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HALL OF FAME<br />

Quiet Larry Allen leads a talented class, B1<br />

BE FREE<br />

Turtles get a helping hand, A5<br />

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Serving Oregon’s South Coast Since 1878 SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2013 the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> ■ $1.50<br />

Port feels<br />

heat over<br />

lack of ice<br />

BY THOMAS MORIARTY<br />

The World<br />

CHARLESTON — Coos Bay’s<br />

only public ice dock has broken<br />

down, leaving <strong>com</strong>mercial fisherman<br />

without enough ice to cool<br />

their catch.<br />

Martin Callery, chief operating<br />

officer for the Oregon International<br />

Port of Coos Bay, said the <strong>com</strong>pressor<br />

motor for the plant’s ice-making<br />

machinery failed. Callery said the<br />

port has ordered a new motor,<br />

which is supposed to arrive tomorrow.<br />

In the meantime, the lack of ice<br />

has left local fishermen in dire<br />

straits.<br />

Jeff Reeves, vice chairman of the<br />

Oregon Salmon Commission, said<br />

the lack of ice is especially hurting<br />

smaller boats like his that haven’t<br />

been able to fish in recent strong<br />

winds.<br />

“I’ll be bankrupt in less than 10<br />

days if I can’t fish,” Reeves said.<br />

“That requires like three tons of<br />

ice.”<br />

Reeves said independent fishermen<br />

have turned to Hallmark Fisheries<br />

plant in the past, but that they<br />

don’t currently have ice available<br />

for non-affiliated boats.<br />

“This <strong>com</strong>munity is losing a lot<br />

of dollars — I’m talking big dollars<br />

and a lot of jobs — because the Port<br />

of Coos Bay has let them down,” he<br />

said.<br />

Callery said the port first began<br />

assuming control of ice dock operations<br />

in 2010.<br />

“We took the plant over for a<br />

while and rehabilitated it,” Callery<br />

said. “Once we finished, (former<br />

owner) Pat Houck continued to<br />

operate it for a while.”<br />

He said Houck decided he didn’t<br />

want to be in the ice business and<br />

the port acquired his interest in the<br />

machinery and facility.<br />

Callery said the plant should be<br />

back to full operation by early next<br />

week.<br />

Reporter Thomas Moriarty can<br />

be reached at 541-269-1222, ext.<br />

240, or by email at thomas.moriarty@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Follow him<br />

on Twitter at @ThomasDMoriarty.<br />

Lakeside<br />

man jailed in<br />

attempted<br />

murder case<br />

A man is in Coos County Jail on<br />

charges for attempted murder<br />

stemming from an incident last<br />

Wednesday.<br />

David Wonnacott was arrested<br />

at Eugene Airport on Thursday<br />

afternoon by the Eugene Police<br />

Department.<br />

The Lakeside local was arrested<br />

after an investigation headed by<br />

North Bend police at the 2300<br />

block of Broadway Avenue on<br />

Wednesday.<br />

Wonnacott, 42, was arraigned<br />

Friday on charges of attempted<br />

murder, second-degree assault,<br />

menacing, felon in possession of a<br />

firearm, unlawful use of a weapon<br />

and probation violation.<br />

Wonnacott will be back in court<br />

on Monday. His bail is set at<br />

$250,000.<br />

BY GEORGE ARTSITAS<br />

The World<br />

EUGENE — Mark Helfrich has<br />

no problem admitting he has his<br />

dream job.<br />

The new head football coach at<br />

Oregon has got his nameplate on<br />

the corner office of the palatial new<br />

athletic operations building and<br />

has been given the reigns of the<br />

burgeoning national empire that is<br />

Ducks football.<br />

But for the living pride from<br />

Oregon’s Bay<br />

Area, it’s the<br />

VIDEO<br />

See the video interview<br />

for this story online at<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

people of<br />

Coos Bay and<br />

the way they<br />

helped along<br />

the way that<br />

makes forgetting his roots impossible.<br />

“You’re around people that are<br />

just solid to the core, hard working,<br />

fun people,” Helfrich, 39, said.<br />

“The blue collar mentality. We<br />

have a lot of fancy stuff but if you<br />

don’t work hard, it doesn’t matter.<br />

“A lot of people I grew up around<br />

worked really hard and earned<br />

everything they got.”<br />

Growing Up<br />

Born in Medford, Helfrich<br />

moved to Coos Bay when he was 3<br />

Betsie and Herb<br />

Kinney have been<br />

recently honored by<br />

the Oregon State<br />

Federation of Garden<br />

Clubs with the<br />

Horticulture Award.<br />

The couple will also<br />

be one of the<br />

“Garden Angels”<br />

helping out at this<br />

Saturday’s annual<br />

Coos Bay Garden<br />

Clubs tour.<br />

Photo by Mark Ylen, Albany Democrat-Herald<br />

Oregon Coach Mark Helfrich watches practice before the Rose Bowl game against Wisconsin. See video and a photo gallery at the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

By Lou Sennick,<br />

The World<br />

Duck Commander<br />

Coos Bay’s Mark Helfrich takes<br />

his seat at the head of the table<br />

for Oregon’s football dynasty<br />

years old and graduated from<br />

Marshfield High in 1992.<br />

“I had such a great time,” Helfrich<br />

said. “Every memory I have<br />

about Coos Bay is great and positive.<br />

I have a lot of great friends<br />

that I still talk to to this day.”<br />

Contributed Photos<br />

Mark Helfrich from his days leading the<br />

Marshfield Pirates (above) and<br />

Southern Oregon University (left).<br />

BY TIM NOVOTNY<br />

The World<br />

NORTH BEND - It is remarkable<br />

that Herb and Betsie Kinney,<br />

members of the Coos Bay Garden<br />

Club, won this year’s Oregon State<br />

Federated Garden Clubs 2013 Horticulture<br />

Award. It is, however, just<br />

one of many remarkable things<br />

about these two high school<br />

sweethearts.<br />

Their daughter, Katie Wash,<br />

says the couple just recently celebrated<br />

their 68th wedding<br />

anniversary. It’s safe to say that, of<br />

that nearly seven decades of wedded<br />

bliss, a good amount of their<br />

time was spent in the garden. In<br />

His high school senior year Helfrich<br />

was the salutatorian, starting<br />

quarterback and student body vice<br />

president.<br />

Outside of school, Helfrich did<br />

the typical Coos Bay outdoor stuff<br />

with his dad Mike on the weekends;<br />

clamming, fishing, hunting,<br />

crabbing.<br />

His father was a mainstay<br />

around Coos Bay even after Mark<br />

moved and was not hard to spot.<br />

Michael Helfrich was an offensive<br />

lineman at Oregon before transferring<br />

to Southern Oregon and was —<br />

as most Division 1 linemen — a<br />

massive man.<br />

While Helfrich said they didn’t<br />

have many “touchy-feely” kind of<br />

conversations, his dad literally<br />

wore on his huge frame how proud<br />

he was of his son. While the son<br />

bounced around coaching jobs<br />

from Oregon to Boise State, to Arizona<br />

State, to Colorado and back to<br />

Oregon, the father would wear the<br />

team’s jacket wherever he went.<br />

As Helfrich worked his way up<br />

the coaching ranks, dad attended<br />

every game he could. Helfrich said<br />

his dad “wore out” the early 5 a.m.<br />

flights out of North Bend airport<br />

traveling to his games. A few years<br />

ago while checking out one of Helfrich’s<br />

games at Arizona, Mike Helfrich<br />

passed away in Tucson.<br />

When asked how proud his dad<br />

would be of his office now, Helfrich<br />

visualized his dad sitting in the<br />

corner of his office with a smirk on<br />

his face, embarrassed and awed at<br />

SEE HELFRICH | A8<br />

Budding romance<br />

Gardening helps love grow over decades<br />

fact, for their 50th anniversary,<br />

Wash made a photo montage of<br />

some of those gardens under the<br />

caption, “Making the <strong>world</strong> prettier,<br />

one garden at a time.”<br />

Both are children of farming<br />

families, which may be the source<br />

of their mutual love of gardening.<br />

The Kinney’s have cultivated<br />

land in a variety of climates over<br />

the years, from Tennessee to Maryland,<br />

and from the Mojave Desert<br />

to the Oregon Coast. Each region,<br />

they say, presents its own gardening<br />

challenges.<br />

For instance, Herb notes that<br />

when they left the Mojave 11 years<br />

SEE GARDENING | A8<br />

INSIDE<br />

What’s Up . . . . . . . Go!<br />

South Coast. . . . . . A3<br />

Opinion. . . . . . . . . . A4<br />

Police reports . . . . A6<br />

Sports . . . . . . . . . . . B1<br />

Comics . . . . . . . . . . C5<br />

Puzzles . . . . . . . . . . C5<br />

Classifieds . . . . . . . C6<br />

DEATHS<br />

Frank Maciejewski, Coos Bay<br />

Bonnie Zeller, West Lawn<br />

Wilma Criswell, Bend<br />

Charlotte Milburn, Coos Bay<br />

Welma Wilkerson, Coos Bay<br />

Holly Mobley, Coos Bay<br />

William Harrington, Coos Bay<br />

Obituaries | A5<br />

FORECAST<br />

Partly sunny<br />

68/53<br />

Weather | A8<br />

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A2 • The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

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South Coast<br />

Executive Editor Larry Campbell • 541-269-1222, ext. 251<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/news/local<br />

Orange Zone<br />

Coos and Curry County<br />

motorists can expect traffic<br />

delays at these road<br />

construction projects<br />

this week,<br />

according to the<br />

Oregon Department<br />

of Transportation<br />

and the Coos County<br />

Road Department:<br />

Coos County<br />

■ U.S. Highway 101,<br />

milepost 233.4-234.5,<br />

McCullough Bridge rehab:<br />

Watch for intermittent<br />

weeknight lane closures<br />

across the bridge. Watch for<br />

flaggers. The speed limit on<br />

the bridge is reduced to 35<br />

mph. Drive with caution.<br />

The sidewalk on the east<br />

(northbound) sidewalk will<br />

The<br />

ORANGE<br />

Zone<br />

be closed until September.<br />

■ U.S. Highawy 101, milepost<br />

234-238, North Bend to<br />

Coos Bay paving, sidewalks<br />

and traffic signals: This project<br />

will replace four traffic signals<br />

in North Bend, upgrade<br />

sidewalks throughout the<br />

project area, improve drainage<br />

and pave four miles of Highway<br />

101 between McCullough<br />

Bridge in North Bend and Fir<br />

Street in Coos Bay. Watch for<br />

intermittent daytime lane and<br />

shoulder closures along Highway<br />

101 throughout the<br />

project area. Pedestrians<br />

should watch for sidewalk<br />

closures.<br />

Watch for nighttime<br />

(7 p.m. to 7<br />

a.m.) lane closures<br />

along Highway 101<br />

and side streets between<br />

Stanton Avenue and Florida<br />

Avenue in North Bend due<br />

to drainage work.<br />

■ Oregon Highway 42,<br />

milepost 23-38, Powers<br />

Junction to Remote chip seal:<br />

Watch for daytime lane closures<br />

on Highway 42<br />

between Powers Junction<br />

and Remote due to chip seal<br />

work. Flaggers and pilot cars<br />

will provide traffic control.<br />

Expect brief delays. Watch<br />

for loose rock in the roadway.<br />

Curry County<br />

■ U.S. Highway 101,<br />

milepost 339-340, Pistol<br />

River Bridge rehabilitation:<br />

Highway 101 is limited to a<br />

single lane of traffic at Pistol<br />

River. A temporary signal<br />

will provide traffic control.<br />

Expect brief delays. Watch<br />

for flaggers and message<br />

boards.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit www.TripCheck.<strong>com</strong><br />

or http://bit.ly/16gexcu.<br />

Thirteen members of the<br />

4-H Straight Shooters of<br />

Coos County qualified for<br />

the Oregon 4-H State Shoot<br />

at the Albany Rifle and Pistol<br />

Club.<br />

GRANITE KITCHEN SINK<br />

$ 50 OFF<br />

ANY<br />

IN STOCK<br />

Bring this coupon in and $ave! Expires 8/4/13<br />

3133 Broadway, North Bend • 541.756.2051<br />

Mon. - Fri. 8am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am - 5pm; Sun. 10am - 4pm<br />

Contributed photo<br />

The 4-H Straight Shooters of Coos County had 13 members qualify for the Oregon 4-H State Shoot in Shedd at the Albany Rifle and Pistol Club.<br />

Seven members made the trip the third week of June to <strong>com</strong>pete in some pretty foul weather. They removed rain drops from their lashes and lined<br />

up for their next shots. Those attending were, junior, Miles Calhoun, Coos Bay; intermediates, Brady Calhoun, Coos Bay, Allison Graham, Coquille,<br />

Carrie Harris, Myrtle Point, Clay Hermann, Myrtle Point, Lizzee Sheldon, North Bend; and senior, Sean Long, North Bend.<br />

4-H Straight Shooters qualify<br />

for state <strong>com</strong>petition at Albany<br />

Competitors included:<br />

Junior, Miles Calhoun, Coos<br />

Bay; Intermediates, Brady<br />

Calhoun, Coos Bay; Allison<br />

Graham, Coquille; Carrie<br />

Harris, Myrtle Point; Clay<br />

Hermann, Myrtle Point;<br />

Lizzee Sheldon, North Bend;<br />

and Senior, Sean Long,<br />

North Bend.<br />

Clay Hermann received<br />

the top spot in the FITA<br />

round and came away with a<br />

blue ribbon and championship<br />

for the FITA round.<br />

Sean Long went onto the<br />

National Shoot in Nebraska<br />

where he received 10th<br />

place. The Oregon team from<br />

Coquille earned ninth place<br />

finish.<br />

Meetings<br />

MONDAY<br />

Area Agency on Aging Advisory<br />

Council — 10 a.m., South<br />

Coast Business Employment<br />

Corporation, 93781 Newport<br />

Lane, Coos Bay; regular<br />

meeting.<br />

North Bend Parks & Recreation<br />

Advisory Board — 4:30<br />

p.m., city hall, council chambers,<br />

835 California St., North<br />

Bend; regular meeting.<br />

Reedsport City Council — 7<br />

p.m., city hall, 451 Winchester<br />

Ave.; regular meeting.<br />

Coquille City Council — 7 p.m.,<br />

city hall, council chambers,<br />

851 N. Central Blvd., Coquille;<br />

regular meeting.<br />

Myrtle Point City Council —<br />

7:30 p.m., Flora M. Laird<br />

Memorial Library, 435 Fifth<br />

St., Myrtle Point; regular<br />

meeting.<br />

Contributed photo<br />

Shown here Clay Hermann shooting the FITA round. Far right is Carrie<br />

Harris No. 231 who received a red ribbon for her shooting.<br />

Births<br />

BAY AREA HOSPITAL<br />

Jayce Michael Wahl-Main was born<br />

at 1:02 p.m., June 25, 2013,<br />

weighing 9 pounds, 1 1/2 ounces.<br />

Parent is Ashley Wahl of Reedsport.<br />

Finnley Marie Vaughn-Emerson<br />

was born at 11:40 p.m., June 25,<br />

2013, weighing 6 pounds, 15<br />

ounces. Parents are Dustin Emerson<br />

and Sydney Vaughn of Coos<br />

Bay.<br />

Marcus Bradley Nortness was born<br />

at 4:56 p.m., June 25, 2013,<br />

weighing 5 pounds, 2 6/10<br />

ounces. Parents are Anthony<br />

Nortness and Adrianne O’Donnell<br />

of Coos Bay.<br />

Carter William Fredericksen was<br />

born at 2:15 p.m., June 27, 2013,<br />

weighing 6 pounds, 10 ounces.<br />

Parents are William and Molly<br />

Fredericksen of Bandon.<br />

Sophia Cloey Smith was born at<br />

12:05 a.m., June 28, 2013, weighing<br />

6 pounds, 10 3/4 ounces. Parents<br />

are Timothy Smith and Karla<br />

Casey of Coos Bay.<br />

Franklin Eugene-Arthur Pedersen<br />

was born at 10:49 p.m., July 17,<br />

2013, weighing 8 pounds, 2<br />

ounces. Parents are Gregory and<br />

Courtney Pedersen of Coos Bay.<br />

Bahne James McCall Burris was<br />

born at 11:06 a.m., July 17, 2013,<br />

weighing 9 pounds. Parents are<br />

Lee and Stacey Burris of Myrtle<br />

Point.<br />

Linda Fern Baxter was born at 7:05<br />

a.m., July 18, 2013, weighing 8<br />

pounds, 2 2/10 ounces. Parent is<br />

Chelsie Baxter of Port Orford.<br />

Kamdyn Ray Woolley was born at<br />

3:52 a.m., July 19, 2013, weighing<br />

5 pounds, 8 ounces. Parents are<br />

Michael and Melissa Woolley of<br />

Gold Beach.<br />

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TUESDAY<br />

Coos Soil & Water Conservation<br />

District — 5 p.m., Coos<br />

SWCD office, 371 N. Adams<br />

St., Coquille; special meeting.<br />

Myrtle Point Public Library<br />

Foundation — 7 p.m., Myrtle<br />

Point Public Library, 435<br />

Fifth St., Myrtle Point; regular<br />

meeting.<br />

Coos Bay City Council — 7<br />

p.m., city hall, 500 Central<br />

Ave., Coos Bay; regular meeting.<br />

Coos Bay Urban Renewal<br />

Agency — 7:30 p.m., city hall,<br />

500 Central Ave., Coos Bay;<br />

regular meeting.<br />

Classified<br />

Correction<br />

A story in Wednesday’s<br />

World misspelled Shane<br />

Ozbun’s name.<br />

A story in Thursday’s<br />

<strong>world</strong> incorrectly stated that<br />

the O&C Trust,<br />

Conservation and Jobs Act<br />

was first proposed in 2008. A<br />

draft of the bill was actually<br />

first circulated in 2012.<br />

The bill would place<br />

approximately 1.5 million<br />

acres of federal timberland<br />

VALUE ADS<br />

All ads will appear in The World, The World Link, Bandon Western World,<br />

Reedsport Umpqua Post, The World Online & The World Mobile.<br />

1 week – 6 times in print = 44,412 households................Online 7 days & Mobile 7 days 24/7<br />

2 week –12 times in print = 88,824 households...............Online 14 days & Mobile 14 days 24/7<br />

3 week – 18 times in print = 133,236 households............Online 21 days & Mobile 21 days 24/7<br />

4 week – 24 times in print = 177,648 households............Online 24 days & Mobile 24 days 24/7<br />

MERCHANDISE ITEM PETS (INCLUDES A PHOTO)<br />

Good – 3 lines – 1 week - $5.00 Good – 3 lines – 1 week - $10.00<br />

Better – 4 lines – 2 weeks - $7.00 Better – 4 lines – 2 week - $12.00<br />

Best (includes a photo & boxing) – 6 lines –3 weeks - $12.00 Best (includes boxing) – 6 lines – 3 weeks - $17.00<br />

GARAGE SALE (INCLUDES PHOTO) REAL ESTATE/RENTALS (INCLUDES PHOTO)<br />

Good – 4 lines – 1 day - $12.00 1 week– 6 lines –$35.00<br />

Better (includesboxing)–5 lines – 2 days -$15.00 2 weeks – 6 lines – $45.00<br />

Best (includesboxing)– 5 lines – 1 week $20.00 3 weeks – 6 lines –$ 55.00<br />

4 weeks – 6 lines –$59.95<br />

AUTO / VEHICLES / BOATS / TRAILERS FREE ADS (INCLUDES PHOTOS)<br />

Good – 3 lines – 1 week $12.00 Merchandise under $500 total – 4 lines – 1 week<br />

Better (includes photo) – 6 lines – 2 weeks $15.00 Found & Found Pets - 4 lines – 1 week – Free<br />

Best (includes photo & boxing) – 6 lines – 3 weeks $25.00 Lost & Lost Pets – 4 lines – 1 week – Free<br />

541-267-6278<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/classifieds<br />

into a public trust controlled<br />

by a governor-appointed<br />

<strong>com</strong>mittee. Another million<br />

acres of old-growth forest<br />

would be transferred to the<br />

U.S. Forest Service.<br />

Policy<br />

We want to correct any<br />

error that appears in The<br />

World. To report an error,<br />

call our newsroom at 541-<br />

269-1222 or email<br />

news@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

CALL IN<br />

SPECIAL<br />

ONLY!<br />

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Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • A3 Y<br />

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South Coast<br />

Executive Editor Larry Campbell• 541-269-1222, ext. 251<br />

Pets of the Week<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/news/local<br />

Refresh your<br />

driving skills<br />

Jett & Onyx Shaker Lillian Meggy<br />

Pacific Cove Humane<br />

Society<br />

Pacific Cove Humane<br />

Society is featuring one dog<br />

and one cat of the week,<br />

available for adoption<br />

through its “People-to-<br />

People” pet-matching service.<br />

■ Jett & Onyx are two<br />

good looking brothers. They<br />

were both rescued, neutered<br />

Wedding<br />

Crouse,<br />

Walker<br />

Joel Crouse and Amy<br />

Walker were married June 1,<br />

2013, in North Bend.<br />

The bride is the daughter<br />

of Joe and Susan walk of<br />

North Bend. She is a 2009<br />

graduate of North Bend High<br />

School and a 2011 graduate of<br />

Southwestern Oregon Community<br />

College.<br />

The groom is the son of<br />

Brenda Crouse and the late<br />

Brian Crouse of Myerstown,<br />

Pa. He is a 2005 graduate of<br />

Lititz Christian School and a<br />

2008 graduate of Pennsylvania<br />

College of Technology.<br />

The ceremony was held at<br />

Shoreline Community<br />

Church in North Bend with<br />

Pastor Dan Jackson officiating.<br />

The bride was ac<strong>com</strong>panied<br />

by Jessica Lillie, maidof-honor<br />

and sister of the<br />

bride; Sarah Koechel; Tabitha<br />

Martin; Kelly Coolen; and<br />

Anniversary<br />

Looneys<br />

celebrate 60<br />

years<br />

and given all their shots.<br />

They would love to stay<br />

together but can go on their<br />

own. Evaluation required.<br />

■ Shaker is a spayed 3-<br />

month-old fluffy, black kitten<br />

with white paws and a<br />

“bib” around her neck. She’s<br />

looking for a loving home<br />

after being rescued when<br />

their mom was hit by a car.<br />

Evaluation required.<br />

For information about<br />

JOEL CROUSE AND<br />

AMY WALKER<br />

Married June 1, 2013<br />

Gwen Rogers. Groomsmen<br />

included; Tim Crouse, bestman<br />

and brother of the<br />

groom; Brenden Hoover;<br />

Dane Martin; Kirk Artz; and<br />

Matthew Walker, brother of<br />

the bride. Rylee Anderson<br />

was the flower girl and Carson<br />

Lillie was the ring bearer.<br />

After a honeymoon in<br />

Alaska, the couple returned<br />

to their home in Richland, Pa.<br />

adoptions, call 541-756-<br />

6522.<br />

Kohl’s Cat House<br />

The following are cats of<br />

the week available for adoption<br />

at Kohl’s Cat House.<br />

■ Lillian is an adult<br />

female Tortoiseshell. She<br />

would love to find a forever<br />

home. Come visit her and all<br />

of her adopted brothers and<br />

sisters.<br />

■ Meggy is a youngadult<br />

female who was found<br />

in a field with a littler of kittens.<br />

Will you be her forever<br />

<strong>com</strong>panion? Come and find<br />

out.<br />

Kohl’s Cat House can be<br />

reached at 541-260-5303 or<br />

kohlscats@gmail.<strong>com</strong>. Visit<br />

them online at<br />

www.kohlscats.rescuegroups.org.<br />

COOS BAY — The<br />

AARP Safe Driving Program<br />

is offering a class 9<br />

a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday,<br />

Aug. 5 to adults 50 and<br />

older. The class will meet<br />

at Southwestern Oregon<br />

Community College in<br />

Empire Hall, Lakeview<br />

G.<br />

Cost for the one-day<br />

class is $12 to current<br />

AARP members and $14<br />

for nonmembers. Register<br />

by calling Sharon<br />

Bessey at 541-269-0845.<br />

Temporary closure<br />

on Lakeshore Drive<br />

There will be a temporary<br />

street closure on<br />

Lakeshore Drive, between<br />

Taylor Avenue and<br />

Chickses Drive, from<br />

Aug. 5 to Aug. 7 for infrastructure<br />

and street<br />

maintenance work. Residential<br />

traffic will be<br />

allowed access between<br />

Taylor Avenue and<br />

Chickses Drive during the<br />

road closure.<br />

Kenneth and Helen<br />

Looney of Coos Bay celebrated<br />

their 60th wedding<br />

anniversary July 12, 2013<br />

with a lunch at their home<br />

with family and friends.<br />

Kenneth and Helen (Hasel)<br />

were married at the Coos<br />

Bay First Baptist Church in<br />

1953.<br />

The couple are proud<br />

parents of Patty Woodworth<br />

(Looney), Jeff<br />

Looney and Tim Looney.<br />

They enjoy three grandchildren<br />

and four greatgrandchildren.<br />

Helen is retired from her<br />

work with school district<br />

No. 9. She now volunteers<br />

at the Bay Area Hospital.<br />

Ken has retired from McKays<br />

and Thomas and Sons.<br />

He enjoys singing with the<br />

worship team at his<br />

church. They both love to<br />

travel and spend time with<br />

their family and friends.<br />

KENNETH AND<br />

HELEN LOONEY<br />

Married June 1953<br />

KENNETH AND<br />

HELEN LOONEY<br />

Married June 1953<br />

C ON TA C T T H E N EW SPA PER<br />

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Editorial Board<br />

Jeff Precourt, Publisher<br />

Larry Campbell, Executive Editor<br />

Les Bowen, Digital Editor<br />

Ron Jackimowicz, News Editor<br />

Opinion<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/opinion<br />

& Cheers<br />

Jeers<br />

Artful effort<br />

Cheers to Bandon artist<br />

Vicki Affatati for her efforts<br />

to restore a movie mural on<br />

the side of the<br />

Savoy Theatre in<br />

Port Orford.<br />

Double cheers for<br />

including local<br />

students from the<br />

After School Arts and<br />

Culture Club in the project.<br />

The club is Affatati's brainchild,<br />

and she runs it during<br />

the school year at Harbor<br />

Lights Middle School.<br />

Better things to do?<br />

We're all for constitutional<br />

freedoms, but could there be<br />

more pressing<br />

local issues for<br />

the Coos County<br />

Commissioners<br />

to deal with.<br />

Tuesday's 2-1 vote to adopt a<br />

resolution voicing disapproval<br />

of the National<br />

Defense Authorization Act<br />

certainly makes a statement,<br />

but to who? And for what?<br />

We can't help but agree with<br />

Commissioner John Sweet,<br />

who said, “I believe I was<br />

elected to deal with county<br />

issues.”<br />

Better safe ...<br />

Kudos to Reedsport police<br />

and other first responders in<br />

how they handled<br />

the suspicious<br />

device found along<br />

U.S. Highway 101<br />

last Saturday.<br />

Some folks initially called<br />

the temporary road closure<br />

and appearance of the state<br />

police bomb squad an overreaction.<br />

Skeptics quieted<br />

down, however, when<br />

authorities confirmed the<br />

devise was a pipe bomb.<br />

Animal abuse at parks<br />

saddens family<br />

Receiving The World newspaper today I<br />

was so saddened on the article, “Group<br />

fights for fowl at Mingus Park.” How could<br />

anyone be so insensitive to such beautiful<br />

geese and ducks that call the park home?<br />

While my grandson Bryan visited me in<br />

June, he wanted to go to Empire Lake to visit<br />

a beautiful large goose we called Charlie. A<br />

friend who lived by the lake told me someone<br />

had shot and killed him. I thought this<br />

violence may have been just a random act,<br />

but now feel it is happening too often. I<br />

think the parks department should do all<br />

they can to stop this. The Friends of Mingus<br />

Park should keep the watch up, and the Coos<br />

Bay police should prosecute anyone for any<br />

animal abuse. This has got to stop.<br />

Debra Miranda<br />

Coos Bay<br />

One way to check<br />

for spotted owls<br />

On an elder hostel program, we went to<br />

Arcata, Calif. We were birding. One of our<br />

days was spent with a wildlife biologist. He<br />

took us into a second growth forest. We were<br />

going to see the northern spotted owl. He<br />

said he had found 50 nests of the spotted<br />

owl. We drove some back roads. We<br />

stopped, he said we will see the owl soon.<br />

The biologist reached in his truck, into a<br />

bucket, and brought up a white mouse. He<br />

placed the mouse at the tip of a stick. Then<br />

Write to us<br />

The World wel<strong>com</strong>es letters from readers. Please<br />

observe these standards:<br />

■ Use your real name.<br />

■ 400 words maximum.<br />

■ Include your address and daytime phone number<br />

for verification.<br />

■ No defamation, vulgarity or business <strong>com</strong>plaints.<br />

■ No poetry or religious testimony.<br />

We generally print every letter that meets these<br />

guidelines. Send yours to letters@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>,<br />

or P.O. Box 1840, Coos Bay, 97420.<br />

Public Forum<br />

he started hooting. A spotted owl appeared,<br />

got on a limb and looked. The owl saw the<br />

mouse, it swooped down, grabbed the<br />

mouse and disappeared.<br />

Why doesn’t the U.S. Fish and Wildlife<br />

Service check second growth forests for<br />

spotted owl?<br />

Bob Grant<br />

North Bend<br />

What other people<br />

say about LNG<br />

“Fearmongering”? Jon Barton’s July 27<br />

letter, with a cavalier attitude toward our<br />

many neighbors concerned by the hazards<br />

of a nearby LNG factory, 200-mile pipeline<br />

and humongous transport vessels who<br />

oppose local LNG, is interesting.<br />

You alone must decide if LNG is good for<br />

you. Don’t be bamboozled by any pro- or<br />

con-LNG supporter. Consider what other<br />

people have said:<br />

■ “You want to have these (LNG terminals)<br />

away from population centers ... for<br />

safety issues, for issues of noise, visual<br />

impact” — Don Felsinger, CEO of $11 billion<br />

annual sales (imported LNG and exported<br />

natural gas) Sempra Energy<br />

■ “LNG presents risks and residents have<br />

to determine if they are willing to accept<br />

those risks” — William Kramer Jr, LNG<br />

Chairman for the National Association of<br />

State Fire Marshalls<br />

■ “Any gas that is confined is explosive”<br />

— Richard Swartz, Massachusetts Firefighting<br />

Academy<br />

■ Tank failure “would be the <strong>world</strong>’s<br />

largest Roman candle” — Gordon Shearer,<br />

CEO with extensive LNG experience<br />

■ “We know that Al Qaida has targeted<br />

our ports for attack in order to inflict massive<br />

economic losses on the U.S.” — U.S. Rep<br />

Peter DeFazio.<br />

Most experts consider at least 1 mile to be<br />

the hazard zone — that mile includes Sunset<br />

and Madison schools. Isn’t it Mr. Barton’s<br />

SCDC colleague pushing LNG and arguing<br />

for the pipeline to be on others’ property,<br />

not theirs? Strange.<br />

Barton writes about 28 LNG factory/vessel<br />

deaths <strong>world</strong>wide (one in U.S.). There are<br />

at least 66 documented LNG factory/natural<br />

gas pipeline/piping related deaths ( and<br />

hundreds of documented injuries) without<br />

counting the LNG tanks catastrophic events<br />

of Staten Island in 1973 (37 dead); or Cleveland<br />

in 1944 (128 dead with 1 square mile<br />

incinerated). Consider also the double hulls<br />

of the tanker Limburg were breached by terrorists.<br />

Correct, you will not taste, see, or smell<br />

the methane cloud while LNG is returning to<br />

a gaseous state and searching for an ignition<br />

source. LNG on water vapor cloud is denser<br />

than in air. Unlike us, the multi-billion dollar<br />

LNG factory, in an enterprise zone, will<br />

not be paying tax for several years and there<br />

is no enforceable agreement that schools<br />

will get one cent in lieu of taxes. Nothing<br />

guarantees any local unemployed person a<br />

temporary or permanent job. Most jobs will<br />

be filled by outsiders working hard by day<br />

and partying harder by night.<br />

Fred Kirby<br />

Coos Bay<br />

Kudos<br />

Many thanks. The Oregon Coast Music<br />

Association would like to thank everyone<br />

who helped make our 35th Oregon Coast<br />

Music Festival a huge success: Off The<br />

Record, Coos Art Museum, Host Families,<br />

Greenroom Volunteers, Host Service<br />

Groups, Beverly Segner, The Pancake Mill,<br />

Zonta, The Davidson Family, Tuna Guys,<br />

The Liberty Pub, Vend West, Crystal Landucci,<br />

Cardas Audio, Mark and Madeline<br />

Stephens. All of our advertisers and festival<br />

sponsors: Abel Insurance, Bay Area Hospital,<br />

Bay Eye Clinic, Black Market Gourmet,<br />

BNT, Friends of Shore Acres, Hough<br />

MacAdam and Wartnik, Huggins Insurance,<br />

ISSCO & Ocean Terminals, JPR, Ken Ware,<br />

KDOCK, KCBY, KEZI, Konrady & Hartley<br />

Group, Nasburg Insurance, Oregon Coast<br />

Culinary Institute, Oregon Piano Tuners,<br />

Roger Scott, Sol Coast, South Coast Anesthesia<br />

Associates, Southwestern Oregon<br />

Community College, Sterling Bank, The Mill<br />

Casino and Hotel, The World, Umpqua<br />

Bank, Vend West, Wegferd’s Printing — all<br />

helping make it happen.<br />

Kathy Metzger<br />

North Bend<br />

Life begins at 40<br />

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Cheers to Circle the Bay,<br />

