdrm, 2.5 baths, qua dbl wide, 3 bdrm, 2 bath 2497 sq.ft., 3-car garage, RV on large beautiful lot, w/cargarage. .83 acre. Many port and 3 storage sheds, unique features. $725,000. drive by Four Seasons Park, 541-408-2594. Visit lot #29. $14,900. http://261973.byore541-312-2998. gonowner.com


F4 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

NOTICE Central Electric Cooperative, Inc., gives notice that unclaimed capital credit payments have been available since December 11, 2006 at the office of the Cooperative, at 2098 N. Highway 97, Redmond, Oregon to the member’s names hereunder of membership and payments which have been authorized for more than 4 years. Unless said members or heirs claim said payments not later than Jan 1, 2012, they will be forfeited to the Cooperative. These payments are retired capital credits for patronage for the years: 1982 and 2004. To claim the capital credit payment please phone or write our office. 3H FARMS 7 R LAND & CATTLE CO 78TH ST SHARED WELL A BAR D PINTO RANCH ABBATOYE TIM B ABBOTT GABE ABBOTT OLETHA M ABBY JOHN D ABDICH ROBERT ACKERMAN RONALD M ADAIR RICHARD ADAMS KENARD ADAMS NORMAN ADAMS SUSAN P ADVANCED SURGICAL CARE AGER SEAN AGNER E M AHRENS JOHN H AIMONE PATRICIA A AINGE RAY AIROLDI HAROLD ALBERT KEN ALBERT LUCIEN J ALBERTINI ALAN F ALDOR KATHRYN ALDOUS MARVIN L ALEXANDER ELIZABETH ALFORD ALMOUTH A ALGER RICHARD B ALLEN DAN L ALLEN DOUGLAS P ALLEN MARJORIE S ALLEN RICHARD ALLEN STEVE R ALMASIE LARRY P ALPINE MTN HOMES INC AMADOR SHAYLA C AMARAL JOEL J AMBROSON RODD M AMENS ROBERT D AMERICAN FEDERAL SAVINGS AMES A GARY AMES DALE AMSBERRY H MEL ANCELL CELESTE C ANDERS RICHARD L ANDERSEN ANTHONY C ANDERSEN RALPH V ANDERSON ANDY ANDERSON BRUCE P ANDERSON DARRELL D ANDERSON DAVID C ANDERSON DEL R ANDERSON DONALD R ANDERSON JEFF L ANDERSON LLOYD W ANDERSON MARY E ANDERSON MIKE C ANDERSON RAINSE E ANDERSON RICHARD F ANDERSON RON ANDERSON RUTH F ANDERSON SCOTT D ANDERSON STEVE L ANDERSON WM R ANDERSON CHRISTOPHER ANDRESEN DARVON M ANDRULIS RENEE ANGELL MILLARD ANGLER KATHRYN M ANSELL RICHARD M ANSORGE MICHELE A ANSTETT GARY F ANTHONY KATHRYN APPLEGATE LOUIS A APPLEGATE WILLIAM R ARENZ JOHN ARIAIL JAMES M ARMITAGE JANET E ARONSON DAVID J ASH LAWRENCE M ASHCRAFT LAMONICA F ASSOCIATE DEVELOPMENT CO ASSOCIATED MGMT ASTON EDWIN L ATKINSON JOSEPH G ATTELL GUSSIE AUGUSTINE FRANK E AUGUSTYNOVICH RON AUSBROKS TERRI E AUZENNE ALLEN J AUZENNE RONALD J AVEY FRANK D AYALA ALFREDO AYLWARD ERNEST M BABBITT JAMES M BABCOCK CRAIG BACH CHARLES J BACHAND MICHAEL BACHMAN SONNY J BACON DONALD C BACON WARREN C BAGGETT BAGLEY ROBERT R BAILEY AL L BAILEY AMBER D BAILEY WM M BAKER HARVEY W BAKER JAMES A BAKER LOGAN L BAKER MICHAEL D BAKER RICHARD W BALDRIDGE ROGER H BALL DON BALL JAMES C BALLEW WILLIAM W BALLIN RUTH E BALTZOR ARTHUR L BANGS GARY W BANKOFIER ANN W BANTA OREN C BARBER MURL S BARCLAY JOSEPH J BARCROFT D J BARKER GLEN BARKER REED A BARKES RICHARD D BARLUP GERALD L BARNDOLLAR VICKY M BARNES GAYLA A BARNES JUDY L BARNES STEVEN M BARNETT JAMES E BARNETT LOU E BARNGROVER ROBERT E BARNHART JANET L BARR PAUL R BARRETT KEN BARRETT MICHAEL W BARRETT RODERICK D BARRY OLIVE M BARTA VERNA I BARTH HERBERT E BARTHOLOMEW JOHN C BARTLETT NICK H BARTLINE BETTY H BARTON GARY A BASHOR JAY F BASS CHARLES L BASSFORD PAUL S BATES CARYL B BATES DAVE A BAUER KEITH J BAUER KIM S BAUGHMAN SHANNA L BAUMAN JOHN S BAUMAN RANDALL M E BAUNACH FRANCES V BAXTER SANDRA K BAYES CASEY J BEALL PAULINE BEALS DAVID E BEALS JEANNE A BEAN STEVEN BEARD JOHN R BEATY PAT M BEAUPRE CHRISTINE C BEBB EDWARD E BECK JOHN E BECK MARGARET BECKER KAREN L BECKMAN I KENT BECKWITH JEFFERY D BECRAFT HARRY R BEGIN MICHAEL BEGLEY AMANDA J BEGLEY DANIEL E BELDING MICHAEL T BELL JAY E BELL JOHN C BELL RANDALL N BELL ROGER G BELLEMORE PAUL H BELVEAL STACEY M BELZEL JOHN BEND PHYSICAL THERAPY BENDELE PAUL A BENEDICT SCOTT BENIASCH KEITH R BENJAMIN ROBERT M BENNETT LEONA M BENNETT ROBERT L BENNETT STEPHEN BENNETT STEVEN L BENSON CECIL G BENSON GARY G BENSON HELEN TRU M BENSON KAREN J BERG STEVEN BERGER CHARLES D BERGER DAVID BERGER WALTER O

BERGHOFER RONALD B BERGMEN CLARK A BERGSMA GEORGE BERGSMA JOHN E BERGSMA RODDY G BERKSON JOHN S BERLAND KENNETH BERNDT MERLE H BERNHARDS TAILOR SHOP BERNHARDT-GEHRMANN BERNLOEHR TERI BERRY GEORGE S BERRY HERSCHAL A BERRY MARK E BERRY MICHAEL R BERTINOIA EDWARD A BESEL KRISTA D BESSEY FLOYD J BEST BARRETT J BETTUCCI FRANK A BEVINS MAURICE G ESTATE BIDIMAN ORRIN W BIEVER KRISTY BIGHAUS TOM A BILKOSKY ROBERT R BILLHYMER HELEN J BILLINGS DAN M BILLINGS JACK R BILLINGS JAMES R BILYEU JEFF BILYEU RICHARD BINFORD LINDLEY BLACK JAMES E BLACKWELL DON W BLACKWELL HENRY B BLACKWOOD JEFF D BLAIR GARY L BLANCHARD EUNICE F BLANK MARY C BLAYLOCK DONALD BLOCH BONNIE J BLOCH KEITH W BLODGETT NICK C BLOMQUIST DAWN D BLONSKI ARTHUR S BLOOM WILLIAM H BLUNT JOHN BOARDMAN E RUSSELL BOARDMAN PHYLLIS M BOATWRIGHT JERRY D BOB GODFREY PONTIAC INC BOCCI ROBERT L BOCHSLER GERALD J BODENLOS CAMILLE S BODIN DAVID W BODTKER F N BOEHI RONALD C BOEHM CARTER R BOETTCHER TAMMY S BOHAM DAN S BOHN MARY A BOLCE ELLA M BOLCE NANCY M BOLES JAMES E BOLLARD TERESA A BOLT RUSS BOLTEN PHILLIP B BOLTINGHOUSE WILLIAM A BOLTON DON BOLTON ROBERT S BONANNO ROBERT K BOND NANCY K BOND STEVE K BOND THOMAS BONHAM HARRY S BONIFACE RICHARD M BONNIEVIEW RANCH INC BONS REBECCA N BORDEN CLARA BORDEN JESSIE B BORK DIANE J BOSTIC JOHN E BOUCHE PARRIS BOURGEOIS RUSSELL BOWEN PAUL BOWERS MARION E BOYANOVSKY-KUTSCH RON BOYD ROBERT G BOYLE CHRIS D BOYLE CONNIE S BOYLE DANIEL J BRADBURY HAROLD W BRADBURY JOSEPH H BRADFORD CAROL A BRADLEY CLARK J BRAND MALCOLM L BRANDENBURG DON F BRANDER ALEX G BRANDT WM D BRANSON LORRI J BRATLEY C M BREADON ROBERT W BRENIMAN S KEYES L BRENNAN MICHAEL A BREUSER PHILLIP D BREW ROBERT S BREWER DONALD L BREWER ROY B BRICKER PENNI-ANN BRIER FRANK D BRILES JUDITH M BRINKLEY TOM G BRITTAIN CHARLES L BRITTAIN DONALD BRITTSAN RUSSELL BRONSON ROBERT P BROOKS CONLEY BROSWICK BRUCE I BROTHERS J THOMAS BROTHERS PAUL BROUGHTON DEBBIE L BROUGHTON HAL F BROWN ALFRED J BROWN ALICE A BROWN CRAIG E BROWN DARCI BROWN DEBORAH K BROWN DONALD G BROWN HAZEL F BROWN J W BROWN J SCOTT BROWN JAMES W BROWN JEFFREY A BROWN JIM J BROWN JOHN M BROWN KATHY M BROWN MIKE A BROWN NEIL D BROWN RICHARD C BROWN ROBERT L BROWN RON E BROWN RUSSELL O BROWNING J ROBERT BRUCKER M BRUCKERT O C BRUNE LEROY A BRUNMEIER R J BRYAN KENNETH M BRYANT WAYNE E BRYANT WILLIAM M BUCHANAN L A BUCHMAN ED H BUCK VIRGINIA R BUCKNER AUGUSTA BUCKNER GRACE BUCKNER W A BUDKE AFTIN M BUENA VISTA CATTLE CO BUERMANN WILLIAM L BUESHER RBT G BUIGI THOMAS J BULGER JOSEPH E BUNCH CURT BUNCH DAN BUNDOCK HUGH M BUNDOCK W E BUNNELL LOREN K BURCH DENINE BUREN JULIE M BURGESS DALE E BURHART CHARITY A BURING RICHARD M BURKE DANIEL D BURKE WILLIAM P BURKS FLOYD E BURNETTE WILLIAM J BURNISTON JACK K BURNS C DICK R BURNS GENE A BURNS JANET M BURRELL JAMES H BURT CHERYL A BURTON JEFFREY S BURTON MICHAEL A BURTON ROBERT D BURWELL KIRBY J BURWELL TODD V BUSBY DAVID H BUSHNELL MERLE BUTTKE CARL H BUTTRAM WILBUR G BUTZ RONALD D BUXTON DAVID L BUZARD JULIA BUZZARD WILLIAM G BYERS GEORGE J BYERS MICHAEL L BYERS MICHAEL D BYRD JOHNNIE BYRD RICHARD L BYRD WALTON E BYRNE GREGORY W

C & L RANCH CAILLIET SUE CALDWELL LOUIS CALKINS RONALD D CALLISON PATRICK L CAMARILLO THOMAS L CAMERON SHARON CAMERON WILEY CAMOMILE BETTY CAMPBELL BOB C CAMPBELL ELLA E CAMPBELL KEN R CAMPBELL KIRK R CAMPOS HEIDI L CANFIELD FRED C CANJA SAFRON S CANNARD WALTER C CANNON A W CANNON MATT CANNON RICHARD R CANOY RICHARD L CANTWELL ROGER W CANYON COURT CARBAUGH PAUL B CARD ROBERT V CARELLI MAC W CARGILE CATHLEEN A CARLEY MARGARET V CARLILE FRIEDA K CARLSON A B CARLTON R A CARPENTER ANDREW CARPENTER KENNETH CARPENTER LARRY K CARR ARRAH M CARR LESLIE D CARR MICHELLE CARRIGAN CARROLL E CARTER BRAD S CARTER GEORGE W CARTWRIGHT GARY E CARTWRIGHT WILLIAM S CARY MARIE N CASCADE DEV INC CASHEN TRACY D CASTANEDA DAVID CASTLE WILLIAM E CASTRO JAMES J CASWELL JOSEPH H CAUDLE CAROL L CAUFIELD JOSEPH CAVENDER DIANE M CAVIS CLAUDE O CD HOME ENTERTAINMENT INC CECIL ED J CEDERGREEN COLLIN L CENARRUSA JOE E CENTRAL TRUSS C CENTRAL OR CUSTOM HOMES CESSNA DOLORES L CHADBOURNE PHILLIP F CHAFFIN GORDON R CHALKER LORI CHAMBERLAIN CRAIG D CHAMBERLAIN LYNDALL C CHANEY NATHAN CHANGING HORIZONS INC CHAPIN AL P CHAPMAN HOWARD C CHARLES H G CHASE NINA M CHASE PHIL W CHAVEZ MARGARETT R CHAVRE NEAL R CHESHIRE MICHAEL N CHESTER RODNEY L CHIAPUZIO ROBERT CHILDERS RONALD E CHOPPING ROBERT CHRISTENSEN DANA M CHRISTENSEN JEFF R CHRISTIAN MARK A CHRISTIANSEN OTTO H CHRISTIANSON T A CHRISTOPHERSON CARRIE L CHURCHILL JULIET N CHURCHILL TOMMIE N CIRCLE F RANCHES INC CITY TOURNAMENT CLAES THOMAS E CLAFLIN PETER E CLAPP MARTIN A CLAREY DUVEEN O CLARK ALFRED L CLARK AMY M CLARK DANIEL K CLARK DAVID L CLARK KENDRA CLARK KENNETH W CLARK RICHARD I CLARK ROBERT D CLARK RUSSELL B CLARK STEVE CLARK TERRY L CLARK THOMAS L CLARK VIOLET E CLARKE JAMES H CLECKER MARIA P CLEMENS CECILE CLEMENT BRAD D CLEVENGER RAY CLINE FALLS OASIS IMP DIS CLINKENBEARD DEREK S CLINTON L POWELL CLONTZ ALVIE T CLOUSE RONALD E CMC CONSTRUCTION CNTRL LMB & TRUSS/G HOBIN COATNEY ED L COATS KATHLEEN K COBLANTZ RAY J COCHRAN LESLIE A COCKRUM JACK W COE MERILYN COFFEY KATHRYN N COFFEY LEONA D COFFMAN ROBERT E COLE GLORIA J COLE KAREN A COLE STEVEN W COLEMAN ALLEN B COLEMAN LULA I COLLIER LORRI COLLINS ALLEN M COLLINS BLANCHE E COLLINS DARRELL D COLLINS PATRICIA A COMBS DAVID W COMBS PAUL W COMBS THOMAS COMPTON JUDY R COMPTON LAURENCE R COMSTOCK ROBERT CONANT EATON H CONING GARY A CONKLIN EVELYN M CONKLIN FRANK S CONN JOSHUA W CONNER RON A CONNOLLY MICHAEL CONRADS O B CONTRERAS RICHARD M COOK ALMA A COOK DIANA K COOK JUSTIN E COOKE EDWARD J COOKE ROBERT A COOL WAYNE A COOMBS MAC M COONCE LEE F COOPER DAVE W COOPER EDWARD L COOPER EDWIN T COOPER JAMES H COOPER JAMES L COOPER JOHN D COOPER LAFE M COPELAND RICHARD D COPP ROBERT S CORAZZINI PAUL CORBARI ROBERT S CORDES ROGER A CORNOG CHESTER CORPS CORRIGAN GEORGE J CORRIGAN ROBERT CORUM ALLEN COSNER ANDREW R COSNER FRED R COSSETTE JACK T COTTRELL GENE COUEY KAREN M COUNTRY EST MOBILE HOMES COURSEY LINDA M COURTRIGHT LESTER L COWAN BARBARA COWAN RICK W COX BOYD E COX DENESE COX DON COX OLEN J COX ROBIN COZBY BETSY E CRAIG DALE D CRAM AND RHOADS CRAMBLETT BRENT R CRANE IVA A CRAVENS BUD CRAWFORD ILA L CRAWFORD ROBERT J CREASEY OPAL O CREEL J LEROY CRETSINGER DAVID M CRISAFULLI LINDY W CRISMAN WILLIAM G CROCKER RICHARD L CROFTS FRANKLIN P CROMWELL WILLIAM T CRONIN GEORGE R CROOK CO IMP CROOKS RICHARD C CROSSETT ADA J CROUCH BOB R CROWE DAVID V CROWLEY JAMES B CRUM R C ASSOC CRUSE VERNON A CUELLAR JUDY K CUEVAS JAMES W CULLEY KEVIN R CUMINS JAMES E CUNETTO DEBBIE A CUNNINGHAM MINNIE CUNNINGHAM PATRICK J CUNNION JOHN J CURRIE JAMES A CURTIS LINDA M CURTIS MARCELLA R CURTIS MICHAEL J CUSTENBORDER J C CUTANEO EUGENE C CUTSFORTH DAVID H CUTTING PAT J D & R RENTALS