the premier event of the<br />

South Coast<br />

Running Club,<br />

which marks its<br />

40th year with<br />

today's event.<br />

Besides the estimated 150<br />

who will run, the event<br />

draws up to 100 volunteers.<br />

That’s <strong>com</strong>munity building.<br />

“We will have a few people<br />

participating and supporting<br />

that ran it 40 years ago,” said<br />

race director Anthony Collins.<br />

“That makes this event special.”<br />

This ain’t cool<br />

Disappointing that Coos<br />

Bay’s only public ice dock<br />

broke down late<br />

this week. Local<br />

independent<br />

fishermen have<br />

already been<br />

hampered by recent high<br />

winds. Repairs are <strong>com</strong>ing,<br />

of course, but days of lost<br />

fishing are days of lost<br />

in<strong>com</strong>e. Not good.<br />

What do you think?<br />

The World wel<strong>com</strong>es letters.<br />

Email us at<br />

letters@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Remembering<br />

the fallen<br />

U.S. military death tolls<br />

in Afghanistan as of Friday:<br />

2,121<br />

Politicians, heal thyselves<br />

The other afternoon President Barack<br />

Obama gave what the White House<br />

described as a “major speech.” When political<br />

aides describe their boss’s forth<strong>com</strong>ing<br />

perorations as “major,” they almost always<br />

are speaking in hope rather than in reality. By<br />

employing the five-letter intensifier, they<br />

are saying to press and public: Please pay<br />

attention to this one.<br />

This one, in truth, deserved some attention.<br />

The president is seeking to change the<br />

conversation, away from what he called<br />

“short-term thinking” and “the same old<br />

stale debates.” Six times he invoked the word<br />

“bargain,” suggesting that his new bargain<br />

was a riff off the New Deal.<br />

White House aides did more than portray<br />

the president’s speech as major, though they<br />

might have done well to describe it in that<br />

manner rather than the way they did, which<br />

was to say it was part of a campaign-style<br />

effort by the president.<br />

That may have been a major (that word<br />

again) tactical mistake — voters are turned<br />

off by a president on a campaign, particularly<br />

when he has just won re-election.<br />

But that wasn’t the only misstep. The<br />

White House also made it as clear as a July<br />

afternoon that there wouldn’t be much new<br />

in these speeches, no new political initiatives,<br />

no new economic proposals, which is<br />

not exactly the way to build anticipation, or<br />

an audience.<br />

This political initiative, disparaged and<br />

dismissed bitterly by Obama’s Republican<br />

rivals, <strong>com</strong>es at a difficult passage for the<br />

president. He cried wolf over the sequester,<br />

blaming Republicans for setting off a new<br />

crisis, when in fact most of the country has<br />

carried on pretty well during the sequester,<br />

though in part because so few pay attention<br />

to the troubles of those terrorized by the<br />

wolves, particularly if they are poor and virtually<br />

voiceless.<br />

Besides, the sequester,<br />

which he excoriated in his<br />

speech on Wednesday, can<br />

fairly be laid as much at his<br />

door as at the Republicans’.<br />

(The sequester grew out of<br />

a scheme conceived in the<br />

White House as a threat so<br />

odious that no one could<br />

DAVID<br />

SHRIBMAN<br />

Columnist<br />

possibly embrace it, a<br />

strategy that backfired terribly.<br />

It was passed by<br />

Congress — where one<br />

house is controlled by the<br />

Democrats — and signed<br />

by the president.)<br />

Obama, whose policies and priorities are<br />

being undermined systematically in obscure<br />

corners of Capitol Hill, is registering poll<br />

ratings that aren’t exactly robust. The latest<br />

Marist Institute survey puts Obama’s<br />

approval rating at its lowest in nearly two<br />

years, 41 percent, a drop of nine points since<br />

April. Only 37 percent said they approved of<br />

the president’s economic performance.<br />

The president’s remarks Wednesday came<br />

at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill. Obama has<br />

made scant use of the Oval Office, which his<br />

predecessors sometimes used for major<br />

addresses. Ronald Reagan spoke there 16<br />

times (including his memorable remarks on<br />

the explosion of the Challenger space shuttle),<br />

Obama only twice.<br />

One truth of our time is that presidential<br />

speeches aren’t what they used to be — not<br />

what they were in the FDR or Reagan years.<br />

And presidential campaign-style efforts in<br />

non-campaign years have not fared especially<br />

well.<br />

The public is increasingly pessimistic<br />

about Obama’s prospects for the remainder<br />

of his term; last week’s Wall Street Journal/NBC<br />

News Poll showed more than a<br />

third of Americans expressing that pessimism,<br />

exactly double the rate of the public<br />

who expressed optimism — a chilling sign<br />

for the White House. But Obama possesses<br />

an advantage his predecessors lacked — a<br />

public that has even less patience for the<br />

Congress than for the president. The legislative<br />

branch’s disapproval rate, according to<br />

the same poll, is an astonishing 83 percent,<br />

as opposed to only 12 percent who express<br />

approval for congressional performance.<br />

So this summer is developing into a terrible<br />

season, as bad in its way as winter was. A<br />

struggling president has begun a campaignstyle<br />

offensive with no campaign in sight<br />

against a discredited Congress still 15<br />

months away from its own midterm elections.<br />

The word from the public, however, is<br />

clear: Heal thyselves. We’re not going to<br />

help.<br />

David M. Shribman is executive editor of<br />

the Post-Gazette (dshribman@postgazette.<strong>com</strong>).<br />

Follow him on Twitter at<br />

ShribmanPG<br />

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Frank Chester<br />

Maciejewski<br />

June 4, 1920 - July 31, 2013<br />

A private family memorial<br />

gathering and scattering of<br />

ashes is pending for Frank<br />

Chester Maciejewski, 93, of<br />

Coos Bay. Cremation rites<br />

were held at Ocean View<br />

Crematory in Coos Bay.<br />

Frank “Frosty” Maciejewski,<br />

a resident of Coos Bay<br />

since June<br />

2006, was<br />

born June<br />

4, 1920, in<br />

Milwaukee,<br />

Wis.,<br />

the first<br />

son in a family of eight children.<br />

Frank lived in Manistee,<br />

Mich., until the age of 17.<br />

He died peacefully July 31,<br />

2013, at Baycrest Village in<br />

North Bend.<br />

Frank proudly served as a<br />

member of the armed forces<br />

in the U.S. Army during<br />

World War II in the Pacific<br />

Theatre. He had recently<br />

returned form participating<br />

in an honor flight trip to visit<br />

Washington, D.C., to view<br />

the World War II Memorial<br />

with his daughter, Carol.<br />

Over the years, Frank<br />

spent many happy times<br />

with his children, grandchildren<br />

and great-grandchildren.<br />

In addition to spending<br />

time with family, he loved to<br />

garden, watch football and<br />

baseball and to visit with his<br />

many friends and acquaintances<br />

in Coos Bay.<br />

Frank is survived by his<br />

sisters, Anna Gielczyk of<br />

Holland, Mich., Alice Morris,<br />

Rose Kowalski and Florence<br />

Masty and husband,<br />

Bend, all of Manistee, Mich.;<br />

daughters, Carol Ann Morse<br />

of Corvallis and Diana Lee<br />

Bahr and husband, Dan of<br />

Pine Valley, Calif.; sons,<br />

Frank Charles Maciejewski<br />

and wife, Sandra of Bandon<br />

and Michael Lyn Maciejewski<br />

of Columbia, Calif.; three<br />

grandchildren, David Weaver<br />

Jr. of Imperial Beach, Calif.,<br />

Lori Kaiser and husband,<br />

Loren of Sonora, Calif., and<br />

Timothy Aaron Maciejewski<br />

and wife, Liza of Poulsbo,<br />

Wash.; five great-grandchildren;<br />

and numerous nieces<br />

and nephews in California,<br />

Washington, Arizona,<br />

Kansas and Michigan.<br />

He was preceded in death<br />

by his beautiful and beloved<br />

wife of 60 years, Marjorie<br />

Rose (Hanes) Maciejewski;<br />

father, Frank Joseph Maczinski;<br />

mother, Cecilia (Bajtka)<br />

Maczinski; sister, Stella<br />

Dembinski; brother, Floyd<br />

Maczinski; and infant brother,<br />

Charles Maczinski.<br />

Arrangements are under<br />

the direction of North Bend<br />

Chapel, 541-756-0440.<br />

Sign the guestbook at<br />

coosbayareafunerals.<strong>com</strong><br />

and www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Thanks guys!<br />

The Associated Press<br />

An endangered 10-month-old western pond turtle, native to Washington, is examined, weighed, sized, tagged and marked for identification<br />

in preparation for its release into the wild in an undisclosed location on July 31 in Seattle. The turtles were collected from the wild as<br />

eggs, hatched and “head started.” They’re back from the brink of extinction from a low of about 150 in the early 1990s to around 1,500<br />

now because of a programs at Woodland Park Zoo and the Oregon Zoo.<br />

Google-funded research vessel sets sail<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Bonnie Jean Zeller<br />

April 1, 1956 - July 26, 2013<br />

Bonnie Jean Zeller, 57, of<br />

West Lawn passed away July<br />

26, 2013, after a very short<br />

illness. Bonnie was born<br />

April 1, 1956, to Roy Milo<br />

Zeller and Lillian Beatrice<br />

(Wirkkala) Zeller in Coos<br />

Bay.<br />

Bonnie graduated from<br />

Boise High School in 1974<br />

and received<br />

a diploma<br />

from ITT<br />

L i n k ’ s<br />

School of<br />

Business in<br />

1975. She<br />

moved to<br />

Eugene in<br />

Bonnie Zeller 1976 and<br />

went to<br />

work at Columbia River Log<br />

Scaling Bureau for a number<br />

of years and then to Sacred<br />

Heart General Hospital in the<br />

billing department. Bonnie<br />

moved to Vancouver, Wash.,<br />

in 1993 and took a job in the<br />

business office of Southwest<br />

Washington Medical Center<br />

until her sudden illness.<br />

Bonnie is survived by two<br />

sisters, Lois and John Loberg<br />

and Marilyn Zeller, both of<br />

Eugene; four nephews,<br />

Wilma Criswell<br />

Wilma Criswell<br />

Nov. 16, 1916 - May 24, 2013<br />

Cremation rites have been<br />

held for Wilma Criswell, 96,<br />

of Bend, formerly of North<br />

Bend, under<br />

the direction<br />

of Nelson’s<br />

Bay<br />

Area Mortuary.<br />

A private<br />

family<br />

inurnment<br />

was held at<br />

Ocean View<br />

Memory<br />

Gardens.<br />

Wilma Criswell was born<br />

Nov. 16, 1916, in Valley City,<br />

N.D. She went to be with the<br />

Lord May 24, 2013, in Bend.<br />

She married Larry<br />

Criswell Aug. 30, 1946, in<br />

Ta<strong>com</strong>a, Wash. In 1956 they<br />

moved from Ta<strong>com</strong>a to<br />

North Bend.<br />

Charlotte Ann<br />

(Crooks) Milburn<br />

Nov. 21, 1951 - July 25, 2013<br />

Private cremation rites<br />

and inurnment for Charlotte<br />

Ann Milburn, 61, of Coos Bay<br />

will be held at a later date at<br />

Ocean View Memory Gardens<br />

in Coos Bay.<br />

Charlotte was born in<br />

Lewiston, Idaho, Nov. 21,<br />

1951, to Raymond Malone<br />

Crooks and Jone Alvena<br />

Phillips. She passed away<br />

July 25, 2013, in Coos Bay.<br />

Charlotte attended<br />

Southwestern Oregon Community<br />

College and the University<br />

of Oregon, majoring<br />

in art. She worked with several<br />

mediums, her favorites<br />

being papermaking, clay and<br />

sculpting with several of her<br />

pieces having been exhibited.<br />

She loved expressing herself<br />

with art and sharing her<br />

talents.<br />

Charlotte will be missed<br />

Ronald Leach and Robert<br />

Leach of Apache Junction,<br />

Ariz., and Ben Sparks and<br />

Johnny and Nicole Loberg of<br />

Eugene; one niece, Valerie<br />

and Jon Knickerbocker of<br />

Eugene; her pride and joy,<br />

her great-nieces and greatnephews,<br />

Kendra Leach of<br />

Albany, Brian Leach of<br />

Apache Junction, Ariz., Bailey,<br />

Luke “Muffin Buns” and<br />

Emma Sparks of Eugene, and<br />

Claire Eskew and L.J. Loberg,<br />

of Eugene; two sisters of the<br />

heart, Roxanne Cross of Vancouver,<br />

Wash., and Dena<br />

Hadley of Eugene; also<br />

numerous friends and relatives<br />

who will miss her<br />

greatly.<br />

A viewing will be held<br />

from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, Aug. 4, at Musgrove<br />

Mortuary in West Lawn<br />

Cemetery. Services will follow<br />

at 2 p.m.<br />

Donations can be made in<br />

Bonnie’s name to the American<br />

Cancer Society.<br />

Arrangements entrusted<br />

to West Lawn Memorial<br />

Funeral Home, 541-342-<br />

8281.<br />

Sign the guestbook at<br />

www.musgroves.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Wilma will not only be<br />

remembered as a woman<br />

who loved to bake and whose<br />

lemon meringue pie was<br />

always a favorite, but as<br />

someone who knew no<br />

stranger, and who had a<br />

wonderful, contagious<br />

laugh.<br />

Larry predeceased Wilma<br />

in 2004, but she continued to<br />

add to their life legacy of<br />

travel, kindness and love<br />

which has been left to Gary<br />

Criswell and his wife, Bonnie,<br />

Dale Criswell and his<br />

wife, Reneé, Sally Page and<br />

her husband, Dennis,<br />

numerous grandchildren,<br />

great-grandchildren, nieces<br />

and nephews.<br />

Arrangements are under<br />

the direction of Nelson’s Bay<br />

Area Mortuary, 541-267-<br />

4216.<br />

Sign the guestbook at<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

by all who knew her. She had<br />

a love for life that was infectious.<br />

When she was with<br />

you, you were laughing and<br />

smiling, you just couldn’t<br />

help yourself.<br />

She is survived by her sisters,<br />

Dorothy Webster, Patty<br />

Johnson, Toni Faber, Lyn<br />

Phillips Maine, Sue Coleman,<br />

Rachel Frank; brother,<br />

Nick Crooks; god-daughter,<br />

Sarah Hardy; and many<br />

nieces and nephews.<br />

She was preceded in death<br />

by her parents, Raymond<br />

Cooks and Jone Phillips;<br />

stepfather, Dale Eldon<br />

Phillips; and brother, Kevin<br />

Brett Nelson.<br />

Arrangements are under<br />

the care of Coos Bay Chapel,<br />

541-267-3131.<br />

Friends and family are<br />

encouraged to sign the online<br />

guestbook at www.coosbayareafunerals.<strong>com</strong><br />

and<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —<br />

A $60 million research ship<br />

funded by a Google executive<br />

was scheduled to set sail<br />

from San Francisco on<br />

Thursday, on its way to study<br />

a “dead zone” in the Pacific<br />

Ocean and other mysteries of<br />

the sea.<br />

The 272-foot vessel,<br />

Falkor, carries an unmanned<br />

submarine that will travel<br />

deep into the ocean off Vancouver<br />

Island to study an<br />

area where sea life dies each<br />

year from a periodic lack of<br />

oxygen, called hypoxia.<br />

Researchers speculate<br />

that the cause may be a<br />

changing climate or caustic<br />

runoff like sewage from land.<br />

And scientists working<br />

aboard the Falkor are treated<br />

to amenities not found on<br />

the usual research ship: a<br />

sauna and down-filled bunks<br />

among them, the San Francisco<br />

Chronicle reported .<br />

“It may not be needed up<br />

here,” Victor Zykov, the<br />

institute’s director of<br />

research, told the newspaper<br />

about the sauna. “But when<br />

we’re up in cold Canadian<br />

waters, the scientists and<br />

crew will surely appreciate it<br />

after a long day on deck.”<br />

The Falkor is funded by<br />

the Schmidt Ocean Science<br />

Institute, which was cofounded<br />

by Google executive<br />

Death Notices<br />

Velma Marie Wilkerson<br />

— 63, of Coos Bay, passed<br />

away July 31, 2013, in Coos<br />

Bay. Arrangements are pending<br />

with Nelson’s Bay Area<br />

Mortuary, 541-267-4216.<br />

Holly Ann Mobley — 56,<br />

of Coos Bay, passed away<br />

Aug. 1, 2013, in Coos Bay.<br />

Arrangements are pending<br />

with Nelson’s Bay Area<br />

Mortuary, 541-267-4216.<br />

Funerals<br />

Saturday, Aug. 3<br />

Allie M. Coleman,<br />

memorial service, 10:30<br />

a.m., Holy Redeemer<br />

Catholic Church, 2250 16th<br />

St., North Bend.<br />

Basil Warnock, potluck<br />

memorial, 2 p.m.,<br />

Charleston Community<br />

Church, 63309 Boat Basin<br />

Drive.<br />

Michael J. Riley, graveside<br />

inurnment, 2 p.m.,<br />

Myrtle Crest Memorial<br />

Gardens, 94105 Rink Creek<br />

Myrtle Grove Funeral Service - Bay Area<br />

Simple Cremation & Burial. Crematory on Premises. Licensed & Certified Operators.<br />

1525 Ocean Blvd NW<br />

P.O. Box 749, Coos Bay, OR Phone: 541.269.2851<br />

“Our family<br />

serving your family”<br />

541-267-4216<br />

405 Elrod • Coos Bay<br />

STATE<br />

D I G E S T<br />

Eric Schmidt and his wife,<br />

Wendy.<br />

After stopping to study<br />

the dead zone, the ship<br />

named for a flying creature in<br />

the movie “The NeverEnding<br />

Story” will move on to<br />

study a submarine volcano,<br />

the Axial Seamount, about<br />

300 miles west of Oregon.<br />

A microbiologist will study<br />

the tiny organisms living for<br />

millions of years inside fissures<br />

in the volcanic rock, and<br />

another scientist will study<br />

viruses that have adapted to<br />

the unique habitat.<br />

Waterborne parasite<br />

sickens 8 in Baker City<br />

BAKER CITY (AP) —<br />

Baker City officials say eight<br />

people have been sickened<br />

by a waterborne parasite,<br />

and they suspect the source<br />

is a lake where mountain<br />

goats live.<br />

The Baker City Herald<br />

reports the illnesses were<br />

confirmed Thursday. It<br />

reported there are likely<br />

other cases.<br />

The parasite is cryptosporidium,<br />

which causes<br />

severe diarrhea. A <strong>com</strong>mon<br />

source is animal feces.<br />

William “Bill” Harrington<br />

— 74, of Coos Bay, passed<br />

away Aug. 1, 2013, in Coos<br />

Bay. Arrangements are pending<br />

with Coos Bay Chapel,<br />

541-267-3131.<br />

Frank<br />

Chester<br />

Maciejewski — 93, of Coos<br />

Bay, died July 31, 2013, in<br />

North Bend. Arrangements<br />

are pending with North Bend<br />

Chapel, 541-756-0440.<br />

Lane, Coquille.<br />

Sunday, Aug. 4<br />

Wayne Burns Young Jr.,<br />

celebraton of life, 2 p.m.,<br />

Black Market Gourmet, 495<br />

Central Ave., Coos Bay.<br />

John R. Stapert, memorial<br />

service, 2 p.m., Seventhday<br />

Adventist Church, 2175<br />

Newmark Ave., Coos Bay.<br />

Monday, Aug. 5<br />

Gilbert C. Pickett ,<br />

memorial service, 11 a.m.,<br />

Family Worship Center, 2050<br />

Lincoln, North Bend.<br />

Locally<br />

Owned<br />

&<br />

Operated<br />

• Cremation<br />

• Funeral Service<br />

John & Tanya Nelson<br />

The city has stopped<br />

drawing water from<br />

Goodrich Lake.<br />

Wash. man dies body<br />

surfing off coast<br />

LINCOLN CITY (AP) —<br />

State Police say a 56-yearold<br />

man body surfing off the<br />

central Oregon coast has<br />

drowned.<br />

The man was identified<br />

Thursday as Kerry Eugene<br />

Bamford of Pasco, Wash.<br />

A friend told officers the<br />

man was about 100 yards out<br />

and trying to swim back to<br />

the beach Wednesday<br />

evening when the friend lost<br />

sight of him.<br />

Onlookers called 911, and<br />

a fire and rescue crew sent<br />

out two personal watercraft.<br />

The man was unresponsive<br />

when they found him.<br />

Detectives investigate<br />

Oregon man’s slaying<br />

LEBANON (AP) — The<br />

Linn County sheriff’s office<br />

says detectives are investigating<br />

the murder of a<br />

Lebanon man whose body<br />

was found at a remote campsite.<br />

Sheriff Tim Mueller said<br />

Thursday that the parents of<br />

48-year-old Wayne Keith<br />

Klavano went to his campsite<br />

north of Oregon Highway 20<br />

and found his body Tuesday.<br />

PORTLAND (AP) — A federal<br />

appeals court says an<br />

Oregon longshoreman who<br />

got drunk on the job, urinated<br />

while standing on a dock<br />

and then fell 6 feet onto concrete<br />

should not get workers’<br />

<strong>com</strong>pensation benefits for<br />

his injuries.<br />

Gary Schwirse drank at<br />

least nine beers and half-pint<br />

of whiskey on Jan. 8, 2006.<br />

While standing on a dock, he<br />

urinated and fell over a railing.<br />

At the hospital, he registered<br />

a blood-alcohol level of<br />

0.25 percent.<br />

Schwirse sued for workers’<br />

<strong>com</strong>pensation benefits and at<br />

first was victorious, when an<br />

administrative law judge ruled<br />

that workplace hazards had<br />

Burial, Cremation &<br />

Funeral Services<br />

Est. 1915<br />

541-267-3131<br />

685 Anderson Ave., Coos Bay<br />

Cremation & Funeral Service<br />

Est. 1913<br />

541-756-0440<br />

2014 McPherson Ave. North Bend<br />

Cremation & Funeral Service<br />

Ocean View<br />

Memory Gardens<br />

Est. 1939<br />

541-888-4709<br />

1525 Ocean Blvd. NW, Coos Bay<br />

Cremation & Burial Service<br />

Est. 1914<br />

Funeral Home 541-267-7182<br />

63060 Millington Frontage Rd., Coos Bay<br />

They grew concerned<br />

because he had missed an<br />

appointment.<br />

The sheriff says his officers<br />

determined Klavano<br />

died of homicidal violence.<br />

He said no additional details<br />

about the cause of death<br />

were being released.<br />

6 sunken cars found<br />

in Willamette River<br />

OAK GROVE (AP) — As<br />

part of a training exercise,<br />

Clackamas County dive<br />

teams agreed to look for a car<br />

an insurance <strong>com</strong>pany<br />

wanted them to find near the<br />

Oak Grove boat ramp on the<br />

Willamette River.<br />

Divers found the sunken<br />

car Thursday, plus five more.<br />

Neighbors told KOIN car<br />

dumping is an ongoing problem<br />

at the ramp.<br />

State gets $10 million<br />

early learning grant<br />

SALEM (AP) — The federal<br />

government is giving<br />

Oregon an additional $10<br />

million to expand and<br />

improve early-childhood<br />

education programs.<br />

Gov. John Kitzhaber’s<br />

office announced the grant<br />

on Friday.<br />

It’s part of the Obama<br />

administration’s Race to the<br />

Top Early Learning Challenge.<br />

No workers’ <strong>com</strong>p in<br />

drunk dockworker case<br />

been a factor in his fall. But the<br />

judge later reversed his ruling<br />

when Schwirse backed off a<br />

claim that he tripped over an<br />

orange cone.<br />

The worker appealed it to<br />

U.S. District Court, where he<br />

lost, and the case landed in<br />

the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of<br />

Appeals, which denied a<br />

petition for a review of<br />

claims this week. The court<br />

said his injuries were due<br />

solely to intoxication and his<br />

employers could not be held<br />

responsible.<br />

Schwirse later tried to<br />

argue that the very concrete<br />

onto which he fell, and not<br />

his intoxication, was responsible<br />

for his injuries. That<br />

argument also lost.<br />

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K<br />

A6 • The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

South Coast and Nation<br />

C<br />

Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Global travel warning:<br />

US cites al-Qaida threat<br />

BY BRADLEY KLAPPER<br />

Associated Press<br />

WASHINGTON — The<br />

United States issued an<br />

extraordinary global travel<br />

warning to Americans Friday<br />

about the threat of an al-<br />

Qaida attack and closed<br />

down 21 embassies and consulates<br />

across the Muslim<br />

<strong>world</strong> for the weekend.<br />

The alert was the first of its<br />

kind since an announcement<br />

preceding the tenth anniversary<br />

of the 9/11 terrorist<br />

attacks. This one <strong>com</strong>es with<br />

the scars still fresh from last<br />

year’s deadly Sept. 11 attack<br />

on a U.S. diplomatic post in<br />

Benghazi, Libya, and with the<br />

Obama administration and<br />

Congress determined to prevent<br />

any similar breach of an<br />

American Embassy or consulate.<br />

“There is a significant<br />

threat stream and we’re<br />

reacting to it,” said Gen.<br />

Martin Dempsey, chairman<br />

of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.<br />

He told ABC News in an<br />

interview to be aired Sunday<br />

that the threat was “more<br />

specific” than previous ones<br />

and the “intent is to attack<br />

Western, not just U.S. interests.”<br />

The State Department<br />

warning urged American<br />

travelers to take extra precautions<br />

overseas, citing<br />

potential dangers involved<br />

with public transportation<br />

systems and other prime sites<br />

for tourists and noting that<br />

previous terrorist attacks<br />

have centered on subway and<br />

rail networks as well as airplanes<br />

and boats. It suggested<br />

travelers sign up for State<br />

Department alerts and register<br />

with U.S. consulates in<br />

FDA links<br />

stomach bug<br />

to Mexico<br />

WASHINGTON (AP) —<br />

The Food and Drug Administration<br />

says an outbreak of<br />

stomach illnesses in Iowa and<br />

Nebraska is linked to salad mix<br />

served at local Olive Garden<br />

and Red Lobster restaurants<br />

and supplied by a Mexican<br />

farm.<br />

The outbreak of cyclospora<br />

infections has sickened more<br />

than 400 people in 16 states in<br />

all. The agency says it is still<br />

working to determine whether<br />

the salad mix is the source of<br />

illnesses in the other 14 states.<br />

“It is not yet clear whether<br />

the cases reported from other<br />

states are all part of the same<br />

outbreak,” the agency said in a<br />

statement. “The investigation<br />

of increased cases of cyclosporiasis<br />

in other states continues.”<br />

A MINUTE<br />

MESSAGE<br />

From<br />

NORM<br />

RUSSELL<br />

Go to the Ant<br />

While camped out at the fair,<br />

we noticed a small piece of corn<br />

chip moving across the mat on the<br />

ground. It was being transported<br />

by an ant which was half the size<br />

of the chip. We watched in<br />

amazement as the ant struggled to<br />

move his burden to its intended<br />

destiny. I was reminded of a<br />

passage of scripture that says, “Go<br />

to the ant, O sluggard, observe her<br />

ways and be wise, which, having<br />

no chief officer or ruler, prepares<br />

her food in the summer and<br />

gathers her provisions in the<br />

harvest.” Proverbs 6:6-8 and in<br />

Proverbs 30:24 and 25 “Four<br />

things are small on the earth but<br />

they are exceeding wise: the ants<br />

are not a strong folk, but they<br />

prepare their food in the summer.”<br />

The American people used to<br />

be just like the ants. They worked<br />

hard, and prepared for the days<br />

ahead. But something happened.<br />

What started out as a good thing<br />

appears to be doing serious<br />

damage to our individualism and<br />

self-reliance. It is killing our pride<br />

and our self-worth.<br />

Let us learn from the ant, who<br />

has no other means of caring for<br />

itself than its own determination.<br />

Even if it means attempting to<br />

take on a load much bigger than<br />

itself.<br />

Come worship with us Sunday.<br />

CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

2761 Broadway, North Bend, OR<br />

541-756-4844<br />

The Associated Press<br />

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, left, speaks to staff members at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan<br />

Thursday. The Obama administration hasn't sent its top diplomat to Pakistan since 2011, and Kerry's trip is<br />

a chance for the former senator to get to know the newly elected prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, who came to<br />

power in Pakistan's first transition between civilian governments.<br />

the countries they visit.<br />

The statement said that<br />

al-Qaida or its allies might<br />

target either U.S. government<br />

or private American<br />

interests. The alert expires on<br />

Aug. 31.<br />

The State Department said<br />

the potential for terrorism<br />

was particularly acute in the<br />

Middle East and North<br />

Africa, with a possible attack<br />

occurring on or <strong>com</strong>ing from<br />

the Arabian Peninsula.<br />

U.S. officials pointed<br />

specifically to Yemen, the<br />

home of al-Qaida’s most<br />

dangerous offshoot and the<br />

network blamed for several<br />

notable terrorist plots on the<br />

United States, from the foiled<br />

Christmas Day 2009 effort to<br />

bomb an airliner over Detroit<br />

WASHINGTON (AP) —<br />

The Justice Department will<br />

begin keeping numbers on<br />

hate crimes <strong>com</strong>mitted<br />

against Sikhs and six other<br />

Coos Bay Division<br />

ALDER WANTED<br />

Also MAPLE and ASH<br />

••• Saw Logs<br />

••• Timber<br />

••• Timber Deeds<br />

Contact our Log Buyers at<br />

Ed Groves: 541-404-3701<br />

Pat: 541-206-4105<br />

to the explosives-laden<br />

parcels intercepted the following<br />

year aboard cargo<br />

flights.<br />

“Current information<br />

suggests that al-Qaida and<br />

affiliated organizations continue<br />

to plan terrorist attacks<br />

both in the region and<br />

beyond, and that they may<br />

focus efforts to conduct<br />

attacks in the period between<br />

now and the end of August,” a<br />

department statement said.<br />

The alert was posted a day<br />

after the U.S. announced it<br />

would shut many diplomatic<br />

facilities Sunday. Spokeswoman<br />

Marie Harf said the<br />

department acted out of an<br />

“abundance of caution” and<br />

that some missions may stay<br />

closed for longer than a day.<br />

Sunday is a business day in<br />

Muslim countries, and the<br />

diplomatic offices affected<br />

stretch from Mauritania in<br />

northwest Africa to<br />

Afghanistan.<br />

“I don’t know if I can say<br />

there was a specific threat,”<br />

said Rep. Eliot Engel of New<br />

York, the House Foreign<br />

Affairs Committee’s top<br />

Democrat, who was briefed<br />

on the State Department’s<br />

decision. “There is concern<br />

over the potentiality of violence.”<br />

Although the warning<br />

coincided with “Al-Quds<br />

Day,” the last Friday of the<br />

Islamic month of Ramadan<br />

when people in Iran and<br />

some Arab countries express<br />

their solidarity with the<br />

Palestinians and their opposition<br />

to Israel, U.S. officials<br />

played down any connection.<br />

They said the threat wasn’t<br />

directed toward a specific<br />

American diplomatic facility.<br />

The Associated Press<br />

In this Aug. 6, 2012, file photo worshipers from the Sikh <strong>com</strong>munity gather for a candle light vigil after prayer<br />

services in Brookfield, Wis. Twelve months ago, a white supremacist walked into a the temple and opened fire<br />

on worshippers he didn't know, killing six and devastating a Sikh <strong>com</strong>munity whose religion is based on peace<br />

and forgiveness. Monday is the one-year anniversary of the shooting.<br />

Sikhs added to DOJ<br />

hate crime statistics<br />

groups, in connection with<br />

Monday’s one-year anniversary<br />

of the killing of six Sikh<br />

worshippers in Oak Creek,<br />

Wis.<br />

Attorney General Eric<br />

Holder made the announcement<br />

Friday in a blog post,<br />

which The Associated Press<br />

obtained ahead of its official<br />

release. Holder said FBI<br />

Director Robert Mueller had<br />

approved a re<strong>com</strong>mendation<br />

from the agency’s advisory<br />

policy board to track hate<br />

crimes against Sikhs, Hindus,<br />

Arabs, Buddhists, Mormons,<br />

Jehovah’s Witnesses<br />

and Orthodox Christians.<br />

“Having accurate information<br />

allows law enforcement<br />

leaders and policymakers<br />

to make informed<br />

decisions about the allocation<br />

of resources and priorities<br />

— decisions that impact<br />

real people, and affect public<br />

safety in every neighborhood<br />

and <strong>com</strong>munity,” Holder<br />

wrote in the blog post.<br />

“Today, I am proud to report<br />

that we have taken steps to<br />

collect this information.”<br />

The addition had long<br />

been sought by members of<br />

the Sikh <strong>com</strong>munity.<br />

Holder also announced a<br />

$500,000 grant for mental<br />

health and trauma services<br />

to those affected by the Oak<br />

Creek shooting, including<br />

survivors and family members.<br />

A year ago Monday, Wade<br />

Michael Page, who had ties<br />

to white supremacist groups,<br />

walked into the Milwaukeearea<br />

Sikh Temple of Wisconsin<br />

and opened fire. He killed<br />

six priests and worshippers<br />

and wounded five others,<br />

and then fatally shot himself<br />

after he was wounded in the<br />

parking lot by a police sniper.<br />

Holder on Friday called the<br />

attack a “heinous act of<br />

hatred and terror.”<br />

Pardeep Kaleka, son of<br />

former temple president<br />

Satwant Singh Kaleka, who<br />

died in the massacre, said he<br />

appreciated anything that<br />

can draw attention to people<br />

being victimized for things<br />

like their race, religion or<br />

gender.<br />

“Progress is sort of a<br />

climb, and it takes a step at a<br />

time. This is one of those<br />

steps toward progress,” he<br />

said.<br />

Thefts & Mischief<br />

NORTH BEND<br />

July 31, 6:28 a.m., mirrors broken<br />

off several vehicles, 2600<br />

block of State Street.<br />

July 31, 7:27 a.m., theft of knives<br />

from business, Auto Zone.<br />

July 31, 9:40 a.m., unlawful<br />

entry into a motor vehicle and<br />

theft, 2100 block of Marion<br />

Street.<br />

July 31, 9:55 a.m., assault victim<br />

in the lobby, 2200 block of<br />

Broadway Avenue.<br />

July 31, 4:10 p.m., two men<br />

warned for disorderly conduct<br />

and obstructing traffic, Newmark<br />

Avenue and Deadmans<br />

Curve.<br />

Aug. 1, 12:40 a.m., one man<br />

warned for misuse of 911 and<br />

two others warned for disorderly<br />

conduct, 2200 block of<br />

Sherman Avenue.<br />

COOS BAY<br />

July 31, 6:48 a.m., found<br />

syringes, North Tenth Street<br />

and West Commercial Avenue.<br />

July 31, 1:23 p.m., burglary, 300<br />

block of North Empire Boulevard.<br />

July 31, 2:56 p.m., dispute, 800<br />

block of South Marple Street.<br />

July 31, 4:11 p.m., fire, behind<br />

Walmart.<br />

July 31, 5:52 p.m., traffic stop<br />

leads to arrest of man on state<br />

parole and probation warrant,<br />

Ocean Boulevard and LaClair<br />

Street.<br />

July 31, 7:08 p.m., theft, 100<br />

block of South Cammann<br />

Street.<br />

Marriages<br />

The following couples have<br />

filed for marriage licenses at<br />

the clerk’s office at the Coos<br />

County Courthouse in<br />

Coquille.<br />

Jack Beelar and Heather Bello<br />

of Eureka, Calif.<br />

Edward Hatley and Alyson Oliver,<br />

both of Coos Bay.<br />

Lawrence Fichtner and Dawn<br />

Gray, both of Mission Viejo,<br />

Calif.<br />

Class Reunions<br />

Coos River School<br />

Reunion of 2013<br />

The Coos River School<br />

Reunion of 2013 will take<br />

place at 10 a.m., Aug. 3 at<br />

the Masionic Temple, 295<br />

N. Fourth St., Coos Bay. All<br />

former students are invited.<br />

For more information<br />

contact Verena Matthews<br />

at 541-267-2075; Harry<br />

Davis at 541-756-2029; or<br />

Roger Ott at 541-267-4487.<br />

Powers Alumni and<br />

Old-timers Weekend<br />

The Powers Alumni and<br />

Old-timers Weekend gathering<br />

will take place Aug. 4<br />

at the Blue Shelter in the<br />

Powers County Park. Registration<br />

will begin at 11<br />

a.m. Eating begins at noon<br />

and the meeting starts at<br />

1:30 p.m. There will be a a<br />

short auction to raise<br />

money for the alumni<br />

scholarship fund, as well as<br />

an introduction to the<br />

Powers <strong>com</strong>munity Hall of<br />

Fame inductees.<br />

The cost is $3 per person,<br />

$5 per couple and $6 per<br />

family. Dues can be paid at<br />

registration or may be<br />

mailed to Powers Alumni<br />

P.O. Box 292, Powers, OR<br />

97466.<br />

Charleston School<br />

Reunion<br />

All former students and<br />

staff members are invited<br />

to attend the Charleston<br />

School Reunion Potluck 1-<br />

6 p.m. Aug. 10 at the Old<br />

School Gym on Seven Devils<br />

Road in Charleston.<br />

Bring your own special<br />

dish. Plates, tableware,<br />

coffee and tea will be provided.<br />

Please bring memorabilia<br />

to share.<br />

RSVP by calling 541-<br />

756-2625, 541-888-3520 or<br />

by email at<br />

cjhutch42@yahoo.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

MHS Class of 1998<br />

The Marshfield High<br />

School Class of 1998<br />

reunion will be at 5:30 p.m.<br />

Aug. 9 at the Coney Station<br />

for a meet and greet. At 10<br />

a.m. Aug. 10, there will be a<br />

tour of Marshfield High<br />

School. At noon lunch will<br />

be on your own, but hoping<br />

to keep everyone together.<br />

Then at 5:30 p.m., there<br />

will be dinner and dancing<br />

at Shark Bites with dinner<br />

catered by Elkhorn BBQ.<br />

RSVP requested; $25<br />

required per person.<br />

July 31, 8:23 p.m., man arrested<br />

for probation violation, 1000<br />

block of South First Street.<br />

July 31, 11:14 p.m., man arrested<br />

for criminal trespass and a<br />

probation violation, and cited<br />

for possession of marijuana,<br />

Walmart.<br />

Aug. 1, 2:41 a.m., man cited for<br />

possession of marijuana,<br />

North Tenth Street and West<br />

Commercial Avenue.<br />

COQUILLE<br />

July 31, 8:36 a.m., woman<br />

arrested for violating a no contact<br />

order, 1200 block of Shelley<br />

Road.<br />

July 31, 4:15 p.m., domestic<br />

harassment, 100 block of<br />

South Collier Street.<br />

July 31, 6:08 p.m., arrest of man<br />

for criminal trespass, theft and<br />

a probation violation, Central<br />

Boulevard and Fourth Street.<br />

COOS COUNTY<br />

July 31, 9:50 a.m., theft, 63500<br />

block of McGill Loop.<br />

Jul y31, 1:33 p.m., theft, 94700<br />

block of Parsonage Road.<br />

July 31, 1:35 p.m., theft, 51000<br />

block of Old Broadbent Road.<br />

July 31, 2:39 p.m., theft, 53500<br />

block of Rosa Road.<br />

July 31, 6:29 p.m., drug investigation,<br />

55300 block of Bates<br />

Road.<br />

July 31, 8:13 p.m., criminal trespass,<br />

63000 block of Fruitdale<br />

Road.<br />

July 31, 8:34 p.m., burglary,<br />

63700 block of Wallace Road.<br />

Philip Diffley of Ireland and<br />

Tonia Louder of Roseburg.<br />

Joseph Holbrook and Amy England,<br />

both of Coquille.<br />

Nicholas Wright and Kori<br />

McCrea, both of Coos Bay.<br />

John Clements and Tamara<br />

Miller, both of Coquille.<br />

Joshua Duke and Rachael<br />

Felsheim, both of Coquille.<br />

Dustin King of North Bend and<br />

Chelsea Herd of Menlfee, Calif.<br />

Seeking photos for<br />

slideshow. Please email<br />

then to Tina or mail a disk.<br />

Contact Tina Woodworth<br />

at tandkmom@gmail.<strong>com</strong><br />

for payment details and<br />

more information. Also<br />

find us on Facebook.<br />

MHS Class of 1963<br />

Marshfield High School<br />

class of 1963 will hold their<br />

50-year reunion Aug. 16-<br />

18. A no-host gathering will<br />

take place at 6 p.m. Aug. 16<br />

at the Coney Station<br />

Restaurant and Lounge, 295<br />

S. Broadway, Coos Bay. A<br />

dinner and dance will take<br />

place Aug. 17 at The Mill<br />

Casino-Hotel in the<br />

Salmon Room, 3201<br />

Tremont St., North Bend. A<br />

picnic will take place starting<br />

at noon Aug. 18 at Sunset<br />

Bay Park, 89814 Cape<br />

Arago Highway, Coos Bay.<br />

For more information contact<br />

Kay Thompson at 541-<br />

294-2905 or by email at<br />

kaythompson45@yahoo.co<br />

m.<br />

Coquille Class of 1951<br />

The Coquille High<br />

School Class of 1951 will be<br />

holding their 62nd annual<br />

class reunion Aug. 19-21 at<br />

West LaVerne Park, 61217<br />

Fairview Road, Coquille. A<br />

crab feast will be held at 3<br />

p.m. Aug. 19 while a<br />

potluck will take place at 1<br />

p.m. Aug. 20. Fore more<br />

information call Rich<br />

Rankin at 503-543-6305 or<br />

Jake Hashberger at 541-<br />

260-2795.<br />

MHS class of 1951<br />

The MHS class of 1951<br />

reunion will take place Aug.<br />

24 with a potluck picnic<br />

starting at 11 a.m. at Simpson<br />

Park in North Bend. If<br />

you are in town early, alumni<br />

will meet at Abbys Pizza<br />

at 5 p.m., Aug. 23. For more<br />

information, call Terry<br />

Staines Lovell at 541-267-<br />

4317.<br />

Empire School Reunion<br />

Empire School Reunion<br />

is planned from 10:30 a.m.<br />

to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 7,<br />

at Simpson Park in North<br />

Bend. Coffee, cream, sugar,<br />

cups, silverware and plates<br />

will be provided. Jim and<br />

Myrna Cagley 541-888-<br />

4391. Bob and LaVerne<br />

Erwin 541-756-2140. Jim<br />

and Jan Hillar 541-888-<br />

3394.<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K<br />

Y<br />

K


C<br />

Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

World<br />

C<br />

Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • A7 Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

Lawyer: Snowden<br />

has a place to live<br />

MOSCOW (AP) —<br />

National Security Agency<br />

leaker Edward Snowden has a<br />

place to live in Russia after<br />

being granted temporary<br />

asylum, but he still hasn’t<br />

decided what he wants to do<br />

next, his lawyer said Friday.<br />

The big question may be how<br />

much choice he actually has.<br />

Russia granted a year of<br />

asylum to Snowden on<br />

Thursday, allowing him to<br />

quietly slip out of the<br />

Moscow airport where he<br />

had been holed up for almost<br />

six weeks as he evades<br />

charges of espionage in the<br />

Fri.’s closing New York Stock<br />

Exchange selected prices:<br />

Stock Last Chg<br />

AT&T Inc 35.77 + .05<br />

Alcoa 7.97 + .02<br />

Altria 35.68 + .14<br />

AEP 46.58 + .03<br />

AmIntlGrp 48.33 + 1.26<br />

ApldIndlT 53.19 — .33<br />

Avon 22.20 + .18<br />

BP PLC 41.93 + .21<br />

BakrHu 48.42 + .01<br />

BkofAm 14.84 — .11<br />

Boeing 107.90 + 1.20<br />

BrMySq 43.84 — .15<br />

Brunswick 39.25 + .27<br />

Caterpillar 84.30 — .14<br />

Chevron 124.95 — 1.49<br />

Citigroup 53.00 + .14<br />

CocaCola s 40.22 — .35<br />

ColgPalm s 60.53 — .03<br />

ConocoPhil 67.23 + 1.14<br />

ConEd 60.37 + .04<br />

CurtisWrt 44.30 + .62<br />

Deere 83.40 + .35<br />

Disney 66.51 + 1.15<br />

DowChm 36.22 + .82<br />

DuPont 59.92 + 1.47<br />

Eaton 66.06 — 3.87<br />

EdisonInt 49.37 — .53<br />

United States. Authorities<br />

have suggested he will have<br />

wide freedom to work, but<br />

Kremlin watchers believe his<br />

moves are likely being closely<br />

controlled by Russian intelligence.<br />

Snowden “is in a safe<br />

place,” but the location will<br />

remain secret out of concern<br />

for his security, his lawyer,<br />

Anatoly Kucherena, told<br />

Russian news agencies. The<br />

systems analyst who revealed<br />

himself as the source of<br />

reports in the Guardian<br />

newspaper of a vast U.S.<br />

Internet surveillance program<br />

needs time after his<br />

ordeal in airport limbo to figure<br />

out his next steps.<br />

He was seen only once in<br />

his weeks in the transit zone<br />

of the Sheremetyevo airport.<br />

Despite troops of photographers<br />

and reporters camped<br />

out inside and outside the<br />

airport, no one apparently<br />

saw him leaving, except for<br />

someone who snapped a<br />

photo of Kucherena talking<br />

to blurry figures who the<br />

attorney later said were<br />

Snowden and Sarah Harrison,<br />

a WikiLeaks staffer who<br />

has been advising him.<br />

Kucherena said he expects<br />

Snowden to speak to journalists<br />

soon. “As soon as he<br />

decides what he will do, I<br />

hope he will announce it<br />

himself,” the ITAR-Tass news<br />

agency quoted the lawyer as<br />

saying.<br />

The move to grant Snowden<br />

asylum infuriated the<br />

Obama administration,<br />

which said it was “extremely<br />

disappointed” and warned<br />

that the decision could derail<br />

an up<strong>com</strong>ing summit<br />

between President Barack<br />

Obama and Russian President<br />

Vladimir Putin.<br />

Stocks<br />

ExxonMbl 91.95 — .78<br />

FMC Corp 67.26 + .40<br />

FootLockr 37.31 + .05<br />

FordM 17.50 + .31<br />

Gannett 26.27 + .12<br />

GenCorp 17.50 + .36<br />

GenDynam 87.49 + .68<br />

GenElec 24.70 + .08<br />

GenMills 52.35 — .38<br />

Hallibrtn 46.30 — .11<br />

HeclaM 3.16 — .05<br />

Hess 75.31 — .73<br />

HewlettP 27.00 + .77<br />

HonwllIntl 84.68 + .12<br />

Idacorp 52.80 + .31<br />

IBM 195.16 — .65<br />

IntPap 49.40 — .09<br />

JohnJn 94.39 + .62<br />

LockhdM 123.77 + 1.60<br />

Loews 46.29 — .28<br />

LaPac 16.76 — .09<br />

MDU Res 30.20 + .27<br />

MarathnO 37.56 + .04<br />

McDnlds 99.20 + .20<br />

McKesson 123.42 — .09<br />

Merck 48.54 — .04<br />

NCR Corp 36.88 + .26<br />

NorflkSo 75.50 — .50<br />

NorthropG 94.89 + 1.80<br />

OcciPet 88.92 — .93<br />

OfficeMax 11.50<br />

Olin 25.04 + .06<br />

PG&E Cp 46.18 — .13<br />

Penney 14.28 — .30<br />

PepsiCo 84.29 + .09<br />

Pfizer 29.37 + .26<br />

Praxair 120.31 + .27<br />

ProctGam 81.29 — .35<br />

Questar 24.80 + .13<br />

RockwlAut 100.10 + .92<br />

SempraEn 88.60 + .11<br />

SouthnCo 44.34 — .01<br />

Textron 28.73 + .13<br />

3M Co 118.26 — .15<br />

TimeWarn 64.29 + 1.23<br />

Timken 60.10 — .28<br />

TriContl 18.84 — .04<br />

UnionPac 163.37 + .60<br />

Unisys 25.66 — .44<br />

USSteel 17.44 + .09<br />

VarianMed 73.01 — .19<br />

VerizonCm 50.25 + .24<br />

ViadCorp 25.10 + .36<br />

WalMart 78.75 + .53<br />

WellsFargo 44.49 + .23<br />

Weyerhsr 27.98 — .33<br />

Xerox 10.00 + .09<br />

YumBrnds 74.39 + .49<br />

The Associated Press<br />

Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohammed Morsi chants slogans against Egyptian Defense Minister<br />

Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi during protest in Nasr City, Cairo, Egypt on Friday.<br />

Egyptian forces to<br />

cordon off protest sites<br />

CAIRO (AP) — Authorities<br />

outlined plans Friday to<br />

break up two sit-ins by supporters<br />

of deposed President<br />

Mohammed Morsi, saying<br />

they would set up a cordon<br />

around the protest sites, and<br />

riot police used tear gas to<br />

disperse demonstrators<br />

threatening a TV <strong>com</strong>plex.<br />

Morsi backers also showed<br />

their defiance by briefly setting<br />

up a third camp near the<br />

airport, but later folded their<br />

tents and left.<br />

The military-backed<br />

interim government seeks to<br />

end a political stalemate that<br />

has paralyzed Egypt and<br />

deeply divided the country.<br />

Supporters of Morsi and his<br />

Muslim Brotherhood say<br />

they will not disperse until<br />

he is returned to power.<br />

The second-ranking U.S.<br />

diplomat arrived in the<br />

Egyptian capital for talks on<br />

the political crisis, as Secretary<br />

of State John Kerry<br />

warned both sides that “the<br />

last thing we want is more<br />

violence.”<br />

Also Friday, Amnesty<br />

International reported cases<br />

of alleged killings and torture<br />

at the hands of Morsi supporters<br />

inside the protest<br />

camps, saying that one man<br />

had his throat cut and<br />

another was stabbed to<br />

death.<br />

In southwestern Cairo,<br />

police fired tear gas at Morsi<br />

supporters who rallied in<br />

front of Media City, a site<br />

housing most of Egypt’s private<br />

TV stations, a security<br />

official said. A second official<br />

told the state news<br />

agency that protesters tried<br />

to “obstruct traffic in an<br />

attempt to affect work at the<br />

<strong>com</strong>plex.”<br />

The rally was “a desperate<br />

attempt by rioters from the<br />

(Islamist) current,” Maj.<br />

Gen. Abdel-Fattah Othman,<br />

a spokesman for the Interior<br />

Ministry, told the private TV<br />

station Mehwer. “There was<br />

reinforcement from police<br />

and army that will not allow<br />

any reckless person to get<br />

close to the Media City or<br />

storm it.”<br />

He described the protesters<br />

as “brainwashed” to<br />

attack broadcasters perceived<br />

as secular opponents<br />

of the Islamists. Last year,<br />

Morsi supporters held a sitin<br />

near Media City, often<br />

harassing TV personalities<br />

and forcing many of them to<br />

sneak into the studios from<br />

other entrances.<br />

Demonstrators said they<br />

gathered there to protest the<br />

lack of local media coverage<br />

of their activities, and insisted<br />

their gathering was<br />

peaceful. Health ministry<br />

official Khaled el-Khateeb<br />

said 23 people were injured<br />

in the clashes; and security<br />

officials said two conscripts<br />

were also wounded, including<br />

one with birdshot.<br />

The security officials, who<br />

spoke on condition of<br />

anonymity because they<br />

were not allowed to address<br />

the media, said 31 rioters<br />

were detained following the<br />

clashes. Footage of the<br />

detainees sitting on the<br />

ground outside the media<br />

city was aired on private<br />

channels.<br />

WORLD<br />

D I G E S T<br />

France<br />

tries cure<br />

in suburbs<br />

PARIS (AP) — Two weeks<br />

after a spurt of rioting in a<br />

far-flung Paris suburb, President<br />

Francois Hollande is<br />

injecting a new dose of funds<br />

to help cure one of France’s<br />

most persistent problem<br />

areas — the suburban housing<br />

projects with their<br />

volatile mix of joblessness,<br />

high immigration, crime and<br />

despair.<br />

The Socialist government is<br />

counting on state-sponsored<br />

jobs and improved lodging to<br />

help the millions of people living<br />

in pockets of poverty that<br />

ring major cities. Many are<br />

immigrants from former<br />

French colonies in Muslim<br />

North Africa who suffer from<br />

discrimination, notably in<br />

their search for jobs.<br />

Jailers thwart<br />

phone smuggling<br />

MEXICO CITY (AP) —<br />

Mexico City prison authorities<br />

say they have quashed an<br />

attempt to smuggle a prohibited<br />

cell phone into a city<br />

prison in the coffin of an<br />

inmate’s mother.<br />

Prisoners in the city have<br />

the right to have the casket of<br />

a deceased parent or child<br />

brought into the prison yard<br />

so they can bid farewell to<br />

their relative.<br />

But city correctional<br />

spokesman Emilio Castelazo<br />

said Friday that before the<br />

coffin was allowed into the<br />

Santa Marta Acatitla prison,<br />

guards searched the casket<br />

and found the cell phone<br />

inside.<br />

Castelazo said a criminal<br />

<strong>com</strong>plaint has been filed.<br />

Several relatives were with<br />

the coffin at the time.<br />

Cell phones are banned<br />

because inmates frequently<br />

use them to coordinate criminal<br />

activities outside prison<br />

or make extortion calls.<br />

Financial snapshot Friday, Aug. 2, 2013<br />

Interest rates<br />

WEEK’S WEEK YEAR<br />

CLOSE AGO AGO<br />

Average rate paid on banks<br />

money-market accounts<br />

(Bank Rate Monitor)<br />

91-day Treasury Bill Yield<br />

0.11%<br />

0.11<br />

0.12<br />

0.03%<br />

2.60%<br />

0.01<br />

2.56<br />

0.08<br />

1.56<br />

10-year Treasury Bond<br />

Commodities<br />

DJ UBS Commodities Indexes<br />

125.69 126.62 142.92<br />

Stocks<br />

Dow Jones Industrial Avg.<br />

S&P 500<br />

Wilshire 5000 Total Market<br />

15,658.36<br />

1709.67<br />

18,154.68<br />

15,558.83<br />

1,691.65<br />

17,925.62<br />

13,096.17<br />

1390.99<br />

14,473.15<br />

AP<br />

NORTHWEST STOCKS<br />

Week’s action: Monday, SFriday closings: Safeway . . . . . . . . . 26.06 25.37<br />

Stock . . . . . . . . . . Mon. Fri. Skywest . . . . . . . . . . 15.02 15.40<br />

Frontier. . . . . . . . . . E. 4.29 4.49 Starbucks . . . . . . . . 72.45 74.23<br />

Intel . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23.24 23.22 Sterling Fncl.. . . . . . 26.10 26.86<br />

Kroger . . . . . . . . . . . 39.84 39.16 Umpqua Bank. . . . . 16.56 17.32<br />

Lee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.96 3.04 Weyerhaeuser . . . . 28.00 27.96<br />

Microsoft . . . . . . . . . 31.54 31.88 Xerox . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.64 10.00<br />

Nike . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62.73 66.28 Dow Jones closed at 15,658.36<br />

NW Natural. . . . . . . 44.15 44.06<br />

Provided by Coos Bay Edward Jones<br />

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A8 • The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

South Coast<br />

Kitzhaber to visit wildfire areas<br />

Weather<br />

Today's Forecast<br />

Oregon weather Saturday, Aug. 3<br />

Weather Underground forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures<br />

Forecast for Saturday, Aug. 3<br />

City/Region<br />

High | Low temps<br />

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PORTLAND (AP) — Gov.<br />

John Kitzhaber will visit<br />

southwest Oregon to get a<br />

firsthand look at the wildfires<br />

that have threatened<br />

homes and made the air<br />

unhealthy to breathe.<br />

He’ll be joined this morning<br />

by U.S. Sens. Ron Wyden<br />

and Jeff Merkley. The trip<br />

<strong>com</strong>es after the death of a<br />

firefighter who was hit by a<br />

HELFRICH<br />

Ducks have the<br />

talent to contend<br />

Continued from Page A1<br />

the same time.<br />

It’s the type of mentality<br />

his dad had that Helfrich is<br />

trying to impart on his players<br />

now.<br />

“He’d be proud, he’d be<br />

ecstatic, and at the same<br />

time he’d tell me what I was<br />

doing wrong,” Helfrich said.<br />

“It epitomizes what I want to<br />

be and I think what a lot of<br />

people should try and aspire<br />

to be.<br />

“Parts of him will be<br />

reflected in everything we<br />

do.”<br />

Helfrich <strong>com</strong>es home to<br />

visit now for his mother,<br />

Linda. She is in poor health<br />

now, and while she may not<br />

be as strong as she once was,<br />

Helfrich can’t think of anyone<br />

else better suited to deal<br />

with it.<br />

“I know a lot of tough<br />

people, but my mom is by far<br />

the toughest person I know,”<br />

Helfrich said. “She’s inspirational;<br />

she’s awesome.”<br />

Helfrich and his wife,<br />

Megan, have two kids Max, 6,<br />

and Maggie, 3. Helfrich’s<br />

brother John married his<br />

wife’s sister, with the two now<br />

sharing in-laws.<br />

When he does <strong>com</strong>e to<br />

Coos Bay about two to three<br />

times a year, he always tries to<br />

take in the beach and has also<br />

looked into possibly getting a<br />

summer home down here.<br />

As a teenager with his buddies,<br />

Helfrich was an oldschool<br />

hip-hop fan and used<br />

to throw in cassettes of rap<br />

artists like NWA, Kool Moe<br />

Dee, Eric B. and Rakim, Kurtis<br />

Blow. While he won’t cop to<br />

wearing any kind of B-Boy<br />

gear, Helfrich would throw<br />

down a cardboard box and<br />

break dance with his buddies.<br />

He even happily admitted to<br />

playing Milli Vanilli.<br />

Floyd Montiel, Helfrich’s<br />

good friend from high school,<br />

had Helfrich as the best man<br />

in his wedding. Those two,<br />

along with a couple other<br />

buddies would drive around,<br />

hold their own dunk contests<br />

and home run derbies<br />

between games to try and stay<br />

out of trouble in high school.<br />

For Montiel, who was a<br />

wide receiver when Helfrich<br />

GARDENING<br />

Contrast makes<br />

life fascinating<br />

Continued from Page A1<br />

ago their total rainfall for the<br />

year was 64/100ths of an<br />

inch. The year they arrived<br />

in Oregon they saw 64 inches<br />

of rain for the year.<br />

“Everything in Oregon<br />

grows twice as big and twice<br />

as fast as it is supposed to,”<br />

Betsie said.<br />

“We quickly found out the<br />

coast was unique,” Betsie<br />

said. “Because of the cool<br />

temperatures we were able to<br />

grow some things that we<br />

had never been able to be<br />

successful with before. I<br />

couldn’t believe when we<br />

brought the legendary Blue<br />

Poppy of the Himalayas into<br />

bloom. That’s what makes it<br />

fascinating with these garden<br />

tours. When you go from<br />

place to place and see how<br />

people have brought out<br />

their potential. That’s what<br />

makes life fascinating and<br />

interesting: contrast.”<br />

falling treetop Thursday<br />

while removing fuels near a<br />

small wildfire in Central<br />

Oregon.<br />

The governor is likely to<br />

find an improving situation on<br />

the five major wildfires in the<br />

southwest part of the state.<br />

Cooler temperatures and<br />

higher humidity Thursday<br />

slowed the blazes that have<br />

charred about 40,000 acres<br />

was quarterback and the current<br />

Marshfield softball<br />

coach, Helfrich is just a standup<br />

guy.<br />

“He brings out the best in<br />

people,” Montiel said.<br />

Career ascent<br />

Helfrich wasn’t always a<br />

quarterback.<br />

As a middle school player,<br />

weight restrictions made Helfrich<br />

too heavy to be quarterback.<br />

He settled for being a<br />

tight end. On his way into high<br />

school, he personally asked<br />

his head coach Kent Wigle if<br />

he could try to be quarterback.<br />

He was met with no argument<br />

from his coach and a year<br />

later, as a sophomore, Helfrich<br />

was starting.<br />

After Helfirch started varsity<br />

as a quarterback, he and<br />

Wigle would sit down on Sundays<br />

at his home near Allegany<br />

on the Coos River. Wigle<br />

wanted to make sure he didn’t<br />

discourage or embarrass Helfrich<br />

<strong>com</strong>ing up as a young<br />

quarterback. Helfrich contends<br />

that it was “because I<br />

It can certainly be said<br />

that the Kinney’s have<br />

brought out their own<br />

potential, both in gardening<br />

and in life. Their recent<br />

award, both say, was the culmination<br />

of a lifetime of<br />

planting, learning and then<br />

sharing with others. Herb<br />

also describes it as a shared<br />

award, “98 percent to my<br />

wife and 2 percent to me.”<br />

Betsie, though, says that<br />

may be a little too lopsided.<br />

“It’s wonderful to me,”<br />

she said, “He does the hard<br />

work, shifting the rocks, digging<br />

the holes, while I have<br />

the fun part of it. We wouldn’t<br />

be able to do it unless we<br />

worked as a team.”<br />

Both say there is something<br />

about gardening that<br />

can help add great benefits to<br />

a persons life, perhaps even<br />

prolonging it.<br />

“There is something so<br />

wonderful about being close<br />

to nature and I think you<br />

have to work harder at it than<br />

ever in today’s <strong>world</strong>,” Betsie<br />

said. “There is something<br />

about the silence in a forest,<br />

the wildlife, the native plants<br />

in different places across the<br />

of forestland. Nearly 4,500<br />

firefighters are on the scene<br />

and more are on the way as<br />

the relatively mild U.S. fire<br />

season has freed firefighters<br />

and equipment to <strong>com</strong>e to<br />

the Pacific Northwest.<br />

The politicians plan to<br />

visit Glendale, close to where<br />

the lightning-sparked<br />

Douglas Complex of wildfires<br />

ignited last week. Those<br />

Contributed Photo<br />

Mark Helfrich (14), Rod Miles and Chris Peach with head coach Kent Wigle at the Shrine Game in 1992 in<br />