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809 D & S CATTLE CO D H M DEVELOPMENT CO DACHENHAUSEN ROBERT D DAEGES MICHAEL J DAEUBLE THEODORE C DAGGETT HAZEL M DAHL CLYDE DAHLEN JIM H DAHLSTROM VIRGINIA M DALE ROMIG GIFTS DALEY MATHEW H DANIELS NORMAN P DANIELS TARYN DANNEN W E DANNUNZIO SUE DARLING DAVID M DAUGHERTY J RICHARD DAVIDSON GERALD O DAVIDSON N GORDON DAVIDSON THOMAS A DAVIES JAKE DAVIS ALBERT W DAVIS CHARLES DAVIS COLEMAN E DAVIS DAVID B DAVIS DENNIS L DAVIS EMERY D DAVIS FREDERICK A DAVIS HAROLD DAVIS HOWARD H DAVIS JOE W DAVIS KENNETH DAVIS LON J DAVIS MARTY L DAVIS RANDY C DAVIS RICHARD E DAVIS STAFFORD W DAY GERALDINE B DAY LESTER A DAY MICHAEL H DE KONING EDWIN DEAN FRANK L DEAN HOWARD R DEARDORFF DELBERT R DEBERNARDI GARY L DEBRON JOHN J DECKER EVERETT F DEFREMERY MARY S DEGERMAN KENNETH DEIBELE DEAN C DEJANIKUS MIMI S DEKAY CHARLES W DELGADO JON DELL GERALD C DELL JOHN D DELLER DAVID J DELONG DENNIS G DEMAR KO ENTERPRISES DEMASTERS JAMES G DENLOR INC DENNIS GARY DENNIS WAYNE R DENTON JILLIAN L DENTON KEN R DENTON ROBIN M DENTON WAYNE E DEPOT BUILDING DERIEUX LARRY E DERR JANICE M DESERT SEED DEVINE PATRICK DEVORE LILLIAN DEWEESE HOWARD DEZOTELL ROBERT W DIAZ BONNIE L DIAZ RICHARD E DIBBLE JANET E DIGIANFLIPPO CHRISTINA M DILLEY PATRICK W DILLING PEARL D DIMMITT ROBERT DINGER LLOYD E DINGLE STEPHEN DITMORE DEAN DIXON FLOYD L DIXON LILLIAN O DIXON MIKE L DOBKINS JOHN V DODGE STEVE M DOHERTY ALIDENE M DOHERTY RAY E DOMINGUES PAUL H DON FISHER CONSTRUCTION DONAFRIO DON DONOHO WOODROW W DOOLIN FRED DORIGAN FRANCIS DORSHIMER JR G R DOUBLE B RANCH DOUGLAS BERT R DOUGLAS JEFFREY W DOUGLAS CASCADE CORP DOUGLASS DAVID L DOVER MARILYN DOWD ROY B DOWELL LARRY G DOWERS H DAVID DR TURNER-SPRANG ETAL DRAKE RICK H DRAKE STEVEN A DREES ROY J DREW DAVID L DREW LINDA E DRILL ANTHONY J DRIVER ELBERT D DRY CANYON FARMS DUCHETT ERIC DUCKWORTH CAROL A DUENO KELLI A DUFF GARY C DUFFY TOM DUGGAN DENNIS W DULIN GLENN DUNAWAY DWAYNE T DUNAWAY O E DUNBAR ARLO W DUNBAR SALLY DUNCAN EDWARD N DUNCAN LARRY HEL DUNHAM R HOWARD DUNN EUGENE R DUNN JULIUS H DUNN MARK DUNN PHILIP G DUNN ROBERT M DUNN SHIRLEY A DUNNE ERIC N DUNNE RICHARD D DURAN MONSE DURANT GAIL L DURHAM WILLIAM C DURNING-STALICK ANNE W DURST DON M DYER MIKE EAST PORTLAND INVESTMENT EASTMAN DARWIN C EATON C SUSAN ECKMAN PAUL EDENFIELD BONNIE J EDGINGTON JESSE C EDMONDSON MUSETTA EDWARDS C B EDWARDS C CHICK H EDWARDS EUGENE L EDWARDS LEE E EDWARDS RONALD E EDWARDS WILLIAM J EGAN VIRGINIA G EGELINE STEVEN C EIDE MELVIN D EIDEMILLER DOROTHY D EL TORO EXPRESS INC ELBERS JULIANNE M ELLER WENDELL L ELLIOTT CHARLES R ELLIOTT DARL ELLIOTT DONALD P ELLIOTT MORGAN H ELLIS CLIFF R ELLIS EDMUND ELLIS NANCY I ELLIS ROBERT D ELLISON DAVID G ELLISON JOHN C ELLISON WILLIAM H ELLSWORTH RUSSELL J ELMORE DEBBIE E ELPI TRAVIS J ELSTON JUDY K ELWEFATI MOHAMED N EMERY JOSIE L EMRICK AL ENDICOTT CHARLES ENGIN ASSOC ENGSTLER CAROLE L ENGSTROM MATTHEW J ENOS LEWIS W EORIATTI JULIE N EPSTEIN MICHAEL P ERCANBRACK SHENA ERCOLIN DIANE E ERDMAN HENRY M ERETH MARK W ERICKSON CYNTHIA L ERICKSON K GLENN ERIKSON JOHNNIE C ERIKSON KELLY ERNST STEVE R ERNST-HOUCK JAN K ESHLEMAN EARL ESTERGREEN ALICE ETHREDGE LOIS M EVANS REUBEN W EVERED MARGARET J EVERETT ROGER W EVERHART CHARLES S EWEN KATE M EWING LEON EXTRA R G ESTATE FAGG FRED D FAHNESTOCK KEVIN FAIRCHILD HELEN J FAIRCHILD SCOTT M FALLEY SAM F FALTYS RANDY FANNING CURTIS H FAR WEST FEDERAL BANK FARIS JAMES C FARLEY ROBERT F FARNEY JAMES M FARNSWORTH DAVID A FARR W M FARRELL ALYS BELLE FARRELL J DOUGLAS FARRELL JOE W FEHLMAN AVALYN L FELDSCHAU LAWRENCE FELICIANO MATTHEW A FERGUSON SAMUEL E FERRERA BART R FERTSCH ARON W FICK DEXTER A FIELDS RAYMOND FIJALKA DAVID F

FINCHER HAROLD M FINDLAY HUGH G FINDLEY COLLEN FINK ANNE H FINNELL JORDAN FINNELL MICHAEL R FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD FIRST INTERSTATE BANK FISHER FRANK A FISHER GEORGE A FISHER MARC R FISHER OLIVE E FISHER RODGER A FISHER THOMAS C FISHER WALDO R FITCH HARRY L FITZPATRICK E B FITZSIMMONS DWAYNE L FLANDEY MEYER F FLEGEL WINSTON M FLESHER RICK A FLETCHER H K FLINT LARRY B FLOREA DAN FLORY DAWN A FLOWER ROBERT C FLOWERS ELSIE L FLOYD JEFF H FOLEY ROBERT H FOLEY THOMAS P FOLLETT LYNN P FORD EVELYN E FORE STEVEN E FOREMAN LYLE G FORSBERG VAUGHN D FOSS ART FOSTER A L FOSTER FRANK FOSTER GRANT FOSTER MILO FOUCAULT JAMES FOUNTAIN TIM N FOWLER BETTY J FOWLER MARION E FOWLS CAROLINE A FOX AARON W FOX RODNEY G FOXLEY EDWARD FOY DWIGHT D FRANCE DAVID W FRANEY JAMES M FRANK RICHARD L FRANKE HERBERT P FRANKLIN EDITH M FRANKLIN WILLIAM L FRANKS R MINOR FRANTZ VIRGINIA F FRASER PATRICIA M FRASER QUENTON J FRAZEE D BRUCE FRAZEE NONA ESTATE OF FREEMAN JACK N FREEMAN PAT S FREEMAN ROBERT J FREIGHTLINER INC FRIBERG RUTH E FRICKEY ALLAN K FRIEND PAMELA S FRISTROM GUY FRITZ GEORGIA FULLER ROBIN L FULTON LAMOINE FULTON & KAUFFMAN FUNKHOUSER JOHN A FUQUA DONALD K FUQUA JEANETTE FURLOTT CLIFF D GAGE THOMAS M GAINES CLAY GAINES THOMAS M GAISER DONALD F GALE WESTON W GALES COLLENA M GALL ALVIN G GALLOWAY JOHN C GAMBLE TED R GANDER DAVE C GANGER LAWRENCE GARD EDWARD E GARDEN HOME PROPERTIES GARDNER BUSTER L GARDNER GARY P GARDNER ROBERT C GARNER RALPH J GAROUTTE MIKE S GARRISON CALEEN A GARRISON JAMES ESTATE OF GASCON JOSEPH F GASSNER JENNIFER F GATES MICHAEL A GAYLORD EDSON C GECK HAL E GEHRKE CLARENCE A GEORGE ERNEST GEORGE MARY A GERALD A COFFMAN GERBER JOHN C GERBER ROBERT D GERDES EARL GERGEN YVONNE C GERKE EUNICE GESIK KELLEY A GHIRARDO LOUIS J GIBBONS JAMES H GIBSON CHRISTINE A GIBSON STANLEY M GIBSON WARREN N GIBSON WILLIAM H GIEFFELS MONTE J GILBERT DORATHY GILBERT TED D GILCHRIST EDITH GILCHRIST F RUST GILLERAN TIM F GILLESPIE DEREK P GILLILAND NORMAN GILLUM HARLEN G GILMER JERRY L GILMORE BERNADETT L GILMORE VIRGLE F GILPIN CLARENCE H GILPIN EILEEN GILPIN MICHAEL E GIORDANO MIKE S GITTINGS EMMA H GLANTZ KENNETH E GLASGOW THELMA L GLASPEY SUSAN L GLASS BYRON B GLAZIER HOWARD L GOBLE WILBUR M GOCKE WILLIAM F GODAT CARYL E GODDARD GALE L GODDARD LAVONNE G GODDEN JACOB J GOERTLER ROBERT ESTATE OF GOETZ R L GOLDBERG SARA G GOLDSMITH RICHARD E GOLDSTRAND LUCY GOMPERTZ KATHLEEN A GONZALEZ FRED C GONZALEZ LINDSEY C GOODFELLOW PAUL GOODMAN JEFFREY L GOODMAN JOHN J GORDON EVELYN GORDON JOHN R GORDON NORMAN W GOSS JAMES L GOTCHY CLARENCE E GOULD ALTA M GOYTIA RUBEN GRABENHORST RICHARD GRADY ROBERT M GRAGE DENNIS H GRAHAM DUANE K GRAHAM JEFFERY GRANITE BUTTE GRANT CLOYCE J GRANT JOHN H GRANT MARYDITH D GRANUM MICHAEL J GRAVANCE DAVE L GRAVES FRED C GRAVES REBECCA K GRAVES ROBERT D GRAVLEY JAMES GRAY CLAIRE M GREEN DOROTHY E GREEN LESTER D GREEN RICHARD W GREEN W B GREEN WILLIAM D GREEN BROTHERS FARMS GREENBLAT ALAN P GREENOUGH ED GREESON DAVID L GREGG MARGARET E GREGOIRE JOHN J GREGORY ALEX L GREGORY RENEA E GREKEL EDWARD GRESSER TIM W GRIBSKOV POLLY J GRIFFIN E M GRIFFITH JIM D GRIFFITH TRADING CO INC GRIFFITHS ARTHUR L GRIGGS DAN D GRINDSTONE LIVESTOCK GROSHONG THOMAS M GROSS WILLIAM N GROVE GERALD E GROVER MICHAEL GRUBB DONALD T GULLICKSON CARLA GUNDERSON CECIL V GUNJUR YATIAH S GUNN LINDA GUNTER ROBERT G GUS ASSOC GUYTON CHARLES HAAS PAUL G HAAS PAUL H HAASE PHILLIP R HADDOCK JOHN D HAFTER ELITA V ESTATE OF HAGEMAN PAUL L HAGER ORVAL O HAINES KEVIN HAINES RALPH A HALDORS C S HALE SAMUEL L HALEY THOMAS W HALEY WILLIAM W HALICKI RAY HALL BILLY J HALL FRED A HALL HAZEL M HALL JIM F HALL LEROY E HALL MARGUERIT A

HALL MICHAEL HALL RICHARD L HALLOWELL SCOTT A HALSTEAD KATHY R HALTER JERRY HAMAR BRUCE A HAMILTON FLETCHER HAMILTON JAMES G HAMILTON RAY N HAMMACK DRUSILLA HAMMACK JOHN HAMMACK SANDRA K HAMMACK ALAN G & SANDRA HAMMON DURLIN R HAMPTON DANA S HAMPTON BUTTE GRAZING ASN HANBY MARIE HANCOCK PAUL HANKINS CLAUDE L HANKINS TRACY A HANLON COLLEEN L HANSEN HAZEL L HANSEN MARLENE B HANSEN RON R HANSEN STEPHEN G HANSON ARNOLD E HANSON DONALD A HANSON JILL M HANSON OSWALD HANSON PHILIP L HARBAUGH EVA HARBEINTNER ROBERT G HARBICK WAYNE R HARDCASTLE CONSTRUCTION HARDIE ARTHUR D HARDIN BOB W HARDING EDNA HARDING HAROLD S HARDING MICHAEL L HARGIS ROBERT E HARING ARLINE HARKLEROAD DONALD G HARLESS DEWEY R HARMAN EUGENE C HARMON KAY HARMON ROD E HARMON WILLIAM D HARMON WILLIAM W HARNESS DON HAROLD W J HARPER TRACY K HARRELL ALLEN L HARRINGTON EVERETT J HARRINGTON STEVE HARRIS E MAY HARRIS GLENN H HARRIS GRACE HARRIS JOHNNIE HARRIS LAURA HARRIS WAYNE L HARRISON WILLARD R HART E MARLENE HART GLENN A HARTRICH CATHY S HARTSOCK ROBERT E HASKIN ROBERT HASKIN VERN G HASLEY LESLEY L HASWELL RICHARD W HATTAN MAXINE H HAVERFIELD BURTON O HAVERLY JOHN HAWKINS GEO L HAWLEY NANCY G HAYCOCK RICHARD D HAYHURST WILLIAM L HAYNES JACK L HAYNES JONNIE S HAYNES ROBERT N HAYS DICK E HAYS KEN E HBK SERVICES INC HEAGLE JAMES H HEALEY JOHN M HEATER ROLLIN K HEATON THOMAS W HEBB PAUL H HECHT WILLIAM J HEDGE J DALE HEIBEL HEATHER M HEIMAN HERBERT HEIN ESTER J HEINRICH DAN J HEINRICH TINA HEISER GEORGE W HEITKEMPER PETER HELBERG ERIC G HELFRICH PHILLIP E HELMS SUSAN HELTON CLINTON L HELZER C L HEMPENIUS STEVE H HEMPHILL CHARLES T HENDERSON DORIS J HENDRICKSON RUSSELL HENKEL JACK R HENNEN JACK D HENRY JACQUELIN B HENRY MARLEE L HENRY RICHARD R HENRY THOMAS A HENSLEY MICHAEL A HENSON CHESTER N HERAUF GARY A HERB STANLEY C HERING JOHN B HERMAN MICHAEL R HERNANDEZ MIKE J HERNANDEZ SHELLI R HERRING HUBERT B HERRING JACK D HERRMANN FRANZ E HERSHBERGER DOYLE A HERVIN JASON O HETZLER HOWARD G HEUSTON LEONARD Z HEWITT BRIANNA HEWITT VICKI I HEWITT WILLIAM J HEYDEN JOHN R HIBBARD GEORGE HIBBARD JIM O HIBBS CHARLES H HICKEY ILA M HIGDON TERRY L HIGH DESERT MORTGAGE HILDEBRANDT RUSSELL R HILDERBRAND FRANCESS O HILL DOUGLAS A HILL JOHN J HILL RONALD J HILL ROY J HILLE ARVIN HILLS JAMES R HILT MURRAY E HINDERLIDER JOHN M HINRICHS JOHN HINTON DALLAS L HINTON JIM E HINTZ NANCY L HITES JAMES L HOADLEY SHANE K HOBGOOD ROBYN C HOBIN LESLIE R HOBIN BUILDING MTRLS HODGES DONNA J HODGSON CECIL HODGSON ROBERT L HOFFMAN GARY HOFSTETTER ADAM J HOGAN RITA E HOLBROOK STEPHEN M HOLCOMB RICHARD E HOLLAMON DARLENE L HOLLAND JAMES F HOLLAND TATSYANA HOLLIDAY AL R HOLLIPETER ROBERT C HOLLOWAY DAVID B HOLMES BRANDIE L HOLTER DALVIN D HOLUM JAMES M HOMAN ASHLEY HOOD NUEL HOPKINS WILLIAM E HOPPER JOHN A HORN SHERRY L HORNBACK DANIEL W HORSE BUTTE RANCH HORSELL WILLIAM B HORTON CHERRY R HOSFORD JAMES D HOSKINS KATHLEEN L HOTCHKISS ROBERT M HOUGH MERLE M HOUSDEN OSCAR ESTATE HOUSTON WILLIAM C HOWARD DALE W HOWARD HANK L HOWE WIL & ASSOC HOWEY JERALD E HUBER HAROLD A HUBSTENBERGER KELLY F HUDDLESTON L P HUDSON GORDON W HUDSON NEIL K HUDSON THOMAS R HUFSTADER RICK A HUGHES GEORGE W HUGHES JOHN G HUGIE SCOTT HULBERT RONALD A HULL WARREN T HULL ENTERPRISES LLC HULSE DAVEY W HUNKING MARTHA E HUNT KATHRYN M HUNTER HARRY HUNTER VANCE HURLBURT F T HURST L M HURST RONALD L HVAL GARY L IACOVETTA BEA S IHLE CARL IMCE LEROY IMWALLE ROBERT J INGLIS MARIE A IRELAND KENNETH G IREY H VERN ESTATE IRWIN ANDREA IRWIN RICHARD H ISAAC BURDETT E ISHAM RICHARD L IVERSON LARRY R IVIE GEORGE E J D ROELKE CABINETS J G BOSWELL CO JACKSON BIRT W JACKSON DAVID L JACKSON LEE R JACKSON RICHARD E JACKSON V L JACKSON WAYNE J