Corvallis.<br />

“I had the great fortune of playing for a<br />

lot of old-school type coaches that were<br />

hard-nosed and disciplined but at the<br />

same time they loved you. I’m forever<br />

blessed for that fact.”<br />

Mark Helfrich<br />

Oregon football coach<br />

was bad.”<br />

For the next 20 years, Wigle<br />

made it a tradition that the<br />

entire team would <strong>com</strong>e to his<br />

house and watch film every<br />

Sunday.<br />

“That’s probably where my<br />

angling towards coaching<br />

began,” Helfrich said. “I had<br />

the great fortune of playing<br />

for a lot of old-school type<br />

coaches that were hard-nosed<br />

and disciplined but at the<br />

same time they loved you. I’m<br />

forever blessed for that fact.”<br />

After getting an offer to<br />

walk-on at Oregon, Helfrich<br />

chose instead to play his college<br />

ball at Southern Oregon,<br />

figuring he had a better<br />

chance of getting on the field.<br />

After being injured as a junior<br />

and senior, Helfrich wanted to<br />

pursue medical school for<br />

orthopedics and even was<br />

accepted to some schools.<br />

When an opportunity to go to<br />

Austria to play and coach professionally<br />

for the Vienna<br />

Vikings sprang up, he decided<br />

to stay in football.<br />

A year later he moved back<br />

country. And there is a great<br />

spiritual quality about it<br />

also. I found out if I have<br />

anything worrying me at the<br />

moment, I go out and dig and<br />

dig and dig and it vanishes.<br />

It’s just wonderful. I can’t<br />

imagine living without digging<br />

and planting.”<br />

You can also expect this<br />

dynamic gardening duo to<br />

keep on growing. There are<br />

always new challenges to<br />

blazes have burned more<br />

than 28,000 acres, or 44<br />

square miles. Residents from<br />

105 houses got evacuation<br />

notices last week, but the<br />

improving situation allowed<br />

45 to return late Thursday.<br />

Smoke from those wildfires<br />

has worsened air quality<br />

to unhealthy-to-hazardous<br />

levels across southwest<br />

Oregon.<br />

World file photo by John Gunther<br />

Mark Helfrich plays with his<br />

nephew Joe following Arizona<br />

State's 2002 win over Oregon.<br />

to Oregon. The day he got<br />

back, a job opened up as a<br />

graduate assistant for Oregon.<br />

Helfrich admits it was “pure<br />

luck,” but it started the “cascade<br />

of good events” to get<br />

him where he is today.<br />

The new chapter in his<br />

career starts Aug. 31 with the<br />

Ducks’ season opener against<br />

Nicholls State. He has two<br />

legitimate Heisman candidates<br />

in Marcus Mariota and<br />

De’Anthony Thomas. Helfrich<br />

has talent and speed to<br />

spare at his disposal. They’re<br />

the betting favorite to win the<br />

Pac-12 title and play in the<br />

Rose Bowl or — as every Duck<br />

fan hopes and dreams — BCS<br />

National Championship<br />

game.<br />

It’s his dream job and Helfrich<br />

knows how rare it is to<br />

have an opportunity like that.<br />

“There’s places that have it<br />

and places that don’t,” Helfrich<br />

said. “(This is) a place<br />

where you can win it all.”<br />

Garden Tour today<br />

The Coos Bay Garden Club's annual Town and Country Garden Tour will be<br />

going on around Coos Bay and North Bend on Saturday, Aug. 3, from 10 a.m.<br />

to 4 p.m.<br />

Tickets are $10 and proceeds go toward a Marshfield High Schools<br />

Scholarship. They can be purchased in Coos Bay at Farr's True Value, Coos<br />

Grange Supply, Garden Elements, and 3B’s Nursery, in North Bend from Bev's<br />

Flowers, and from Hwy 101 Plants, Bandon.<br />

Club President Cheryl Rae Drumheller says this is just one of many <strong>com</strong>munity<br />

projects that the 40 members rally around each year. Pennies for Pines is<br />

another one, where garden club members’ donations go toward a National<br />

Garden Clubs Inc. project. For every $68 donated to the project an acre of<br />

pines is planted, with two acres planted over the last year.<br />

To find out more, or to get involved, Drumheller suggests checking out one<br />

of their monthly meetings.<br />

They meet on the first Wednesday at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church in Coos<br />

Bay at 1 p.m., though they suggest arriving a little earlier. Recent topics have<br />

included things like how to grow native plants, how to identify mushroom<br />

species and their importance to our health, coastal gardening, and how to<br />

make hanging baskets.<br />

tackle, and a wish list for a<br />

variety of plants they want to<br />

grow that never goes blank.<br />

“I’m 91 — she’s 90,” Herb<br />

added. “Gardening is what<br />

gets you there.”<br />

“Yes, it’s definitely contributed<br />

to harmony and<br />

goodwill,” said Betsie, before<br />

adding with a twinkle and a<br />

laugh, “and to 68 years of<br />

being together.”<br />

Newport<br />

59° | 54°<br />

Partly<br />

Cloudy<br />

Cloudy<br />

CALIF.<br />

Showers<br />

Thunderstorms<br />

South Coast<br />

Today: Partly sunny, with a high near<br />

68. North wind 6 to 14 mph, with gusts<br />

as high as 21 mph.<br />

Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 53. North northwest wind 6 to 14<br />

mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph.<br />

Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near<br />

68. North northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.<br />

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 54. North northwest wind 5 to 11<br />

mph.<br />

Curry County Coast<br />

Today: Areas of smoke. Mostly sunny,<br />

with a high near 69. Northeast wind 13<br />

to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 25 mph.<br />

Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 50. North wind 10 to 15 mph .<br />

Winds could gust as high as 22 mph.<br />

Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near<br />

63. East northeast wind 5 to 7 mph.<br />

Sunday: Night Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 51. Northeast wind 3 to 7 mph.<br />

Rogue Valley<br />

Today: Areas of smoke. Mostly sunny,<br />

with a high near 94. Calm wind be<strong>com</strong>ing<br />

north northwest 5 to 8 mph.<br />

Saturday Night: Areas of smoke. Partly<br />

cloudy, with a low around 59. North<br />

northwest wind 5 to 10 mph.<br />

Sunday: Areas of smoke. Mostly sunny<br />

and hot, with a high near 96. Light northwest<br />

wind.<br />

Sunday Night: Areas of smoke. Partly<br />

cloudy, with a low around 60. North<br />

northwest wind 5 to 8 mph.<br />

Central Douglas County<br />

Today: Mostly sunny, with a high near<br />

88. Light north northwest wind increasing<br />

to 6 to 11 mph in the afternoon.<br />

Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 57. North northwest wind 8 to 13<br />

mph. Winds could gust to 18 mph.<br />

Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near<br />

91. Calm wind be<strong>com</strong>ing north northwest<br />

5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.<br />

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 59. Northwest wind 5 to 9 mph<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing calm in the evening.<br />

WASH.<br />

Portland<br />

81° | 57° Pendleton<br />

86° | 45°<br />

Eugene<br />

84° | 54°<br />

North Bend<br />

Coos Bay<br />

61° | 52°<br />

Medford<br />

91° | 46°<br />

Salem<br />

84° | 57°<br />

Oregon Temps<br />

Temperature extremes and precipitation<br />

for the 24 hours ending at 5 a.m. today.<br />

Hi Lo Prec<br />

Astoria 64 56 0.07<br />

Brookings 74 49 0<br />

Corvallis 75 50 0<br />

Eugene 78 51 0<br />

Klamath Falls 77 34 0<br />

La Grande 77 54 0<br />

Medford 85 49 0<br />

Newport 63 55 0.02<br />

Pendleton 80 60 0<br />

Portland 72 59 T<br />

Redmond 79 43 0<br />

Roseburg 83 60 0<br />

Salem 76 59 T<br />

Extended outlook<br />

TODAY<br />

Partly sunny<br />

68/53<br />

MONDAY<br />

Mostly sunny<br />

69/53<br />

SUNDAY<br />

Partly sunny<br />

68/54<br />

TUESDAY<br />

Mostly sunny<br />

69/55<br />

Temperatures indicate Friday’s high and<br />

overnight low to 8 p.m. Eastern Time.<br />

Hi Lo Prc Otlk<br />

Albuquerque 91 66 .06 pcdy<br />

Anchorage 72 59 cdy<br />

Atlanta 89 69 pcdy<br />

Austin 102 74 pcdy<br />

Baltimore 87 65 rn<br />

Birmingham 88 68 pcdy<br />

Boise 83 54 clr<br />

Boston 85 66 .13 pcdy<br />

Burlington,Vt. 82 65 rn<br />

Casper 92 58 pcdy<br />

Charlotte,N.C. 89 69 pcdy<br />

Chicago 84 62 .63 pcdy<br />

Cincinnati 83 56 cdy<br />

Cleveland 75 59 cdy<br />

Colorado Springs 90 63 .15 rn<br />

Concord,N.H. 83 63 .73 pcdy<br />

Dallas-Ft Worth 102 81 pcdy<br />

Denver 94 60 cdy<br />

Des Moines 85 68 cdy<br />

Detroit 76 57 pcdy<br />

Fairbanks 82 58 cdy<br />

Fargo 78 51 clr<br />

Flagstaff 77 MM MM cdy<br />

Green Bay 80 57 pcdy<br />

Hartford Spgfld 84 64 .71 pcdy<br />

Honolulu 88 74 clr<br />

Houston 95 78 clr<br />

Indianapolis 84 59 rn<br />

Kansas City 82 64 .84 cdy<br />

Las Vegas 104 80 pcdy<br />

Bend<br />

82° | 48°<br />

Klamath Falls<br />

84° | 54°<br />

Rain<br />

© 2013 Wunderground.<strong>com</strong><br />

Flurries<br />

IDAHO<br />

Ontario<br />

90° | 57°<br />

Snow<br />

Ice<br />

Weather Underground• AP<br />

Willamette Valley<br />

Today: Mostly cloudy, then gradually<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing sunny, with a high near 82.<br />

Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low<br />

around 53. North northwest wind 5 to 10<br />

mph be<strong>com</strong>ing light.<br />

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 86.<br />

Calm wind be<strong>com</strong>ing north 5 to 9 mph in<br />

the afternoon.<br />

Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 55. North northwest wind 5 to 9<br />

mph be<strong>com</strong>ing light.<br />

Portland area<br />

Today: Cloudy through mid morning,<br />

then gradual clearing, with a high near<br />

80. Calm wind.<br />

Saturday Night: Increasing clouds, with a<br />

low around 60. West wind 5 to 7 mph<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing calm after midnight.<br />

Sunday: Mostly cloudy, then gradually<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing sunny, with a high near 85.<br />

Calm wind.<br />

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low<br />

around 62. Northwest wind 3 to 8 mph.<br />

North Coast<br />

Today: A 20 percent chance of showers.<br />

Mostly cloudy, with a high near 65. Light<br />

west wind.<br />

Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a<br />

low around 54. North northwest wind 5<br />

to 13 mph, with gusts as high as 18 mph.<br />

Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near<br />

67. Light north wind.<br />

Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low<br />

around 54. North wind 6 to 11 mph.<br />

Central Oregon<br />

Today: Sunny, with a high near 81. Light<br />

and variable wind be<strong>com</strong>ing north 5 to 8<br />

mph in the afternoon.<br />

Saturday Night: Mostly clear, with a low<br />

around 56. North wind 5 to 9 mph<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing calm in the evening.<br />

Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 87.<br />

Northeast wind 5 to 9 mph be<strong>com</strong>ing<br />

northwest in the morning.<br />

Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low<br />

around 59. Northwest wind 5 to 9 mph<br />

be<strong>com</strong>ing calm in the evening.<br />

Local high, low, rainfall<br />

Thursday: High NA, low NA<br />

Rain: NA<br />

Total rainfall to date: 17.49 inches<br />

Rainfall to date last year: 28.80 inches<br />

Average rainfall to date: 36.63 inches<br />

The Tide Tables<br />

To find the tide prediction for your area, add or<br />

subtract minutes as indicated. To find your estimated<br />

tidal height, multiply the listed height by<br />

the high or low ratio for your area.<br />

Location High time ratio Low time ratio<br />

Bandon -0:18 .81 -0:06 .84<br />

Brookings -0:40 .81 -0:30 .91<br />

Charleston -0:11 .89 -0:04 .91<br />

Coos Bay +1:20 .86 +1:24 .84<br />

Florence +0:38 .77 +0:54 .75<br />

Port Orford -0:28 .86 -0:23 .99<br />

Reedsport +1:05 .79 +1:20 .75<br />

Umpqua River -0:01 .81 -0:01 .91<br />

HIGH TIDE A.M. P.M.<br />

Date time ft. time ft.<br />

3-Aug 11:52 6.2 10:50 7.9<br />

4-Aug 12:27 6.5 11:33 8.1<br />

5-Aug - - 12:58 6.8<br />

6-Aug 12:14 8.1 1:28 7.1<br />

7-Aug 12:53 8.1 1:58 7.3<br />

LOW TIDE A.M. P.M.<br />

Date time ft. time ft.<br />

3-Aug 5:05 0.1 4:47 3.3<br />

4-Aug 5:44 -0.2 5:32 3.0<br />

5-Aug 6:20 -0.4 6:13 2.7<br />

6-Aug 6:53 -0.6 6:52 2.3<br />

7-Aug 7:25 -0.6 7:30 2.0<br />

Sunrise, sunset<br />

Aug 1-9 — 6:07, 8:40<br />

Moon watch<br />

New Moon — Aug 6<br />

Lexington 83 61 cdy<br />

Little Rock 91 70 cdy<br />

Los Angeles 76 62 pcdy<br />

Louisville 86 65 cdy<br />

Madison 80 63 .12 pcdy<br />

Memphis 90 71 cdy<br />

Miami Beach 93 79 .31 cdy<br />

Milwaukee 82 63 .45 pcdy<br />

Mpls-St Paul 79 61 pcdy<br />

Nashville 89 63 cdy<br />

New Orleans 95 77 pcdy<br />

New York City 83 67 .19 cdy<br />

Oklahoma City 98 76 pcdy<br />

Omaha 85 68 .17 cdy<br />

Philadelphia 86 68 rn<br />

Phoenix 107 88 clr<br />

Pittsburgh 76 60 rn<br />

Raleigh-Durham 89 67 .77 pcdy<br />

Reno 86 53 clr<br />

Sacramento 92 57 clr<br />

St Louis 83 73 .15 rn<br />

Salt Lake City 94 65 clr<br />

San Diego 70 65 pcdy<br />

San Francisco 68 53 pcdy<br />

Seattle 63 59 .06 cdy<br />

Toledo 72 53 .06 cdy<br />

Tucson 93 80 pcdy<br />

Washington,D.C. 88 71 rn<br />

Wichita 92 71 1.43 pcdy<br />

Wilmington,Del. 84 66 rn<br />

National Temperature Extremes<br />

High Friday 113 at Bullhead City, Ariz.<br />

Low Friday 25 at Truckee, Calif.<br />

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The ticker<br />

Major League Baseball<br />

Baltimore 11, Seattle 8<br />

Detroit 2, Chicago White Sox 1<br />

Arizona 7, Boston 6<br />

Miami 10, Cleveland 0<br />

N.Y. Mets 4, Kansas City 2, 11 innings<br />

San Francisco 4, Tampa Bay 1<br />

Minnesota 4, Houston 3, 13 innings<br />

San Diego 7, N.Y. Yankees 2<br />

L.A. Dodgers 6, Chicago Cubs 2<br />

Atlanta 6, Philadelphia 4<br />

Colorado 4, Pittsburgh 2<br />

St. Louis 13, Cincinnati 3<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/sports ■ Sports Editor John Gunther ■ 541-269-1222, ext. 241<br />

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2013 • SECTION B<br />

SPORTS<br />

Baseball, B2 • Scoreboard, B3 • Community, B4<br />

Tiger on the prowl<br />

Woods has<br />

big lead.<br />

Page B3<br />

C<br />

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Babe Ruth<br />

All-Stars<br />

reach<br />

semifinals<br />

THE WORLD<br />

The Associated Press<br />

Former Portland Trail Blazers center Greg Oden reacts after falling to the floor in the first half of a Dec. 5, 2009, basketball game against the Houston Rockets in Portland.<br />

Oden tries to revive career in Miami<br />

MIAMI (AP) — Greg Oden still<br />

needs some time to get ready for<br />

the rigors of playing in the NBA.<br />

He no longer needs a new team,<br />

however.<br />

The former No. 1 overall draft<br />

pick has chosen to sign with the<br />

two-time defending NBA champion<br />

Miami Heat, ending months<br />

of suspense over where the center<br />

whose career has been decimated<br />

by a series of knee problems would<br />

be attempting his <strong>com</strong>eback. The<br />

Heat were long perceived as the<br />

frontrunners to land Oden, and<br />

now have a 7-footer to help them<br />

try for a third straight title.<br />

Mike Conley Sr., one of Oden’s<br />

agents, said Friday night that the<br />

former Portland center accepted<br />

an offer worth about $1 million for<br />

this <strong>com</strong>ing season and would<br />

THE WORLD<br />

With the fall sports season quickly<br />

approaching, three South Coast schools will<br />

hold volleyball camps next week.<br />

Marshfield hosts the annual Sports<br />

Performance Volleyball Camp, led by a group<br />

out of Chicago from Monday through Friday.<br />

The camp for Marshfield High School volleyball<br />

players runs from 9 a.m.-noon and 1-<br />

3:30 p.m. each day. The cost is $190 for the<br />

week.<br />

Meanwhile, Sports Performance also will<br />

hold a camp for any South Coast students in<br />

grades 5 through 8 from 3:30-6 p.m. each day.<br />

Cost for that camp is $80.<br />

have a player option for 2014-15.<br />

“He just thought that it was the<br />

best fit for him, where he’s at and<br />

especially for how it relates to him<br />

<strong>com</strong>ing back,” Conley said. “He<br />

can be on a winning team and be<br />

working his way in slowly.”<br />

The contract is expected to be<br />

formally signed early next week,<br />

Conley said.<br />

“I think a 7-footer can help any<br />

team,” Heat point guard Mario<br />

Chalmers said. “They’re hard to<br />

find. I’ve known Greg since our<br />

high school days, talked to him a<br />

couple of times about this and you<br />

just hope for the best.”<br />

Oden told ESPN.<strong>com</strong> on Friday<br />

that he still has “a lot of work to do.”<br />

And during their recruiting<br />

process, the Heat were obviously<br />

cognizant of that. Oden has not<br />

played in the NBA since fracturing<br />

his kneecap in a game on Dec. 5,<br />

2009, but the Heat surely will not<br />

expect him to play big minutes<br />

right away, given that they are<br />

bringing back most of the rotation<br />

that won the last two league titles<br />

and will almost certainly be<br />

favored to win a third next season.<br />

When meeting with Oden last<br />

month in Indianapolis, Heat coach<br />

Erik Spoelstra laid out what<br />

Miami’s plans would be as far as<br />

potential roles and the former<br />

Ohio State star’s ongoing rehabilitation,<br />

and whatever got said in<br />

that conversation resonated<br />

throughout the remainder of the<br />

decision-making process.<br />

“The fact that Coach Spoelstra<br />

said all the right things, understood<br />

where he was at and what he<br />

Both camps will be held on the Marshfield<br />

campus.<br />

For more information, contact Marshfield<br />

coach Tammie Montiel either by phone at 541-<br />

404-6401 or email at tammiem@coosbay.k12.or.us.<br />

North Bend<br />

North Bend will hold its annual skills camp<br />

for any students from fifth grade through high<br />

school next week, starting Tuesday.<br />

The camp runs from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.<br />

Tuesday through Friday and will give players<br />

intense instructions on various volleyball<br />

skills. The instructors are veteran coaches from<br />

outside the area.<br />

wants, that impressed Greg quite a<br />

bit,” Conley said.<br />

Oden is the second No. 1 pick<br />

on the Heat roster, joining LeBron<br />

James, the top overall draft selection<br />

in 2003 — and someone who<br />

developed quite an affinity for<br />

Oden’s game when the center was<br />

at Ohio State. Oden wound up<br />

leaving college after one season,<br />

then was taken by Portland at the<br />

top of the 2007 draft.<br />

It was a spectacular failure,<br />

thanks to an array of injuries. Oden<br />

played in just 82 games — the<br />

equivalent of one full NBA season<br />

— during his four-plus years in the<br />

Blazers’ organization, averaging<br />

9.4 points, 7.3 rebounds and 1.4<br />

blocks on 58 percent shooting.<br />

SEE ODEN | B2<br />

Iconic group set to join NFL Hall of Fame<br />

CANTON, Ohio (AP) — While his<br />

six other classmates for this weekend’s<br />

enshrinement sported blue golf shirts<br />

given them by the Pro Football Hall of<br />

Fame, Cris Carter was dressed in suit<br />

and tie.<br />

He might never take them off.<br />

“Man, I am in the Hall of Fame. I am<br />

wearing a suit every day,” Carter said<br />

Friday as the 50th anniversary festivities<br />

for the hall began.<br />

Carter will join Jonathan Ogden,<br />

Larry Allen, Bill Parcells, Warren Sapp,<br />

Dave Robinson and Curley Culp as the<br />

newest inductees on Saturday night.<br />

He was, by far, the most emotional<br />

during a news conference Friday as<br />

festivities began for the 50th anniversary<br />

celebration of the hall.<br />

The only member of the Class of<br />

2013 who didn’t win an NFL title,<br />

Carter used a handkerchief to wipe<br />

away the tears when asked about his<br />

career and the fact it took six tries to<br />

get elected.<br />

“Minnesota fans didn’t judge me<br />

when a lot of bad things were being<br />

said about me,” Carter said, frequently<br />

pausing to regain his <strong>com</strong>posure.<br />

“They always cheered for Cris. The<br />

only thing I really wish is we could’ve<br />

won that championship for those people.<br />

What they did for my life, every<br />

day I went out there, I played for those<br />

people.”<br />

Carter was exiled from Philadelphia<br />

in 1989 after off-field problems,<br />

including drug and alcohol issues. The<br />

first one to call him and offer a job was<br />

Parcells.<br />

Carter ever told his agent he wanted<br />

to go to the Giants, but he wound up<br />

with the Vikings, who had a stronger<br />

need for a wide receiver. All Carter did<br />

the rest of his 16-season career was<br />

wind up second at his retirement in<br />

2002 behind Jerry Rice for all-time<br />

receptions and touchdowns. He’s<br />

fourth in those categories now.<br />

As he mentioned, though, he doesn’t<br />

have that championship. For the<br />

other six, those Super Bowl rings will<br />

have a blinding shine to them tonight.<br />

Parcells was a winner of two NFL<br />

titles as a coach and master of the franchise<br />

turnaround. Ogden, one of the<br />

premier offensive tackles of his time,<br />

grabbed a Super Bowl ring in 2000.<br />

SEE HALL | B3<br />

The Associated Press<br />

Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Cris Carter (80) celebrates a touchdown<br />

during a November, 1999, game. Carter will be inducted into the Pro Football<br />

Hall of Fame this weekend.<br />

Bulldogs, Pirates and Braves host volleyball camps<br />

For more information, call North Bend<br />

coach Les Willett at 541-756-0189.<br />

Reedsport<br />

Reedsport will hold two camps next week,<br />

both starting Monday.<br />

The school’s high school camp will go from<br />

5 to 7 p.m. each day and is for players who will<br />

be on the high school teams this fall. There is no<br />

cost for the players.<br />

Meanwhile, the youth camp for students in<br />

grades 3 through 8 will be held from 10 a.m. to<br />

noon each day. The cost is $30 and includes a<br />

camp T-shirt.<br />

For more information on either camp, call<br />

James Hixenbaugh at 541-271-3414.<br />

CENTRALIA, Wash. — The<br />

South Coast All-Stars will play for<br />

a spot in the championship game<br />

at the Pacific Northwest Babe<br />

Ruth 13-15 Regional Tournament<br />

today, despite suffering their first<br />

loss in the event Friday.<br />

South Coast fell 8-6 to Grays<br />

Harbor on Friday night, which left<br />

the local squad as the No. 2 seed<br />

out of its pool.<br />

South Coast plays tournament<br />

host Twin Cities in the second<br />

semifinal today. The two winners<br />

today face off at 5 p.m. Sunday for<br />

a spot in the Babe Ruth World<br />

Series in Virginia.<br />

On Thursday, South Coast<br />

edged Kennewick, Wash., 3-2 to<br />

improved to 3-0 and guarantee a<br />

spot in the semifinals. That gave<br />

manager Rob Laskey the luxury of<br />

saving some of his pitching for<br />

today’s round.<br />

“Our goal was to save a couple<br />

arms back for the championship<br />

type play,” Laskey said after Friday<br />

night’s loss.<br />

Cory Chattelle, who pitched<br />

the opener, will start today’s game,<br />

with Andrew Sharp and Garrett<br />

McCoy available if necessary.<br />

In Friday’s loss, Ricky Jones,<br />

Austin Soria, McCoy and Tyler<br />

Laskey all took turns on the<br />

mound.<br />

South Coast trailed 8-5 entering<br />

the final inning and loaded the<br />

bases, pushing across one run on a<br />

walk before the final two batters<br />

struck out.<br />

“They came through with their<br />

pitching in the end,” Rob Laskey<br />

said. “We knocked one pitcher off<br />

the mound and they brought in his<br />

twin brother.”<br />

Both twins stand 6-foot-5,<br />

Laskey said.<br />

Tyler Laskey drove in two runs<br />

in the loss and McCoy also had an<br />

RBI.<br />

“We had a couple minor<br />

injuries where we had to play people<br />

out of position a little bit,” Rob<br />

Laskey said. “That hurt us a little<br />

bit, but the kids did real well stepping<br />

up. That’s what we’re proud<br />

of. They showed a lot of character.”<br />

South Coast should be at full<br />

strength today, he said.<br />

Friday was the first time in the<br />

tournament South Coast failed to<br />

<strong>com</strong>e through in the seventh<br />

inning.<br />

Against Kennewick, Marshall<br />

Rice scored the winning run in the<br />

seventh, when he walked, stole<br />

second base, moved to third on a<br />

single by Jones and scored on a<br />

wild pitch with two outs.<br />

South Coast got another stellar<br />

pitching performance, this one<br />

from Sharp, who <strong>com</strong>bined with<br />

J.J. Hubbard to limit Kennewick to<br />

three hits.<br />

Sharp pitched into the seventh<br />

inning before Hubbard got two<br />

outs for his second straight save.<br />

South Coast also played an<br />

error-free game, finding a way to<br />

win despite getting only four hits.<br />

One of those came in the first,<br />

when Sharp beat out a grounder<br />

for an infield single, stole second<br />

and third and scored on a passed<br />

ball.<br />

South Coast’s other run came<br />

in the fourth, when Hubbard doubled<br />

and later came home on a<br />

grounder by Colton Olson that<br />

Kennewick misplayed for the only<br />

error of the game.<br />

Sharp had four strikeouts and<br />

Hubbard added one. Kennewick’s<br />

Gerald Hein was nearly as effective,<br />

also pitching into the seventh.<br />

“It was quite a pitching duel,”<br />

said Rob Laskey.<br />

Thursday Game<br />

South Coast 3, Kennewick 2<br />

South Coast 100 100 1 — 3 4 0<br />

Kennewick 100 001 0 — 2 3 1<br />

Andrew Sharp, J.J. Hubbard (7) and Kenny Thrall;<br />

Gerald Hein, Seth Lyeheed (7) and Tyler Morley. 2B-SC:<br />

Hubbard.<br />

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B2• The World • Saturday,August 3, 2013<br />

Davis hits<br />

40th HR<br />

in victory<br />

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

BALTIMORE — Chris Davis hit his<br />

major league-leading 40th home run<br />

and Nate McLouth contributed his first<br />

career grand slam to a power display<br />

that carried the Baltimore Orioles past<br />

the Seattle Mariners 11-8 Friday night.<br />

Ryan Flaherty also homered and had<br />

a career-high three hits for the Orioles,<br />

who never trailed but had to withstand<br />

four homers by Seattle.<br />

McLouth connected off Brandon<br />

Maurer to make it 11-6 in the sixth, and<br />

that was enough offense to fend off the<br />

Mariners, who closed the gap in the<br />

eighth with solo shots from Kendrys<br />

Morales and Michael Morse.<br />

Jim Johnson worked the ninth to<br />

earn his 38th save and secure the win for<br />

Chris Tillman (14-3).<br />

Davis drove a pitch from Aaron<br />

Harang (5-10) over the right-field wall<br />

and onto Eutaw Street to give Baltimore<br />

a 5-3 lead in the third inning. The solo<br />

homer traveled an estimated 442 feet<br />

and gave Davis a major-league high 101<br />

RBIs.<br />

He is the fifth Oriole to hit 40<br />

homers in a season, joining Brady<br />

Anderson (50), Frank Robinson (49), Jim<br />

Gentile (46) and Rafael Palmeiro (43).<br />

Tigers 2, White Sox 1: Doug Fister<br />

(10-5) pitched eight impressive innings,<br />

Austin Jackson homered and Jose<br />

Iglesias drove in a run in his Detroit<br />

debut to lead the Tigers over Chicago.<br />

The White Sox lost their eighth<br />

straight, while AL Central-leading<br />

Detroit has won 10 of 11.<br />

Twins 4, Astros 3, 13 innings:<br />

Brian Dozier’s third hit of the game<br />

scored Clete Thomas in the 13th inning<br />

to lift Minnesota to a win over Houston.<br />

Right-handed pitcher Kevin Correia<br />

pinch-hit in the 13th to sacrifice<br />

Thomas to second base. Dozier followed<br />

by punching a single to right field to<br />

snap Minnesota’s four-game losing<br />

streak.<br />

Rangers 8, Athletics 3: Nelson<br />

Cruz shook off talk of a pending suspension<br />

to hit a tying two-run homer,<br />

Jurickson Profar added another tworun<br />

shot and the surging Texas Rangers<br />

beat the Oakland Athletics for their fifth<br />

straight win.<br />

The Rangers, who were six games<br />

behind Oakland in the AL West earlier<br />

this week, are only 2 1 ⁄2 games back.<br />

NATIONAL LEAGUE<br />

Dodgers 6, Cubs 2: Mark Ellis<br />

extended his hitting streak to 13 games<br />

before both he and manager Don<br />

Mattingly were ejected, and the Los<br />

Angeles Dodgers matched an 89-yearold<br />

club record with their 12th straight<br />

road victory, beating the Chicago Cubs.<br />

Ellis doubled and scored in the third<br />

before being tossed when he and<br />

Mattingly argued a called third strike in<br />

the fourth, but the Dodgers still<br />

improved to 12-2 since the All-Star<br />

break.<br />

Sports<br />

The Associated Press<br />

Baltimore’s Chris Davis follows through on a solo home run against the Seattle Mariners in the<br />

third inning Friday.<br />

The NL West leaders remained<br />

unbeaten on the road since a loss at San<br />

Francisco on July 6 and matched the<br />

1924 Brooklyn Robins for the longest<br />

streak in franchise history.<br />

Rockies 4, Pirates 2: Jhoulys<br />

Chacin (10-5) allowed one run on six<br />

hits over eight innings and Colorado<br />

snapped a four-game losing streak with<br />

a win over Pittsburgh.<br />

Cardinals 13, Reds 3: David Freese<br />

set the tone with a bases-loaded double<br />

in the first inning, and Daniel Descalso<br />

hit two of St. Louis’ three homers in a<br />

win over Cincinnati.<br />

The Cardinals have emerged from a<br />

deep hitting slump by scoring 13 runs in<br />

each of their past two games. It’s the first<br />

time this season they’ve had doubledigit<br />

run totals in consecutive games.<br />

Braves 6, Phillies 4: Brian McCann<br />

and Chris Johnson hit consecutive<br />

homers in a five-run fifth inning to lead<br />

Atlanta over Philadelphia for its eighth<br />

straight win.<br />

Nationals 4, Brewers 1: Jordan<br />

Zimmermann earned his career-high<br />

13th win and Bryce Harper homered to<br />

lead Washington to a win over<br />

Milwaukee.<br />

INTERLEAGUE<br />

Giants 4, Rays 1: Madison<br />

Bumgarner struck out 11 in seven innings,<br />

Brandon Crawford hit a two-run homer<br />

and San Francisco beat Tampa Bay.<br />

Diamondbacks 7, Red Sox 6: Cody<br />

Ross capped his four-hit return to<br />

Fenway Park with a tie-breaking homer<br />

that gave Arizona a win over Boston.<br />

Ross, Boston’s regular right fielder<br />

last season, drove in three runs, doubled<br />

twice and singled once. His big hit came<br />

with the score tied at 6 when he led off<br />

the seventh inning against Pedro Beato<br />

(1-1) with his seventh homer of the year.<br />

Marlins 10, Indians 0: Jose<br />

Fernandez Fernandez (8-5) pitched<br />

eight innings and struck out 14, the<br />

most by an NL pitcher this season, to<br />

help Miami snap Cleveland’s eightgame<br />

win streak.<br />

Miami’s All-Star became the first<br />

major league pitcher to strike out at<br />

least 13 in consecutive games since<br />

Randy Johnson in 2004. He’s the first<br />

rookie to do so since Kerry Wood in<br />

1998.<br />

Padres 7, Yankees 2: Everth<br />

Cabrera, facing a 50-game suspension,<br />

tied his career high with four hits and<br />

Logan Forsythe hit one of San Diego’s<br />

three solo homers in a win over CC<br />

Sabathia and New York.<br />

Mets 4, Royals 2, 11 innings: Eric<br />

Young Jr. homered with two outs in the<br />

11th inning and New York overcame a<br />

blown lead to end Kansas City’s winning<br />

streak at nine.<br />

Young slammed a 3-1 pitch from Luis<br />

Mendoza (2-6) over the right-field<br />

fence for his first career game-ending<br />

hit and just his second home run of the<br />

season.<br />

Lochte wins two more golds at <strong>world</strong>s<br />

BARCELONA, Spain (AP)<br />

— Wearing fluorescent<br />

orange sneakers, Ryan Lochte<br />

eased out of his seat and<br />

moved gingerly toward the<br />

exit of the Palau Sant Jordi.<br />

It was the first time he<br />

was slow all night.<br />

“My whole entire body is<br />

hurting,” Lochte moaned.<br />

“There’s no other way to put<br />

it — I’m sore.”<br />

No kidding.<br />

On a night when Missy<br />

Franklin finally lost, Lochte<br />

turned in an epic performance<br />

at the <strong>world</strong> championships<br />

Friday. He swam<br />

three races in less than two<br />

hours, <strong>com</strong>ing away with two<br />

gold medals and the top time<br />

in an event he’s <strong>com</strong>peting in<br />

for the first time at a major<br />

international meet.<br />

Certainly, this grueling<br />

triple was worthy of a “Jeah!”<br />

— Lochte’s silly catchphrase<br />

that echoed through the<br />

arena every time he dove in<br />

the water.<br />

“Unbelievable,” said no<br />

less an authority than Bob<br />

Bowman, Michael Phelps’<br />

former coach. “An incredible<br />

night of swimming.”<br />

No one could find any<br />

record of someone <strong>com</strong>peting<br />

in three races in the same<br />

session at either the <strong>world</strong>s<br />

ODEN<br />

From Page B1<br />

Oden’s health issues have<br />

dogged him since he was<br />

drafted. Right knee<br />

microfracture surgery — a<br />

procedure used to develop<br />

new, healthy cartilage —<br />

ended what would have been<br />

his rookie season before it<br />

ever started. He made his<br />

or the Olympics. Phelps, for<br />

all his ac<strong>com</strong>plishments,<br />

never did it at one of the<br />

major international meets.<br />

Bowman was asked where<br />

Lochte’s performance ranked<br />

in swimming history. He<br />

immediately thought of the<br />

night in this same arena, a<br />

decade ago, when Phelps<br />

broke <strong>world</strong> records in different<br />

events on the same night.<br />

“It’s up there with stuff<br />

like that,” Bowman said.<br />

Lochte won the 200-<br />

meter backstroke, posted the<br />

fastest time in the semifinals<br />

of the 100 butterfly, and put<br />

the Americans ahead to stay<br />

with a strong leg in the 800<br />

freestyle relay. Not bad for a<br />

guy who took a long break<br />

after the London Olympics<br />

and slacked off on his training<br />

while filming a reality television<br />

show, “What Would<br />

Ryan Lochte Do?”<br />

Lochte finished his big<br />

night in the relay, taking over<br />

with the Americans trailing<br />

both Russia and France after<br />

Conor Dwyer’s opening leg.<br />

Lochte took care of that,<br />

turning in the second-fastest<br />

200 (1:44.98) of anyone in<br />

the field. Only Sun Yang of<br />

China, one of the <strong>world</strong>’s<br />

greatest freestylers, went<br />

faster — and he hadn’t<br />

long-awaited NBA debut on<br />

Oct. 28, 2008, and sprained<br />

his right foot in that game,<br />

sidelining him for two weeks.<br />

His next major injury<br />

issue came in February of<br />

that season, when he chipped<br />

his left kneecap and missed<br />

about a month. Oden<br />

returned for the final 21<br />

games of that season — 15<br />

before the playoffs, then six<br />

more in the postseason,<br />

when Portland was ousted by<br />

the Rockets.<br />

He’s played in a total of 21<br />

games since, and the fractured<br />

kneecap in 2009 came<br />

just as he seemed to be hitting<br />

his best NBA stride.<br />

Another microfracture surgery<br />

awaited him in<br />

November 2010, and a third<br />

one was needed early in 2012,<br />

essentially ending his career<br />

with the Blazers. He was<br />

already <strong>com</strong>peted in two<br />

races.<br />

“When you get together<br />

for a relay, you don’t care<br />

about the pain,” Lochte said.<br />

Franklin also had a busy<br />

night, but the first race didn’t<br />

go as she hoped. The 18-<br />

year-old American finished<br />

fourth in the 100 free behind<br />

gold medalist Cate Campbell<br />

of Australia, ending a run of<br />

four straight victories in<br />

Barcelona.<br />

“I’m a little bummed,”<br />

Franklin said.<br />

She quickly shook off the<br />

defeat, however, <strong>com</strong>ing back<br />

about 25 minutes later to easily<br />

post the top qualifying<br />

time in the semifinals of the<br />

200 back, her favorite event.<br />

She’ll be a heavy favorite in<br />

that race tonight — she’s the<br />

Olympic champion and<br />

<strong>world</strong>-record holder —<br />

which leaves her still on<br />

course to at least match Tracy<br />

Caulkins of the U.S. and<br />

Libby Trickett of Australia as<br />

the only women to win five<br />

events at <strong>world</strong>s.<br />

Caulkins won her five at<br />

the 1978 meet in Berlin, while<br />

Trickett did it in her home<br />

championships at Melbourne<br />

in 2007.<br />

Franklin will have one<br />

more event after the backstroke<br />

— Sunday’s 400 medley<br />

relay — so she’s got a shot<br />

at joining Phelps and Mark<br />

Spitz as the only swimmers<br />

to win as many as six golds at<br />

either the <strong>world</strong>s or<br />

Olympics.<br />

In the relay, Lochte joined<br />

with Dwyer, Charlie Houchin<br />

and Ricky Berens to give the<br />

Americans their fifth straight<br />

<strong>world</strong> title in the 4x200 free.<br />

Berens touched in 7:01.72,<br />

while Russia took the silver<br />

and China — with Sun swimming<br />

1:43.16 on the anchor<br />

leg — rallied for the bronze.<br />

In the women’s 100 free,<br />

Campbell pushed the pace<br />

from right the start, making<br />

the flip more than a half-second<br />

under <strong>world</strong>-record pace.<br />

That gave her a big enough<br />

lead to hold on for a time of<br />

52.34, a half-body length in<br />

front of silver medalist Sarah<br />

Sjostrom of Sweden.<br />

Ranomi Kromowidjojo of<br />

the Netherlands edged<br />

Franklin for the bronze by<br />

0.05.<br />

“I don’t think it really<br />

sunk in until I got out of the<br />

pool and I heard all the<br />

Aussies in the crowd chanting,”<br />

Campbell said. “In the<br />

water I was just like, ‘Why are<br />

all these people hugging me?<br />

What’s going on?”’<br />

waived in March 2012.<br />

“Time will tell,” Heat<br />

president Pat Riley said earlier<br />

this summer, when asked if<br />

Oden could still be effective.<br />

San Antonio, New<br />

Orleans, Dallas, Atlanta and<br />

Sacramento also were<br />

believed to be seriously vying<br />

for Oden this summer, with a<br />

handful of other clubs<br />

expressing a lower level of<br />

interest.<br />

Johnson grabs<br />

pole in Pocono<br />

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

LONG POND, Pa. —<br />

There was no bumping<br />

Jimmie Johnson this week.<br />

Johnson set a track record<br />

with a lap of 180.654 mph to<br />

win the pole Friday at Pocono<br />

Raceway. Johnson seemed<br />

poised to win the pole last<br />

week at Indianapolis until<br />

Ryan Newman<br />

topped him<br />

on the last<br />

qualifying<br />

attempt<br />

of the day.<br />

Sports<br />

Shorts<br />

Johnson<br />

would not be denied at<br />

Pocono. He’s now in position<br />

to go for the season sweep at<br />

Pocono, where he won from<br />

the pole in June.<br />

Kyle Busch was third and<br />

Carl Edwards third. Newman,<br />

last week’s race winner at the<br />

Brickyard, starts fourth. Kurt<br />

Busch is fifth.<br />

Johnson has four wins this<br />

season and leads the points<br />

standings as he chases his<br />

sixth championship.<br />

Points leader Dillon aims<br />

for first win of season<br />

NEWTON, Iowa — Austin<br />

Dillon knows the Nationwide<br />

race in Iowa tonight might be<br />

his best shot yet at a victory.<br />

But it’s not necessarily<br />

because Dillon is running so<br />

well.<br />

It’s mostly because Kyle<br />

Busch is staying at Pocono<br />

Raceway.<br />

Dillon, who took over the<br />

Nationwide points lead last<br />

week despite going winless<br />

through 19 starts, headlines a<br />

field almost exclusively made<br />

up of Nationwide regulars.<br />

Brad Keselowski, who won<br />

the inaugural Nationwide<br />

race in Iowa four years ago,<br />

will be the lone Sprint Cup<br />

driver in the field as<br />

NASCAR’s top series runs<br />

Sunday in Pennsylvania.<br />

BASEBALL<br />

A-Rod homers as big<br />

suspension looms<br />

NEW YORK — Alex<br />

Rodriguez was back with the<br />

Trenton Thunder on Friday<br />

and hit what might be his last<br />

home run in a while.<br />

With a lengthy suspension<br />

looming, the New York<br />

Yankees star hit a two-run<br />

homer to left in the third<br />

inning of a 6-2 win over the<br />

Reading Fightin Phils.<br />

Rodriguez is among 14<br />

players facing discipline in<br />

Major League Baseball’s<br />

Biogenesis investigation, and<br />

suspensions are expected on<br />

Monday — with Rodriguez<br />

facing the longest penalty.<br />

“I am mentally prepared<br />

to play for five more years,”<br />

he said, later adding, “It’s not<br />

time for me to hang it up. I<br />

have a lot more fight in me.”<br />

Coming back from hip<br />

surgery and a quadriceps<br />

injury, A-Rod hopes to rejoin<br />

the Yankees for Monday’s<br />

series opener at the Chicago<br />

White Sox, what would be his<br />

first time back in the major<br />

leagues since last October.<br />

“I think it’s possible,”<br />

Yankees manager Joe Girardi<br />

said in San Diego.<br />

Rodriguez is counting on<br />

it.<br />

COLLEGE BASKETBALL<br />

NCAA announces plan to<br />

change seeding process<br />

INDIANAPOLIS — The<br />

NCAA announced changes to<br />

the way it will select teams<br />

for the men’s basketball<br />

tournament, adding flexibility<br />

in hopes of keeping teams<br />

properly seeded.<br />

Previously, conference<br />

teams couldn’t meet until the<br />

regional final — unless a conference<br />

had nine teams in the<br />

field.<br />

The changes will not<br />

affect which teams get into<br />

the tourney. But they will<br />

allow conference teams that<br />

have played only once during<br />

the season — including league<br />

tournaments — to meet as<br />

early as the third round.<br />

Teams that have played twice<br />

will not face one another until<br />

the regional semifinals and<br />

teams that have played three<br />

times cannot meet until the<br />

regional championship.<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

NFL suspends Jackson<br />

for first eight games<br />

OWINGS MILLS, Md. —<br />

Baltimore Ravens cornerback<br />

Asa Jackson has been suspended<br />

without pay for the<br />

first eight games of the regular<br />

season for violating the<br />

NFL’s policy on performance-enhancing<br />

substances.<br />

Jackson received a fourgame<br />

suspension as a rookie<br />

last season for the same reason.<br />

This suspension is for<br />

eight games because it’s his<br />

second violation.<br />

Drafted in the fifth round<br />

out of Cal Poly, Jackson<br />

played in only two games last<br />

season for the Super Bowl<br />

champions.<br />

Jackson will be eligible to<br />

return to the active roster<br />

Nov. 4 after the team’s game<br />

against Cleveland on Nov. 3.<br />

He is eligible to participate in<br />

all preseason practices and<br />

games.<br />

‘Whizzer’ White dies on<br />

way to Phoenix hospital<br />

PHOENIX — Wilford<br />

“Whizzer” White, the father<br />

of former Dallas Cowboys<br />

quarterback Danny White<br />

and a member of the Arizona<br />

State hall of fame, has died at<br />

the age of 84.<br />

The former Sun Devils<br />

running back died Thursday<br />

after falling unconscious<br />

while awaiting a doctor’s<br />

appointment, White’s<br />

daughter-in-law, Michelle<br />

White, said Friday.<br />

White passed away while<br />

on an ambulance headed to a<br />

Phoenix-area hospital, possibly<br />

of a heart attack, but<br />

family members are still<br />

awaiting tests.<br />

White was an ASU running<br />

back from 1947 to 1950<br />

and finished his career as the<br />

school’s all-time leading<br />

rusher with 3,173 yards, one<br />

of only four players in school<br />

history to rush for more than<br />

3,000 yards. He now ranks<br />

fourth among the school’s<br />

all-time leading rushers.<br />

“Whizzer embodied all of<br />

the attributes of the Sun<br />

Devil Way that we teach our<br />

players,” head football coach<br />

Todd Graham said in a statement.<br />

“The mark he left on<br />

this program will always echo<br />

through Sun Devil Stadium.”<br />

White led the Sun Devils<br />

to nine wins for the first time<br />

in the school’s history, and<br />

his 1,502 yards rushing in<br />

1950 remain the secondhighest<br />

mark in a single season<br />

at ASU. White’s 48 career<br />

touchdowns are the second<br />

most in school history. He<br />

was drafted by the Chicago<br />

Bears in 1951.<br />

Hawaii fires coordinator<br />

on eve of first practice<br />

HONOLULU — Hawaii<br />

coach Norm Chow says<br />

offensive coordinator Aaron<br />

Price has been dismissed<br />

from the football program.<br />

Chow announced the<br />

decision Friday at the start of<br />

fall practice, but did not give<br />

details or a reason for Price’s<br />

departure.<br />

Chow says the decision<br />

was difficult, with unfortunate<br />

timing at the start of fall<br />

camp. Chow says “some<br />

issues have arisen” and the<br />

team is choosing to move forward<br />

without Price.<br />

Price had been with the<br />

Rainbow Warriors since<br />

February. He served as offensive<br />

coordinator and wide<br />

receivers coach.<br />

Team officials say Chow<br />

likely won’t fill the position<br />

this year. Chow will oversee<br />

the positions and two graduate<br />

assistants will expand<br />

their roles with the quarterbacks<br />

and wide receivers.<br />

Montreal fires former<br />

Colorado, Boise coach<br />

MONTREAL — The<br />

Montreal Alouettes fired<br />

coach Dan Hawkins on<br />

Thursday, ending the former<br />

Boise State and Colorado<br />

coach’s run with the CFL<br />

team after only five games.<br />

General manager Jim<br />

Popp is taking over as coach.<br />

The Alouettes are 2-3.<br />

“I won’t get into specifics,<br />

but there are some issues that<br />

we felt should be moving<br />

along quicker than they are,”<br />

Popp said. “We feel it’s going<br />

very slow. We’re a veteran<br />

team. We’re looking for<br />

results now. Hopefully, we<br />

can get ourselves back to the<br />

Alouette way.”<br />

Hawkins was hired Feb. 19<br />

to replace Marc Trestman,<br />

who left to coach the NFL’s<br />

Chicago Bears. In five seasons,<br />

Trestman took the<br />

Alouettes to three Grey Cup<br />

games, winning twice.<br />

C<br />

Y<br />

C<br />

Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

M<br />

K


C<br />

Y<br />

C<br />

Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

M<br />

K<br />

Tiger<br />

flirts<br />

with 59<br />

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />

AKRON, Ohio — Tiger<br />

Woods had a shot at making<br />

history with a magical 59.<br />

He swore he wasn’t disappointed<br />

to <strong>com</strong>e up short.<br />

“Disappointed?<br />

Absolutely not,” he said.<br />

Then he cracked, “A 61’s<br />

pretty good. I’m not<br />

bummed.”<br />

Woods could console<br />

himself by tying his career<br />

best and building a sevenshot<br />

lead Friday through 36<br />

holes at the Bridgestone<br />

Invitational.<br />

Pursuing his eighth victory<br />

at Firestone Country Club,<br />

Woods opened birdie-eagle<br />

— stuffing an approach to 3<br />

feet at the first hole and holing<br />

a 20-footer for 3 at the<br />

par-5 second. He had two<br />

more birdies on the front<br />

nine, and had four in a row to<br />

start the back nine in a light<br />

rain.<br />

Needing to go only 2 under<br />

over his last five holes, he<br />

missed birdie putts inside 10<br />

feet at 15 and 17. He saved par<br />

on the last with a 25-footer<br />

after an errant drive and a<br />

shot that hit into the trees and<br />

ended up in a bare spot short<br />

and right of the green.<br />

The 61 — matching his<br />

career best at the 1999 Byron<br />

Nelson, 2005 Buick Open and<br />

on the same Firestone course<br />

back in 2000 — left him at<br />

13-under 127.<br />

Defending champion<br />

Keegan Bradley and Chris<br />

Wood, playing the tournament<br />

for the first time, were<br />

On The Air<br />

No updated TV listings were available for<br />

today’s edition.<br />

Local Schedule<br />

Today<br />

Babe Ruth — South Coast All-Stars vs. Twin<br />

Cities at regionals, Centralia, Wash., 1 p.m.<br />

Sunday, Aug. 4<br />

Babe Ruth — South Coast All-Stars at regionals,<br />

Centralia, Wash., 5 p.m. (with win Saturday).<br />

Monday, Aug. 5<br />

No local events scheduled.<br />

Pro Baseball<br />

American League<br />

East Division W L Pct GB<br />

Boston 66 45 .595 —<br />

Tampa Bay 64 45 .587 1<br />

Baltimore 61 49 .555 4 1 ⁄2<br />

New York 56 52 .519 8 1 ⁄2<br />

Toronto 50 59 .459 15<br />

Central Division W L Pct GB<br />

Detroit 62 45 .579 —<br />

Cleveland 60 49 .550 3<br />

Kansas City 54 52 .509 7 1 ⁄2<br />

Minnesota 46 60 .434 15 1 ⁄2<br />

Chicago 40 67 .374 22<br />

West Division W L Pct GB<br />

Oakland 63 46 .578 —<br />

Texas 61 49 .555 2 1 ⁄2<br />

Los Angeles 50 58 .463 12 1 ⁄2<br />

Seattle 50 59 .459 13<br />

Houston 36 72 .333 26 1 ⁄2<br />

Thursday’s Games<br />

Cleveland 6, Chicago White Sox 1<br />

Kansas City 7, Minnesota 2<br />

Texas 7, Arizona 1<br />

Baltimore 6, Houston 3<br />

Boston 8, Seattle 7<br />

L.A. Angels 8, Toronto 2<br />

Friday’s Games<br />

Baltimore 11, Seattle 8<br />

Detroit 2, Chicago White Sox 1<br />

Arizona 7, Boston 6<br />

Miami 10, Cleveland 0<br />

N.Y. Mets 4, Kansas City 2, 11 innings<br />

San Francisco 4, Tampa Bay 1<br />

Minnesota 4, Houston 3, 13 innings<br />

Texas 8, Oakland 3<br />

L.A. Angels 7, Toronto 5<br />

San Diego 7, N.Y. Yankees 2<br />

Today’s Games<br />

Kansas City (B.Chen 4-0) at N.Y. Mets (C.Torres<br />

1-2), 10:10 a.m.<br />

Texas (Garza 1-0) at Oakland (J.Parker 6-6),<br />

1:05 p.m.<br />

Seattle (E.Ramirez 2-0) at Baltimore (Feldman<br />

2-2), 4:05 p.m.<br />

Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 2-8) at Detroit<br />

(Scherzer 15-1), 4:08 p.m.<br />

Arizona (Corbin 12-2) at Boston (Peavy 8-4),<br />

4:10 p.m.<br />

Cleveland (McAllister 4-6) at Miami (Ja.Turner<br />

3-3), 4:10 p.m.<br />

Houston (Bedard 3-8) at Minnesota (Gibson 2-<br />

3), 4:10 p.m.<br />

San Francisco (Lincecum 5-11) at Tampa Bay<br />

(Price 6-5), 4:10 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Yankees (Nova 4-4) at San Diego (T.Ross 2-<br />

4), 5:40 p.m.<br />

Toronto (Rogers 3-5) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 5-<br />

5), 6:05 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 10:08 a.m.<br />

Cleveland at Miami, 10:10 a.m.<br />

Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m.<br />

Arizona at Boston, 10:35 a.m.<br />

Seattle at Baltimore, 10:35 a.m.<br />

San Francisco at Tampa Bay, 10:40 a.m.<br />

Houston at Minnesota, 11:10 a.m.<br />

Toronto at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m.<br />

Texas at Oakland, 1:05 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Yankees at San Diego, 1:10 p.m.<br />

Monday’s Games<br />

Detroit at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Boston at Houston, 5:10 p.m.<br />

Minnesota at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Yankees at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m.<br />

Texas at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.<br />

Toronto at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.<br />

National League<br />

East Division W L Pct GB<br />

Atlanta 65 45 .591 —<br />

Washington 53 56 .486 11 1 ⁄2<br />

Philadelphia 50 59 .459 14 1 ⁄2<br />

New York 49 58 .458 14 1 ⁄2<br />

Miami 43 65 .398 21<br />

Central Division W L Pct GB<br />

Pittsburgh 65 44 .596 —<br />

St. Louis 64 44 .593<br />

1<br />

⁄2<br />

Cincinnati 60 50 .545 5 1 ⁄2<br />

Chicago 49 60 .450 16<br />

Milwaukee 46 63 .422 19<br />

West Division W L Pct GB<br />

Los Angeles 59 49 .546 —<br />

Arizona 56 53 .514 3 1 ⁄2<br />

Colorado 52 59 .468 8 1 ⁄2<br />

San Diego 51 59 .464 9<br />

San Francisco 49 59 .454 10<br />

Thursday’s Games<br />

Miami 3, N.Y. Mets 0<br />

Texas 7, Arizona 1<br />

San Francisco 2, Philadelphia 1<br />

St. Louis 13, Pittsburgh 0<br />

Atlanta 11, Colorado 2<br />

L.A. Dodgers 6, Chicago Cubs 4<br />

Friday’s Games<br />

L.A. Dodgers 6, Chicago Cubs 2<br />

Atlanta 6, Philadelphia 4<br />

Colorado 4, Pittsburgh 2<br />

Arizona 7, Boston 6<br />

Miami 10, Cleveland 0<br />

N.Y. Mets 4, Kansas City 2, 11 innings<br />

San Francisco 4, Tampa Bay 1<br />

St. Louis 13, Cincinnati 3<br />

Washington 4, Milwaukee 1<br />

San Diego 7, N.Y. Yankees 2<br />

Today’s Games<br />

Kansas City (B.Chen 4-0) at N.Y. Mets (C.Torres<br />

1-2), 10:10 a.m.<br />

Atlanta (Beachy 0-0) at Philadelphia (Lannan<br />

3-4), 1:05 p.m.<br />

L.A. Dodgers (Capuano 3-6) at Chicago Cubs<br />

(Samardzija 6-9), 1:05 p.m.<br />

Colorado (J.De La Rosa 10-5) at Pittsburgh<br />

(Liriano 11-4), 4:05 p.m.<br />

Arizona (Corbin 12-2) at Boston (Peavy 8-4),<br />

4:10 p.m.<br />

Cleveland (McAllister 4-6) at Miami (Ja.Turner<br />

3-3), 4:10 p.m.<br />

San Francisco (Lincecum 5-11) at Tampa Bay<br />

(Price 6-5), 4:10 p.m.<br />

St. Louis (Westbrook 7-5) at Cincinnati<br />

(Cingrani 4-1), 4:10 p.m.<br />

Washington (Haren 5-11) at Milwaukee<br />

(D.Hand 0-2), 4:10 p.m.<br />

N.Y. Yankees (Nova 4-4) at San Diego (T.Ross 2-<br />

4), 5:40 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

Cleveland at Miami, 10:10 a.m.<br />

Kansas City at N.Y. Mets, 10:10 a.m.<br />

St. Louis at Cincinnati, 10:10 a.m.<br />

Arizona at Boston, 10:35 a.m.<br />

Colorado at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m.<br />

San Francisco at Tampa Bay, 10:40 a.m.<br />

Washington at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m.<br />

L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.<br />

N.Y. Yankees at San Diego, 1:10 p.m.<br />

Atlanta at Philadelphia, 5:05 p.m.<br />

Monday’s Games<br />

Atlanta at Washington, 4:05 p.m.<br />

L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Milwaukee at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.<br />

Friday’s Linescores<br />

Orioles 11, Mariners 8<br />

Seattle 003 012 020 — 8 12 2<br />

Baltimore 401 114 00x — 11 11 0<br />

Harang, Maurer (6) and Quintero; Tillman,<br />

Patton (6), Fr.Rodriguez (8), Ji.Johnson (9) and<br />

Wieters. W—Tillman 14-3. L—Harang 5-10. Sv—<br />

Ji.Johnson (38). HRs—Seattle, M.Saunders (8),<br />

Quintero (1), K.Morales (17), Morse (12).<br />

Baltimore, C.Davis (40), Flaherty (7), McLouth<br />

(7).<br />

Tigers 2, White Sox 1<br />

Chicago 000 001 000 — 1 7 0<br />

Detroit 000 110 00x — 2 6 1<br />

H.Santiago, N.Jones (8) and Phegley; Fister,<br />

Benoit (9) and B.Pena. W—Fister 10-5. L—<br />

H.Santiago 3-7. Sv—Benoit (11). HRs—Detroit,<br />

A.Jackson (7).<br />

Twins 4, Astros 3<br />

Houston 000 020 001 000 0 — 3 7 1<br />

Minnesota 001 000 011 000 1 — 4 11 0<br />

(13 innings)<br />

Cosart, Cisnero (8), W.Wright (8), Fields (8), Lo<br />

(9), Blackley (10), Zeid (11), Keuchel (12) and<br />

Corporan; Deduno, Burton (7), Thielbar (8),<br />

Perkins (9), Fien (10), Roenicke (11), Pressly (12)<br />

and Mauer. W—Pressly 3-2. L—Keuchel 5-6.<br />

Marlins 10, Indians 0<br />

Cleveland 000 000 000 — 0 3 2<br />

Miami 311 000 05x — 10 16 0<br />

U.Jimenez, Shaw (5), Rzepczynski (7), Albers<br />

(8) and C.Santana; Fernandez, Ames (9) and<br />

Mathis. W—Fernandez 8-5. L—U.Jimenez 8-6.<br />

Diamondbacks 7, Red Sox 6<br />

Arizona 201 030 100 — 7 16 1<br />

Boston 220 002 000 — 6 9 0<br />

Delgado, Putz (7), Thatcher (7), Bell (8),<br />

Ziegler (9) and Nieves; Lester, Thornton (5),<br />

Beato (7), Tazawa (8) and Saltalamacchia. W—<br />

Delgado 4-3. L—Beato 1-1. Sv—Ziegler (6). HRs—<br />

Arizona, Goldschmidt (25), C.Ross (7). Boston,<br />

D.Ortiz (21), Drew (8).<br />

Mets 4, Royals 2<br />

Kansas City 000 000 011 00 — 2 6 0<br />

New York 200 000 000 02 — 4 11 1<br />

(11 innings)<br />

W.Davis, K.Herrera (6), Coleman (7), Crow (9),<br />

Mendoza (10) and S.Perez; Gee, Rice (8),<br />

Hawkins (8), Aardsma (9), Feliciano (9), C.Torres<br />

(10) and Buck. W—C.Torres 2-2. L—Mendoza 2-6.<br />

HRs—New York, D.Wright (16), E.Young (2).<br />

Giants 4, Rays 1<br />

San Francisco 000 010 300 — 4 8 0<br />

Tampa Bay 001 000 000 — 1 8 0<br />

Bumgarner, S.Casilla (8), J.Lopez (9), Romo (9)<br />

and Posey; Archer, C.Ramos (8), Farnsworth (8),<br />

J.Wright (9) and Lobaton. W—Bumgarner 11-6. L—<br />

Archer 6-4. Sv—Romo (26). HRs—San Francisco,<br />

Belt (11), B.Crawford (7).<br />

Dodgers 6, Cubs 2<br />

Los Angeles 102 210 000 — 6 9 0<br />

Chicago 010 100 000 — 2 14 1<br />

Ryu, Howell (6), League (7), Belisario (8),<br />

Marmol (9) and A.Ellis; Tr.Wood, Bowden (4),<br />

E.Sanchez (5), Russell (7), B.Parker (8), Strop (9)<br />

and Castillo. W—Ryu 10-3. L—Tr.Wood 7-8.<br />

Rockies 4, Pirates 2<br />

Colorado 010 003 000 — 4 9 0<br />

Pittsburgh 001 000 001 — 2 8 0<br />

Chacin, Brothers (9) and W.Rosario; Cole,<br />

Ju.Wilson (6), J.Hughes (8), Morris (9) and<br />

R.Martin. W—Chacin 10-5. L—Cole 5-5. Sv—<br />

Brothers (8). HRs—Colorado, Tulowitzki (20).<br />

Braves 6, Phillies 4<br />

Atlanta 001 050 000 — 6 10 0<br />

Philadelphia 020 002 000 — 4 6 1<br />

Medlen, D.Carpenter (7), Walden (8), Kimbrel<br />

(9) and McCann; E.Martin, Lu.Garcia (5),<br />

Diekman (6), De Fratus (7), Bastardo (8) and<br />

Kratz. W—Medlen 8-10. L—E.Martin 0-1. Sv—<br />

Kimbrel (32). HRs—Atlanta, McCann (16),<br />

C.Johnson (7). Philadelphia, Ruf (3), D.Young (8),<br />

Utley (15).<br />

Cardinals 13, Reds 3<br />

St. Louis 410 430 100 — 13 14 0<br />

Cincinnati 000 003 000 — 3 6 0<br />

S.Miller, Siegrist (6), K.Butler (8) and T.Cruz,<br />

Ro.Johnson; Arroyo, Partch (4), Simon (6),<br />

Ondrusek (7), LeCure (8), Hoover (9) and<br />

Mesoraco, C.Miller. W—S.Miller 11-7. L—Arroyo 9-<br />

9. HRs—St. Louis, Descalso 2 (5), Craig (11).<br />

Cincinnati, Votto (17).<br />

Nationals 4, Brewers 1<br />

Washington 000 011 101 — 4 12 1<br />

Milwaukee 000 000 010 — 1 5 2<br />

Zimmermann, Mattheus (7), Clippard (8),<br />

R.Soriano (9) and W.Ramos; Gorzelanny, Figaro<br />

(2), Badenhop (6), Axford (7), Kintzler (8),<br />

Mic.Gonzalez (9) and Lucroy. W—Zimmermann<br />

13-6. L—Figaro 1-3. Sv—R.Soriano (27). HRs—<br />

Washington, Harper (16). Milwaukee, Lucroy (16).<br />

Swimming<br />

FINA World Championships<br />

Thursday Finals<br />

At Barcelona, Spain<br />

Swimming<br />

Men<br />

100 freestyle — 1, James Magnussen,<br />

Australia, 47.71. 2, James Feigen, United States,<br />

47.82. 3, Nathan Adrian, United States, 47.84. 4,<br />

Cameron McEvoy, Australia, 47.88. 5, Vladimir<br />

Morozov, Russia, 48.01. 6, Marcelo Chierighini,<br />

Brazil, 48.28. 7, Fabien Gilot, France, 48.33. 8,<br />

Luca Dotto, Italy, 48.58.<br />

200 individual medley — 1, Ryan Lochte,<br />

United States, 1:54.98. 2, Kosuke Hagino, Japan,<br />

1:56.29. 3, Thiago Pereira, Brazil, 1:56.30. 4,<br />

Wang Shun, China, 1:56.86. 5, Laszlo Cseh,<br />

Hungary, 1:57.70. 6, Daniel Tranter, Australia,<br />

1:57.88. 7, Daiya Seto, Japan, 1:58.45. 8, Simon<br />

Sjodin, Sweden, 1:59.79.<br />

Women<br />

50 backstroke — 1, Zhao Jing, China, 27.29. 2,<br />

Fu Yuanhui, China, 27.39. 3, Aya Terakawa,<br />

Japan, 27.53. 4, Etiene Madeiros, Brazil, 27.83. 5,<br />

Mercedes Peris, Spain, 27.93. 6, Georgia Davies,<br />

Britain, 27.96. 7, Rachel Bootsma, United States,<br />

28.05. 8, Lauren Quigley, Britain, 28.33.<br />

200 butterfly — 1, Liu Zige, China, 2:04.59. 2,<br />

Mareia Belmonte, Spain, 2:04.78. 3, Katinka<br />

Hosszu, Hungary, 2:05.59. 4, Natsumi Hoshi,<br />

Japan, 2:06.09. 5, Zsuzsanna Jakabos, Hungary,<br />

2:06.58. 6, Jiao Liuyang, China, 2:06.65. 7,<br />

Cammile Adams, United States, 2:07.73. 8, Judit<br />

Ignacio, Spain, 2:08.40.<br />

4x200 freestyle relay — 1, United States (Katie<br />

Ledecky, Shannon Vreeland, Karlee Bispo, Missy<br />

Franklin), 7:45.14. 2, Australia (Bronte Barratt,<br />

Kylie Palmer, Brittany Elmslie, Alicia Coutts),<br />

7:47.08. 3, France (Camille Muffat, Charlotte<br />

Bonnet, Mylene Lazare, Coralie Balmy), 7:48.43.<br />

4, China, 7:49.79. 5, Spain, 7:53.20. 6, Canada,<br />

7:55.48. 7, Italy, 7:57.91. 8, Japan, 7:58.15.<br />

Friday Finals<br />

Men<br />

200 backstroke — 1, Ryan Lochte, United<br />

States, 1:53.79. 2, Radoslaw Kawecki, Poland,<br />

1:54.24. 3, Tyler Clary, United States, 1:54.64. 4,<br />

Ryosuke Irie, Japan, 1:55.07. 5, Kosuke Hagino,<br />

Sports<br />

The Associated Press<br />

Tiger Woods tees off on the third hole during the second round of the Bridgestone Invitational on Friday.<br />