JACOB JOHN R JACOBSON ALAN G JACOBSON TIM D JACQUES PHIL D JAHN DONALD D JAMES ALVIN C JAMES MICHAEL D JAMES SHERI K JAMES WILLIAM R JANES CINDY JANIGIAN MELISSA JANSEN ELLEN M JAQUA MARY JARVIS JAN G JASA REUBEN D JEARDOE CHERYLL A JEFFERS DEAN W JENKIN CRAIG F JENKINS JACK K JENNINGS WILLIAM L JENSEN JAMES W JENSEN RICK C JENSEN WILLIAM K JEPSEN JERALD R JEPSON NICHOLAS H JERNAGAN M L ROY JEYS LUKE JOHN COELHO & SONS JOHNS JERRY L JOHNSON BILL H JOHNSON CARL B JOHNSON CHARLES P JOHNSON CLARENCE R JOHNSON DAVID L JOHNSON DAVID K JOHNSON DONALD E JOHNSON DOUGLAS S JOHNSON E J JOHNSON GARY W JOHNSON HARVEY W JOHNSON HERBERT L JOHNSON INA M JOHNSON JULIE A JOHNSON KENNETH P JOHNSON MARIAN JOHNSON MARK A JOHNSON MARK J JOHNSON MARTIN W JOHNSON MELLADEAN JOHNSON MICHAEL G JOHNSON RAYMOND A JOHNSON RICHARD JOHNSON ROBERT E JOHNSON ROBERT L JOHNSON SHARON R JOHNSON TOM W JOHNSON W B JOHNSON WENDY E JOHNSON WILLIAM JOHNSTON EVERETT L JOHNSTON GERALD B JOHNSTON HELEN M JOHNSTON MARGARET M JOHNSTON ROBERT W JONAS BOB W JONAS DANIEL T JONES CHARLES P JONES DAVID S JONES DAVID L JONES ILSE JONES JAMES H JONES JEFFREY L JONES JERRY JONES LINDA L JONES LUELLA K JONES OLIVER R JORDAN GEROLD W JORGENSEN ARLINE M JOSEPH-ARNTSON JUDY LOWELL D JUSTICE DONALD B K F & H REPAIR INC KADHIM BASIM M KAGEE INC KALBERER HOTEL SUPPLY KALISZEWSKI JOSEPH V KALK NICOLE J KANADA KIRBY KANE KEVIN M KAPELA EILEEN KARDAS WILLIAM F KASHNER DICK KASZA IMRE KAUFFMAN KRISTI J KAUTZ JUNIOR W KAVANAGH DEVEREUX L KEALIHER KEELE W SCOTT KEENER JAMES P KELLER JOHN T KELLER KORI T KELLER SUSANNE R KELLY DOROTHY E KELLY JEAN E KELSEN STEVEN KEMP JOHN KENDALL DOUGLAS D KENDALL JAMES N KENDRICK CHARLES P KENDRICK MICHAEL M KENNEDY FRANK W KENNEDY H LEON KENNEDY THOMAS A KENT ALAN R KENTNER PAMELA KENTNER VIOLA M KENYON STANLEY J KEPHART HORACE KESSEL JOYCE KESSLER DOUGLAS C KEY TV INC KIGHTLINGER HUGH KILIAN NADINE R KILLIAN GEORGE KILLINGER DONALD KIMBALL EDWARD L KINCH PHYLLIS KINDSVATER ROBERT A KING GENE KING LEWIS M KINGERY JACK W KINGSBURY DOROTHY W KINNEY STEVE B KIPPER DEBRA J KIRBY CLARENCE L KIRCHNER BOB E KIRK RAYMOND L KIRKLAND DAVID W KIRKPATRICK MARK D KIRKPATRICK RICHARD T KIRKWOOD MARIETTA L KISER BOB L KISSLER CLARENCE KITCHELL LONNY S KITTERMAN YVONNE A KITTLESON CHARLES R KJOS OLGA KLECKER NICK KLECKER SHELLEY T KLEIN RODNEY L KLEINHEINZ WILLIAM C KLINE OROVILLE KLINK CLEM K KLONOSKI PAT KNAPP GERRY L KNAPP W H KNICKERBOCKER M E KNIGHT GLADYS KNOKE LINDSEY A KNOX BUCKLEY G KNUCKLES VICKIE J KOBASIC JOHN I KOEHLER PETER H KOHLER TERESA A KOHLS DAVID A KOLLEN CODY T KONNER MICHAEL S KOOP DAVID A KOOPS ROLLIE B KOOPS TUNIS B KOOYMAN DOUGLAS J KOPLAU ROBERT O KOROSKI DAVE M KOROUSH LONNIE D KOSCT CHAD KOSMALA GARY W KOUTSOURIS PETER T KOVACHEVICH LARRY KOZAK MICHAEL KRAFT ROBERT KRAH EST OF DOROTHY W KRAJCIK MAX J KRAMER DONNA M KRATZ RUSSELL W KREHBIEL NORM G KRESHON TOM L KROEKER MELANIE F KROPF LAWRENCE KUEHN ROBERT O KUEHNE EDWIN A KURTZ JERRY R LA BERRY LEGELE LADUE STEPHEN B LADUKE J H LAFFERTY L F LAKESHORE LODGE LAMKIN GLORIA LANCE JIM LANDERHOLM LEWIS LANDERS MIKE T LANDIS CLINT L LANDIS ROY S LANDRUM DARRELL LANE RYAN J LANEY JODY L LANGE STEPHANIE M LANGMAS DAVID A LANTER ROBERT T LARIONOV LEON M LARISCH RUDY LARREW BROOKE LARSEN JAMES P LARSEN MARK S LARSON MARK S LARSON REX A LARSON RICHARD A LARSON ROY L LASS DENNIS E LATHAM PAUL E LATOURETTE FRANCES S LATTIMER KRYSTAL G LAVAGNINO LORENZO F LAVENDER JANICE M LAWRENCE LORI L LAWSON ROBERT W LAWTON WILLIAM C LAYTON FRANK P LAYTON STEPHANIE B LE DOUX ROY LEACH M WILTON LEADER ESTHER W LEAF LYNETTE M LECKBAND EVA LECKBEE MERVIN

LEDBETTER CHAD R LEDERMAN JOHN P LEDGERWOOD LADONNA J LEE K L LEE MONROE A LEE TERRIE Y LEE WILLIAM F LEEVER MICHAEL E LEFEBRE BEN LEFLEY WAYNE W LEFORS LAURIE J LEGG GALEN L LEGORE JOE W LEHMAN KATHY LEHUQUET BRAD D LEITH ADELAIDE F LEITH ANNA E LEIX FRED W LEMKE MARK C LENGELE LYNDON C LENZ ROSEMARY H LEON JOHN E LEONARD CAROLYN A LEONE MICHAEL D LEONTI MARK S LETZ ROY LEVI COLIN T LEWALLEN DENNIS L LEWIS MARK LEWIS MIKE G LEWIS R L LEWIS RICHARD D LEWISON JUSTIN J LIAO FRANK LIBOLT RICHARD E LIGHT ROBERT C LILLEBO CHRIS H LILLYWHITE HEROLD S LIND HILL A LINDE DAVID J LINDLEY BRYAN D LINDSAY C R LINK DAVID LIPPINCOTT MICHAEL R LIPPOLD FLORENCE LISENSKY MARY ESTATE OF LITTLE RICHARD D LITTLEDEER ROY LIVESEY RICHARD W LOBUE MILDRED V LOCKER JAMES R LOCKYEAR MAX L LOEB ALFRED A LOEKS RICK E LOGAN NORMA D LOGAN NORMAN D LOMBARDO JOSEPH T LONG JOHN C LONG MARK L LONG QUINN A LOOMIS BARBARA L LOPEZ JOSE M LORD ANTONY N LOTT DEBRA J LOUTH SHARON LOVEGREN GRANT A LOVEJOY PAUL D LOWE LEON A LOWE RICHARD G LOWE ROBERT I LOWERY BERNADINE LOWNDES RANDY M LOWRY H TYRRELL LOZIER ROBIN D LUCAS WILLIAM A LUCKMAN ANGIE J LUCKMAN MARJORIE S LUDEMAN SHIRLEY LUND KENNETH M LUNDGREN FERN L LUNDGREN GARLAN R LUNDGREN JOHN A LUNDGREN LARRY LUSK CAROLYN L LUSTER DAVID R LUTON ROBERT C LUTSCHG ROBERT C LUTTON PAUL E LUTZ C W LUZIUS PAUL L LYDY THYRA I LYNCH CHARLES B LYNCH GARY S LYNCH LESLIE J LYON LEON LYSAGHT MONICA E LYTLE WALLACE MACDONALD JOHN MACKEY RANDY L MACTHERSON GARY K MACY GREG MACY TERRY L MADDOX JERRY MADRAS VET CLINIC MAHODY PATRICK J MAIN ROBERT E MAINE D C MAINELINE RANCH MAJOR BILL MALLOY LUDWIG & WHEELER MANES JOSEPHINE A MANESS DEBBIE MANGERS ROBERT G MANN CLARK D MANN FLETCHER J MANN HARLAN A MANNIX LAWRENCE A MANSFIELD ROBERT W MANZANARES DIANA R MARCUM JOYCE K MARIPOSA FARMS LTD MARJAMA MARVIN L MARKGRAF CHERYL R MARKS CREEK LODGE INC MARNEY TIMOTHY W MARSH TAMMY MARTENS THOMAS J MARTIN CRAIG L MARTIN EDWARD G MARTIN FRANK T MARTIN JOSEPH H MARTIN KENNETH R MARTIN LOTTIE D MARTIN RALPH W MARTINSON AMBER MARYBROOK CORP MASNICA DEBRA J MASON ARMEL S MASON BETTY S MASON JEFFERY A MASON LORRAINE MASSEY BURL V MAST JOHN R MASTERS TINA MASTON ANN MATHENY JERROLD G MATHENY RONALD G MATHESON WELL MATHEWS VALERIE G MATSON ERNEST T MATSON J W MATSON NEAL M MATTHEWS EMORY A MATTSON FLOYD G MATTSON LYNNE MAULT BILLIE J MAUPIN GARRETT H MAURICIO HECTOR MAXWELL MARION M MAY A DANIEL MAY REBECCA S MAY-VARAS CARRIE M MAYER ELIZABETH MAYFIELD RON MAYHUGH TIMOTHY L MCADAMS LLOYD C MCALISTER WILLIAM R MCAULAY ROBERT C MCBETH LEWIS A MCBRIDE KIMBERLY L MCCABE TERRANCE MCCAFFERTY JOHN MCCAHAN ESTHER MCCAIGE JOHN E MCCAIN ELVA G MCCAIN JANICE E MCCAIN JANIE M MCCALEB J FRED MCCALL RICHARD L MCCALLISTER JEANETTE L MCCALLISTER ROYAL H MCCANN MALACHY MCCARTHY T M MCCARY HULEN C MCCARY JAMES C MCCAWLEY EDGAR MCCAY DENNIS M MCCLAIN RUSTY L MCCLAMMY THOMAS V MCCLAUGHRY SHARON MCCLEARY DAVE L MCCLOW AND HOPE MCCONNELL COLVIN S MCCONNELL NANCY R MCCORD BRUCE M MCCORMACK G M MCCOY DAWN MCCOY LEE R MCCREA JOHN D MCCREIGHT DONALD L MCCULLOUGH RON MCCULLY RUTH E MCCUTCHEN MARK MCDANIEL ELMER L MCDANIEL JOHN H MCDANIEL LAVINA M MCDARMENT RICHARD W MCDONALD B K MCDOWELL MAXINE E MCDUFFIE & YORK MCEWEN BARBARA M MCFADDEN JAMES H MCFARLAN STEVEN D MCFARLANE WILLIAM MCGAVRAN MARK S MCGEE JAMES A MCGHEE LLOYD M MCGILL ROBERT D MCGINNIS THOMAS E MCGLOTHLIN ROSELINE A MCGUIRE EDWARD E MCHUGH ALICE MCINTOSH DONAL W MCINTOSH GENE MCINTOSH JACK L MCKAY CHARLES B MCKAY DAVID J MCKAY HARLEY MCKAY JEFF A MCKECHNIE ROBERT P MCKELVY THELMA N MCKEMIE BERT D MCKENZIE EARLINE L MCKIBBIN JOHN S

MCKINNEY GARY F MCLAGAN ROBERT R MCLAREN JOHN J MCLAUCHLIN RUTH S MCLEOD DOUGLAS MCMICKEN MARGARET L MCMILLAN O E MCMINN STEPHANIE L MCMULLENS SHARON I MCMURRAY LYNN L MCNABB JUDITH M MCNALL DAVID D MCNEE ANN MCPHERSON DONALD MCQUAID JOE E MCREYNOLDS MATTHEW W MCSWAIN MARY E MCVAY SHAWN T MCWILLIAM BJ MEADOWS BYRON D MEDEIROS LOUIS J MEEKER MARSHA A MEEKS LUCILLE M MEIER JOHN T MEJDELL HARRY H MELGAARD BRENT R MENDENHALL NANCY G MENDENHALL STEVE MERCER D E MERCER THOMAS H MERLICH STUART K MERRICK STEVEN MERRITT GENE W MERWIN JOHN W METKE J PAT MEYERS DON E TRUST “B” MEZORI MARGARET M MICHALSEN ROGER C MIDDLETON BETTY J MIDWAY PLUMBING MIKESELL KRISTI MILES RAY M MILES VADA L MILKS DUANE MILLER CRAIG R MILLER DON E MILLER DON M MILLER EDNA R MILLER EMILY J MILLER GLENN MILLER HARLAN R MILLER HARVEY I MILLER HELEN A MILLER JERRY I MILLER KAREN A MILLER KENNETH W MILLER L VIVIAN MILLER MORRIS M MILLER RAYMOND L MILLER ROBERT W MILLER ROBERT L MILLER STANLEY F MILLS REBECCA S MILLS ROCKY MILLS WILLIAM F MINNETTE MITCH J MINNICK PAULINE MISCHEL ROD D MITTS LINDA & JOHN MIZE ANNIE M MLASKO RUDOLPH R MODE GARY R MOELLER CALVIN E MONAHAN BEVERLY K MONROE BARBARA MONSON LEFTY MONTGOMERY EVANS MONTGOMERY LORREN K MOODY LARRY R MOORE DANIEL R MOORE DELLA M MOORE FRANCES N MOORE GARY T MOORE JAMES W MOORE LIN G MOORE MARGIE M MOORE PANSY L MOORE PETER C MOORE CLEAR CO MOOREHEAD DAVID M MOORMAN JEANNETTE M MORALES GEORGE MORALES L M MORAN DENNIS B MORAN PAUL D MORE JOHN H MOREHOUSE MARION R MORELLI SUE A MORELLI-WIDMARK MORFIN RICHARD F MORGAN BEVERLY MORGAN CARL E MORGAN HAROLD R MORGAN MICHAEL G MORGAN RAPP MORGAN RUSSELL G MORGAN TERESA A MORISETTE SETH MORRIS ARCHIE J MORRIS EVERETT R MORRIS GARY W MORRIS KYLE MORRIS LYDIA C MORRIS RICHARD K MORRIS ROBERT L MORRIS B MORRISON GERALD L MORRISON HARRY A MORRISON ROBERT N MORRISON WAYLAND E MORTGAGE BANCORPORATION MORTON PETER F MOSAR ROBERT A MOSCHETTI RON MOSES ROBERT L MOSS SUSAN MOUSER OLEN J MOWLDS JD OLDS KEN C MRS ESTATE MUD SPRINGS RANCHES MUHLEMAN JENNIFER L MUHLHAUSER CONRAD C MUIR DIANE L MULE SHOE CATTLE CO MULLARD PHILLIP G MULLENS MICHAEL L MULLINS RICHARD D MUMFORD DWIGHT C MUMMERT A EUGENE MUNK DANA A MUNKERS HAZEL J MUNSON W E MURDERS D W MURDERS RONALD L MURDOCH THOMAS L MURPHY AL MURPHY FATHER J MURPHY LOIS L MURRAY ARTHUR E MURRAY JOHN R MUTCH AMANDA MUZGAY PERRY MUZZEY FRANK D MYERS MONTE K NAGEL JOHN E NAGEL JOHN K NASON D SCOTT NASON DENNIS R NATION R CLARK NAUMANN DAVID R NAYLOR JASON NAYLOR ROBERT M NEAL ELIZABETH C NEET DARRELL D NEFF KENT E NELSON A TED NELSON ELWIN W NELSON HARRY NELSON ROBERT D NELSON WALTER J ESTATE NESBIT FRANK M ESTATE OF NESS STEVEN A NEUGARD JON W NEUMEISTER VERA NEWCOMB WILLIAM D NEWMAN JIMMIE F NEWTON MARVIN M NEWTON THEODORE E NICHLOS ERNEST H NICHOLAS NORMAN H NICHOLS BETTY J NICHOLSON SCOTT L NICKERSON GARY NICOLAI THEODORE NIENDORF JOHN E NIERMANN ALVIN H NIESS DAVID R NOAH G KENNETH NOBLE ANGEL NOBLE MARGARET NOBLE MARVIN B NOBLET CAROLINE NOLAN DANIEL D NOLEN EDWARD C NORDBY ROBERT H NORDSTROM RAY A NORMAN JIM B NORMAN RON P NORTHAM MICHAEL B NORTHWEST DREAM HOMES NOW & THEN SHOP NUGENT ROY C O’BRIEN JOHN OAK K R OAR KATE A OBRIEN PATRICK F OBRIEN ROBERT M OCHOCO TELECASTERS INC OCONNELL MICHAEL ODLE RICHARD V OFFICER JIM OFFIELD DONALD F OHOLLAREN JOHN ESTATE OF OHIO KNIFE CO OLDHAM ALLEN P OLEARY CLARENCE OLEMAN DELMER L OLIVER MARY L OLIVER PATRICK J OLIVIER STEVE R OLMSTED VERNON OLSEN DAVID S OLSON CHEVRON OLSON CRAIG R OLSON DARIS G OLSON GLENN L OLSON HARVEY J OLSON JAMES A OLSON PATRICK K OMNI RESOURCES OMOHUNDRO PAUL H ONEAL JULIE R ONEEL WESLEY G ONEIL LESTER H

ONEIL RICHARD D OPIE HAZEL OPOKA KAROL OREGON RECOVERY-OXFORD HOUSES OREGON SUN RANCH INC ORRELL SARAH S ORTLOFF ROD ORZECHOWSKI MELINDA OSBORNE BILL R OSKO GEORGE E OSTROM SCOTT W OSUNA KAREN M OTTERSON MELVIN P OUELLETTE NORRIS H OVERBAY RON I OVERBY H E OVERHOLSER DENYS D OWEN GENE OWEN RACING SHELLS OWENS JOHN OWENS NEIL D OWINGS LEONARD V OWINGS PATRICK OWNBEY BILL PACHECO MARK PACIFIC 1ST FEDERAL PADGET RAYMOND E PADGETT ALLEN J PAGE ALICE L PALFY STEVE P PALMER DAVID PALMER JUDY D PALMER MICHAEL R PALMER VERNON W PANG DAVID T PANNER OWEN PARK JESSE L PARK RONALD A PARK MOTEL PARKER ED J PARKER GARY W PARKER GEORGE A PARKER RON PARKEY WANDA M PARKS GARY A PARRY JAMES W PARSONS MARK D PARTCH JEROME E PARTNEY G L PASCHALL GARY W PASCHALL SAMUEL PASCHALL W ELOISE PATERA LYNNE M PATT OLNEY PATT RALPH O PATTENAUDE MARVIN M PATTERSON CURTIS M PATTERSON EMMITT C PATTERSON HEATHER C PATTERSON SUE PATTON JAMES A PATTON LOWELL E PAULSON DONALD M PAULSON SALLY L PAULSON ENTERPRISES INC PAULY RANCH PAYNE MARTHA K PAYNE WILMA L PEALATERE RALPH PEARSON CATHY L PEASE GILBERT C PEASE MARK W PEASLEY ROBERT N PEDERSEN RAY PEIFFER JANET A PELKEY FRED A PELTON RIDGE ROCK & LAND PENA LEN A PENCE LORETTA J PENDERGRAFT GENUIA M PENNEY ARTHUR W PENNINGTON DANIEL C PEREZ PAULO PERIN LARRY A PERKINS BONNIE PERKINS VONDA PERRY CHARLES L PETE WILSON REALTY PETERS EDWARD A PETERS RANDY W PETERS RICHARD K PETERSEN LAWRENCE W PETERSEN MICHAEL S PETERSEN RICHARD L PETERSEN WALTER F PETERSON DEE ANN PETERSON JACK B PETERSON PAUL D PETERSON RICK A PETERSON ROLF R PETERSON THELMA PETFORD CHRIS PETRIE TOM PETROZZI DANIEL P PETTET J D PETTET JOSEPH D PFAFF HENRY V PFAFMAN JIM PFEFFER EDITH PHEIFER KATHLEEN R PHILLIBER WILLIAM R PHILLIPS BEVERLY PHILLIPS CHARLES E PHILLIPS DIAN L PHILLIPS GEORGE J PHILLIPS LLOYD PHILLIPS ROGER C PHILLIPS RON PHILLIPS THOMAS J PICKARD BOB N PICKETT BARBARA H PICKETT JAMES F PIEPER DEAN M PIEPER ROBERT L PIERATT BROS PIERCE GARY PIERCE JOHN S PIERCE PAUL PILLION PAT PINA DAVID A PIONEER INDUSTRIES PIPER WILLIAM D PITTS CARROLL E PITTS LAWRENCE D PLATT PATTY A POBANZ DONALD E POINDEXTER JEFF T POLLY LOIS C POMEROY TOM POND ALEX PONGRACZ MATYAS PONTIUS JUANITA L PONTON KENNETH F POOLE ALBERT R POOLE CAROL POOLE FLORENCE E POOLE STANLEY D POPE C EVERETT POPPLEWELL GARY L PORTER DOUGLAS D PORTER JESSICA PORTER LARRY R PORTER WILLIAM W PORTILLO JUANA D PORTUS DIANA L POTTER FRANK POTTS RICHARD POVEY HAROLD B POWELL JAMES W POWELL LEONARD POWELL MARVIN R POWELL MELISSA T POWELL RICHARD D POWERS MICHAEL W POWERS MICHAEL J POWERS ROY PRATZ WARREN W PRENTICE BRUCE G PRICE HAROLD R PRICE JOHN E PRICE PEGGY PRICE RHODA S PRICE WESLEY B PRIGMORE WANDA PRINEVILLE HIGHLANDS LTD PRINZING TRAVIS PROCTOR MARYSE L PROSSER DAVID E PROUGH WILLIAM W PROUTY JOHN E PROVINCE E C PRUNER JAMES C PUCKETT DONALD PULIDO MIGUEL PURA VERNON A PURCELL GREGORY PURCELL PETER J PURVINE BEATRICE M PURVIS DAN PUSHEE VIRL E PYLE JAMES A QUEARY LOUIS B QUILLIN CHARLES QUINCY JAMES E QUINN JOE J R AND T TRUCKING R D B ENTERPRISES INC RABY MARGARET L RACELY ANDREW V RADER O CARL RADIO STATION KPRB RAEBURN TOM J RAHMN GERALD RAINBOW COIN-OP LAUNDRY RAINES GENE M RAINEY JOHN RAMBERG CAROL A RAMEY JOAN L RAMIREZ ALEXIS A RAMOSS SHASTA RAMSEY ALBERT L RAMSEY LLOYD F RANCH HOUSE DELI RANKIN ERNEST L RANKIN JOHN A RANTSCHLER JOHN F RANYARD BONNIE R RAPUE KARON Y RAU GEORGE A RAUBERTUS STANLEY RAWLINS GARY RAWLINS GERALD S RAWLINSON RONALD F RAYBURN WILLIAM S RAYGOR FRANCIS W RAYMOND FREDRICK H RAYNIS EDGAR A READ KATHLEEN M RECTOR AUDREY REDDING DALE R REED DEE L REED JOSEPHINE K REED RONALD


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LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND 2011 Pavement Restoration ST11KA

LEGAL NOTICE Notice of Sheriff's Sale Execution in Foreclosure (Real Property)

NOTICE OF INVITATION TO BID

WASHINGTON FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION; Plaintiff, v. MIRON YAKIS; ANASTASIA YAKIS; and DOES 1-10 being all occupants or other persons or parties claiming any right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defendants.

The City of Bend Street Department invites bids for 4.2 lane miles of pavement restoration work. The treatments will be comprised of either a 1.5-inch Overlay or a 2-inch Grind and Inlay. The invitation to bid, plans, specifications, addenda, planholders list, mandatory pre-bid attendees, and notification of bid results for this project may be viewed, printed or ordered on line from Central Oregon Builders Exchange at http://www.plansonfile.com by clicking on "Public Works Projects" and then on "City of Bend" or in person at 1902 NE 4th St., Bend, Oregon. Entities intending to bid should register with the Central Oregon Builders Exchange as a planholder in order to receive addenda. This can be done on-line or by contacting Central Oregon Builders Exchange at: (541) 389-0123, Fax (541) 389-1549, or email at admin@plansonfile.com. Bidders are responsible for making sure they have all addenda before submitting bids. The deadline for submitting bids is: August 9, 2011, at 2:00 PM. Bids will be opened and read at Bend City Hall Council Chambers (located on 1st Floor) immediately after the deadline. Bids must be physically received by the City at the location listed below by the deadline. No faxed or electronic (email) bids shall be accepted. Sealed bids shall be delivered to: Gwen Chapman, Purchasing Manager, City Hall, Administrative Office, 2nd floor, 710 Wall Street, Bend, Oregon 97701 or mailed to her at: City of Bend, PO Box 431, Bend, Oregon 97709. The outside of the envelope or box containing the bid shall include the bidders name and be marked: 2011 Pavement Restoration ST11KA. Prequalification is a requirement. Bidders must have a prequalification approval letter from ODOT or the City of Bend on file with City at the time the bids are opened. Prequalification forms may be obtained from Gwen Chapman at 541-385-6677. New applications for the City of Bend prequalification must be delivered to: City of Bend Purchasing, 710 NW Wall St., Bend, Oregon 97701 at least five days before the bid deadline.

Case No.: 09CV0449MA Notice is hereby given that I will on August 4, 2011, at 11:10 a.m. at the front, west, entrance to the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to the highest bidder, for cash, the following real property, known as 3960 NW SPRUCE AVENUE, REDMOND, Oregon 97756, to wit, Lot Twenty-Six (26), Block Twelve (12), HIDDEN VALLEY MOBILE ESTATES NO. 1, recorded July 15, 1969, in Cabinet A, Page 340, Deschutes County, Oregon; And 1975 Fleetwood Manufactured Home, Manufacturer's Serial Number 702D064315S1854 Said sale is made under a Writ of Execution issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Deschutes, dated April 10, 2011; to me directed in the above-entitled action wherein WASHINGTON FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION as plaintiff, recovered General Judgment Based on Default on October 28, 2009, against MIRON YAKIS, ANASTASIA YAKIS AND DOES 1-10 as defendants. BEFORE BIDDING AT THE SALE, A PROSPECTIVE BIDDER SHOULD INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a)The priority of the lien or interest of the judgment creditor; (b)Land use laws and regulations applicable to the property; (c)Approved uses for the property; (d)Limits on farming or forest practices on the property; (e)Rights of neighboring property owners; and (f)Environmental laws and regulations that affect the property. LARRY BLANTON Deschutes County Sheriff By Jinnie L. Willard, Civil Technician

This project is subject to the provisions of ORS 279C.800 through 279C.870 regarding payment of prevailing wages.

Published in Bend Bulletin Date of First and Successive Publications: June 29, 2011; July 6, 2011; July 13, 2011 Date of Last Publication July 20, 2011

A mandatory Pre-Bid meeting will be held on July 28, 2011, at 10:00 AM at the Council Chambers at Bend City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon

Attorney: Nancy K. Cary, OSB #902254 Hershner Hunter LLP PO Box 1475 Eugene, OR 97440 541-686-8511

Questions should be directed to: Project Manager: Kevin Ramsey, 541-317-3036, kramsey@ci.bend.or.us Purchasing Manager: Gwen Chapman, 541-385-6677, gchapman@ci.bend.or.us

Conditions of Sale: Only U.S. currency and/or cashier's checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment must be made in full immediately upon the close of the sale.

Published July 20, 2011 Gwen Chapman Purchasing Manager People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Day through

The Bulletin Classifieds REED WILLIAM M REESE RUTH ANN REETZ WAYNE P REEVE FARIL REID JERRY REID OPAL K REIGLES JOHN L REILL NORA M REISWIG CAROL D REISWIG DONN A RENCHER FRANK L RENFROW DEAN L RENKEN GLEN P RESCH ALISSA L RESPINI D RACHAEL REX JOHN M REYES FRED R REYNOLDS ANN L REYNOLDS GEORGE REYNOLDS GERALD REYNOLDS JERRY REYNOLDS LOIS REYNOLDS MIKE D REYNOLDS ONITA M REYNOLDS RICHARD S RHEINHOLDT MARVIN RHODEN JACK E RHODES LISA L RIBERA FRANK J RICE J E RICE RICHARD A RICE TOM A RICHARDS BERTHA J RICHARDS HAROLD C RICHARDSON CLYDE R RICHARDSON PATRICIA M RICHARDSON RICHARD L RICHARDSON WILMA RICKETTS HARRIET RICKMAN STEVE RICO ALBERT RIDDLEMOSER M C RIGGINS FLOYD F RIGNEY R LEE RILEY ERROLL F RILEY MAX E RING DON L RIPS RESTR & LOUNGE RIQUELME ENRIQUE RISTAU WARD W RITCHEY MARTIN S RITCHIE GARRY D RIVERS BEN L ROACH B ANNE ROBB BETTY J ROBBINS LAURA D ROBERT RHEN CONST ROBERTS BURTON W ROBERTS DAWN D ROBERTS KEITH R ROBERTS MICHAEL E ROBERTS PHILLIP F ROBERTS RON B ROBERTS RUSSELL C ROBERTS STEVEN SU M ROBERTS THOMAS E ROBERTS TIM P ROBERTSON CAROLYN T ROBERTSON ROSIE L ROBINS DON ROBINSON PAMELA R ROBINSON RITA ROBINSON WARREN A ROBSON JAMES H ROBY DONALD E RODGER RONALD J RODGERS NEIL H RODGERS RALPH R RODRIGUEZ BERNIDET

RODRIGUEZ JOSE F ROELKE JOHN D ROGERS DOUGLAS L ROGERS KIM M ROGERS LELAND T ROGERS R L ROGERS TIMOTHY J ROGERSON RONALD G ROJAS MARIO ROMBOUGH RUSS C ROMERO VIRGIL D ROMMEL DONNA F RONCERAY MAURICE ROOD LEO C ROOT DANIEL A ROSE DOROTHY A ROSE JAMES R ROSE MICHAEL L ROSE ROBERT A ROSENSTIEL DENNIS R ROSENSTIEL ELTON A ROSENTHAL JOHN C ROSES DELMAR R ROSS GEORGE W ROSS MIKE R ROST CARY M ROWAT GORDON A ROWLAND ROBERT W ROY F C ROYDON O M ROYSE TIMOTHY A RRSS CORP RUDD JOSEPH H RUDDELL BILL E RUFKAHR ROSEMAE B RUIS SHARON L RUMLEY S DAVE RUNDELL RON A RUPE BETTY L RUSH ROBB C RUSHING CHARLES R RUTHERFORD ROBERT C RUTLEDGE JIMMY RYCHARD DEBORAH K RYSDAM FRANCIS E S & B FARMS WEST S T B RETREAT CO SACKINGER GEORGE P SADDLER GEORGE D SAILORS TAMMY S SAMPAULESI PAUL J SAMPLE DOUGLAS SAMPLE JOHN A SAMPLES DENNY L SAMUEL STEVE SANCHEZ DAVID N SANDEEN KRISTOPHER SANDER C V SANDERCOCK GARY SANDILANDS JOHN R SANVILLE DAVID K SAUL IVAR SAUNDERS CAROLYN E SCANNELL LEONARD W SCARBOROUGH ROGER D SCHABLE DANA S SCHAFFNER PATRICK J SCHALKA KARL A SCHARN TIM E SCHECHTEL DAVID H SCHIRM RONALD L SCHLANGEN NANCY P SCHMELZ STANLEY C SCHMID SCOTT SCHMIDT VINCENT SCHMITH D H SCHMITT PETE J SCHNEIBEL RICHARD R SCHNEIDER HARVEY P

LEGAL NOTICE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Scott Cloud, Grantor(s), to First American Title Insurance Company trustee, in favor of National City Mortgage, as beneficiary, recorded 4/3/2007, in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon as Instrument No. 2007-19417, which was subsequently assigned to Green Tree Servicing, LLC on March 23, 2010 under Instrument No. 2010-11773, and Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC being the successor trustee, covering the following described real property situated in the above-mentioned county and state, to wit: APN: 201543; Lot 38 of WHITEHORSE, PHASES 6 & 7, City of Redmond, Deschutes County, Oregon; Commonly known as 2046 SW 36th Street, Redmond, OR 97756. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to section 86.753(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $1450.22 beginning on Mar, 2011; plus late charges of $217.53; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expenses, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys' fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $241,346.21 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.00% per annum from Mar, 2011 until paid; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expenses, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys' fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. Whereof, notice is hereby given that Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC the undersigned trustee will on 10/14/2011 at the hour of 11:00 am standard time, as established by ORS 187.110, at the at the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, OR, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the

SCHNITZLER RICHARD P SCHRADER LAURENCE G SCHRADER WILLIAM F SCHROEDER MERLE W SCHULTZ JAMES L SCHULTZE GERALD W SCHUTZ VICTORIA D SCHWIEGER GEORGE B SCOFIELD ART E SCOTT AUBREY W SCOTT CHERYL A SCOTT DONALD V SCOTT DUANE SCOTT JACK R SCOTT JIM J SCOTT SUSAN E SCRUGGS JAMES V SEBER PATRICK R SEDBERRY JOHN W SEE KEITH M SEGALL ELLIOT SEKAVEC LELLIE C SELINSKI LARRY SELLERS JANA L SEPENUK NORMAN SERAFIN NADINE SETHER VALERIE SEVEN STAR RANCH SEVERSON DINA M SEVERY LAWRENCE D SEXTON JIM E SEXTON LEONARD E SHAFFER GENE E SHAFFER ROBERT D SHANK CATHY A SHANK JILLIAN SHAPIRO STEVEN D SHARER ROY H SHAW MAXINE SHAW SAMUEL B SHAW TED T SHEA THOMAS A SHEARER DAVE H SHEARER LINDA S SHEETS WANDA E SHELDEN THOMAS M SHELDON DAWN M SHELDON EVERETT R SHELDON ROSALIE A SHELTON TROY S SHENK CATHERINE A SHEPEARD ZOLA L SHEPHARD STAN SHEPHERD ANNE C SHEPPARD JOHN R SHERMAN OTTO E SHERRY M HARGER SHETLER MELVIN C SHIELDS CATHERINE SHIELDS JERALD C SHIELDS JOHN A SHIRKEY WANDA SHOLES ELDORA E SHORT ALBERN L SHORT JAMES F SHROY MAUDE SHUM SARA J SHURTLEFF JOY G SIEG JENNIFER SIFERS GLINDA F SILER ORVILLE P SILER S CRAIG SIMMONS DON C SIMMONS GLENN C SIMMONS RANDY SIMMONS ROBERT J SIMON BEN N SIMONIS CAROLINE A SIMONSEN KATHLEEN M

date last set for sale. Notice is hereby given that reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must comply with that statute. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the sale status and the opening bid. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. DATED: June 6, 2011 By Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC, 2505 Third Ave Ste 100 Seattle, WA 98121 (206) 903-9966. LEGAL NOTICE Reference is made to that certain trust deed made by Kecia Weaver, Grantor(s), to First American Title Insurance Company of Oregon trustee, in favor of National City Mortgage, as beneficiary, recorded 3/14/07, in the Records of Deschutes County, Oregon as Instrument No. 2007-15323, which was subsequently assigned to Green Tree Servicing, LLC on March 23, 2010 under Instrument No.2010-11763, and Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC being the successor trustee, covering the following described real property situated in the above-mentioned county and state, to wit: APN: 202862; Lot 1, Tanglewood, Phase VII, Deschutes County, Oregon; Commonly known as 20956 Gardenia Ave, Bend, OR 97702. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to section 86.753(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes. The default for which foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly payments of $2036.08 beginning on Apr., 2011; plus late charges of $199.98; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expenses, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys' fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $326,865.76 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.00% per annum from Apr., 2011 until paid; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expenses, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys' fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. Whereof, notice is hereby given that Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC, the undersigned trustee will on 10/24/2011 at the hour of 11:00 am standard time, as established by ORS 187.110,