tied for second. They each<br />

shot 68.<br />

Cable dispute<br />

NEW YORK — Millions of<br />

golf fans might not be able to<br />

watch Tiger Woods protect<br />

his lead this weekend at the<br />

Bridgestone Invitational<br />

because of a dispute between<br />

Time Warner Cable and CBS.<br />

Three million Time<br />

Warner Cable customers in<br />

and around New York, Los<br />

Angeles, Chicago, Dallas,<br />

Boston, Pittsburgh, Denver<br />

and Detroit lost access to<br />

CBS programming Friday as<br />

the cable provider dropped<br />

the network in a dispute over<br />

fees.<br />

CBS is scheduled to<br />

broadcast the final two<br />

rounds today and Sunday.<br />

Next week, the network is set<br />

to show the PGA<br />

Championship .<br />

Women’s British Open<br />

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland<br />

— Before she can think of<br />

four in a row, Inbee Park first<br />

has to make up an eight-shot<br />

deficit at the Women’s<br />

British Open.<br />

Playing in the strongest<br />

wind this week, she had a<br />

pair of three-putt bogeys in a<br />

round of 1-over 73 that left<br />

her closer to the cut line than<br />

the lead. The 25-year-old<br />

South Korean is trying to<br />

be<strong>com</strong>e the first golfer to win<br />

four professional majors in<br />

one year.<br />

Those rugged afternoon<br />

conditions were no problem<br />

for Na Yeon Choi. The South<br />

Korean had a 5-under 67 —<br />

nearly nine shots lower than<br />

the field average for the<br />

afternoon — and had a oneshot<br />

lead over Miki Saiki of<br />

Japan. Saiki set the Old<br />

Course record for the<br />

Women’s British Open at 6-<br />

under 66 in the morning,<br />

which featured bursts of<br />

showers but very little wind<br />

until late in the round.<br />

Choi was at 10-under 134.<br />

Reno-Tahoe Open<br />

RENO, Nev. — Andres<br />

Romero birdied his last four<br />

holes to take the secondround<br />

lead in the Reno-Tahoe<br />

Open with 22 points in the<br />

modified Stableford scoring<br />

format on the edge of the<br />

Sierra.<br />

The Argentine player who<br />

finished third last year had<br />

nine birdies, a bogey and a<br />

double bogey on Friday for a<br />

one-point lead over Gary<br />

Woodland.<br />

The scoring system<br />

awards eight points for double<br />

eagle, five points for<br />

eagle, two for birdie, zero for<br />

par, minus-one for bogey and<br />

minus-three for double<br />

bogey or worse.<br />

Woodland had a chance to<br />

take the lead on his last hole<br />

when his 90-yard approach<br />

glanced off the pin, but<br />

missed a 5-foot birdie<br />

attempt.<br />

Stuart Appleby, Rod<br />

Pampling and former<br />

University of Nevada player<br />

Charlie Wi were three points<br />

back at 19. David Toms had<br />

17.<br />

Scoreboard<br />

Japan, 1:55.43. 6, Craig McNally, Britain, 1:55.67.<br />

7, Xu Jiayu, China, 1:57.13. 8, Peter Bernek,<br />

Hungary, 1:58.26.<br />

200 breaststroke — 1, Daniel Gyurta, Hungary,<br />

2:07.23. 2, Marco Koch, Germany, 2:08.54. 3,<br />

Matti Mattsson, Finland, 2:08.95. 4, Andrew<br />

Willis, Britain, 2:09.13. 5, Michael Jamieson,<br />

Britain, 2:09.14. 6, Viatcheslav Sinkevich, Russia,<br />

2:09.34. 7, Akihiro Yamaguchi, Japan, 2:09.57. 8,<br />

Ryo Tateishi, Japan, 2:10.28.<br />

4x200 freestyle relay — 1, United States<br />

(Conor Dwyer, Ryan Lochte, Charlie Houchin,<br />

Ricky Berens), 7:01.72. 2, Russia (Danila Izotov,<br />

Nikita Lobintsev, Artem Lobuzov, Alexander<br />

Sukhorukov), 7:03.92. 3, China (Wang Shun, Hao<br />

Yun, Li Yunqi, Sun Yang), 7:04.74. 4, France,<br />

7:04.91. 5, Japan, 7:04.95. 6, Germany, 7:10.07. 7,<br />

Belgium, 7:11.15. 8, Britain, 7:12.00.<br />

Women<br />

100 freestyle — 1, Cate Campbell, Australia,<br />

52.34. 2, Sarah Sjostrom, Sweden, 52.89. 3,<br />

Ranomi Kromowidjojo, Netherlands, 53.42. 4,<br />

Missy Franklin, United States, 53.47. 5, Femke<br />

Heemskerk, Netherlands, 53.67. 6, Britta<br />

Steffen, Germany, 53.75. 7, Tang Yi, China, 54.27.<br />

8, Shannon Vreeland, United States, 54.49.<br />

200 breaststroke — 1, Yuliya Efimova, Russia,<br />

2:19.41. 2, Rikke Moller Pedersen, Denmark,<br />

2:20.08. 3, Micah Lawrence, United States,<br />

2:22.37. 4, Rie Kaneto, Japan, 2:22.96. 5,<br />

Viktoriya Solnceva, Ukraine, 2:23.01. 6, Marina<br />

Garcia, Spain, 2:23.55. 7, Sally Foster, Australia,<br />

2:24.01. 8, Martha McCabe, Canada, 2:25.21.<br />

Auto Racing<br />

NASCAR<br />

Sprint Cup GoBowling.<strong>com</strong> 400 Lineup<br />

After Friday qualifying; race Sunday<br />

At Pocono Raceway<br />

Long Pond, Pa.<br />

Lap length: 2.5 miles<br />

(Car number in parentheses)<br />

1. (48) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 180.654.<br />

2. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 180.639.<br />

3. (99) Carl Edwards, Ford, 180.18.<br />

4. (39) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 180.004.<br />

5. (78) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 179.695.<br />

6. (22) Joey Logano, Ford, 179.601.<br />

7. (16) Greg Biffle, Ford, 179.533.<br />

8. (9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 179.329.<br />

9. (11) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 179.144.<br />

10. (43) Aric Almirola, Ford, 179.094.<br />

11. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 178.937.<br />

12. (1) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 178.848.<br />

13. (31) Jeff Burton, Chevrolet, 178.667.<br />

14. (29) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 178.508.<br />

15. (51) A J Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 178.501.<br />

16. (15) Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 178.409.<br />

17. (17) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 178.264.<br />

18. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 178.26.<br />

19. (42) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet, 178.056.<br />

20. (14) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 178.031.<br />

21. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 177.982.<br />

22. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 177.658.<br />

23. (93) Travis Kvapil, Toyota, 177.592.<br />

24. (20) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 177.508.<br />

25. (88) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 177.441.<br />

26. (56) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 177.239.<br />

27. (98) Michael McDowell, Ford, 177.221.<br />

28. (55) Mark Martin, Toyota, 176.991.<br />

29. (13) Casey Mears, Ford, 176.942.<br />

30. (34) David Ragan, Ford, 176.838.<br />

31. (30) David Stremme, Toyota, 176.821.<br />

32. (7) Dave Blaney, Chevrolet, 176.267.<br />

33. (47) Bobby Labonte, Toyota, 176.098.<br />

34. (10) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 175.86.<br />

35. (83) David Reutimann, Toyota, 175.743.<br />

36. (36) J.J. Yeley, Chevrolet, 175.179.<br />

37. (38) David Gilliland, Ford, Owner Points.<br />

38. (40) Landon Cassill, Chevrolet, Owner Points.<br />

39. (87) Joe Nemechek, Toyota, Owner Points.<br />

40. (35) Josh Wise, Ford, Owner Points.<br />

41. (32) Timmy Hill, Ford, Owner Points.<br />

42. (19) Alex Kennedy, Toyota, Owner Points.<br />

43. (33) Tony Raines, Chevrolet, Owner Points.<br />

Pro Soccer<br />

Major League Soccer<br />

EASTERN CONFERENCE<br />

W L T Pts GF GA<br />

Sporting KC 10 6 6 36 31 21<br />

New York 10 7 5 35 33 27<br />

Montreal 10 5 5 35 32 29<br />

Philadelphia 9 6 7 34 33 30<br />

New England 8 7 6 30 27 19<br />

Houston 8 6 6 30 23 20<br />

Chicago 7 9 4 25 25 30<br />

Columbus 6 10 5 23 24 27<br />

Toronto FC 3 10 8 17 19 29<br />

D.C. United 2 15 4 10 10 35<br />

WESTERN CONFERENCE<br />

W L T Pts GF GA<br />

Real Salt Lake 11 7 4 37 36 24<br />

Portland 8 3 10 34 31 20<br />

Colorado 9 7 7 34 28 24<br />

Los Angeles 10 9 3 33 32 27<br />

HALL<br />

From Page B1<br />

Larry Allen, a 1995 champion<br />

with Dallas, was the rare<br />

equal of Ogden on the offensive<br />

line in their era.<br />

Sapp, an outstanding<br />

defensive tackle with a personality<br />

as big as any football<br />

stadium, won the 2002 championship<br />

in Tampa Bay.<br />

Robinson, a major cog in<br />

Green Bay’s championship<br />

machine under Vince<br />

Lombardi, won the first two<br />

Super Bowls. Culp, one of the<br />

original pass-rushing demons<br />

at defensive tackle, got his<br />

ring with the 1969 Chiefs.<br />

Quite a group, and a<br />

record 121 hall members are<br />

expected to attend the ceremonies.<br />

“It’s somewhat overwhelming,”<br />

said Ogden, the<br />

Baltimore Ravens’ first-ever<br />

draft choice and the first team<br />

member elected to the hall.<br />

“You look around and there’s<br />

Joe Greene and Joe Namath —<br />

heck, they are all there, you<br />

can’t stop naming names.”<br />

Ogden, Allen and Sapp<br />

have the distinction of making<br />

the hall in their first year<br />

of eligibility. It’s all the more<br />

impressive considering all<br />

three were linemen.<br />

Allen became the anchor<br />

of the Cowboys’ blocking<br />

unit for a dozen seasons, then<br />

finished his career with two<br />

years in San Francisco. He<br />

made six All-Pro teams and<br />

11 Pro Bowls, playing guard<br />

and tackle.<br />

“It’s great, great <strong>com</strong>pany<br />

to be in,” said Allen, who<br />

Cowboys executive vice<br />

president Stephen Jones<br />

believes “would have been a<br />

Hall of Famer at guard or<br />

tackle, and either side. He<br />

was special like that.”<br />

Adds Curtis Martin, the<br />

Jets and Patriots running<br />

back who was inducted last<br />

Vancouver 9 7 5 32 33 29<br />

FC Dallas 8 5 8 32 27 27<br />

Seattle 8 7 4 28 24 22<br />

San Jose 7 9 6 27 23 33<br />

Chivas USA 4 12 5 17 19 37<br />

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.<br />

Today’s Games<br />

New York at Sporting Kansas City, 3:30 p.m.<br />

Montreal at D.C. United, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Chicago at Philadelphia, 5 p.m.<br />

Columbus at Houston, 6 p.m.<br />

Real Salt Lake at Colorado, 6 p.m.<br />

Chivas USA at San Jose, 7 p.m.<br />

FC Dallas at Seattle FC, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Vancouver at Portland, 8 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

Toronto FC at New England, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, Aug. 10<br />

Seattle FC at Toronto FC, 4 p.m.<br />

San Jose at Vancouver, 4:30 p.m.<br />

New York at Columbus, 4:30 p.m.<br />

D.C. United at Philadelphia, 5 p.m.<br />

Montreal at Chicago, 5:30 p.m.<br />

New England at Sporting Kansas City, 5:30 p.m.<br />

Houston at Real Salt Lake, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, Aug. 11<br />

Los Angeles at FC Dallas, 5 p.m.<br />

Colorado at Chivas USA, 8 p.m.<br />

National Women’s Soccer League<br />

W L T Pts GF GA<br />

FC Kansas City 10 4 5 35 30 17<br />

Portland 10 4 4 34 27 19<br />

Sky Blue FC 9 6 4 31 26 22<br />

Western New York 8 4 6 30 31 17<br />

Boston 6 7 5 23 29 29<br />

Chicago 6 7 5 23 24 30<br />

Seattle 5 10 3 18 20 29<br />

Washington 1 13 4 7 13 37<br />

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.<br />

Today’s Games<br />

Western New York at Boston, 3 p.m.<br />

Seattle FC at Chicago, 4 p.m.<br />

Washington at Sky Blue FC, 4 p.m.<br />

Sunday’s Games<br />

FC Kansas City at Portland, 5:30 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, Aug. 7<br />

Portland at Boston, 4 p.m.<br />

Seattle FC at Western New York, 4:05 p.m.<br />

Chicago at Washington, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, Aug. 10<br />

FC Kansas City at Boston, 3 p.m.<br />

Seattle FC at Washington, 4 p.m.<br />

Sky Blue FC at Chicago, 4 p.m.<br />

Portland at Western New York, 4:35 p.m.<br />

Transactions<br />

BASEBALL<br />

American League<br />

BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed 2B Brian<br />

Roberts on the paternity leave list. Reinstated<br />

RHP Steve Johnson from the 15-day DL.<br />

Assigned RHP Jairo Asencio outright to Norfolk<br />

(IL).<br />

BOSTON RED SOX—Added RHP Jake Peavy to<br />

the active roster. Optioned RHP Jose De La Torre<br />

to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled RHP Steven Wright<br />

from Pawtucket. Optioned RHP Brandon<br />

Workman to Pawtucket.<br />

DETROIT TIGERS—Released RHP Cesar<br />

Carrillo.<br />

HOUSTON ASTROS—Released 1B Carlos Pena.<br />

KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Placed INF Chris Getz<br />

on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 28.<br />

MINNESOTA TWINS—Optioned LHP Scott<br />

Diamond and OF Aaron Hicks to Rochester (IL).<br />

TEXAS RANGERS — Claimed INF Adam Rosales<br />

off waivers from Oakland. Optioned OF Engel<br />

Beltre to Round Rock (PCL).<br />

TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Placed RHP Dustin<br />

McGowan on the 15-day DL, retroactive to<br />

Tuesday. Reinstated RHP Sergio Santos from the<br />

60-day DL. Transferred RHP Brandon Morrow to<br />

the 60-day DL.<br />

National League<br />

ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Placed C Miguel<br />

Montero on the 15-day DL, retroactive to July 29.<br />

Optioned RHP Chaz Roe to Reno (PCL). Recalled<br />

RHP Zeke Spruill from Reno. Selected the contract<br />

of C Tuffy Gosewisch from Reno.<br />

CINCINNATI REDS—Assigned RHP Greg<br />

Reynolds outright to Louisville (IL).<br />

COLORADO ROCKIES—Optioned LHP Jeff<br />

Francis to Colorado Springs (PCL). Recalled RHP<br />

Chad Bettis from Tulsa (Texas). Designated RHP<br />

Josh Sullivan for assignment.<br />

MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Recalled INF Scooter<br />

Gennett from Nashville (PCL). Sent RHP Mark<br />

Rogers to the AZL Brewers for a rehab assignment.<br />

NEW YORK METS — Selected the contract of<br />

LHP Pedro Feliciano from Las Vegas (PCL).<br />

Placed LHP Josh Edgin on the 15-day DL.<br />

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Announced the<br />

retirement of RHP Brad Lidge.<br />

PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Activated RHP Jared<br />

Hughes from the 15-day DL. Optioned RHP Vic<br />

Black to Indianapolis (IL).<br />

C<br />

Saturday,August 3, 2013 • The World • B3 Y<br />

year: “If there were two guys<br />

I would have wanted to run<br />

behind, it would be Larry and<br />

Jonathan.”<br />

Sapp, whose induction<br />

speech might be the most<br />

anticipated because he’s<br />

liable to say anything, was a<br />

cornerstone of Tampa Bay’s<br />

powerful defense that was<br />

the key to winning the<br />

Buccaneers’ only title after<br />

decades of futility.<br />

“We took a place where<br />

they said careers came to die<br />

to a place that’s be<strong>com</strong>e a<br />

destination,” Sapp said, noting<br />

the Tampa 2 scheme is<br />

now played by defenses<br />

everywhere.<br />

As for his speech, Sapp<br />

said he has “been trying to<br />

imagine how everything will<br />

feel and still haven’t gotten<br />

it. My anticipation is<br />

nowhere near <strong>com</strong>plete.”<br />

Like Sapp in Tampa,<br />

Parcells also was heavily<br />

involved in making popular<br />

— and successful — a specific<br />

alignment. The 3-4 defense<br />

came to life under Parcells<br />

with the New York Giants,<br />

and he led them to the 1986<br />

and 1990 championships.<br />

Parcells, who also took the<br />

Patriots, Jets and Cowboys<br />

from the bottom to near the<br />

top of the NFL as head coach,<br />

says it was his duty to provide<br />

a prosperous environment.<br />

“You give the players a<br />

chance to succeed to the best<br />

of their ability,” he said.<br />

“That’s your job as a coach,<br />

your responsibility.”<br />

Parcells mentioned his<br />

coaching tree, which<br />

includes the likes of Tom<br />

Coughlin, Bill Belichick and<br />

Sean Payton — all Super<br />

Bowl-winning coaches planning<br />

to be on hand Saturday<br />

— as among his proudest<br />

achievements. He promised<br />

to bring that up during his<br />

induction speech.<br />

Robinson and Culp were<br />

voted in as senior members.<br />

SAN DIEGO PADRES—Reinstated RHP Sean<br />

O’Sullivan from paternity leave. Optioned RHP<br />

Miles Mikolas to Tucson (PCL).<br />

WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Promoted Mike<br />

Rizzo to president of baseball operations and<br />

general manager.<br />

BASKETBALL<br />

National Basketball Association<br />

MILWAUKEE BUCKS—Signed G Nate Wolters.<br />

SACRAMENTO KINGS — Named Corliss<br />

Williamson assistant coach.<br />

TORONTO RAPTORS—Signed F Austin Daye.<br />

Women’s National Basketball Association<br />

INDIANA FEVER—Released F Jasmine Hassell.<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

National Football League<br />

NFL — Suspended Baltimore CB Asa Jackson<br />

for the first eight games of the 2013 regular season<br />

for violating the NFL policy on performance<br />

enhancing substances. Suspended Minnesota OT<br />

DeMarcus Love first four games of the 2013 regular<br />

season for violating the NFL policy on performance<br />

enhancing substances.<br />

ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed CB Jordan Mabin.<br />

Waived CB Saeed Lee.<br />

CAROLINA PANTHERS—Released OL Geoff<br />

Hangartner.<br />

CHICAGO BEARS — Signed LB Andrew Starks to<br />

a three-year contract. Waived K Austin Signor.<br />

CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed DT Vaughn<br />

Meatoga. Acquired OT Jason Weaver off waivers<br />

from Tampa Bay. Signed WR Jheranie Boyd.<br />

DALLAS COWBOYS—Released DE Cameron<br />

Sheffield and CB Devin Smith. Signed G Jeff<br />

Olson and OT James Nelson.<br />

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Waived G Robert<br />

Griffin and LB Scott Lutrus. Signed G Danous<br />

Estenor and C Thomas Austin.<br />

JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS—Were awarded LS<br />

Luke Ingram off waivers from Pittsburgh.<br />

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS—Signed CB Kamaal<br />

McIlwain and OT Mike Tepper.<br />

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed OL Luke<br />

Patterson and OL Brice Schwab. Signed DL<br />

Travis Chappelear, WR Johnathan Haggerty, WR<br />

Lavasier Tuinei and DL Scott Vallone. Released<br />

DB Stephon Morris.<br />

NEW YORK GIANTS—Placed WR Jeremy Horne<br />

on the waived-injured list. Signed WR Julian<br />

Talley.<br />

NEW YORK JETS—Activated S Rontez Miles<br />

from the PUP list.<br />

OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed K Sebastian<br />

Janikowski to a four-year contract extension.<br />

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES — Excused WR Riley<br />

Cooper from all team activities indefinitely after<br />

he was caught on video making a racial slur.<br />

SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed WR Austin<br />

Collie and WR Lavelle Hawkins to one-year contracts.<br />

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Waived DE Kenneth<br />

Boatright. Agreed to terms with WR Early<br />

Doucet. Waived RB Ray Holley. Waived/injured<br />

WR Greg Herd. Claimed WR Perez Ashford off<br />

waivers from New England. Signed TE Andrei<br />

Lintz.<br />

Canadian Football League<br />

MONTREAL ALOUETTES—Fired coach Dan<br />

Hawkins. Announced general manager Jim Popp<br />

will take over coach.<br />

HOCKEY<br />

National Hockey League<br />

LOS ANGELES KINGS—Agreed to terms with LW<br />

Kyle Clifford on a two-year contract.<br />

PHOENIX COYOTES — Announced today the<br />

team renewed their one-year affiliation agreement<br />

the Gwinnett (ECHL).<br />

SAN JOSE SHARKS — Re-signed F Bracken<br />

Kearns to a one-year contract.<br />

ST. LOUIS BLUES — Signed D Jay Bouwmeester<br />

to a five-year contract extension.<br />

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Signed G Kristers<br />

Gudlevskis to a three-year contract.<br />

SOCCER<br />

Major League Soccer<br />

MLS — Suspended Real Salt Lake MF Yordany<br />

Alvarez three games for a reckless challenge<br />

that injured New York MF Tim Cahill in a July 27<br />

game. Suspended Philadelphia MF Keon Daniel<br />

one game and fined him an undisclosed amount<br />

for an act of violent conduct against Vancouver<br />

MF Jun Marques Davidson in a July 27 game.<br />

Suspended Colorado D Hendry Thomas one<br />

game and fined him an undisclosed amount for<br />

a reckless challenge of LA Galaxy MF Hector<br />

Jimenez in a July 27 game. Thomas is also suspended<br />

one game for yellow card accumulation.<br />

FC DALLAS — Loaned F Bradlee Baladez to<br />

Fort Lauderdale (NASL).<br />

PHILADELPHIA UNION — Signed MF Gilberto<br />

dos Santos Souza Junior.<br />

SPORTING KANSAS CITY — Signed D Erik<br />

Palmer-Brown.<br />

COLLEGE<br />

ARKANSAS BAPTIST — Announced senior RB<br />

Michael Dyer will transfer to Louisville.<br />

HAWAII — Fired offensive coordinator Aaron<br />

Price.<br />

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B4• The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

Community Sports<br />

Traveling team finishes<br />

strong in Las Vegas event<br />

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Contributed Photos<br />

The North Bend Majors team poses for a photo after one of its tournament victories this summer. Pictured<br />

are, back row from left: coach Walter White, coach Rick Simmons, Justin Lambert, Corbin White, Teron<br />

Catanzaro and coach Josh Snoddy; and front row, from left: Orion Osborn, Jayden Frank, Brendon Roberts,<br />

Mane Freeman, Jake Simmons, Braydon Snoddy and Preston Harden.<br />

NB all-star teams stand out<br />

THE WORLD<br />

The all-star teams in the<br />

North Bend Independent<br />

Baseball Program had a<br />

strong summer, <strong>com</strong>bining<br />

to with eight tournament<br />

titles among the Majors,<br />

Minors and Rookies divisions.<br />

The North Bend Majors<br />

won tournaments in<br />

Florence, Newport and Coos<br />

Bay, placed second in Lincoln<br />

City and did not place in a<br />

highly <strong>com</strong>petitive event in<br />

Medford to start the all-star<br />

season. In the tournaments at<br />

both Florence and Newport,<br />

North Bend beat a team it had<br />

earlier lost to in the championship<br />

game, topping<br />

Siletz/Eddyville/Toledo 16-<br />

10 (after trailing 10-3) in<br />

Florence and then topping<br />

Lincoln City 13-6 at<br />

Newport. The Majors finished<br />

18-6 overall in the five<br />

tournaments.<br />

The Minors, meanwhile,<br />

won the tournaments in<br />

Florence and Newport, finished<br />

third with just one loss<br />

in Lincoln City, and tied for<br />

third in Medford after earning<br />

the top seed heading into<br />

the Sunday bracket portion<br />

of the tournament. The team<br />

finished 13-4 overall.<br />

The Rookies placed first at<br />

Reedsport, Newport and<br />

Lincoln City and placed third<br />

at Florence, <strong>com</strong>bining for a<br />

13-4 record in the four tournaments.<br />

The Majors team included<br />

Justin Lambert, Corbin<br />

White, Teron Catanzaro,<br />

Orion Osborn, Jayden Frank,<br />

Brendon Roberts, Mane<br />

Freeman, Jake Simmons,<br />

Braydon Snoddy and Preston<br />

Harden. Coaches included<br />

Walter White, Rick Simmons<br />

and Josh Snoddy.<br />

The Minors team included<br />

Daylen Sickels-Brown,<br />

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The North Bend Minors include, back row from left: Clint Williams, Mike<br />

Spalding, Jerry McCloskey and Tim Causey; middle row: Nick Williams,<br />

Ian Spalding, Kobe Johnson, Chris McCloskey and Chase Platt; and front<br />

row: Robbie Kliewer, Brylee Anderson, Daylen Sickels, Zack Reynolds,<br />

Adrianna Frank and Blaine Causey.<br />

The North Bend Rookies pose for a photo during a tournament.<br />

Brylee Anderson, Ian<br />

Spalding, Chase Platt, Chris<br />

McCloskey, Zack Reynolds,<br />

Blaine Causey, Adrianna<br />

Frank, Kobe Johnson, Nick<br />

Williams and Robbie<br />

Kliewer. The coaches were<br />

Tim Cause, Mike Spalding,<br />

Clint Williams and Jerry<br />

McCloskey.<br />

The Rookies team included<br />

Tyler Hayes, Brock<br />

Thomas, Bryant Wicks,<br />

Brody Thomas, CJ Franklin,<br />

Markus Kleiwer, Knoll<br />

Gederos, Jack Burgmeier,<br />

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Lathan Dunning and David<br />

Roberts. The coaches were<br />

Bob Hayes, John Burgmeier<br />

and Stefan Gederos.<br />

Josh Snoddy extended<br />

thanks all-star sponsors,<br />

including Thomas and sons,<br />

SHN, Dr. Scott Roberts,<br />

Tyree Oil, Pony Village Mall,<br />

Conrad Forest Products,<br />

Sause Bros., Knutson<br />

Towboat Company, Tri-<br />

County Plumbing, Ed and<br />

Bev Sandine, Rick and Tobi<br />

Simmons and BNT<br />

Promotional Products.<br />

Fletcher bowls first perfect game<br />

THE WORLD<br />

Brian Fletcher bowled his<br />

first perfect game at North<br />

Bend Lanes during the<br />

Thursday Social Have-A-Ball<br />

league on July 25.<br />

Fletcher, a regular at North<br />

Bend Lanes for several years,<br />

rolled the 300 in the final<br />

game of his series which also<br />

included game of 224 and 182.<br />

Forest Hills tourney<br />

The squad of Alison<br />

Myers, Harvey Myers, Don<br />

Bangs, Terry LaVigne, Dano<br />

Dunn and Jennifer Dunn won<br />

the annual fundraiser golf<br />

tournament for Forest Hills<br />

Country Club.<br />

The group won the Jack<br />

Dunn Memorial Scramble<br />

with an 18-hole score of 55.<br />

Results for Forest Hills<br />

and Bandon Crossings are in<br />

the Community Scoreboard.<br />

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10054 Hwy. 42 Coquille, Oregon • (541) 396-4264<br />