SIMONSON GEORGE SIMPSON EARL T SIMS JOHN M SINCLAIR RANDAL E SISK IVAN P SISTERS CABLE TV SISTERS CABNT & WDWK INC SISTERS ESCROW BEND TITLE SISTERS FEED & GARDEN SPL SISTERS GEN STORE SISTERS LAND ASSOC SISTERS OFFICE SUPPLY SISTERS TEXACO SIVERS EMMA J SKAAR DENNIS SKAAR DENNY SKEEL LAUREN D SKEEN VEVA E SKEES ERNEST C SKEIE OWEN B SKELTON KEITH D SKERRETT DANIEL H SLACK MARLENE K SLOAN DONALD N SLOAN HAROLD L SMITH AGNES C SMITH ALAN R SMITH BARBARA A SMITH BENJAMIN R SMITH CECIL D SMITH CHARLES R SMITH DEL SMITH DENNIS A SMITH DON W SMITH DONALD R SMITH DOROTHY C SMITH DOUGLAS C SMITH DOUGLAS N SMITH E R SMITH ERICA SMITH GARY SMITH GREGORY L SMITH JAMES B SMITH JANICE K SMITH JERRY M SMITH JOEL G SMITH JOHN B SMITH JOHN E SMITH JOHN D SMITH LARRY E SMITH LINDA M SMITH MARGARET D SMITH MARIAN R SMITH MARLIN M SMITH MICHAEL D SMITH PIPER K SMITH RANDALL L SMITH RICHARD F SMITH RICHARD D SMITH ROGER M SMITH SHAWNA SMITH TIFFANY SMITH VICTOR W SMITH W D SMITH WILBUR J SMITH WILLIAM C SMITH CHRISTOPHER M SMITHWICK LOIS SNYDER DENISE M SOARD LES L SODERBERG JOE SOLBERG DAVID A SOLOMON JOSEPH C SOMMER DAVID E SORENSEN DONALD J SORENSON TED SOSA SAM S SOTO GENE SPARKMAN RAY J

at the at the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond Street, Bend, OR, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. Notice is hereby given that reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to ORS 86.757 and 86.759 must comply with that statute. Due to potential conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will only receive information concerning the sale status and the opening bid. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. DATED: June 20, 2011 By Katrina E. Glogowski, Glogowski Law Firm, PLLC 2505 Third Ave Ste. 100 Seattle, WA 98121 (206) 903-9966. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: xxxxxx7097 T.S. No.: 1315836-09. Reference is made to that certain deed made by Kurt L. Fuchs and Diane L. Fuchs, As Tenants By The Entirety, as Grantor to First American Title Ins Co., as Trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., As Nominee For Sydion Financial, Llc., as Beneficiary, dated September 20, 2008, recorded September 24, 2008, in official records of Deschutes, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. xx at page No. xx, fee/file/Instrument/microfilm/reception No. 2008-39068 covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Lot 14 of Oakview, Phase IX, City of Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon. Commonly known as: 2722 Great Horned Place Bend OR 97701. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Failure to pay the monthly payment due October 1, 2010 of principal and interest and

SPARKS WILLIAM F SPATZ WILLIAM R SPEAKMAN DARREL E SPEAKMAN JANIENE SPECK GEORGIA R SPEEDLING JAMES M SPEER & SONS NURSERY INC SPELBRINK MARCIA L SPENCER CHESTER F SPENCER DEAN H SPENCER PATRICIA L SPIES EDWARD R SPIES HILDE L SPIRES EARL SPITTLER LAURA L SPITTLES TERESA S SPOHN WILLIAM J SPRAGUE GEORGE C SPRENGER TOM SPRINGATE KATHLEEN M SPRINGER DAN SPRINGER JEFFREY M STANARD JAMES R STANDLEY BRYAN L STANDLEY ETAL C STANTON MARJORIE P STARK JACK B STARR CLAUDIA S STARR JERRY L STATON ROBERT W STAUDINGER EARL G STEEGE ELMER H STEELE EVELYN STEEVENS B L STEFFEY ROLAND STENKAMP DIANE M STEPETIN MIKE L STEPHENS LARRY W STEPHENS LESTER P STEPHENS MIKE STEPHENSON BOB L STERKOWICZ MIKE STEVENS WANDA A STEWARD LEE H STEWARD STEVEN L STEWART DAVID D STEWART ROBERT D STEWART ROBERT R STEWART ROGER STEWART URBA H STILLSON JAMES E STOLIAR RON STOLL MANUEL STONE MITCHELL D STONER CLAIRE W STORMER ROBERT W STORRAR DARRYL E STORRS A H STOUTENBURG PAUL C STRAHM JOSEPH F STRATTON WILLIAM D STRAW JENIFER M STREADWICK ROBERT L STREBINGER JOHN STREDWICK BARBARA J STRIDE JON P STRINGFELLOW MICHAEL J STROBEHN CLIFFORD M STROMME ERNEST H STRONEGGER MABEL L STRONEGGER RICHARD J STRONG CARL W STROUD WARD J STROUP CAROL N STROUSE MICHAEL S SUA TRAN V SUGLIAN MICHAEL J SUITER JERRY W SULKOSKY ORTHOPEDIC

subsequent installments due thereafter; together with all subsequent sums advanced by beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust. Monthly payment $1,594.47 Monthly Late Charge $.00. By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $197,459.87 together with interest thereon at 7.250% per annum from September 01, 2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that, Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation the undersigned trustee will on August 30, 2011 at the hour of 1:00pm, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the Bond Street entrance to Deschutes County Courthouse 1164 NW Bond, City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" includes their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: April 25, 2011. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation 525 East Main Street P.O. Box 22004 El Cajon CA 92022-9004 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation Signature/By: Tammy Laird R-386208 07/13, 07/20, 07/27, 08/03

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CLINIC SULLIVAN J KEVIN SULLIVAN JAMES P SULLIVAN JEFF M SULLIVAN JOHN T SULLIVAN PHILLIP M SULLIVAN SIMMONS SUSAN E SUMMERFIELD LYLE SUMMERS JOHNNIE M SUMNER JERRY O SUNBURST HOMES SUNCRAFT MOLDINGS INC SUNDANCE LND & LVSTCK SUNDAY DARWIN SUNDSETH BRUCE R SUNDSETH MARTHA SURGEON MARY KAY SUTTON CLAYTON C SUTTON VAN L SVOBODA CLEO SWANK HERBERT F SWANSON CINDY R SWANSON D SWANSON DALLEEN J SWANSON DAN A SWANSON JOHN S SWANSON LUELLEN I SWARTZ ELMER C SWEARINGEN DAN D SWEENY GORDON F SWENSON OSCAR L SYTSMA GARY J TABER RON F TACKMAN WM H ESTATE TANNER GERALD E TARANOFF ANNABELLE E TATUM HOWARD L TAYLOR ALFRED B TAYLOR DAVID TAYLOR FOREST G TAYLOR L A TAYLOR NAOMI J TAYLOR PAULINE G TAYLOR ROSS H TAYLOR WAYNE L TEEL TANA TEENY DEBRA J TELFER CHRISTINE TEMPLE TAMARA L TENNANT MARGARET C TERREL KATIE TERRILL GEORGE A TERRITO C J TERRY FRANK A TERZIAN STEPHEN TESDALE THOR TEWALT GENE R THE HUB RESTAURANT THE PINE CONE THIEDE DICK D THIEMAN NELLIE B THOMAS BRIAN THOMAS DEBI L THOMAS GIL THOMAS GUY O THOMMEN RONALD L THOMMEN TRAVIS A THOMPSON DONALD THOMPSON F DAVID THOMPSON JIM THOMPSON JOSEPH THOMPSON LARRY L THOMPSON MIKE C THOMPSON RON L THOMPSON STANLEY A THOMPSON TOMMY THORN STAN A THORNE RICHARD M THORNTON G E

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 7429505803 T.S. No.: OR-235454-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, BRENT HARRISON as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR LENDER HOMECOMINGS FINANCIAL NETWORK, INC., as Beneficiary, dated 07/22/2006, recorded 07/28/2006, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/file/instrument/microfiIe/reception No. 2006-51949 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 186976 LOT FORTY-FOUR (44), BLOCK FOUR (4), PROVIDENCE PHASE 8, RECORDED SEPTEMBER 9. 1994, IN CABINET D, PAGE 74, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 939 NORTHEAST LOCKSLEY DRIVE, BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86,735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $251,991.01 ; plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 8/1/2009 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $1,841.62 Monthly Late Charge $78.74 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $251,993.01 together with interest thereon at the rate of 7.50% per annum from 07/01/2009 until paid; plus alt accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/26/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the

THORPE JAMES R THREE CRICKS INV THRIFTY FOOD CENTER TIEKAMP PATRICK J TIERNEY ANNETTE TIERNEY ROBERT B TIFFANY MARSHA J TILSON ROBERT J TIMOTHY CALVIN R TINGLEY WILLIAM A TIPTON DONALD E TIPTON LARRY M TODD JASON A TOMLINSON W H TOMORUG EUGENE P TOMPKINS JON D TOMPSETT HOGAN MANUF CO TONEY MEGAN M TORKELSON EDITH TOWNES ROBERT W TOWNSEND TREVOR D TOWRY TRACY A TRANS AMERICA RELOCATION TRATTNER ROSE A TRAUTLOFF ALICE TRIATOMIC INDUSTRIES TRIMBLE DORIS TRIPLE L RANCH TRIPP DENNIS F TRUEDSON VERNAL A TRUJILLO MARK W TUCKFIELD GLADYS TURLEY G J TURNER AMANDA M TURNER DELBERT R TURNER GRANT E TURNER JOEL R TURNER LISA S TURNER RANDY L TUTTLE GEORGE R TWEEDY ROBERT G TWELKER PAUL A TWIGGER MICHELLE R TYLER EFFIE M U S FORT KID U S NATL BANK KNIGHT U-LOCK-IT STORAGE UELAND ROBERT L UFFELMAN STEPHEN P UHL BILL R UMBACK SARA UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHRCH UNITED SAVINGS BANK UNITED TELE CO OF THE NW UNIVERSAL FOREST PROD INC UTERHARDT LUBY VAN ESS GRANGER VAN GINKLE GARRITT VAN HOUTEN JAMES VAN RELCO CO INC VAN VLEET GEORGE VANDERVORSTE MARY M VANDERVORSTE ARTHUR ESTATE VANDERVORT STEWART W VANDEVER TERRY V VANVEEN JANEY E VANWINKLE ROBERT W VANZYL ROGER A VARNON JACK VARNUM KATHERINE L VASQUEZ JOB TORRES VAUGHN HAZEL M VAUGHT ANDREW J VENN STEVEN A VENO CATHERINE C VICKERS WILLIAM V VICTOR KEITH L VILES JOHN W

VINEYARD TODD O VINSON JAMES A VINTAGE HOMES VIRGEN RAUL VIRTUE MAGAZINE VOGT JACK N VOLLUM PATRICIA L VOLPERT JOAN VON OSTEN JAMES VON WOGLOM WESLEY VOOS SUSAN I VORPAHL VERA VRANIZAN JAMES M WADDELL STEPHEN A WAGENER SID J WAGER BRIAN K WAGGONER PAUL R WAGNER JOHN F WAGNER WILL W WAHAUS D E WAINIO DENNIS A WAITZ BUD WALDEN JAMES L WALDOW LEONA WALDRAM DAVID W WALDRON DAVID E WALKER BILL R WALKER CHARLES R WALKER HOMER R WALKER STEVEN L WALKER THOMAS A WALL GARY A WALLACE DONITA F WALSTER DON B WALTER N GORSON WALTERS ODIE WALTMAN STACY WALTONEN EVERETT D WANZO CHARLES M WARD ELMER S WARE EVERTON E WARNER CHRISTOPHER WARNER DENNIS W WARNES CELIA B WARREN EDWARD H WARRINGTON ERNEST WARTON GERALD B WASCHGAU J A WASHINGTON MUTUAL BANK WATERS TERI L WATSON CHARLES W WATSON RICHARD G WAY SIGRID J WEASER A R WEAVER THOMAS E WEBB FRED E WEBB STANLEY L WEBBER KENNETH L WEBBER ROBERT D WEBER CHRISTIAN J WEDGE CINDY S WEIGEL DON WEINMANN CAROL WEISBERG JAMES B WEISNER JODI WEISS LARRY R WEISSERT WESLEY R WELCH RONALD E WELLER PATRICK WELLINGTON RICHARD J WELLS GREGORY L WELLS RONALD W WELLS FARGO LAND CO WENDE COLLEEN WEST JOAN A WEST PALOMA D WEST RICHARD C WESTERN BANK WESTERN STATES DEV CORP

date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 05/06/11 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Karen Balsano, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3991421 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011, 08/03/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0022169049 T.S. No.: 11-02488-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of July 28, 2006 made by, WESLEY M. JOHNSON, as the original grantor, to MILLENNIUM SERVICES, LLC, as the original trustee, in favor of EMPIRE MORTGAGE CORPORATION, ITS SUCCESSORS AND/OR ASSIGNS, as the original beneficiary, recorded on August 7, 2006, as Instrument No. 2006-53929 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of Trust")- The current beneficiary is: WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR OPTION ONE MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2006-3 ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-3, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 113354 BEGINNING AT THE SOUTHEAST 1/16 CORNER OF SECTION THIRTY-TWO (32), TOWNSHIP SIXTEEN (16) SOUTH, RANGE TWELVE (12), EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN; THENCE NORTH 00º08'34" EAST, 1175.81 FEET ALONG THE 1/16 LINE TO ITS INTERSECTION WITH THE SOUTHEASTERLY RIGHT-OF-WAY OF THE OLD DALLAS-CALIFORNIA HIGHWAY; THENCE SOUTH 50º12'54" WEST, 1495.11 FEET ALONG SAID RIGHT-OF-WAY TO ITS POINT OF CURVE; THENCE CONTINUE ALONG SAID CURVE TO THE INTERSECTION OF THE 1/16 LINE BETWEEN THE C.S. 1/16 CORNER AND THE SAID SOUTHEAST 1/16 CORNER. THIS CURVE IS SUBTENDED BY A CHORD BEARING SOUTH 29º16'57" WEST, 251.47 FEET; THENCE ALONG SAID 1/16 LINE NORTH 89º59'18" EAST, 1028 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 00º00'42" EAST, 250.81 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89º59'18" EAST, 240.16 FEET; THENCE NORTH 00º08'34" EAST, 250.81 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 64560 OLD BEND-REDMOND HIGHWAY, BEND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; together with other fees and expenses incurred by the Beneficiary; less unapplied funds thereon; and which defaulted amounts total: $18,820.81 as of July 1, 2011. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $788,008.43 together with interest thereon at the rate of 2.00000% per annum from WESTFALL JOHN M WESTGATE FREDRICK E WESTMORELAND CALVIN C WESTWOOD PROP WETER O B WHALEN THOMAS F WHALEY SONDRA D WHEELER ROBERT A WHEELER SARAH WHITAKER BARRY G WHITE BYRON D WHITE CLARENCE H WHITE DALTON D WHITE JOSEPH T WHITE MELINDA WHITMIRE DWAYNE WHITMORE SYLVIA L WHITTINGTON JANET E WIBERG TED R WICK LESTER WICKLAND DEVELOPMENT CORP WIEGAND ADELINE C WIESE RICHARD L WIKLUND WALLY WILBER ARNOLD J WILDMAN TAMMY M WILES DONALD R WILES PATTY S WILKERSON VICTOR T WILLIAMS BARBARA J WILLIAMS BESSIE L WILLIAMS CHARLEY L WILLIAMS DONALD L WILLIAMS ELIZABETH F WILLIAMS ELMER F WILLIAMS GARRY A WILLIAMS HELEN WILLIAMS JOHN F WILLIAMS JUANITA G WILLIAMS KEITH WILLIAMS KENAN WILLIAMS LONNIE D WILLIAMS MATT WILLIAMS ROBERT R WILLIAMS TERRY A WILLIAMSON RALPH WILLINGHAM LETHA P WILSON ALVIN P WILSON BARBARA J WILSON BOBBIE WILSON CALLIE M WILSON CHARLES K WILSON CHARLES E WILSON DENNIS D WILSON DOUGLAS H WILSON E E WILSON FRANCES M WILSON FRANK D WILSON HAROLD W WILSON JACQUELIN L WILSON JAMES O WILSON JON T WILSON KAY F WILSON LEONARD H WILSON MARVIN J WILSON MAX B WILSON RICHARD K WILSON STEVE A WILSON VICTOR L WILSON VERA ESTATE OF WING WALTER E WING RANCHES INC WININGER ROBERT A WINKLER MARK F WINNOP ROBERT P WINSLOW JOHN B WINTERS CHRIS WINTERS RUTH E

February 1, 2011 until paid; plus ail accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on November 14, 2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and 'Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: July 13, 2011 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Michael Busby, Authorized Signature ASAP# 4043646 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011, 08/03/2011, 08/10/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0359448519 T.S. No.: OR-263562-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, FREDERIC A PEASE AND JANE M PEASE, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR PAUL FINANCIAL, LLC A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, as Beneficiary, dated 12/28/2006, recorded 01 /08/2007, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2007-01002 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 154869 /R 1-095 191120 CC 02500 LOT 13 IN BLOCK 18 OF WINTERSWONSER DONNA R WIRT RUSSELL L WISBECK STEVEN W WISE MURLIN D WISER FRANK & ASSOCIATES WISNER JOHN C WITT GORDON E WITTE ROXANNE K WITTY DALLAS WOERNER JAKE E WOLFE HELEN I WOLFF CLARENCE R WOLFF ROBERT WOMACK TIM J WOOD JAYSON WOOD MARSHA G WOOD ROBERT W WOOLLEY MICHAEL J WORKMAN HAROLD WRIGHT BARBARA WRIGHT CAROL WRIGHT LENA D WRIGHT RICHARD S WRIGHT SUSAN P WRISTON HALTON L WRONA REBECCA WUERFEL TIMOTHY D WYE LOIS B XCALIBER AUTO DESIGNS YAHR VIC R YARBER BEVERLY YATES GINA YEAGER JOHN P YONGE W E YORK BENNIE N YORK DALE G YORK ELVIN E YORK KENNETH A YORK THAD YOST SAM W YOUDE SUE A YOUNG DONALD E YOUNG EDDY K YOUNG KATHLEEN A YOUNG ROBERT F YOUNG ROBERT E YOUNGBERG WAYNE E YUEN YEUNG YUTZIE WALLACE A ZAHL NANCY L ZAKOVIES CJ ZAPF ERNEST ZAVACKI MYRA J ZEIGLER KELLIE A ZIEGLER A JACK ZIKA JAMES W ZIMMERMAN JOE ZIMMERMAN THOMAS W ZINIKER ED ZIRKLE DENNY R ZIRKLE NANCY ESTATE OF ZITEK LA RENA L ZIVNEY DONALD D ZNEROLD R MICHAEL ZODROW HAROLD E ZUBER EDITH M ZUERCHER ELMER L ZURCHER SAMUEL ZURFLU LYLE D ZYBACH JOHN