The Coos Bay Area<br />

Basketball Program wrapped<br />

up its first season with a successful<br />

effort by both its<br />

squads in the Las Vegas Elite<br />

National Championship<br />

Tournament.<br />

The team, coached by<br />

Patrick McKnight, had 20<br />

players on the two teams,<br />

which each played well in the<br />

tournament.<br />

The Outlawz varsity team<br />

placed third in its division<br />

while the junior varsity went<br />

2-1 in its pool play and finished<br />

fourth in the Division II<br />

level for 15-and-under<br />

squads.<br />

McKnight said his goal for<br />

this season was to give as<br />

many students as possible a<br />

chance to be<strong>com</strong>e better athletes<br />

and basketball players.<br />

The program’s motto, he<br />

said, is: All players must play<br />

with respect, responsibility<br />

and reckless abandon.<br />

The players did that in Los<br />

Vegas, he said.<br />

The varsity squad beat<br />

Sole Texas 46-35, lost to<br />

Alaska Gold 54-43, beat LA<br />

Valley 56-49 and the lost to<br />

the Arizona Cost 64-61.<br />

The team included<br />

Coquille players Drew<br />

Piburn, Brad Romine, Joe<br />

Scolari, Terrence Edwards<br />

and Brandon Bowen; Hunter<br />

Olson and Ty Bunnell of<br />

Marshfield; Drew Matthews<br />

of North Bend; Taylor Fischer<br />

of Myrtle Point; and Evan<br />

Henson of Bandon.<br />

The junior varsity team<br />

beat Las Vegas Elite 32-28<br />

and 818 Swoosh 41-34<br />

before losing to New Mexico<br />

HHH 62-56 in pool play.<br />

THE WORLD<br />

Runners can sign up now<br />

for the up<strong>com</strong>ing Prefontaine<br />

Memorial Run, scheduled<br />

this year for Sept. 21.<br />

The popular event, which<br />

honors famed Marshfield<br />

graduate Steve Prefontaine, is<br />

a 10-kilometer run over one of<br />

Pre’s favorite training routes.<br />

In addition to the 10K, for<br />

the third year there will be a<br />

5-kilometer run just for high<br />

school students that starts at<br />

9:45 a.m., 15 minutes before<br />

the main race.<br />

The race is held in conjunction<br />

with the Bay Area Fun<br />

Festival, Coos Bay’s largest<br />

<strong>com</strong>munity celebration.<br />

This is the 34th edition of<br />

the Prefontaine Memorial<br />

Run, started when a group of<br />

local residents decided<br />

Prefontaine’s hometown<br />

Community Scoreboard<br />

Golf<br />

Forest Hills Country Club<br />

Jack Dunn Memorial Scramble<br />

Sunday<br />

Low Gross — Alison Myers, Harvey Myers, Don<br />

Bangs, Terry LaVigne, Dano Dunn and Jennifer<br />

Dunn, 55; Dustin Dibala, Wence Dibala, Ruthie<br />

Dibala, Bill Lyon, Dave Lyon and Shane<br />

Chambers, 56; Scott Phares, Rob Hague, Ron<br />

Cress, Katherine Barton, Darrell Eubanks and<br />

Bill Hinman, 57.<br />

Ladies Day<br />

Tuesday<br />

Mexican Scramble<br />

Low Net — Pat Porter, Melanie Schwartz and<br />

Betty Osborne, 34.7; Stephanie Thomas, Bonnie<br />

Morgan, Shawn Leake and Alison Myers, 34.75.<br />

Couples Night<br />

Wednesday<br />

Odd & Even (par 52)<br />

Low Gross — Alison and Harvey Myers 56,<br />

Sheri and Lonnie Van Elsberg 62.<br />

Low Net — Dan and Sheila Jordan 51.15, Cheryl<br />

and Halsey Taylor 58.8.<br />

Closest to Pin — Alison Myers (No. 2), Sheri<br />

Van Ellsberg (No. 6).<br />

Long Drive — Ray Wasson (No. 3), Dan Jordan<br />

(No. 7).<br />

Men’s Day<br />

Thursday<br />

Individual<br />

Low Gross — Rich McCarty 78, Mark Bedard<br />

80, Joe Margocs 84, Mike Winters 86.<br />

Low Net — Robbie Robison 67, Jim Richardson<br />

71, Dick Manthe 72, Jack Lakey 73, Alex Emmons<br />

73.<br />

Team<br />

Low Gross — Rich McCarty and Ray Malmberg<br />

75, Mark Bedard and Jack Lakey 79, Joe Margocs<br />

and Gary Schindele 79.<br />

Low Net — Robbie Robison and John Kouba<br />

61.1, Dick Manthe and Jim Reynolds 61.45, Jerry<br />

Olson and Alex Emmons 67.55.<br />

Closest to Pin — Jim Reynolds (No. 2), Joe<br />

Margocs (No. 6).<br />

Bandon Crossings<br />

Casual Fridays<br />

July 26<br />

Better Ball (blind draw)<br />

Low Net — Dewey Powers Sr. and Barb Hoy 63,<br />

Brian Boyle and Ashley Burke 63, John Johnston<br />

and Kelly Hoy 64, Val Nemcek and Gregg<br />

Wilkinson 65, Christo Schwartz and Ed Atkinson<br />

65, Sean Suppes and Tracy Couch 66, Bob<br />

Webber and blind draw 66, Gary Coots and Mike<br />

Shileds 67, Tom Gant and John Flannagan 68, Ed<br />

Yelton and Johnny Ohanesian 68, Jack<br />

Hammerstrom and Ron Cookson 70, Mike Tucker<br />

and Brandon Hibbs 70, Dick Wold and Chris<br />

Holm 72.<br />

Closest to Pin — Handicaps 14+: John<br />

Johnston (No. 6), Gregg Wilkinson (No. 14). 0-13:<br />

Brandon Hibbs (No. 14), Tracy Couch (No. 17).<br />

Contributed Photos<br />

The Outlawz varsity team smiles for a photo in the airport during the<br />

Las Vegas Elite tournament.<br />

The Outlawz JV team poses for a picture with coach Patrick McKnight.<br />

The team then lost to San<br />

Diego Hoops 52-33 in bracket<br />

play.<br />

Team members included<br />

Justin Banks, Jacob Dub, Joey<br />

Torres, Sawyer Heckard,<br />

Chance Jacobs, John<br />

Hampton, Casey King and<br />

Scott Clough of either<br />

Marshfield or Milli<strong>com</strong>a;<br />

should honor him. He held<br />

every American record from<br />

2 miles to 10 kilometers when<br />

he died in a car crash in 1975.<br />

Race Director Bob<br />

Huggins said the qualities<br />

that made Prefontaine a hero<br />

to track fans more than three<br />

decades ago still are creating<br />

new admirers.<br />

“Many who were not born<br />

when Pre was setting records<br />

or ever saw him <strong>com</strong>pete are<br />

inspired by his enduring<br />

example of courage, feisty<br />

determination and charisma,”<br />

Huggins said.<br />

Awards will be given to<br />

the top three finishers in<br />

five-year age groups.<br />

Trophies will be presented to<br />

the overall men’s, women’s<br />

and wheelchair champions.<br />

The top three college teams<br />

also will receive trophies.<br />

In the high school race,<br />

Men’s Club<br />

July 24<br />

Stableford<br />

Low Net — Christo Schwartz 69 points, John<br />

Johnston 51, Bob Webber 49, Dick Wold 49, Mike<br />

Tucker 45, Ron Cookson 44, Gregg Wilkinson 43,<br />

Larry Grove 43, Tom Gant 43, Gary Coots 40,<br />

Brandon Hibbs 39, Forrest Munger 38, Dewey<br />

Powers 37, Don Conn 36, Nik Arrenbrecht 35, Jeff<br />

Lee 34, Larry Grove 33, Chris Holm 25.<br />

Closest to Pin — Forrest Munger (No. 6),<br />

Brandon Hibbs (No. 17).<br />

Bowling<br />

North Bend Lanes<br />

July 22-25<br />

HIGH GAME<br />

Monday Senior Trio — Richard Dupret 211,<br />

Jerry Collins 201, David Rutledge 198; Linda<br />

Nichols 242, Thelma Fairchild 181, Kitty Russell<br />

158.<br />

Monday Adult/Junior — Adults: Bruce Watts<br />

231, John Dixon 224; Debra Cramer 204,<br />

Elizabeth Watson 168. Juniors: Dillon<br />

Woodworth 224, Jayse Morgan 223; Arianna<br />

Campbell 203, Regan Foxworthy 173.<br />

Wednesday Senior Mixed — David Rutledge<br />

225, William Merkow 224, Richard Dupret 212;<br />

Irma Koivunen 234, Yorkio Creque 222, Maxine<br />

Rowling 214.<br />

Wednesday Juniors — Jayse Morgan 263, Alex<br />

Minyard 216, Dillon Woodworth 212; Regan<br />

Foxworthy 239, Bryanna Decker 184, Abigayle<br />

Price 148.<br />

Wednesday Handicap Mixed — Mark Gonzalez<br />

156, Bryan Tooley 155, Brian Simms 127; Sandy<br />

Tammietti 146, LInda Tooley 143, Sarah Boyd<br />

142.<br />

Wednesday No-Tap (9 pins=strike) — Luke<br />

Clark 297, Louie Spanik 277, Jordan Clark 274;<br />

Peggy Ahlgrim 231, Jessica Fellows 181, Natasha<br />

Martin 147.<br />

Thursday Social Have-A-Ball — Brian Fletcher<br />

300, Robert Berry 257, Jason Low 250; Linda<br />

Nichols 228, Elizabeth Watson 180, Dawnella<br />

Michna 174.<br />

HIGH SERIES<br />

Monday Senior Trio — Richard Dupret 564,<br />

David Rutledge 530, Bruce Watts 523; Linda<br />

Nichols 562, Thelma Fairchild 480, Sally Curtis<br />

411.<br />

Monday Adult/Junior — Adults: Bruce Watts<br />

611, John Dixon 576; Debra Cramer 592, Elizabeth<br />

Watson 457. Juniors: Jayse Morgan 590, Dillon<br />

Woodworth 575; Arianna Campbell 550, Bryanna<br />

Decker 448, Regan Foxworthy 448.<br />

Wednesday Senior Mixed — Mike Ash 573,<br />

Richard Dupret 571, Vern Crockett 567, Scott<br />

Balogh 567; Yoriko Creque 545, Sandra Jacobs<br />

525, Sheryl Todd 525.<br />

Wednesday Juniors — Jayse Morgan 653,<br />

Micheal Villers 560, Alex Minyard 527; Regan<br />

Foxworthy 492, Bryanna Decker 489, Rose<br />

Anderson 401.<br />

Wednesday Handicap Mixed (two-game<br />

series) — Mark Gonzales 312, Bryan Tooley 299,<br />

Henry Scolari of Coquille;<br />

and Tyler Wallace of North<br />

Bend.<br />

McKnight extended special<br />

thanks to the Coos Bay<br />

School District for its support<br />

and also to the parents<br />

for the support they showed<br />

the program and their players.<br />

Registration starts for Pre<br />

the top three male and female<br />

teams will win trophies.<br />

Awards for the overall<br />

champions and the high<br />

school team winners will be<br />

presented at 11:30 a.m. in the<br />

finish area at Marshfield<br />

High School. Age-group<br />

awards will be presented<br />

starting at noon.<br />

The entry fee is $24 for<br />

runners who sign up by Sept.<br />

17 and $27 on race day. All<br />

entrants receive a T-shirt<br />

<strong>com</strong>memorating the run.<br />

On-line registration is<br />

encouraged at www.pref<br />

ontainerun.c om.<br />

Registration forms also are<br />

available in Coos Bay at the<br />

Visitor Information Center,<br />

Farr’s True Value Hardware<br />

and Huggins Insurance.<br />

For more information,<br />

visit the race website or call<br />

541-269-1103.<br />

Brian Simms 217; Sandy Tammietti 271, Sarah<br />

Boyd 263, Linda Tooley 246.<br />

Wednesday No-Tap (9 pins=strike) — Luke<br />

Clark 765, Caleb Burns 736, Louis Spanik 717;<br />

Peggy Ahlgrim 584, Jessica Fellows 500,<br />

Natasha Martin 380.<br />

Thursday Social Have-A-Ball — Brian Fletcher<br />

684, Robert Berry 659, Jason Low 657; Linda<br />

Nichols 566, Elizabeth Watson 485, Sally Curtis<br />

475.<br />

Auto Racing<br />

Coos Bay Speedway<br />

Drag Strip<br />

July 27<br />

Sportsman — Winner: Doug Kirby (70 Ford).<br />

Runner up: Leon Williams (92 GMC). Semifinals:<br />

Bill Brown, Wesley Williams.<br />

Pro — Winner: Ian Nickel (68 Chevelle).<br />

Runner-up: Tom Melson (65 Chevelle).<br />

Semifinals: Rick Sales Sr.<br />

Super Pro — Winner: Bob Harlukowitz (23<br />

Ford). Runner-up: Rick Orton ()) Dragster).<br />

Semifinals: Rick Lachance.<br />

Jr. Dragster — Winner: Riley Kirby (02<br />

Halfscale). Runner-up: Billy Brown (Jr. Dragster).<br />

July 28<br />

Sportsman — Winner: Scott Jackson (78<br />

Chevy). Runner-up: Leon Williams (92 GMC).<br />

Semifinals: Doug Kirby.<br />

Pro — Winner: Tom Melson (65 Chevelle).<br />

Runner-up: Josh Harlukowitz (36 Ford).<br />

Semifinals: Rick Sales Sr.<br />

Super Pro — Winner: Rick Lachine (69 Dodge).<br />

Runner-up: Bob Harlukowitz (23 Ford).<br />

Jr. Dragster — Winner: Riley Kirby (02<br />

Halfscale). Runner-up: Billy Brown (Jr. Dragster).<br />

Road Runs<br />

Up<strong>com</strong>ing Road Races on the South Coast:<br />

Sunset Bay Trail Run — Saturday, Aug. 31,<br />

starting at 10 a.m. at Sunset Bay State Park near<br />

Charleston. Events include a 1-mile beach fun<br />

run (starts at 9:45 a.m.), a 15-kilometer run and<br />

a 4-mile run/walk. The longer race is hilly and<br />

challenging. The entry fee is $5, with T-shirts<br />

available for an additional $10 for those who<br />

sign up by Aug. 19. All proceeds go to the South<br />

Coast Gospel Mission. For more information, call<br />

Patrick Myers at 541-290-7530 or by email at<br />

pmyers1224@msn.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Prefontaine Memorial Run — Saturday, Sept.<br />

21, starting at 10 a.m. in downtown Coos Bay.<br />

The popular 10-kilometer run honors famed<br />

Marshfield graduate Steve Prefontaine and is<br />

run on a challenging course that was one of<br />

Pre’s favorite training routes. A separate 5-kilometer<br />

run for high schoolers only starts at 9:45<br />

a.m. Both races end on Prefontaine Track at<br />

Marshfield High School. The entry fee is $24 for<br />

runners who sign up by Sept. 17 and includes a<br />

race T-shirt. To register on-line visit www.prefontainerun.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

For more information, call<br />

541-269-1103.<br />

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Comics | C5<br />

Classifieds | C6<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/business • Digital Editor Les Bowen • 541-269-1222, ext. 234<br />

Unions get creative to halt<br />

decline in membership<br />

BY SAM HANANEL<br />

Associated Press<br />

WASHINGTON (AP) —<br />

With union membership on<br />

the decline, labor leaders are<br />

getting more creative — and<br />

some say more desperate —<br />

to boost sagging numbers<br />

and rebuild their waning<br />

clout.<br />

Unions are helping nonunion<br />

fast food workers<br />

around the country hold<br />

strikes to protest low wages<br />

and poor working conditions.<br />

They are trying to<br />

organize home day care<br />

workers, university graduate<br />

students and even newly<br />

legalized marijuana dealers.<br />

Members of a “shadow<br />

union” at Wal-Mart hold<br />

regular protests at the giant<br />

retailer, which long has been<br />

resistant to organizing.<br />

Labor leaders say unions<br />

must create new models and<br />

new ways to represent workers<br />

to reverse a steady slide in<br />

the union ranks. Those<br />

efforts have taken on greater<br />

urgency since the Bureau of<br />

Labor Statistics reported<br />

earlier this year that union<br />

membership had declined to<br />

just 11.3 percent of the workforce<br />

— its lowest point in<br />

nearly a century.<br />

“To be blunt, our basic<br />

system of workplace representation<br />

is failing to meet<br />

the needs of America’s<br />

workers by every critical<br />

measure,” AFL-CIO President<br />

Richard Trumka said in<br />

a recent speech.<br />

The most high-profile<br />

tactic has seen hundreds of<br />

low-wage workers at<br />

McDonald’s, Burger King<br />

and other fast food chains<br />

walk off their jobs this week<br />

in a series of one-day strikes<br />

to demand better pay and the<br />

right to unionize. Workers<br />

are demanding wages of $15<br />

an hour, more than double<br />

the current federal minimum<br />

wage of $7.25.<br />

The actions in New York,<br />

Chicago, Detroit and other<br />

cities are being coordinated<br />

by local worker centers, nonprofit<br />

organizations made up<br />

of unions, clergy and other<br />

advocacy groups. While not<br />

technically labor groups,<br />

they receive generous financial<br />

support and training<br />

staff from the Service<br />

Employees International<br />

Union and other unions.<br />

“Our primary goal is to<br />

help workers boost wages,”<br />

SEIU President Mary Kay<br />

Henry said. “We think a key<br />

part of that is helping workers<br />

form organizations where<br />

they can directly bargain for<br />

wages with their employers.”<br />

Labor strategists say the<br />

fast food campaign has longterm<br />

potential for unions. If<br />

unions can’t organize<br />

The Associated Press<br />

In this July 29 file photo, demonstrators in support of fast food workers march towards a McDonald's as they demand higher wages and the right<br />

to form a union without retaliation in New York's Union Square. Labor leaders are getting more creative _ and some say more desperate _ in trying<br />

to boost their sagging numbers. Unions are helping non-union fast food workers around the country hold strikes to protest low wages and<br />

poor working conditions. They are organizing home day care workers, university graduate students and even newly legalized marijuana dealers.<br />

through traditional methods,<br />

they see the smaller<br />

“union fronts” designed to<br />

operate outside labor laws so<br />

mobilizations through they don’t have to follow<br />

worker centers as a way to<br />

show low-wage workers how<br />

restrictions on secondary<br />

picketing, boycotts or file<br />

coordinated action can win reports with the Labor<br />

some concessions from<br />

employers. That might make<br />

workers in the rapidly growing<br />

fast food industry more<br />

sympathetic to the idea of<br />

joining a union later on.<br />

“The fast food and Wal-<br />

Mart strikes are exciting<br />

examples of workers reinventing<br />

the strike, going on<br />

offense and challenging<br />

inequality,” said Stephen<br />

Lerner, a labor and <strong>com</strong>munity<br />

organizer and architect<br />

Department. House Republicans<br />

wrote a letter to the<br />

Labor Department last week<br />

asking officials whether the<br />

groups need to abide by labor<br />

laws.<br />

“An advantage of these<br />

groups is they allow unions<br />

to gain entry into a block of<br />

workers without them realizing<br />

this is just a front for a<br />

traditional union,” said<br />

Glenn Spencer, vice president<br />

of the U.S. Chamber of<br />

of the Justice for Janitors Commerce’s Workforce<br />

campaign in the late 1980s<br />

and early 1990s.<br />

But the tactic has raised<br />

the concern of business<br />

groups, which say these<br />

organizations are merely<br />

Freedom Initiative.<br />

The number of worker<br />

centers has grown from five<br />

in the 1990s to more than<br />

200 today, including the<br />

Restaurant Opportunity<br />

Center, National Day Laborers<br />

Organizing Network and<br />

the National Domestic<br />

Workers Alliance. The AFL-<br />

CIO and member unions are<br />

trying to leverage alliances<br />

with those groups, as well as<br />

progressive groups that have<br />

similar goals. At the AFL-<br />

CIO’s up<strong>com</strong>ing convention<br />

in Los Angeles next month,<br />

the federation is expected to<br />

announce stronger partnerships<br />

with the NAACP, Hispanic<br />

advocacy groups and<br />

the Sierra Club.<br />

“The worker centers are<br />

obviously springing up to<br />

address an unmet need in<br />

geographic areas or in particular<br />

industries,” said Craig<br />

Becker, general counsel at<br />

the AFL-CIO.<br />

The AFL-CIO is also<br />

seeking to expand its Working<br />

America affiliate, which<br />

has more than 3 million<br />

members sympathetic to<br />

unions but who don’t work<br />

under collective bargaining<br />

agreements and pay only<br />

token dues or nothing at all.<br />

As businesses have<br />

be<strong>com</strong>e more aggressive and<br />

successful at battling union<br />

organizers, unions are also<br />

increasingly targeting nontraditional<br />

workers for<br />

membership. In Minnesota,<br />

lawmakers this year authorized<br />

unions to try organizing<br />

some 12,700 home day care<br />

providers whose care of children<br />

is subsidized by the<br />

state. Similar measures<br />

affect home care workers in<br />

Vermont and Rhode Island.<br />

Unions claim collective<br />

bargaining will help home<br />

day care workers earn better<br />

wages and benefits for health<br />

care and retirement. But<br />

critics say the added costs<br />

will be borne by parents who<br />

can’t afford it.<br />

Unions also hope to target<br />

thousands of graduate students<br />

at private universities.<br />

Labor advocates are urging<br />

the National Labor Relations<br />

Board to overturn a 2004<br />

decision that said graduate<br />

assistants are more like students<br />

than employees under<br />

federal labor laws.<br />

The NLRB indicated last<br />

year that it would reconsider<br />

the question, and with the<br />

board’s newly confirmed<br />

Democratic majority this<br />

week, unions may have a<br />

chance. Some universities<br />

are wary, though. Peter<br />

Weber, graduate school dean<br />

at Brown University, told<br />

lawmakers at a House hearing<br />

last year that unionizing<br />

grad students would “damage<br />

the fabric of graduate<br />

education.”<br />

One surprising area where<br />

unions have had success<br />

recently is organizing marijuana<br />

dealers in states that<br />

have legalized the drug for<br />

recreational or medical use.<br />

The United Food and Commercial<br />

Workers Union, the<br />

nation’s largest union for<br />

retail workers, helped support<br />

ballot measures to<br />

legalize marijuana in Colorado<br />

and Washington last<br />

year and now counts about<br />

3,000 members in the<br />

industry.<br />

Pot farm pollution: Too dangerous to deal with?<br />

The Associated Press<br />

In this undated photo released by Butte County Department of Public Works, marijuana grading violations<br />

are seen on a hillside less than 1,000 feet from the west branch of the Feather River off of Jordan Hill Road<br />

in the Concow area in Butte County, Calif. With parts of Northern California’s scenic hillsides illegally gouged<br />

by bulldozers for marijuana growing, frustrated local officials asked the state for help to protect tributaries<br />

of the Sacramento River from runoff of sediment and the chemicals used on plants.<br />

SACRAMENTO, Calif.<br />

(AP) — With parts of Northern<br />

California’s scenic hillsides<br />

illegally gouged by<br />

bulldozers for marijuana<br />

grows, frustrated local officials<br />

asked the state for help<br />

to protect streams and rivers<br />

from harmful sediment and<br />

the chemicals used on the<br />

pot plants.<br />

They hoped to charge<br />

growers under federal and<br />

state clean water regulations<br />

with tougher penalties than<br />

the infractions local officials<br />

could impose. But they were<br />

rebuffed.<br />

It’s too dangerous, the<br />

state agency in charge of<br />

protecting the region’s water<br />

said in a letter to county<br />

supervisors.<br />

“We simply cannot, in<br />

good conscience, put staff in<br />

harm’s way,” wrote Central<br />

Valley Regional Water Quality<br />

Control Board Executive<br />

Director Paula Creedon.<br />

As in many rural counties<br />

in California, marijuana<br />

farms are be<strong>com</strong>ing more<br />

and more plentiful. They<br />

proliferate in the high Sierra,<br />

where armed Mexican cartel<br />

operatives clear wilderness<br />

areas, divert creeks and poison<br />

wildlife. Other smaller<br />

gardens are planted by people<br />

operating as collectives<br />

by pooling dozens of permits<br />

under the state’s medical<br />

marijuana laws, though<br />

many of those are traffickers<br />

attempting to skirt the law.<br />

State law allows a person<br />

with a medical permit to<br />

grow roughly a dozen plants.<br />

Butte County Supervisor<br />

Chairman Bill Connelly —<br />

frustrated that even photos<br />

of illegally scraped and terraced<br />

hillsides in sensitive<br />

watersheds didn’t convince<br />

the water quality board to act<br />

— accused the board of not<br />

applying the law equally.<br />

“My concern is that legitimate<br />

business people get<br />

harassed (by the agency), but<br />

illegal people will not be<br />

harassed because they get a<br />

pass,” he said. “They go after<br />

the timber industry and<br />

farmers.”<br />

Penalties can range from<br />

cease-and-desist citations<br />

to fines of $5,000 for each<br />

day of the violation to more<br />

than $1 million, said state<br />

water board spokeswoman<br />

Kathie Smith.<br />

The issue of large-scale<br />

marijuana enforcement and<br />

the damage some pot farms<br />

cause is not new in a region<br />

known as the Emerald Triangle,<br />

for the marijuana that<br />

has been produced there for<br />

decades. Marijuana is the<br />

state’s biggest cash crop with<br />

an estimated $14 billion in<br />

legal and illegal sales annually.<br />

California wildlife wardens<br />

and hikers in the state’s<br />

remote backcountry occasionally<br />

happen upon gunmen<br />

guarding multimilliondollar<br />

pot farms. It’s one of<br />

the reasons the California<br />

Department of Fish &<br />

Wildlife recently issued its<br />

wardens more powerful<br />

weapons.<br />

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 2013<br />

SBA can<br />

assist<br />

small<br />

businesses<br />

Q: I keep hearing the<br />

SBA can help my business.<br />

What do they do<br />

and how do I access the<br />

resources?<br />

The U.S. Small Business<br />

Administration (SBA)<br />

www.sba.gov was officially<br />

established<br />

in 1953 to DOWN TO<br />

assist small<br />

BUSINESS<br />

businesses<br />

in the United<br />

States to<br />

be more<br />

<strong>com</strong>petitive.<br />

In the<br />

Small Business<br />

Act of<br />

July 30,<br />

1953, Congress<br />

created<br />

the Small<br />

Business<br />

Administration,<br />

ARLENE<br />

SOTO<br />

whose<br />

function was to “aid, counsel,<br />

assist and protect, insofar<br />

as is possible, the interests<br />

of small business concerns.”<br />

The charter also<br />

stipulated that SBA would<br />

ensure small businesses a<br />

“fair proportion” of government<br />

contracts and sales of<br />

surplus property. Current<br />

SBA programs include<br />

financial assistance (loan<br />

programs, surety bonds and<br />

export financing), counseling<br />

and training, government<br />

contracting, online<br />

resources and tools, disaster<br />

assistance, advocacy and<br />

civil rights <strong>com</strong>pliance. A<br />

good starting place to learn<br />

more about all of the<br />

resources available through<br />

SBA is the National Resource<br />

G u i d e<br />

http://www.sba.gov/content/resource-guides.<br />

The definition of what is<br />

considered a small business<br />

might surprise you. SBA<br />

defines a small business<br />

concern as one that is independently<br />

owned and operated,<br />

is organized for profit,<br />

and is not dominant in its<br />

field. Depending on the<br />

industry, size standard eligibility<br />

is based on the average<br />

number of employees for the<br />

preceding twelve months or<br />

on sales volume averaged<br />

over a three-year period.<br />

Examples of SBA general<br />

size standards include the<br />

following:<br />

■ Manufacturing: maximum<br />

number of employees<br />

may range from 500 to<br />

1,500, depending on the<br />

type of product manufactured.<br />

■ Wholesaling: maximum<br />

number of employees<br />

may range from 100 to 500<br />

depending on the particular<br />

product being provided.<br />

■ Services: annual<br />

receipts may not exceed $2.5<br />

million to $21.5 million,<br />

depending on the particular<br />

service being provided.<br />

■ Retailing: annual<br />

receipts may not exceed $5.0<br />

million to $21.0 million,<br />

depending on the particular<br />

product being provided.<br />

■ General and heavy<br />

construction: general construction<br />

annual receipts<br />

may not exceed $13.5 million<br />

to $17 million, depending on<br />

the type of construction;<br />

■ Special trade construction:<br />

annual receipts<br />

may not exceed $7 million.<br />

■ Agriculture: annual<br />

receipts may not exceed<br />

$500,000 to $900,000 million,<br />

depending on the agricultural<br />

product.<br />

SBA resources can be<br />

accessed through the website<br />

http://www.sba.gov,<br />

through <strong>com</strong>mercial<br />

lenders, through the<br />

regional SBA office, through<br />

the local Small Business<br />

Development Center or<br />

SCORE office and through<br />

other SBA funded providers<br />

such as women’s business<br />

centers and procurement<br />

technical assistance centers.<br />

Arlene M. Soto is the<br />

director of the SWOCC Small<br />

Business Development<br />

Center, www.BizCenter.org.<br />

She can be reached at 541-<br />

756-6445, asoto@socc.edu,<br />

or at 2455 Maple Leaf, North<br />

Bend, OR 97459.<br />

C<br />

M<br />

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C2• The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

C<br />

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M<br />

K<br />

INSIDE THIS ISSUE<br />

New Feature:<br />

Business Achievements<br />

See Page C3<br />

• The World Newspaper<br />

• www.OregonCoastHomeFinder.<strong>com</strong><br />

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It’s All in the Materials<br />

Rehabbing your outdoor space is an investment.<br />

Outdoor materials get a lot of wear and tear, so choose<br />

low-maintenance options that fit your personal style<br />

BY ALYSSA KARAS<br />

CTW Features<br />

Outdoor spaces can be<br />

just as <strong>com</strong>fortable and<br />

inviting as indoor spaces if<br />

you choose the right materials.<br />

Here’s how to select<br />

products that will weather<br />

the elements – and the pets,<br />

the people and the occasional<br />

ketchup stain that make up<br />

the joys of the outdoor experience.<br />

Decking<br />

When it <strong>com</strong>es to outdoor<br />

decking, there are several<br />

material choices: wood,<br />

<strong>com</strong>posite decking or PVC, a<br />

type of plastic.<br />

Composite decking is a<br />

mixture of real wood and<br />

other ingredients, such as<br />

wood flour, rice hulls and<br />

glue. Because <strong>com</strong>posite<br />

decking contains some wood<br />

material, it can be prone to<br />

the pitfalls of real wood, like<br />

stains and mildew.<br />

Many manufacturers are<br />

switching to PVC from <strong>com</strong>posite<br />

ingredients, says<br />

Steve Pozo, sales manager at<br />

Lakeside Lumber in<br />

Tualatin, Ore. While PVC<br />

can be a more expensive<br />

choice, people consider it<br />

money well spent.<br />

“It seems that PVC on the<br />

outside is the best way to go,”<br />

Pozo says. “It doesn’t stain,<br />

it doesn’t take on moisture.”<br />

Wood-alternative decking<br />

<strong>com</strong>pany Trex offers a 50<br />

percent plastic, 50 percent<br />

wood decking product,<br />

which it says will not rot,<br />

warp or splinter.<br />

Recognizing that aesthetics<br />

matter as much as physical<br />

durability, the<br />

Winchester, Va.-based <strong>com</strong>pany<br />

also says its product is<br />

scratch-, stain-, fade- and<br />

mold-resistant, and several<br />

lines carry a 25-year warranty.<br />

The allure of real wood,<br />

however, is still strong.<br />

“Around here, a lot of people<br />

like natural wood,” Pozo<br />

says. “We still sell a lot of<br />

wood decks [like] cedar,<br />

mahogany.”<br />

In some cases, natural<br />

wood can be less expensive,<br />

but the tradeoff is that it<br />

requires more maintenance.<br />

The more sun exposure a<br />

deck receives, the more<br />

upkeep it will need. It needs<br />

to be cleaned regularly.<br />

Plus, most wood decks<br />

need a new coat of stain once<br />

every two years, if not<br />

before. That’s more often<br />

than the siding on a house,<br />

which only needs to be<br />

stained every five years or so.<br />

Pozo says that people tend<br />

to forget that decks take a lot<br />

more wear and tear than<br />

other exterior surfaces:<br />

“Dogs are walking on it, people<br />

are walking on it, stuff<br />

from trees is falling on it.”<br />

On the other hand, <strong>com</strong>posite<br />

and PVC decking<br />

requires less attention. Trex<br />

products, for example, can<br />

be washed down with a garden<br />

hose.<br />

Furniture<br />

The most popular outdoor<br />

furniture materials include<br />

aluminum, wicker, wrought<br />

iron and wood. Aluminum<br />

furniture is rust-resistant<br />

and lightweight, making it<br />

easier to rearrange and store.<br />

Cast aluminum, which is<br />

heated down and poured into<br />

a mold, offers a more ornate<br />

outdoor touch.<br />

“Aluminum doesn’t rust,<br />

so that’s perfect for pool<br />

areas where it has the potential<br />

to stay wet,” says Tonya<br />

Johnson, store manager at<br />

Holiday Patio and Wicker in<br />

Hudson, N.C. Johnson re<strong>com</strong>mends<br />

applying a clear<br />

coat of wax to outdoor aluminum<br />

furniture once a year<br />

in order to maintain it.<br />

Wicker furniture is<br />

another lightweight option.<br />

Outdoor wicker is made of<br />

vinyl, while indoor wicker, or<br />

rattan, is constructed of reed<br />

material. Melinda Frazee<br />

says customers are drawn to<br />

her shop, Frazee’s Wicker in<br />

Searsport, Maine, in search<br />

of the nostalgic, antique<br />

feeling that wicker gives off.<br />

“They like to <strong>com</strong>e in and get<br />

sofas so they can sit down<br />

and relax, read and watch the<br />

birds,” Frazee says.<br />

Wicker is easy to maintain<br />

and can simply be hosed off.<br />

However, wicker can<br />

mildew, she says, which can<br />

be cleaned with bleach<br />

and water.<br />

On the other hand,<br />

wrought iron furniture is<br />

heavier, so it’s a better choice<br />

for windy outdoor areas.<br />

Of the outdoor furniture<br />

materials, wood requires the<br />

most maintenance, Johnson<br />

says. Teak is one<br />

of the most<br />

popular outdoor<br />

woods,<br />

and if left alone,<br />

it weathers and<br />

takes on a silver<br />

hue.<br />

“A lot of people<br />

want to get<br />

that silvery gray<br />

color,” she says.<br />

“When it first<br />

<strong>com</strong>es, it’s a tan<br />

color, but… if<br />

you want to<br />

maintain it, you<br />

have to keep it<br />

clean.”<br />

Fabric<br />

To really liven up outdoor<br />

living, don’t forget about<br />

fabrics, where quality is just<br />

as important as color.<br />

Solution-dyed acrylic is your<br />

best bet for long-lasting fabric.<br />

“You should not be able to<br />

turn a piece of fabric over<br />

and see white on the back<br />

side,” says Gina Wicker,<br />

design and creative director<br />

for Sunbrella fabrics, a popular<br />

choice for many outdoor<br />

brands.<br />

“When you turn it over, it<br />

should be a negative image of<br />

what is on the front side of<br />

the fabric.”<br />

Another quality to look<br />

for is UV-resistance. They<br />

“are essential for fade resistance<br />

and prevent the fabric<br />

from degrading over time,”<br />

Wicker says.<br />

The key to decorating an<br />

outdoor living space is to<br />

take your indoor aesthetic<br />

outside. “If you like bright<br />

colors, select brightly colored<br />

fabric for the furniture,”<br />

Wicker says. “If neutrals feel<br />

safer, then select neutral<br />

fabrics for your outdoor furniture<br />

and accent it with<br />

pops of color in accent pillows,<br />

outdoor throws and<br />

rugs.”<br />

For a fun touch, mimic the<br />

flowers and colors of your<br />

landscape and garden with<br />

the colors and patterns on<br />

your outdoor fabric.<br />

Call Kelly for evening or weekend appointments<br />

541-294-2844<br />

BIG SHOP<br />

$30,000 PRICE REDUCTION!<br />

LEASE TO OWN!<br />

Call Kelly for evening or weekend appointments<br />

541-294-2844<br />

SUNNY MYRTLE POINT<br />

COTTAGE<br />

BRING OFFERS!<br />

MLS#12652343<br />

92310 Cape Arago Hwy., Coos Bay<br />

3 bed, 2 bath. Several outbuildings with a<br />

shop. All chain link fenced with electric<br />

gate. Lots of room for RV/boats/toys.<br />

Very nice manufactured home with bay<br />

view. Sunroom. Possible owner carry.<br />

$129,000<br />

MLS#12184074<br />

2490 Grant, Coos Bay<br />

.28 acre corner lot graced by a 3 bedroom,<br />

2 bath updated home with a large attached<br />

2-car garage. Upstairs is very unique. Beautiful<br />

home with backyard covered swimming pool,<br />

deck, guest cottage and a chicken house!<br />

You gotta see this one!<br />

$199,000<br />

BRING OFFERS!<br />

MLS#12049648<br />

90864 Travis Ln., Coos Bay<br />

Wrap around deck, covered patio,<br />

RV hook-up, fenced. Fire pit.<br />

Possible lease to own on approval<br />

of credit. Negotiable.<br />

$134,900<br />

GREAT BUY!<br />

MLS#13204565<br />

2054 Stover Ln., Myrtle Point<br />

2 bedroom, 1 bath <strong>com</strong>pletely remodeled<br />

home features a washer and dryer, refrigerator,<br />

range and a nice workshop/garage. This is a<br />

really nice home and priced at just<br />

$109,000<br />

MLS#13167968<br />

63515 Grand Rd., Coos Bay<br />

Lots of space in this manufactured home on its<br />

own corner lot near Charleston. 1,848 sqft., big<br />

kitchen with tons of storage and a breakfast<br />

bar, family room, 4 bedrooms and 2 baths.<br />

Deck and storage shed in yard.<br />

$119,000<br />

NEW LISTING!<br />

MLS#13314100<br />

1854 Arthur, North Bend<br />

This property must sell, so sharpen your pencil<br />

and make an offer! Great location and a 3<br />

bedroom, 2 bath, 1,100 sq. ft. 1997 Golden<br />

West manufactured home with a 2-car attached<br />

garage. Power of attorney for the trust is a<br />

licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker.<br />

$119,900<br />

NEW LISTING!<br />

385 S. 10th, Coos Bay<br />

Great investment or starter home next to<br />

Blossom Gulch Elementary. 945 sq. ft.<br />

with large windows for lots of natural light.<br />

Walk to Mingus Park and shopping.<br />

$94,000<br />

MLS#13602162<br />

94961 Echo Springs Ln., Coos Bay<br />

Beautiful pastoral view. Gardens and<br />

landscaping by a Master Gardener. House<br />

<strong>com</strong>pletely updated in 2000. Year round creek<br />

and waterfalls. Seclusion yet close to town.<br />

$211,000<br />

MLS#13101701<br />

980 Blanco, Coos Bay<br />

Large fenced yard, fruit trees, close to<br />

shopping, schools and beaches.<br />

Garage, deck.<br />

$129,900<br />

Buying, Selling, Renting…We Work For You!<br />

E.L. EDWARDS REALTY II, INC.<br />

Now serving Bandon, Coquille & Myrtle Point.<br />

Mark Hodgins, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker • Cell: 541-297-3404<br />