F6 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

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RIVER VILLAGE III, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 58027 SISKIN LN, BEND, OR 97707 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $985,946.81 ; plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 11/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $2,703.33 Monthly Late Charge $7.78 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $985,946.81 together with interest thereon at the rate of 7.63% per annum from 10/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, Stale of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 5/2/11 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Marina Marin, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3988518 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 7428830137 T.S. No.: OR-279116-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, MARK KRAMER AND BARBARA KRAMER, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.. SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR HOMECOMINGS FINANCIAL NETWORK, INC A CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 05/18/2006, recorded 05/24/2006, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/Tile/instnmient/microfile/recepti.on. No. 200635772 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 247185 / R 1-001171136 DB 01600 LOT THREE HUNDRED SEVENTY-TWO (372), NORTHWEST CROSSING, PHASE 8, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 810 NORTHWEST FORT CLATSOP STREET, BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary find the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $518,085.89 ; plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 11/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $2,516.92 Monthly Late Charge $125.84 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $518,085.89 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.38% per annum from 10/01/2010 until paid; plus ail accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OR-

EGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W, Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale.In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 04/29/2011 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Marina Marin Signature By Marina Marin, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3987424 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0030462907 T.S. No.: 11-02324-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of March 23, 2005 made by, BRIAN SWEENEY, as the original grantor, to AMERITILE, as the original trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE ACCEPTANCE, INC., as the original beneficiary, recorded on March 28, 2005, as Instrument No. 2005-18044 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of Trust'). The current beneficiary is: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Indenture Trustee for American Home Mortgage Investment Trust 2005-1, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 200007 LOT TWELVE (12) OF LAVACREST, RECORDED FEBRUARY 24, 2000 IN CABINET E, PAGE 392, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 63349 LAVACREST ST., BEND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; and which defaulted amounts total: $5,044.33 as of June 27, 2011. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $157,428.94 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.12500% per annum from January 1, 2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on October 31, 2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSUR-

ANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and "Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: June 27, 2011 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Michael Busby, Authorized Signature ASAP# 4033011 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: xxxxxx5633 T.S. No.: 1325073-09. Reference is made to that certain deed made by Kimberly Medford and Jason Medford Husband And Wife As Joint Tenants, as Grantor to Western Title, as Trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., As Nominee For Guaranteed Rate, Inc., Its Successors and Assigns, as Beneficiary, dated February 13, 2007, recorded February 16, 2007, in official records of Deschutes, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. xx at page No. xx, fee/file/Instrument/microfilm/reception No. 2007-09979 covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Beginning at the Northeast corner of Lot 3, Conestoga Hills; thence South 01°15'05" East, 473.09 feet; thence South 83°15'54" west, 2.83 feet; thence along the arc of a curve to the right 166.79 feet. (the Long chord of which bears North 80°50'30" West, 164.66 feet), thence North 64°56'54 West, 132.77 feet; thence North 15°47'01" East, 406.57 feet; thence South 89°52'37" East, 164.73 feet to the point of beginning. Commonly known as: 23040 Chisholm Trail Bend OR 97702. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Failure to pay the monthly payment due September 1, 2010 of principal and interest and subsequent installments due thereafter; plus late charges; together with all subsequent sums advanced by beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust. Monthly payment $1,483.23 Monthly Late Charge $61.98. By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $383,309.96 together with interest thereon at 3.125% per annum from August 01, 2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that, Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation the undersigned trustee will on October 12, 2011 at the hour of 1:00pm, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the Bond Street entrance to Deschutes County Courthouse 1164 NW Bond, City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" includes their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: June 06, 2011. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation 525 East Main Street P.O. Box 22004 El Cajon CA 92022-9004 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation Signature/By: Tammy Laird R-383236 07/06, 07/13, 07/20, 07/27

541-385-5809

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0475563565 T.S. No . OR-263603-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, JEFFREY D. COFFEY AND LORI J. COFFEY as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE AND ESCROW, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR HOMECOMINGS FINANCIAL. LLC (F/K/A HOMECOMINGS FINANCIAL NETWORK, INC.) A LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY, as Beneficiary, dated 09'25/2007, recorded 10/01/2007, in official records of Deschutes County. Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX. fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2007-53130 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit : APN: 203453 / R 1-001 171136 DC 04300 LOT 78, SKYLINER SUMMIT AT BROKEN TOP, PHASE 1, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 2453 NW HOSMER LAKE DR., BEND OR 97701 Both the beneficiary mid the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by stud trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section. 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's Unpaid principal balance of $373,507.45 , plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 12/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $ 1,542.48 Monthly Late Charge $77.12 By this reason of said default the beneficiary- has declared ail obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $373,507. 45 together with interest thereon at the rate of 2.38% per annum from 11/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligation thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred"), together wide the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior lo five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "'grantor'" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 5/2/11 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line; 714-730-2727 Signature By: Marina Marin, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3987809 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0031386907 T.S. No.: 11-02458-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of October 2, 2006 made by, SHARI BIGGS, AS TRUSTEE, OF THE SHARI BIGGS REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST DATED AS OF APRIL 8, 2005., as the original grantor, to AMERITITLE, as the original trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN BROKERS CONDUIT, as the original beneficiary, recorded on October 30, 2006, as Instrument No. 2006-72280 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon {the "Deed of Trust")- The current beneficiary is: U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust 2007-1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-1, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 110350 LOT SEVEN (7) IN BLOCK SEVEN (7) OF BRIGHTENWOOD ESTATES III, DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON. Commonly known as: 20581 WHITEHAVEN LN., BEND, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pur-

suant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; and which defaulted amounts total: $4,630.01 as of June 30, 2011. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: The sum of $272,958.39 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.61800% per annum from February 1, 2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on November 15, 2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due {other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and 'Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: July 13, 2011 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee Michael Busby, Authorized Signature ASAP# 4044144 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011, 08/03/2011, 08/10/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: xxxxxx7791 T.S. No.: 1331107-09. Reference is made to that certain deed made by Daniel P. Wyland and Andrea J. Wyland, As Tenants By The Entirety And Cliff W. Wyland, Not As Tenants In Common But With Rights Of Survivorship, as Grantor to First American Title Insurance Company Of Oregon, as Trustee, in favor of National City Mortgage A Division of National City Bank, as Beneficiary, dated March 14, 2007, recorded March 19, 2007, in official records of Deschutes, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. xx at page No. xx, fee/file/Instrument/microfilm/reception No. 2007-16230 covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: Lot 6 of block FF, Deschutes River Woods, Deschutes County, Oregon. Commonly known as: 19696 Manzanita Ln. Bend OR 97702. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Failure to pay the monthly payment due February 1, 2011 of interest only and subsequent installments due thereafter; plus late charges; together with all subsequent sums advanced by beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of said deed of trust. Monthly payment $1,398.46 Monthly Late Charge $55.94. By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said Deed of Trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit; The sum of $210,068.97 together with interest thereon at 5.250% per annum from January 01, 2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advance by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that, Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation the undersigned trustee will on October 26, 2011 at the hour of 1:00pm, Standard of Time, as established by Section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statutes, At the Bond Street entrance to Deschutes County Courthouse 1164 NW Bond, City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for

cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expense of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" includes their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: June 20, 2011. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation 525 East Main Street P.O. Box 22004 El Cajon CA 92022-9004 Cal-Western Reconveyance Corporation Signature/By: Tammy Laird R-384837 07/20, 07/27, 08/03, 08/10 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE A default has occurred under the terms of a trust deed made by Margaret C. Garner, as grantor to AmeriTitle, as Trustee, in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, as Beneficiary, dated October 25, 2004, recorded October 29, 2004, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County, Oregon, in Book 2004, at Page 65182, beneficial interest having been assigned to DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY AS TRUSTEE FOR WAMU MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATE SERIES 2005-AR1, as covering the following described real property: LOT SEVENTY-TWO (72), RIVER'S EDGE VILLAGE, PHASE VIII, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 3181 N.W. Fairway Heights Drive, Bend, OR 97701. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclosure is made is grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: Monthly payments in the sum of $2,716.03, from January 1, 2010, and monthly payments in the sum of $2,547.50, from December 1, 2010, together with all costs, disbursements, and/or fees incurred or paid by the beneficiary and/or trustee, their employees, agents or assigns. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation that the trust deed secures immediately due and payable, said sum being the following, to-wit: $554,303.12, together with interest thereon at the rate of 2.894% per annum from December 1, 2009, together with all costs, disbursements, and/or fees incurred or paid by the beneficiary and/or trustee, their employees, agents or assigns. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on October 11, 2011, at the hour of 11:00 AM PT, in accord with the standard time established by ORS 187.110, at the main entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, located at 1164 N.W. Bond Street, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor has or had power to convey at the time of the execution of said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given to any person named in ORS 86.753 that the right exists, at any time that is not later than five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by paying to the beneficiary of the entire amount due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligations or trust deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's fees and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by said ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include

their respective successors in interest, if any. Also, please be advised that pursuant to the terms stated on the Deed of Trust and Note, the beneficiary is allowed to conduct property inspections while property is in default. This shall serve as notice that the beneficiary shall be conducting property inspections on the said referenced property. The Fair Debt Collection Practice Act requires that we state the following: This is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that purpose. If a discharge has been obtained by any party through bankruptcy proceedings: This shall not be construed to be an attempt to collect the outstanding indebtedness or hold you personally liable for the debt. Dated: 06-08-2011 By: /s/:Kelly D. Sutherland KELLY D. SUTHERLAND Successor Trustee SHAPIRO & SUTHERLAND, LLC 5501 N.E. 109th Court, Suite N Vancouver, WA 98662 www.shapiroattorneys.com/wa Telephone: (360) 260-2253 Toll-free: 1-800-970-5647 S&S 10-104353 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0031395676 T.S. No.: 11-02494-6 Reference is made to that certain Deed of Trust dated as of October 3, 2006 made by, ROBERT L. DAGGETT, DIANE S. DAGGETT, as the original grantor, to DESCHUTES COUNTY TITLE, as the original trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION

SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN BROKERS CONDUIT, as the original beneficiary, recorded on October 10, 2006, as Instrument No. 2006-67754 of Official Records in the Office of the Recorder of Deschutes County, Oregon (the "Deed of Trust"). The current beneficiary is: U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for MASTR Adjustable Rate Mortgages Trust 2007-1, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-1, (the "Beneficiary"). APN: 114564 THE WEST ONE-HALF OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 4, TOWNSHIP 22 SOUTH, RANGE 10 EAST OF THE WILLAMETTE MERIDIAN, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON Commonly known as: 52302 WHISPERING PINES ROAD, LA PINE, OR Both the Beneficiary and the Trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default(s) for which the foreclosure is made is that the grantor(s): failed to pay payments which became due; together with late charges due; less unapplied funds thereon; and which defaulted amounts total: $6,542.11 as of July 1, 2011. By this reason of said default the Beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to

wit: The sum of $364,252.07 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.16800% per annum from February 1, 2011 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all Trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as the duly appointed Trustee under the Deed of Trust will on November 14, 2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at the front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution of the Deed of Trust, together with any interest which the grantor or his successor(s) in interest acquired after the execution of the Deed of Trust, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not

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Legal Notices

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Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. #: OR-11-438147-NH Reference is made to that certain deed made by, GABRIEL R. RING AND AMANDA J. RING, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of FIRST FRANKLIN FINANCIAL CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 12/27/2004, recorded 12/30/2004, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/ reel/ volume number xxx at page number xxx fee/ file/ instrument/ microfile/ reception number 2004-78137,, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 204092 LOT THIRTY-EIGHT (38), WESTSIDE MEADOWS, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2486N W. SUMMERHILL DR. BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 11/1/2010, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $952.07 Monthly Late Charge $47.60 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $178,404.78 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.0000 per annum from 10/1/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 9/29/2011 at the hour of 11:00:00 AM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, FRONT ENTRANCE OF THE COURTHOUSE, 1164 N.W. BOND STREET, BEND, OR County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-730-2727 or Login to: www.fidelityasap.com In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee's Attorney. NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for 9/29/2011. Unless the lender who is foreclosing on this property is paid, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. The following information applies to you only if you occupy and rent this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a residential tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale has the right to require you to move out. The buyer must first give you an eviction notice in writing that specifies the date by which you must move out. The buyer may not give you this notice until after the foreclosure sale happens. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the buyer can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES YOU TO BE NOTIFIED IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING UNDER A LEGITIMATE RENTAL AGREEMENT, FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU A NOTICE IN WRITING A CERTAIN NUMBER OF DAYS BEFORE THE BUYER CAN REQUIRE YOU TO MOVE OUT. THE FEDERAL LAW THAT REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU THIS NOTICE IS EFFECTIVE UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 2012. Under federal law, the buyer must give you at least 90 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If you are renting this property under a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), you may stay until the end of your lease term. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 90 days left. STATE LAW NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS IF THE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY, STATE LAW STILL REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU NOTICE IN WRITING BEFORE REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY AS A TENANT IN GOOD FAITH. EVEN IF THE FEDERAL LAW REQUIREMENT IS NO LONGER EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 31,2012, THE REQUIREMENT UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR SITUATION. Under state law, if you have a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 30 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 30 days left. If you are renting under a month-to-month or week-to-week rental agreement, the buyer must give you at least 30 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. IMPORTANT: For the buyer to be required to give you a notice under state law, you must prove to the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale that you are occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The name and address of the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale is shown on this notice under the heading "TRUSTEE". You must mail or deliver your proof not later than 8/30/2011 (30 days before the date first set for the foreclosure sale). Your proof must be in writing and should be a copy of your rental agreement or lease. If you do not have a written rental agreement or lease, you can provide other proof, such as receipts for rent paid. ABOUT YOUR SECURITY DEPOSIT Under state law, you may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out. You should contact the buyer to discuss that possibility if you would like to stay. Under state law, if the buyer accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the buyer becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise, the buyer is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf and you must move out by the date the buyer specifies in a notice to you. YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD TO ANOTHER BUSINESS OR INDIVIDUAL OR UNTIL A COURT OR A LENDER TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. AS EXPLAINED ABOVE, YOU MAY BE ABLE TO APPLY A DEPOSIT OR RENT YOU PREPAID AGAINST YOUR CURRENT RENT OBLIGATION. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE AND OF ANY NOTICE YOU GIVE OR RECEIVE CONCERNING THE APPLICATION OF YOUR DEPOSIT OR PREPAID RENT. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR HOME WITHOUT FIRST GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU MAY WISH TO CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer or are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance is included with this notice. Oregon State Bar: (503) 684-3763; (800) 452-7636 Legal assistance: www.lawhelp.org/or/index.cfm Dated: 05/23/2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as trustee 3 First American Way Santa Ana, CA 92707 Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington as agent for FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 For Non-Sale Information:_ Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. ASAP# 4005244 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011


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then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, Trustee's or attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Deed of Trust, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, 1920 Main Street, Suite 1120, Irvine, CA 92614 949-252-4900 FOR SALE INFORMATION CALL: 714.730.2727 Website for Trustee's Sale Information: www.lpsasap.com TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Deed of Trust, the words "Trustee" and 'Beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: July 13, 2011 FIDELITY NATIONAL TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, Trustee / Michael Busby, Authorized Signature ASAP# 4043710 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011, 08/03/2011, 08/10/2011 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0602476683 T.S. No.: OR-262661-F Reference is made to that certain deed made by, *HERMAN G. LOVELL* and *MARILYN J. LOVELL*, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor to CHICAGO TITLE, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., AS NOMINEE FOR GLOBAL ADVISORY GROUP DBA MORTGAGE ADVISORY GROUP, A CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 09/23/2009, recorded 11/12/2009, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/file/Instrument/microfile/reception No. 2009-47953 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 137938/20 10 34A0 02300 Commonly known as: 16326 CARRINGTON AVE, BEND, OR 97707 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected To sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $211,840.49; plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 11/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $1,493.26 Monthly Late Charge $59.73 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $211,840.49 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.38% per annum from 10/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 AM., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set far sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 5/2/11 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Marina Marin Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3988177 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 5/2/11 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Signature By: Marina Marin, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3988178 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011

EGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "tmstee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated; 04/28/2011 LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank. CA 91504-3120 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Signature By: Marina Marin Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3986736 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0359220754 T.S. No.: OR-259979-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, SIMON PROCOPENKO AND CINDY PROCOPENKO, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor to FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF OREGON, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR ALLIANCE BANCORP A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 06/06/2005, recorded 06/09/2005, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2005-36148 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 207070/15 13 17CB 05500 LOT FIFTY (54) OF WILLOW SPRINGS, PHASE 1, CITY OF REDMOND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 3425 SOUTHWEST JUNIPER AVENUE, REDMOND, OR 97756 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real properly to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $ 146,676.05 ; plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 7/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $427.81 Monthly Late Charge $21.39 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $146,676.05 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.50% per annum from 06/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and ail trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No. 0602388934 T.S.No.:OR-278997-V Reference is made to that certain deed made by, LARRY E PETERS AND DONNA MAE PETERS, AS TENANTS BY THE ENTIRETY as Grantor to AMERITITLE, as trustee, in favor of "MERS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR EVERGREEN MONEYSOURCE MORTGAGE COMPANY A WASHINGTON CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 07/09/2009, recorded 07/14/2009, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX. fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No. 2009-29818 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 14 13 16 00 00110 /171955 LOT SIX (6), BLOCK TWO (2), CRAWFORD'S CORNER If, RECORDED APRIL 29, 1986 IN CABINET C, PAGE 193, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 1518 NW LOWER BRIDGE WAY, TERREBONNE, OR 97760 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes; the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's; Unpaid principal balance of $160,557.72 : plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 11/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $949.67 Monthly Late Charge $37.98 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $160,557.72 together with interest thereon at the rate of 5.63% per annum from 10/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OR-

LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE Loan No: 0702125425 T.S.No : OR-279341-C Reference is made to that certain deed made by, JOHN COLLINS, AND. MELINDA G. HALPERN-COLLINS, HUSBAND AND WIFE as Grantor to CHICAGO TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY OF OREGON, as trustee, in favor of "MBRS" MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., SOLELY AS NOMINEE FOR USA A FEDERAL SAVINGS BANK A FEDERALLY CHARTERED SAVINGS BANK, as Beneficiary, dated 03/05/2007, recorded 03/30/2007, in official records of Deschutes County, Oregon in book reel/volume No. XX at page No. XX, fee/file/instrument/microfile/reception No, 2007-18506 (indicated which), covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 168480 / R 1-001-181209 CO 06001 LOT 9 IN BLOCK 5 OF TILLICUM VILLAGE, SECOND ADDITION, DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON. EXCEPTING THEREFROM THE NORTH 10 FEET. Commonly known as: 61263 PAULINA LANE. BEND, OR 97702 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to sat-

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LEGAL NOTICE INVITATION TO BID Sealed bids for the Loop Road Connector for Central Oregon Community College will be accepted by Rick Hayes, Construction Project Manager, at Room #116 Campus Center Building 2600 NW College Way, Bend, OR 97701 until 2:00 pm, local time, Tuesday August 2, 2011, at which time all bids will be opened and publicly read aloud. First Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Form submittal is required for this project as per ORS 279C.370. Form must be submitted plainly marked "First-Tier Subcontractor Disclosure Form #1371-11" either with the Bid or no later than within two (2) working hours of Bid Closing date and time; no later than 4:00 P.M., August 2, 2011. (Facsimile not accepted). Submit Bids for the work on forms furnished by the College, acknowledging receipt of all addenda. Briefly, the Work is described as follows: Central Oregon Community College has a private loop road that provides vehicular access to buildings and parking lots for Deschutes Hall, Jefferson Hall, Pence/Pinckney Hall, Grandview, Juniper Residence Hall, Ochoco Hall, Modoc Hall, Metolius Hall, and Pioneer Hall. This loop road has a sharp switchback near Ochoco Hall and a steep section near Pioneer Hall where the road then connects into College Way in the center of campus. The loop road connector project will connect this private loop road to a private road adjacent to the parking lots near OSU Cascades hall avoiding the sharp switchback and steep section of existing road. The switchback will be replaced with a stop controlled intersection providing access to the staff parking lots at Ochoco, Metolius, and Pioneer Halls. The new loop road connector will be native landscaped with irrigation to assist in establishment. A portion of the project will need to be completed for Fall Term and the remainder can be completed during the first month of Fall Term. At contractor's discretion, the entire project may be completed early prior to the beginning of Fall Term and the much increased vehicular and pedestrian traffic on campus. A MANDATORY pre-bid conference for all general contractors will be held at 10AM on July 25, 2011, meeting at the parking area in front of east Grandview Hall, COCC, Bend, Oregon. The purpose will be to answer any questions bidders may have, review the scope of work, tour the site, and to consider any suggestions Bidders wish to make. Any statements made by the College's representatives at the conference are not binding upon the College unless confirmed by written addendum. The conference is held for the benefit of bidders. A sign-in sheet will be distributed at the beginning of the meeting and will be collected at the beginning of the meeting. Any contractor not signing in at that time will not be allowed to bid on the project. For the project, lump sum bid will be received on forms provided in these specifications. Complete sets of Drawings and Project manuals may be ordered from Central Oregon Builders Exchange (COBE), for cost of reproduction and delivery of same, paid before or at time of delivery. Central Oregon Builders Exchange 1902 NE 4th Street, Bend, OR Plans may also be reviewed at: Daily Journal of Commerce Plan Center2840 NW 35th Street, Portland, OR Salem Contractors Exchange 2256 Judson Street, SE Salem, OR Eugene Builders Exchange860 McKinley, Eugene, OR Contractor Plan Center 14625 SE 82nd Drive, Clackamas, OR A Bid Bond or Certified Check executed in favor of Central Oregon Community College in an amount not less than ten percent (10%) of the total Basic Bid Sum and additive alternates, if any, will be required, which sum shall be forfeited as fixed and liquidated damages should the Bidder neglect or refuse to enter into a contract and provide a suitable bond for the faithful performance of the work in the event the contract is awarded to the Bidder. A person shall not submit a bid to do work as a construction "contractor" as defined in ORS701.005(2) unless that person is first registered with the Construction Contractors Review Board. Bids received from persons who fail to comply with this requirement shall be deemed non-responsive and be rejected. This Contract is for Public Work, thus subject to ORS 279C.800 through 279C.870. No award will be considered by the public contracting agency unless the Bid contains a statement by the Bidder as a part of its Bid that State of Oregon Prevailing Rates for Public Works Contracts in Oregon shall be followed for all work, including Wage Rates and Certification of payroll as required by the Bureau of Labor & Industries. A 100% performance bond will be required of the successful Bidder. Minority-owned, Women-owned, and Emerging Small Business enterprises are encouraged to submit Bids in response to this solicitation and will be afforded full opportunity and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, or national origin in consideration for an award of any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement.(ORS279A.110). No bid will be considered unless Contractor certifies nondiscrimination with regard to obtaining subcontractors un accordance with ORS279A.110(4). Contractor is not required to be licensed under ORS468A.720 regarding asbestos abatement. No Bid will be considered without a statement by the Bidder as a part of their Bid whether Bidder is a "Resident Bidder", as defined by ORS 279A.120. Bidder may not withdraw his/her Bid after the hour set for the opening thereof, before award of Agreement, unless award is delayed for a period of thirty (30) days from the Bid date. Pursuant to ORS 279C.395, the College may reject any bid not in compliance with all prescribed bidding procedures and requirements and may reject all bids if, in the judgment of the College, it is in the public interest to do so. The College reserves the right to waive any or all informalities and irregularities. Central Oregon Community is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Dated this date: July 20, 2011 PUBLISHED: Bend Bulletin Daily Journal of Commerce

isfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86,735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's: Unpaid principal balance of $220,808.43 ", plus accrued interest plus impounds and / or advances which became due on 12/1/2010 plus late charges, and all subsequent installments of principal, interest, balloon payments, plus impounds and/or advances and late charges that become payable. Monthly Payment $1,428,46 Monthly Late Charge $71,42 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $220,808.43 together with interest thereon at the rate of 6.25% per annum from 11/01/2010 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon, and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that LSI TITLE COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC, the undersigned trustee will on 09/19/2011 at the hour of 11:00 A.M., Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, at Front entrance of the Courthouse, 1164 N.W. Bond Street, Bend, Oregon County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash

the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has tire right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before (lie date last set for sale. In construing tins notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Dated: 04/29/2011 LSI TITLE

COMPANY OF OREGON, LLC C/O Executive Trustee Services, LLC 2255 North Ontario Street, Suite 400 Burbank, CA 91504-3320 Sale Line: 714-730-2727 Marina Marin signature By Marina Marin, Authorized Signatory ASAP# 3987563 07/06/2011, 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011

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The contents of the following storage units will be auctioned to collect unpaid storage fees on Saturday, July 30, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. WRIGHT MINI STORAGE 1835 S. HWY. 97 REDMOND, OR 97756 (541) 548-2138 UNITS #’s #46 Salonius, Peter #77 Bowman, Travis #95 Towry, Levi #104 Schulke, Jillian #107 Miller, Bob #115 Pilgrim, Sammy #A22 Giese, Scott #A51 Cook, Todd #B6 Summer, Joseph #B68 Smith, Josh #B75 Farfield, Kathleen #B93 Worrell, Jacklin #C13 Ontjes, Roberta #C37 Bewley, Mike #E8 Wellman, Chase #E24 Gamble, Sandra #E26 Gamble, Sandra #E33 O’Dell, Sara #E34 Robinson, Stacy #E45 White, Rachael #E75 White, Rachael #E110 Wellman, Chase

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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-07-120651-CM Reference is made to that certain deed made by, SHEILA A. LARSON, AN UNMARRIED WOMAN as Grantor to WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as trustee, in favor of MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. AS NOMINEE FOR MERITAGE MORTGAGE CORPORATION, as Beneficiary, dated 8/3/2006, recorded 8/8/2006, in official records of DESCHUTES County, Oregon in book/ reel/ volume number - at page number - fee/ file/ instrument/ microfile/ reception number 2006-54340, covering the following described real property situated in said County and State, to-wit: APN: 155931 THE SOUTHWESTERLY 25 FEET OF LOT 5 AND THE NORTHEASTERLY 45 FEET OF LOT 6 IN BLOCK 6 OF TAMARACK PARK, CITY OF BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. Commonly known as: 2128 NORTHEAST MONTEREY AVENUE BEND, OR 97701 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the said real property to satisfy the obligations secured by said trust deed and notice has been recorded pursuant to Section 86.735(3) of Oregon Revised Statutes: the default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantors: The installments of principal and interest which became due on 8/1/2007, and all subsequent installments of principal and interest through the date of this Notice, plus amounts that are due for late charges, delinquent property taxes, insurance premiums, advances made on senior liens, taxes and/or insurance, trustee's fees, and any attorney fees and court costs arising from or associated with the beneficiaries efforts to protect and preserve its security, all of which must be paid as a condition of reinstatement, including all sums that shall accrue through reinstatement or pay-off. Nothing in this notice shall be construed as a waiver of any fees owing to the Beneficiary under the Deed of Trust pursuant to the terms of the loan documents. Monthly Payment $1,388.04 Monthly Late Charge $69.40 By this reason of said default the beneficiary has declared all obligations secured by said deed of trust immediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to-wit: The sum of $207,316.96 together with interest thereon at the rate of 7.6250 per annum from 7/1/2007 until paid; plus all accrued late charges thereon; and all trustee's fees, foreclosure costs and any sums advanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said deed of trust. Whereof, notice hereby is given that FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, the undersigned trustee will on 10/31/2011 at the hour of 1:00:00 PM, Standard of Time, as established by section 187.110, Oregon Revised Statues, AT THE FRONT ENTRANCE TO THE DESCHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, 1164 NW BOND, ST., BEND, OR County of DESCHUTES, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or his successors in interest acquired after the execution of said trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that any person named in Section 86.753 of Oregon Revised Statutes has the right to have the foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of said principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), together with the costs, trustee's and attorney's fees and curing any other default complained of in the Notice of Default by tendering the performance required under the obligation or trust deed, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for sale. For Sale Information Call: 714-573-1965 or Login to: WWW.PRIORITYPOSTING.COM In construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the feminine and the neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. Pursuant to Oregon Law, this sale will not be deemed final until the Trustee's deed has been issued by FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY. If there are any irregularities discovered within 10 days of the date of this sale, that the trustee will rescind the sale, return the buyer's money and take further action as necessary. If the Trustee is unable to convey title for any reason, the successful bidder's sole and exclusive remedy shall be the return of monies paid to the Trustee, and the successful bidder shall have no further recourse. If the sale is set aside for any reason, the Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee, or the Mortgagee's Attorney. NOTICE TO RESIDENTIAL TENANTS The property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A foreclosure sale is scheduled for 10/31/2011. Unless the lender who is foreclosing on this property is paid, the foreclosure will go through and someone new will own this property. The following information applies to you only if you occupy and rent this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a residential tenant. If the foreclosure goes through, the business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale has the right to require you to move out. The buyer must first give you an eviction notice in writing that specifies the date by which you must move out. The buyer may not give you this notice until after the foreclosure sale happens. If you do not leave before the move-out date, the buyer can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the court hearing. FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES YOU TO BE NOTIFIED IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THIS PROPERTY AS A RESIDENTIAL DWELLING UNDER A LEGITIMATE RENTAL AGREEMENT, FEDERAL LAW REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU A NOTICE IN WRITING A CERTAIN NUMBER OF DAYS BEFORE THE BUYER CAN REQUIRE YOU TO MOVE OUT. THE FEDERAL LAW THAT REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU THIS NOTICE IS EFFECTIVE UNTIL DECEMBER 31, 2012. Under federal law, the buyer must give you at least 90 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If you are renting this property under a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), you may stay until the end of your lease term. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 90 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 90 days left. STATE LAW NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENTS IF THE FEDERAL LAW DOES NOT APPLY, STATE LAW STILL REQUIRES THE BUYER TO GIVE YOU NOTICE IN WRITING BEFORE REQUIRING YOU TO MOVE OUT IF YOU ARE OCCUPYING AND RENTING THE PROPERTY AS A TENANT IN GOOD FAITH. EVEN IF THE FEDERAL LAW REQUIREMENT IS NO LONGER EFFECTIVE AFTER DECEMBER 31, 2012, THE REQUIREMENT UNDER STATE LAW STILL APPLIES TO YOUR SITUATION. Under state law, if you have a fixed-term lease (for example, a six-month or one-year lease), the buyer must give you at least 60 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. If the buyer wants to move in and use this property as the buyer's primary residence, the buyer can give you written notice and require you to move out after 30 days, even if you have a fixed-term lease with more than 30 days left. If you are renting under a month-to-month or week-to-week rental agreement, the buyer must give you at least 30 days' notice in writing before requiring you to move out. IMPORTANT: For the buyer to be required to give you a notice under state law, you must prove to the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale that you are occupying and renting this property as a residential dwelling under a legitimate rental agreement. The name and address of the business or individual who is handling the foreclosure sale is shown on this notice under the heading "TRUSTEE". You must mail or deliver your proof not later than 10/1/2011 (30 days before the date first set for the foreclosure sale). Your proof must be in writing and should be a copy of your rental agreement or lease. If you do not have a written rental agreement or lease, you can provide other proof, such as receipts for rent paid. ABOUT YOUR SECURITY DEPOSIT Under state law, you may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your landlord. ABOUT YOUR TENACY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow you to stay as a tenant instead of requiring you to move out. You should contact the buyer to discuss that possibility if you would like to stay. Under state law, if the buyer accepts rent from you, signs a new residential rental agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, the buyer becomes your new landlord and must maintain the property. Otherwise, the buyer is not your landlord and is not responsible for maintaining the property on your behalf and you must move out by the date the buyer specifies in a notice to you. YOU SHOULD CONTINUE TO PAY RENT TO YOUR LANDLORD UNTIL THE PROPERTY IS SOLD TO ANOTHER BUSINESS OR INDIVIDUAL OR UNTIL A COURT OR A LENDER TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, YOU CAN BE EVICTED. AS EXPLAINED ABOVE, YOU MAY BE ABLE TO APPLY A DEPOSIT OR RENT YOU PREPAID AGAINST YOUR CURRENT RENT OBLIGATION. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAYMENTS YOU MAKE AND OF ANY NOTICE YOU GIVE OR RECEIVE CONCERNING THE APPLICATION OF YOUR DEPOSIT OR PREPAID RENT. IT IS UNLAWFUL FOR ANY PERSON TO TRY TO FORCE YOU TO LEAVE YOUR HOME WITHOUT FIRST GOING TO COURT TO EVICT YOU. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU MAY WISH TO CONSULT A LAWYER. If you believe you need legal assistance, contact the Oregon State Bar and ask for the lawyer referral service. Contact information for the Oregon State Bar is included with this notice. If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer or are otherwise eligible, you may be able to receive legal assistance for free. Information about whom to contact for free legal assistance is included with this notice. Oregon State Bar: (503) 684-3763; (800) 452-7636 Legal assistance: www.lawhelp.org/or/index.cfm Dated: 6/27/2011 FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY, as trustee 818 Stewart Street, Suite 800 Seattle, WA 98101 A Signature By: Brooke Frank, Assistant Secretary Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington as agent for FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 For Non-Sale Information: Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington 2141 5th Avenue San Diego, CA 92101 619-645-7711 Fax: 619-645-7716 If you have previously been discharged through bankruptcy, you may have been released of personal liability for this loan in which case this letter is intended to exercise the note holders right's against the real property only. THIS OFFICE IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. As required by law, you are hereby notified that a negative credit report reflecting on your credit record may be submitted to a credit report agency if you fail to fulfill the terms of your credit obligations. ASAP# 4032230 07/13/2011, 07/20/2011, 07/27/2011, 08/03/2011

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

Summer Price Yamaha 600 Mtn. Max 1997 Now only $850! Sled plus trailer package $1550. Many Extras, call for info, 541-548-3443.

860

Motorcycles And Accessories PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC AUCTION WRIGHT MINI STORAGE

Boats & Accessories

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

BMS Apache 2008 150 Scooter, excellent cond, 70+mpg, $1600 cash. 541-389-7213 BMW R1200 RT 2009, silver, lowered suspension, 7000 mi., just serviced, new tires, exc. cond., $12,750, 541-923-2248.

HARLEY DAVIDSON CUSTOM 883 2004 • Forward controls • Quick release windshield • Back rest • Large tank • Low miles! • $4000 Call 541-504-9284 or 541-905-5723

Harley Davidson Ultra Classic 2008, clean, 15K mi, lots of upgrades, cstm exhaust, dual control heated gloves & vest, luggage accessories, $15,500 OBO. 541-693-3975

Honda Elite 80cc Scooter, 1400 miles, (2) adult helmets, like new, $1100. 541-420-0235 or 541-389-0524 Honda Gold Wing 2007 1800GL, 6200 miles, under warranty, immaculate cond, $14,900. 541-977-0903 Honda Goldwing 2008, black, loaded, exc. cond. very low mi. $17,500. 541-678-3421

GAS

SAVER!

Honda Gold Wing GL 1100, 1980. 23,000 miles, full dress plus helmets, $3500 or best offer. Call 541-389-8410

25’ Catalina Sailboat 1983, w/trailer, swing keel, pop top, fully loaded, $11,000, call for details, 541-480-8060 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

GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

Houseboat 38 x10, triple axle trailer incl. 20’ cabin, 12’ rear swim deck plus 6’ covered front deck. Great price! $14,500. 541-788-4844

Used out-drive parts Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 875

Watercraft 12’ Fiberglass Canoe, $300. 16’ Kayak, Tsunami 165, $1000. Cash only. 541-389-0371

Honda Shadow VLX-600 1988, medical reasons force sale, exc. cond., $2850, call Frank 541-389-1502, 541-390-8821

2 Wet-Jet personal water crafts, new batteries & covers, “SHORE“ trailer, incl spare & lights, $1950 for all. Bill 541-480-7930.

Honda VT700 Shadow

Ads published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

1984, 23K, many new parts, battery charger, good condition, $3000 OBO. 541-382-1891 KAWASAKI 750 2005 like new, 2400 miles, stored 5 years. New battery, sports shield, shaft drive, $3400 firm. 541-447-6552.

KTM 400 EXC Enduro 2006, like new cond, low miles, street legal, hvy duty receiver hitch basket. $4500. 541-385-4975

• Klepper Kayak Sgl Expedition • Klepper Kayak Dbl Expedition with many extras included $5300 for both. 541-306-1361 Sea Kayaks - His & Hers, Eddyline Wind Dancers, 17’, fiberglass boats, all equip incl., paddles, personal flotation devices, dry bags, spray skirts, roof rack w/towers & cradles -- Just add water, $1850/boat Firm. 541-504-8557.

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

880 VESPA 2005 Gran Turismo 200 Perfect Cond., rare vintage green color, top box for extra storage, 2 helmets, incl. $3250. 541-419-9928.

Motorhomes

865

ATVs

Alfa See Ya 40 2005. 2 slides, 350 CAT. Tile. 2 door fridge with ice-maker. $98,000. 541-610-9985

POLARIS PHOENIX 2005, 2X4, 200cc, new rear end, new tires, runs excellent, $1800 OBO, 541-932-4919. Alfa See Ya 40 2005. 2 slides, 350 CAT. Tile. 2 door fridge w/ice maker. $105K. 541-610-9985 Yamaha Grizzly Sportsman Special 2000, 600cc 4-stroke, push button 4x4 Ultramatic, 945 mi, $3850. 541-279-5303

870

Boats & Accessories 16’ Esquire Runabout, new paint, upholstery, rebuilt trailer, new Bimini top, 115 HP Merc engine, $5200 invested in rebuild, selling for $3950, Please call 541-536-9281 or 541-948-2617. 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

18’3” Bluewater 1984, 1 owner, 289 fishing motor & water skis, Calkins trailer, fish finder, sun cover, boat cover, well taken care of, $3500. Call 541-815-7367

18’ Sailboat, Main & Jib, swing keel & rudder,sleeps 2,trailer, $2000 OBO; 9’ Fiberglass Trihull, $400; 10’ Ram-X Dinghy, $475, 541-280-0514.

19.6’ 2007 Duckworth,like new, 115HP Yamaha, only 107 hrs., full enclosure, extras, $18,900 OBO, 541-389-0798. 19' Duckworth Advantage 2005, Yamaha 115hp, 2007 Yamaha 8hp. All covers, equipped for fishing. Lowrance depth finder. $22,000 541-923-6487

Beaver Patriot 2000, Walnut cabinets, solar, Bose, Corian, tile, 4 door fridge., 1 slide, w/d, $89,900. 541-215-5355

Beaver Santiam 2002, 2 slides, 48K, immaculate, 330 Cummins diesel, $75,000. Call for details: 541-504-0874

Best Buy Hurricane 32’ 2007, 12K mi., Cherry Wood, leather, queen, 2 slides, 2 tv’s 2 air, jacks, camera, like new, non smoker, low book $59,900, 541-548-5216.

Dodge Brougham Motorhome, 1977, Needs TLC, $1995, Pilgrim Camper 1981, Self contained, Cab-over, needs TLC, $595, 541-382-2335 or 503-585-3240.

Four Winds Chateau M-31F 2006, 2 power slides, back-up camera, many upgrades, great cond. $48,500 541-419-7099 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.


F8 Wednesday, July 20, 2011 • THE BULLETIN

To place an ad call Classiied • 541-385-5809 Autos & Transportation

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

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

880

881

882

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

900 908

Aircraft, Parts and Service

Springdale 29’ 2007, slide, Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $16,900, 541-390-2504

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

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, located at Sunriver. $138,500. Call 541-647-3718

Executive Hangar

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28’ 2007, Gen, fuel station,exc.

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 $97,400. Look at : www.SeeThisRig.com

Phoenix Cruiser 2001, 23 ft. V10, 51K. Large bath, bed & kitchen. Seats 6-8. Awning. $35,500 OBO. 541-923-4211

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

cond. sleeps 8, black/gray interior, used 3X, $29,900. 541-389-9188.

882

Fifth Wheels

29’ Alpenlite Riviera 1997 5th whl. 1 large slide-out. New carpeting, solar panel, AC & furnace. 4 newer batteries & inverter. Great shape. Must see to appreciate. $13,900 firm! 541-389-8315. Alpenlite 31’ 1996, 2 slides, rear kitchen, Michelin tires, $6500. 541-610-2854

Nash Northwood 2001, 23 1/2’ model 235A, w/ 6 ft. slide, sleep 5, A/C, duct heat, exc. cond., $7,800. 541-633-3629

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. Winnebago Sightseer 30B Class A 2008 $79,500 OBO Top of the line! cell 805-368-1575

881

Travel Trailers

Coleman Chesapeake 1993, mint cond., garaged, 22 ’8” open, awning/screen enclosure. No leaks. $3,900. 619-971-4225, NW Bend.

Skyline Layton 25’

Carri-lite 28½’ alum. const, AC, 4000 watt Onan gen, lrg LR slide, Oak cabinets, lots of storage, rear kitchen, queen bed w/new matt, double pane windows, forced air gas furnace, new Michelins, excellent cond, always garaged. $12,000 Cell, 541-408-7236; home, 541-548-8415.

975

Automobiles

Ford Ranger 2004 4WD, 4L, 6-cyl, auto, 71K., bed liner, A/C tow pkg, well maint, $11,600, 541-549-2012.

Porsche Cayenne S 2008 Nearly every option: 20" wheels, navigation, Bi-Xenon lights, thermally insulated glass, tow pkg, stainless steel nose trim, moonroof, Bose sys, heated seats. 66K mi. MSRP was over $75K; $34,900. 541-954-0230

Chysler La Baron Convertible 1990, Good condition, $3200, 541-416-9566

Towmaster Equipment Trailer, 14,000 lb capacity. Tandemn axle, 4-wheel brakes, 18’ bed, heavy duty ramps, spare tire mounted, side mounted fork pockets, all tires in good condition. $3995. Call 541-420-1846.

931

Blower (Model 671), Polished, with accessories, $3500 OBO, 541-382-8762.

NISSAN Pickup parts, 97 front clip power, steering box complete, tranny and transfer case, $500 takes all. 541-447-1323.

1982 INT. Dump with Arborhood, 6k on rebuilt 392, truck refurbished, has 330 gal. water tank with pump and hose. Everything works, $9,000 OBO. 541-977-8988 Chevrolet 3500 Service Truck, 1992, 4x4, automatic, 11-ft storage bed. Liftgate, compressor & generator shelf inside box, locked storage boxes both sides of bed, new tires, regular maintenance & service every 3K miles, set up for towing heavy equip. $3995. 541-420-1846

GMC 6000 dump truck 1990. 7 yard bed, low miles, good condition, new tires! ONLY $4500 OBO. 541-593-3072 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classiieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

Pilgrim 27’, 2007 5th wheel, 1 slide, AC, TV, full awning, excellent shape, $23,900. 541-350-8629 Need help ixing stuff around the house? Call A Service Professional and ind the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

885

Canopies and Campers 10’ FLEETAIRE cabover camper, 1967, hydraulic jacks, nice condition, great hunting unit. $400; mounted on 14’ 2008 Iron Eagle Trailer, used twice, $1500. Both for $1800. 541-923-2123.

When ONLY the BEST will do! 2003 Lance 1030 Deluxe Model Camper, loaded, phenomenal condition. $17,500. 2007 Dodge 6.7 Cummins Diesel 3500 4x4 long bed, 58K mi, $34,900. Or buy as unit, $48,500. 541-331-1160

Chevy 18 ft. Flatbed 1975, 454 eng., 2-spd trans, tires 60%, Runs/drives well, motor runs great, $1650. 541-771-5535

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

Truck with Snow Plow! Chevy Bonanza 1978, runs good. $4800 OBO. Call 541-390-1466.

925

Utility Trailers

12 ft. Hydraulic dump trailer w/extra sides, dual axle, steel ramps, spare tire, tarp, excellent condition. $6500 firm. 541-419-6552

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

Ford T-Bird 1955, White soft & hard tops, new paint, carpet, upholstery, rechromed, nice! $30,000. 541-548-1422

DLR# 0225

Plymouth Barracuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, (Original 273 eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597

GMC ½-ton Pickup, 1972, LWB, 350hi motor, mechanically A-1, interior great; body needs some TLC. $4000 OBO. Call 541-382-9441

New rebuilt motor, no miles, Power Take-off winch. Exc. tires. 541-389-5355

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.

Pickups

Chevy 4X4 1976, camper special, 173K, 4” lift, winch, detailed, nice cond, records, 2nd owner, $3100, 541-923-2123

Dodge Dakota 2000 Ext. Cab, 143K, new shocks, runs great, $3900. 801-739-4919

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

CHEVY SUBURBAN LT 2005 • 4WD, 68,000 miles. • Great Shape. • Original Owner.

541-598-3750 DLR# 0225

West of 97 & Empire, Bend Dodge pickup 1962 D100 classic, original 318 wide block, push button trans, straight, runs good, $1250 firm. Bend, 831-295-4903

Ford

F-250

1986,

Lariat, x-cab, 2WD, auto, gas or propane, 20K orig. mi., new tires, $5000, 541-480-8009.

Ford 2 Door 1949, 99% Complete, $8,500, please call 541-408-7348. Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, V8, automatic, great shape, $9000 OBO. 530-515-8199 Check out the classiieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Ford F-250 1992, 4X4,460 eng, steel flatbed, headache rack, ~10K on new trans, pro grade tires, $2000, 541-815-7072.

FORD Pickup 1977, step side, 351 Windsor, 115,000 miles, MUST SEE! $3800. 541-350-1686

Lincoln Town Car Signature Series 2001, 4.6L V-8, PW, PDL, A/C, good tires, silver w/grey interior, very nice luxury car, 86K 24 mpg, $7100, 541-317-0116.

Mitsubishi 3000 GT 1999, auto., pearl white, very low mi. $9500. 541-788-8218.

Nissan Maxima 2007, 44K mi., $2000 below BlueBook, very good cond., $15,500, 541-815-9939.

Toyota Sienna XLE2005 leather, 40k miles, VIN# 306767 $23,977 541-598-3750

$19,450! 541-389-5016 evenings.

DLR# 0225

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

975

Ford Excursion 2005, 4WD, diesel, exc.

PORSCHE BOXSTER 1999 silver/tan, runs great, $10,500. 541-604-4316.

Automobiles

call Audi S4 2005, 4.2 Avant Quattro, tiptronic, premium & winter wheels & tires, Bilstein shocks, coil over springs, HD anti sway, APR exhaust, K40 radar, dolphin gray, ext. warranty, 56K, garaged, $30,000. 541-593-2227

Ford Explorer 1999 XLT V6 4.0L 106K, 4WD,CD, tape deck, tow bar, auto, fully loaded $4495, Peter 541-408-0877

Honda CRV 2007 AWD 18mpg City/26 Hwy! 62k mi, MP3, multi-disc CD, sunroof, tow pkg, $17,500. 541-389-3319

Porsche

Boxter

BMW 323i convertible, 1999. 91K miles. Great condition, beautiful car, incredibly fun ride! $9300. 541-419-1763 Buicks -Nice luxury cars, 30 mpg highway. 1995 Limited LeSabre, 111k, $3900, gold; 1998 Custom LeSabre, 91k at $4500, silver; 2005 LeSabre Custom 84k, $6900; 2006 Lucerne, 76k, $7900. Call 541-318-9999 or 541-815-3639.

Jeep Grand Cherokee Special Edition 2004 4x4, V8, 91K, auto, AC, $8495. 541-598-5111 Jeep Liberty Renegade 2002 loaded, 94K, 1 owner, silver, $9000 OBO, 541-771-1889.

Saab 9-3 SE 1999

Subaru Forester S 2001 all wheel drive, 1 owner. $9,995 VIN#745963 541-598-3750 DLR# 0225

West of 97 & Empire, Bend Subaru Outback 2008 2.5I wgn, leather-super clean #341084. $21,295 541-598-3750 DLR# 0225

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

SUBARUS!!! Chevy Blazer 4x4 1996, V6, black, orig owner, PS, AT, power windows, AC, new battery, ski rack, 4 studded tires on sep rims, $1750. Terrebonne, 360-921-2455

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads

The Bulletin

Mercury Mountaineer 1997 V8 5.0L Engine AWD Automatic 169K miles $3395, Peter 541.408.0877

Chrysler LeBaron Convertible, 1995 V6, runs great, looks good inside & out, $2500.

Porsche Cayenne 2004, 86k, immac.,loaded, dealer maint, $19,500. 503-459-1580.

541-389-0435

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 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

Free Classified Ads! No Charge For Any Item Under

$

00

200

1 Item*/ 3 Lines*/ 3 Days* - FREE! and your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

CALL 541-385-5809 FOR YOUR FREE CLASSIFIED AD *Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad. Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit 1 ad per item per 30 days.

www.b end b ulletin.com

To receive this special offer, call 541-385-5809

1999,

exc. cond., 88K, $11,999, call 541-350-1379

convertible, 2 door, Navy with black soft top, tan interior, very good condition. $5200 firm. 541-317-2929.

Ford F150 2010 Super Cab Lariat loaded, 12,000 miles. VIN#B74273 $25,977

2, 4 barrel, 225 hp. Matching numbers $58,500, 541-280-1227.

Ford Mustang Convertible LX 1989, V8 engine, white w/red interior, 44K mi., exc. cond., $6995, 541-389-9188.

mileage, full pwr., all leather, auto, 4 captains chairs, fold down bed, fully loaded, $3950 OBO, call 541-536-6223.

Chevy 3/4 Ton 1989, 4x4, 100K miles, 350 engine, Great cond. $3900. Call 541-815-9939

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

Corvette 1956, rebuilt 2006, 3 spd.,

Chevy Gladiator 1993, great shape, great

Sport Utility Vehicles

cond., $24,000, 541-923-0231.

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 make offer. 541-385-9350.

CHEVY ASTRO EXT 1993 All Wheel Drive mini van, 3 seats, rear barn doors, white, good tires and wheels. Pretty interior, clean, no rips or tears. Drives excellent!!!. Only $2500. (541) 318-9999 or (541) 815-3639

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933

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 & Chevy Corvette Coupe 2006, much more. Original paint, 8,471 orig miles, 1 owner, altruck used very little. $4900, ways garaged, red, 2 tops, John Day, 541-575-3649 auto/paddle shift, LS-2, Corsa exhaust, too many options to list, pristine car, $37,500. Serious only, call 541-504-9945

1957,

Chevrolet 1-ton Express Cargo Van, 1999, with tow pkg., good condition, $3500. 541-419-5693

WILLYS JEEP 1956

70 Monte Carlo All original, beautiful, car, completely new suspension and brake system, plus extras. $5000 obo. 541-593-3072

Wagon

Vans

Ford Sport Trac Limited Edition 2007, too many extras to list incl. new tires, 106k, $17,995, 541-441-4475

www.83porsche911sccabriolet. com

Asking $3,999 or make offer.

MUST SELL

Porsche Cayenne Turbo 2008, AWD, 500HP, 38K mi., exc. cond, meteor gray, 2 sets of wheels and new tires, fully loaded, $59,750 firm. 541-480-1884

940

Porsche 1983 911SC Cabriolet. Info:

real nice inside & out, low mileage, $2500, please call 541-383-3888 for more information.

West of 97 & Empire, Bend

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

932

Cadillac El Dorado 1977, very beautiful blue,

Dodge Caliber SXT 2007 sport wagon, 41k miles VIN# 58571 $12,995 541-598-3750

International Travel All 1967,

Antique and Classic Autos

Chevy

Lance-Legend 990 11’3" 1998, w/ext-cab, exc. cond., generator, solar-cell, large refrig, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 by CarAC, micro., magic fan, bathriage, 4 slideouts, inverter, room shower, removable satellite sys, frplc, 2 flat scrn carpet, custom windows, TVs. $65,000. 760-644-4160 outdoor shower/awning set-up for winterizing, elec. Cedar Creek 2006, jacks, CD/stereo/4’ stinger. $10,500 Bend, 541.279.0458 RDQS, Loaded, 4 slides, 38’, king bed, W/D, 5500W gen., fireplace, Corian Northern Lite 9'6" Queen Clascountertops, skylight sic, 2006. Like new, 2-piece shower, central vac, much fiberglass ultra lite camper, more, like new, $34,900, $19,900. 541-595-5723 please call 541-330-9149.

2008, Model 208 LTD. Like brand new. Used 4x Bend to Camp Sherman. Winterized, in storage. 3855 lbs Sleeps 5. Queen walk around bed w/storage, full bathroom, full kitchen & lrg fridge. Dual batteries & propane tanks, Mobile Suites, 2007, 36TK3 awning,corner-leveling jacks, with 3 slide-outs, king bed, Easylift Elite load hitch w/ ultimate living comfort, bars, furnace, AC, AM/FM quality built, large kitchen, stereo. Couch & dining table fully loaded, well insulated, fold out for extra sleeping. hydraulic jacks and so much $11,795 OBO. 760-699-5125. more.$59,500. 541-317-9185

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Sport Utility Vehicles

Trucks and Heavy Equipment

Winnebago 32VS 2000, Class A Alpha “See Ya” 30’ 1996, 2 Adventurer. Super slide, 31K slides, A/C, heat pump, exc. mi., new Toyo tires, 11½’ cond. for Snowbirds, solid overall height, perfect cond, oak cabs day & night shades, NOW $36,000. 541-312-8974 Corian, tile, hardwood. $14,900. 541-923-3417. Cardinal 34.5 RL (40’) 2009, 4 slides, convection oven + micro., dual A/C, fireplace, extra ride insurance (3 yr. remaining incl. tires), air sleeper sofa + queen bed, $50,900 OBO, must see to appreciate, 406-980-1907, Terrebonne

933

Pickups

60’ wide x 50’ deep, with 55’ wide x 17’ high bi-fold door. Snow Tires, (4) 265/70R-17 Wintercat, used 1 season. Natural gas heat, office & $500 cash only. 541-389-0371 bathroom. Parking for 6 cars. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; We Buy Scrap Auto & great visibility for aviation Truck Batteries, $10 each bus. $235K 541-948-2126 Also buying junk cars & trucks, (up to $500), & scrap metal! 916 Call 541-912-1467

MONTANA 5th Wheel, fully loaded 38ft. ‘09 Limited Edition Model 3665RE w/4 slides w/awnings. Queen Tempurpedic, 3 TVs, DVD/iPod player, surround sound, convection/microwave, central vacuum, sofa w/ queen Aerobed, 2 recliners, custom wine cabinet, printer cabinet, ceiling fan, A/C, plumbed for W/D. UV protective coating, Polar pkg insulation, central control panel for dump, 2-10gal propane tanks, freeze protection and battery disconnect, large heated/lighted basement. Limited use, no pets or smokers. Call for apptmt to view (317) 966-2189. $58,000 w/hitch

932

Antique and Classic Autos

Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories

at Bend Airport (KBDN).

JAYCO SENECA 2008 36MS, fully loaded, 2 slides, gen., diesel, 8k miles, like new cond., $109,000 OBO. Call for details 1-541-556-8224.

925

Utility Trailers

Or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave.


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