Kelly Walton, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker • Cell: 541-294-2844<br />

Property Management & Real Estate Sales<br />

Kris Thurman, Principal Broker - Owner<br />

2707 Broadway, North Bend, OR • www.eledwardsrealty.<strong>com</strong><br />

Call Mark or your favorite realtor for details. Buy, Sell, Rent, We do it all... with great results!<br />

MLS#13342142<br />

1855 McPherson, North Bend<br />

Solid old 2 story Colonial next to<br />

the North Bend Post Office. Has original<br />

wood flooring, bay view and nice back yard.<br />

Would make a great professional office.<br />

$129,000<br />

MLS#13695739<br />

694 Wasson, Coos Bay<br />

Nice family home with tons of bonus space indoors.<br />

Outdoor living space includes fountain and fireplace in<br />

bamboo garden. Great family home with a gorgeous bay<br />

view from the upstairs balcony. A truly imaginative home<br />

that you must see to appreciate. More than meets the eye!<br />

$154,900<br />

MLS#13668615<br />

1403 1 ⁄2 S. 14th, Coos Bay<br />

Cute little cottage, country in town. Restored to the<br />

period with lovely touches and accents. You will feel<br />

like you are in an English country cottage! Beautiful<br />

setting with fruit trees, patio, and huge garden area.<br />

Home is also available fully furnished. Call for<br />

details. House is 1403 1/2, past 1403.<br />

$96,000<br />

Buying, Selling, Renting…We Work For You!<br />

E.L. EDWARDS REALTY II, INC.<br />

Now serving Bandon, Coquille & Myrtle Point.<br />

Mark Hodgins, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker • Cell: 541-297-3404<br />

Kelly Walton, Licensed Oregon Real Estate Broker • Cell: 541-294-2844<br />

Property Management & Real Estate Sales<br />

Kris Thurman, Principal Broker - Owner<br />

2707 Broadway, North Bend, OR • www.eledwardsrealty.<strong>com</strong><br />

Call Mark or your favorite realtor for details. Buy, Sell, Rent, We do it all... with great results!<br />

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Achievements<br />

B U S I N E S S<br />

DIGITAL EDITOR<br />

LES BOWEN<br />

The World wel<strong>com</strong>es its new digital<br />

editor, Les Bowen.<br />

The digital editor position is also a<br />

new one. Responsibilities include<br />

overseeing the newspaper’s website<br />

and social media sites, such as<br />

Facebook and Twitter.<br />

Those kinds of duties are not foreign<br />

to Bowen. He said digital media has<br />

always been important to him since<br />

he’s “kinda been a geek anyway.”<br />

World publisher Jeff Precourt said he<br />

was looking forward to the changes in<br />

digital media.<br />

“In the past seven months, we’ve<br />

made significant improvements in our<br />

digital products. Les will add to that<br />

progress and help us grow even faster<br />

than before,” Precourt said.<br />

Bowen was born and raised in the<br />

suburbs of Salt Lake City, Utah. After<br />

high school he decided he wanted to<br />

be a writer in order to make a mark in<br />

the <strong>world</strong>. “What drove me to journalim<br />

was I wanted to do something<br />

that makes a difference in the <strong>com</strong>munity,”<br />

Bowen said.<br />

He studied journalism at the College<br />

of Eastern Utah, which is now part of<br />

Utah State University. While still attending<br />

college, he was hired as a<br />

paginator at the Sun Advocate in<br />

Price, Utah. He was later promoted to<br />

reporter. From there, Bowen became<br />

editor of the Vernal (Utah) Express in<br />

May 2007. He was there for one year.<br />

He then became editor of the Lake<br />

Chelan Mirror and Quad City Herald in<br />

central Washington state. He was with<br />

the paper until September 2010, when<br />

he moved to upstate New York and<br />

was named editor of the Genesee<br />

Country Express in Dansville, N.Y. He<br />

accepted the additional responsibilities<br />

of general manager in 2012, a position<br />

he held until May.<br />

He lives in Empire with his wife of almost<br />

seven years, Heather Myers,<br />

and their two dogs, Jet and Luna. The<br />

furry kids are a <strong>com</strong>bined 170 pounds.<br />

Precourt said Bowen was a great addition<br />

to The World’s news team.<br />

“Les has a track record of helping<br />

news sources move information<br />

quickly, through a variety of traditional<br />

and social media channels. We are<br />

excited to have been able to recruit<br />

him to Oregon’s South Coast.”<br />

Bowen said he’s happy with his career<br />

choice, even with its challenges because<br />

“every day is different.” He also<br />

enjoys “informing the <strong>com</strong>munity to<br />

help them make better decisions.”<br />

Call Valerie at 541-269-1222 for<br />

Business Achievements submission<br />

information and pricing, or send Email to<br />

Achievements@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

CONTRIBUTED STORIES<br />

STUNNING 3.44 ACRES with amazing<br />

landscaping and a beautiful 4BR,<br />

2BA house, studio, and large<br />

detached garage/shop. Spacious<br />

home with a living and family room,<br />

bonus area upstairs, and basement.<br />

This great property is fenced for<br />

animals, has fruit trees, back patio,<br />

and lots of storage. Rare find just<br />

outside of Coquille for only<br />

$279,500. MLS#12569741<br />

Business-Finance<br />

NEW EXECUTIVE EDITOR<br />

LARRY CAMPBELL<br />

COOS BAY - Larry Campbell has always<br />

wanted to live on the Oregon<br />

Coast. Now, the Pulitzer Prize-winning<br />

journalist has gotten his way. Campbell,<br />

30-year journalism veteran and<br />

reporter and former Associated Press<br />

bureau chief is taking the editorial<br />

helm of The World newspaper. On<br />

July 24 Campbell left his Anchorage,<br />

Alaska, home to assume the role of<br />

executive editor at The World.<br />

“I can’t believe this is really happening,”<br />

Campbell said this week. “My<br />

wife (Melissa) and I have always kind<br />

of hoped we’d be able to relocate to<br />

the Oregon Coast. Now, it’s reality.<br />

We’re quite simply ecstatic.”<br />

World Publisher Jeff Precourt said<br />

Campbell immediately stood out as a<br />

person of interest during an extensive<br />

search. “Larry’s background as a journalist<br />

in Alaska was very appealing to<br />

us,” Precourt said. “Many of the topics<br />

in southwestern Oregon like the environment,<br />

native populations and government<br />

issues translate well.”<br />

Campbell began his journalism career<br />

in 1982 with the Anchorage Daily<br />

News after graduating with a journalism<br />

degree from the University of Oregon.<br />

While at the Daily News, Campbell<br />

became the first reporter on the<br />

scene of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil<br />

spill. The same year, he was part of a<br />

team that won the Pulitzer Prize for<br />

Public Service for a 10-week series on<br />

alcoholism and addiction in Alaskan<br />

native <strong>com</strong>munities.<br />

From 2001-2009, Campbell served as<br />

the assistant bureau chief and Alaska<br />

bureau chief of the Associated Press.<br />

He’s also held executive editor positions<br />

at The Peninsula Clarion and<br />

First Alaskans Magazine, a publication<br />

devoted to telling stories of Alaska’s<br />

indigenous peoples.<br />

“His career is filled with examples of<br />

blending high quality journalism with<br />

progressive strategies,” Precourt said.<br />

“When we <strong>com</strong>bine his strengths with<br />

the talented core of journalists we already<br />

have, there is no telling how<br />

much our news team can achieve.”<br />

Campbell is more than happy to take<br />

on the new challenge.<br />

“I think we can practice the kind of<br />

journalism that folks will appreciate,”<br />

he said. “When it’s done right, real<br />

journalism tries every day to give you<br />

the facts, give you the points of view<br />

and give you the information you need<br />

to make informed decisions about<br />

your <strong>com</strong>munity and your lives. That’s<br />

our responsibility. And we’ll meet our<br />

responsibility.”<br />

The World is the only daily newspaper<br />

published on the Oregon South Coast.<br />

The paper has been owned by Lee<br />

Enterprises of Davenport, Iowa since<br />

2005.<br />

LARGE 155’ X 100’ LANDSCAPED LOT<br />

with a beautiful garden spot and<br />

clean 2BR, 1BA home with a<br />

carport and garage/shop area. This<br />

fantastic corner lot in Coos Bay has<br />

2 sand point wells and leaves lots<br />

of room for a shop, RV parking, or<br />

the possibility of dividing the<br />

property into another lot or two.<br />

What a great opportunity for only<br />

$134,900. MLS#13253016<br />

BEAUTIFUL 4BR, 2BA HOME on<br />

21.31 acres. This amazing property<br />

has an updated home with gorgeous<br />

bathrooms, new kitchen with granite<br />

tiles, and a newer roof. The home is<br />

spacious and has a large living room<br />

with wood floors. This great property<br />

has a greenhouse, barn, pasture,<br />

creek, spring, trees, and room for<br />

horses. A rare find for only $329,000 .<br />

MLS#12651791<br />

Another chapter from<br />

“Homeownerin0g 101.”<br />

Empty the bowl<br />

One of the first challenges<br />

faced by anyone who has to<br />

remove a toilet is getting the<br />

last water out of the bowl<br />

before you lift it.<br />

Stuffing absorbent towels<br />

into the bowl is traditional,<br />

but even simpler is applying<br />

the “wet” feature of your<br />

wet/dry shop vacuum to the<br />

problem.<br />

Sometimes you also can<br />

use a wet/dry vac to suck a<br />

clog out of a sink’s drain line.<br />

It’s a lot more effective and<br />

easier on the plumbing than<br />

those chemical drain cleaners<br />

— and often much faster.<br />

Ladder laws<br />

Everyone learned how a<br />

ladder works the first time<br />

they opened kitchen drawers<br />

and scaled them to get at the<br />

cookie jar, so we’ll confine<br />

ourselves to a few of the<br />

“don’ts” of ladder use.<br />

• Don’t stand on the top<br />

tread of a step ladder. It’s not<br />

yours. It belongs to the ladder,<br />

and it’s where it keeps<br />

its hinges.<br />

• Don’t lean out to the side<br />

to paint the last few inches of<br />

wall. Always keep your<br />

weight centered over the ladder.<br />

• Don’t “jump” an extension<br />

ladder, i.e. try to shift it<br />

to one side to get at those last<br />

few inches of wall. Get down,<br />

move the ladder and go up<br />

again.<br />

• Don’t wear flip-flops or<br />

tennies. It’s not a safety<br />

issue, but standing on rungs<br />

gets very tiring. You’ll be a lot<br />

more <strong>com</strong>fortable in boots.<br />

Blade sharpening<br />

A sharp mower blade clips<br />

the grass neatly; a dull blade<br />

tears the grass, making it<br />

harder for it to recover and<br />

often leaving the lawn with a<br />

brownish sheen.<br />

The blade of a lawnmower<br />

ought to be sharpened at<br />

least once a year, but twice is<br />

better (some even say<br />

monthly) — perhaps at the<br />

end or beginning of the<br />

mowing season and around<br />

Independence Day.<br />

To sharpen a blade, disconnect<br />

the spark plug cable<br />

and flip the mower over.<br />

Wedge a block of wood<br />

against the blade so it doesn’t<br />

spin, then use an adjustable<br />

Team Realty<br />

wrench or socket wrench to<br />

give the large nut a firm<br />

counter-clockwise twist.<br />

If it’s been a while since<br />

the nut was removed, a couple<br />

of spritzes of WD-40<br />

may be needed to get it loose.<br />

Remove the nut and<br />

assorted washers and washer-like<br />

gadgets (it varies with<br />

brand) until<br />

you can take<br />

off the<br />

blade itself.<br />

Keep the<br />

gadgets in<br />

order so<br />

you can put<br />

them back<br />

later; a<br />

p h o t o<br />

might be a<br />

good idea.<br />

Put the<br />

blade in a<br />

vise and<br />

use a hand-held 4-inch<br />

grinder to remove any nicks<br />

in the cutting edge, maintaining<br />

the angle of the factory<br />

edge. You can use a bench<br />

grinder, but I prefer the<br />

smaller hand-held tool<br />

because it lets me see<br />

the cutting edge while<br />

I’m working.<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

714 Ash St., Myrtle Point<br />

541-572-2121<br />

jeffbkrall@frontier.<strong>com</strong><br />

C<br />

Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • C3 Y<br />

You ought to know about this<br />

Smooth off the grinder<br />

marks with a file, then flip the<br />

mower blade over and do the<br />

other side.<br />

Replace the blade on the<br />

mower and reconnect the<br />

spark plug cable.<br />

Sticky drawers<br />

When things stick together,<br />

our tendency is to oil<br />

them. When it <strong>com</strong>es to<br />

wood, however, that’s a mistake.<br />

Oil attracts dust, and<br />

when it inevitably dries, it<br />

actually can make matters<br />

worse.<br />

Wax is the perfect lubricant<br />

for two pieces of wood<br />

that are rubbing together,<br />

such as a drawer and the<br />

guides it’s supposed to be<br />

sliding on. A beeswax candle<br />

is best, but an ordinary<br />

child’s crayon works in a<br />

pinch.<br />

So does a bar of soap,<br />

which is why I always hang<br />

onto a couple of those slivers<br />

that are too small to use in the<br />

shower.<br />

Send your questions to:<br />

HouseWorks, P.O. Box 81609,<br />

Lincoln, NE 68501, or email:<br />

houseworks@journalstar.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

David L. Davis<br />

Real Estate<br />

CONTEMPORARY HOME, pride of ownership<br />

throughout. Seven resident deer. Vaulted ceiling.<br />

Living room, family room, island kitchen with<br />

stainless steel appliances. New stone floor. 3<br />

bedrooms, 2.5 baths. Walk-in closets, huge<br />

deck area with paver patio for entertainment.<br />

.62 acres east of town. Triple car garage<br />

features 864 sq.ft. Economical heat pump.<br />

Skylights. MLS#12656075<br />

$ 325,000<br />

OWNER’S PRIDE AND JOY. Custom designed by<br />

owners, built in 1995. Views from every room.<br />

Home features upstairs living and dining area<br />

and master bedroom to maximize the full effect<br />

of the Oceanview. Dramatic vaulted ceiling,<br />

fireplace and outdoor covered deck with glass<br />

hand rail <strong>com</strong>plete the upstairs environment.<br />

The first floor includes entry foyer, two<br />

bedrooms, bathroom and laundry room. Built-in<br />

vacuum. MLS#13217652<br />

OCEAN DRIVE First time on Market. Hear and<br />

live the grand Pacific Ocean. 4 bedroom<br />

custom home with upgrades. Family room,<br />

living room, kitchen and dining area are on<br />

first level. Fireplace. Second level includes<br />

master suite and 3 additional bedrooms, two<br />

bathrooms upstairs. Kitchen has granite<br />

counters and features modern appliances.<br />

Large deck off back of home. MLS#12311790<br />

Now is the time to Buy.<br />

Fred Gernandt, Broker<br />

Call Fred Today!<br />

Cell: (541) 290-9444<br />

1110 Alabama Street, Bandon, OR 97411<br />

Office: (541) 347-9444 or toll free 1-800-835-9444<br />

Website: www.bandonhomes.<strong>com</strong><br />

Saturday, August 3rd<br />

1:30pm - 4:00pm<br />

1412 Maryland, Myrtle Point<br />

Huge home value priced, should qualify for any<br />

financing this home is solid!! With 4 bedrooms (could<br />

turn to 5 real easy) 2 bathrooms and a whopping 2,050<br />

+- sqft home with family room, living room, dining<br />

room, dining room, not to mention the huge .22 +- acre<br />

lot. Wow! This is one is fresh, clean and ready<br />

to be your new home!! MLS# 13494251<br />

$129,500<br />

Jeff Krall<br />

Principal Broker<br />

C:541-294-0069<br />

$ 245,000<br />

$ 395,000<br />

OPEN HOUSES IN NORTH BEND<br />

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3RD — 11:30AM - 2:00PM<br />

NEW LISTING!<br />

MLS# 13457201<br />

93611 BLUEBIRD, NORTH BEND<br />

Directions -East Bay to Quail to Bluebird.<br />

3 bedroom/2 bath, 2,560 sq.ft. Large Lot,<br />

MLS# 113447424<br />

Shop & Bonus Room.<br />

$<br />

310,000<br />

Glasgow Bridge<br />

& Bay Views!<br />

HOUSE<br />

WORKS<br />

STEVE<br />

BATIE<br />

N EW LISTING!<br />

“Breathtaking Views”<br />

MLS# 13629176 13337832<br />

94020 EAST SHORE DR., NORTH BEND<br />

Directions -East Bay Drive, 1/2 mile south of the Golf Course on right.<br />

3 bedroom/2 bath, 1,920 sq.ft.<br />

Double Lot and Bay Front.<br />

$<br />

325,000<br />

See all our listings & available rental properties at www.OregonBayProperties.<strong>com</strong><br />

BROOKE YUSSIM, CRS 1992 Sherman Ave., North Bend HERB YUSSIM<br />

Principal Broker/Owner<br />

Office: 541.808.2010<br />

Broker/Owner<br />

541.290.0881 Cell<br />

Info@OBPRE.<strong>com</strong><br />

541.290.0889 Cell<br />

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541-267-6278<br />

1835 KOOS BAY BVLD., COOS BAY $329,000<br />

WIND-PROTECTED BACKYARD makes outdoor entertaining a breeze in this<br />

3,214 sq.ft. home on .35 of an acre. Beautiful deck with hot tub, fireplace and<br />

mature landscaping. Three masterfully updated bathrooms, large family room<br />

with built-in library and huge windows with views of the bay. Minutes from<br />

everything, this house is nestled in a setting that is surprisingly<br />

private. #12090568<br />

Jerry Worthen<br />

principal broker<br />

“Just good ol’<br />

fashioned service”<br />

Mariah Grami<br />

Principal Broker<br />

541-290-7808<br />

www.gramiproperties.<strong>com</strong><br />

399C N. C ENTRAL , C OQUILLE , OR 97423 • (541) 260-4663<br />

WOW!<br />

791 Commercial Ave., Coos Bay • (541) 269-5263<br />

www.PacificPropertiesTeam.<strong>com</strong><br />

62560 SHELLHAMER RD., COOS BAY $315,000<br />

BEAUTIFUL HOME IN A NICE COUNTRY SETTING.<br />

Large home with brick and vinyl exterior. In addition to the<br />

attached garage there is an approx. 32x44 shop. Includes<br />

2.74 across the road - has had cows in the field, in the past.<br />

Quiet location. New roof in summer of 2012. #13159492<br />

Donna Optiz<br />

broker<br />

Shaun Wright<br />

Real Estate Broker<br />

541-404-8689<br />

Randy Hoffine<br />

principal broker<br />

Oregon Coast<br />

Home Finder<br />

A weekly advertising<br />

supplement published<br />

by The World<br />

Advertising Department<br />

CONTACT US<br />

The World Newspaper<br />

PO BOX 1840<br />

Coos Bay, OR 97420<br />

HOW TO PLACE<br />

ADVERTISING<br />

Phone: 269-1222<br />

Fax: 267-0294<br />

Contents are prepared by the Advertising<br />

Department with contributions from local housing<br />

industry representatives. Opinions expressed by<br />

contributors belong to the writers and may not<br />

represent official views of their employers or<br />

professional associations. Nothing in this<br />

publication may be reproduced in any manner<br />

without the specific written permission of the<br />

publisher.<br />

EQUAL<br />

HOUSING<br />

OPPORTUNITY<br />

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: All real estate advertising<br />

in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing<br />

Act which makes it illegal to advertise” any<br />

preference, limitation or discrimination based on<br />

race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status<br />

or national origin, or an intention, to make any<br />

such preference, limitation or discrimination.”<br />

Familial status includes children under the age of<br />

18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant<br />

women and people who have security custody of<br />

children under 18. This newspaper will not<br />

knowingly accept any advertising for real estate<br />

which is in violation of the law. Our readers are<br />

hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in<br />

this newspaper are available on and equal<br />

opportunity basis.<br />

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C4• The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

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SHARE YOUR MESSAGE 541-267-6278<br />

Assemblies of God<br />

Christian Science<br />

Grace International<br />

Non Denominational<br />

FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER<br />

Building a Christ Centered Family<br />

Sunday School 9:30am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship 10.30am<br />

Wednesday 7:00pm: Kid’s Program/Youth/Adult<br />

P.O. Box 805/2050 Lincoln St./NorthBend<br />

Ph. 541-756-4838 www.nbfwc.org<br />

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY<br />

444 S. Wall, Coos Bay • 888-3294<br />

Sunday Service & Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 am<br />

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM<br />

Adjacent to church - Open after services, or by Appt.<br />

541-751-9059<br />

EASTSIDE CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY<br />

190 D Street, Coos Bay • 541-808-0822<br />

Rev. Betty and Russell Bazzell, Pastors<br />

Morning Worship .................................................................. 10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Bible Study (Youth & Adult) .................................. 6:30 pm<br />

“We preach the Gospel as it is to people as they are.”<br />

CALVARY ON THE BAY<br />

“Teaching God’s Word book by book,<br />

chapter by chapter, verse by verse”<br />

Pastor Bart Cunningham<br />

Sunday Worship ............................................................................. 10:00 am<br />

Wednesday Jr/Sr. High School Youth ................................................. 7:00 pm<br />

1954 Union Avenue, North Bend (541)756-1707<br />

www.calvaryonthebay.org<br />

Baptist<br />

EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

282 W. Sixth, Coquille OR 97423<br />

Senior Pastor Mark Elefritz ... Assistant Pastor Aaron Finley<br />

Sunday School<br />

9:30am<br />

Morning Worship Service 10:45 am<br />

Wednesday Family Night 6:00 pm<br />

Call for information about Youth Ministries, Bible Studies,<br />

Mom-To-Mom Ministry, Men’s Group & Wednesday Family Night for all ages<br />

541-396-2921 • www.ebccoquille.org<br />

Church of Christ<br />

COOS BAY CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

“Building the Church you read about in your Bible”<br />

Bob Lentz, Minister (541) 267-6021<br />

775 W. Donnelly Ave.<br />

Bible School Classes 9:45am • Evening Worship 6:00pm<br />

Morning Worship 10:45am • Wednesday Prayer & Study 7:00pm<br />

Thursday Night Youth Group 7:00pm<br />

Signing for Hearing Impaired *** Also, Nursery Available<br />

Jewish<br />

CONGREGATION MAYIM SHALOM<br />

ANNUAL PICNIC<br />

August 11th, 12:00pm<br />

Sturdivant Park<br />

Coquille<br />

For more info call 541-266-0470<br />

www.mayimshalom.org<br />

Pentecostal of God<br />

LIGHTHOUSE TEMPLE PC OF G<br />

South Empire Blvd. & Olesan Lane<br />

Pastor Ivan Sharp<br />

Church - 541-888-6114 Pastor -541-888-6224<br />

Sunday School ............................................................................ 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship ...........................................................10:30 am<br />

Sunday Evening Worship .............................................................. 6:00 pm<br />

Monday Men’s & Women’s Meeting ......................................... 6:30 pm<br />

Tuesday SAFE Meeting ........................................................... 7:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Teen Meeting ........................................................ 7:00 pm<br />

Thursday Mid-Week Services ................................................... 7:00 pm<br />

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

1140 South 10th, Coos Bay<br />

An American Baptist Church<br />

Pastor Gary Rice<br />

www.firstbaptistcoosbay.<strong>com</strong><br />

Sunday School ......................................................... 9:00 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship........................................10:00 am<br />

Sunday Children’s Church ...................................... 10:00 am<br />

Monday Bible Study ................................................. 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Home Bible Study .................................. 6:30 pm<br />

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF NORTH BEND<br />

Pastor J. L. Coffey<br />

2080 Marion Ave., North Bend, 541-756-6544<br />

www.firstbaptistnb.org<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Sunday Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..11:00 am & 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday SAFE Addiction Recovery Program......6:30 pm<br />

Wednesday Bible Study........................................7:00 pm<br />

SOUTHERN BAPTIST<br />

SKYLINE BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

“A Christ Centered, Biblically Based, Family Oriented, Dynamic Fellowship”<br />

3451 Liberty St., North Bend - 541-756-3311<br />

(1 block off Newmark behind Boynton Park)<br />

www.sbcnb.org<br />

David Woodruff, Sr. Pastor - Tim Young, Adult & Family Ministries<br />

Josh Kintigh, Youth & Children, Brenda Langlie, Children’s Director<br />

Sunday School........................................................ ..................9:00 am & 10:30 am<br />

Sunday Worship...................................................... ....................9:00 am& 10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Awana.................................................... .....................................6:30 pm<br />

Catholic<br />

HOLY REDEEMER - NORTH BEND<br />

2250 16th St. - 541-756-0633<br />

(West off Broadway)<br />

MASSES:<br />

Saturday Vigil: 4:00 pm<br />

Sunday: 8:00 am & 12:00 pm<br />

Confessions: Saturday 3-3:45 pm or by appointment<br />

Daily Mass: Wed 5:00pm / Thu & Fri 9:00am<br />

ST. MONICA - COOS BAY<br />

357 S. 6th St.<br />

MASSES:<br />

Saturday Vigil: 5:30 pm<br />

Sunday: 8:30 am & 11:00 am<br />

Spanish Mass: 1 pm<br />

Confessions: Saturday 3:30 pm - 5 pm or by appt.<br />

Daily Mass: Tues: 5:30 pm Wed-Fri: 12 pm<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Christian<br />

CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

2761 BROADWAY, NORTH BEND • 541-756-4844<br />

Sunday Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am<br />

Sunday Life Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:00 pm<br />

Where You Can Find A Friend<br />

Church of God<br />

(Clevland, Tenn.)<br />

NORTH BEND CHURCH OF GOD<br />

1067 Newmark, North Bend • 541-756-6289<br />

Pastor Gary L. Robertson<br />

Sunday School ........................................................ 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Service ....................................... 10:30 am<br />

Sunday Evening Service .......................................... 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Evening Service .................................... 7:00 pm<br />

“Building People Through Biblical Values”<br />

Community Churches<br />

HAUSER COMMUNITY CHURCH<br />

69411 Wildwood Dr., 7 miles north of North Bend<br />

Staff: John Adams, Bill Moldt, Rob Wright, Brion Spore, Nancy Goodman .<br />

Radio broadcast Sunday @ 8:30 a.m. (K-Light 98.7 fm)<br />

Sunday Worship Celebration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:15 & 11:00 am<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Nurseries provided for all services. Affiliated with Village Missions - 541-756-2591<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Episcopal<br />

EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH<br />

4th & Highland, Coos Bay 541-269-5829<br />

Rev. Stephen A. Tyson, Rector<br />

Sunday Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:30 & 10:00 am<br />

Sunday School Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Wednesday Services: Holy Eucharist . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 am<br />

Holy Eucharist with Healing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 noon<br />

Children’s Sermon & Nursery Care<br />

Foursquare<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Lutheran<br />

CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL<br />

1835 N. 15th, Coos Bay • 541-267-3851<br />

Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod<br />

Pastor Quintin Cundiff<br />

Sunday Worship (spring/summer schedule) . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8:30 am<br />

Sunday Bible Study for all ages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Midweek Bible studies meet regularly. Call office for info & times.<br />

Christ Lutheran School NOW ENROLLING -<br />

preschool through 6th grade<br />

www.clcs-cb.org<br />

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America<br />

2741 Sherman Ave., North Bend<br />

Pastor Sue Seiffert - 541-756-4035<br />

Office Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mon.-Fri. 8:45-11:45 am<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:15 am<br />

Adult Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 am<br />

Worship (Child Care Provided) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am<br />

faithlutheran-nb.org<br />

Home of Cartwheels Preschool ~ faithlutheran_nb@frontier.<strong>com</strong><br />

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN ELCA<br />

1290 Thompson Rd., Coos Bay (5 Blocks East of Hospital)<br />

Pastor Jon Strasman - 541-267-2347<br />

SUMMER WORSHIP HOURS<br />

Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 am<br />

Adult Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 am<br />

All are Wel<strong>com</strong>e (Nursery available for all services)<br />

Methodist<br />

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH<br />

Rev. Laura Beville, Pastor<br />

Worship Service....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 am<br />

Communion 1st Sunday of each month -<br />

Handicapped Accessible<br />

123 Ocean Blvd. • 541-267-4410 • www.coosbayumc.org<br />

Open hearts, open minds, open doors • Childcare Available<br />

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, N. BEND<br />

541-756-6959<br />

Rev. Laura Beville, Pastor<br />

Located at Pony Village Mall, between AT&T & Sears Stores<br />

SCHEDULE<br />

Worship Service ....................... 9:30 am<br />

Communion 1st Sunday of the month<br />

Nazarene<br />

Presbyterian<br />

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, N. BEND<br />

541-756-4155 • PASTOR: Dr. Daniel Myers<br />

Harrison & Vermont St. (East side of Pony Village Mall)<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:15 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:30 am<br />

Men & Womens Breakfast Bible Study (Friday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 am<br />

Youth Meeting (Friday Evening) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . 6pm-9pm<br />

Combined Youth Group (Sunday) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 pm-7:00 pm<br />

Reformed<br />

HOPE COVENANT REFORMED CHURCH<br />

580 E. 9th St., Coquille, Oregon<br />

Pastor: Ron Joling • 541-396-4183<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Morning Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 am<br />

Afternoon Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4:30 pm<br />

Salvation Army<br />

THE SALVATION ARMY<br />

WORSHIP & SERVICE CENTER<br />

1155 Flanagan, Coos Bay...541-888-5202<br />

Lieutenants Kevin and Heather Pope...Corps Officers<br />

NEW SCHEDULE<br />

Free Kids Meal ....................................................................... 9:00 am<br />

Christian Worship .................................................................... 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship ...................................................... 10:45 am<br />

Seventh-day Adventist Church<br />

COOS BAY SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST<br />

2175 Newmark, Coos Bay 541-756-7413<br />

Sabbath School Bible Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 am<br />

Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:45 am<br />

Pastor Ken Williams<br />

Unitarian Universalist<br />

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST (S.C.U.U.F.)<br />

DIVERSE BELIEFS - ONE FELLOWSHIP<br />

Liberal Religious Organization<br />

10am Sundays at 580 Newmark Ave., Coos Bay.<br />

541-266-7335<br />

for more information and childcare arrangements<br />

Unity Worldwide Ministries<br />

UNITY BY THE BAY<br />

“A spiritual <strong>com</strong>munity to <strong>com</strong>e home to...”<br />

Sunday Celebration Service - 10 am<br />

2100 Union ~ North Bend • 541-751-1633<br />

Karen Lowe, L.U.T., Spiritual Leader<br />

Call Yellow Cab for Free ride to Unity By The Bay.<br />

Office/Bookstore M-W-F 10 – 2<br />

Email: unitybythebaysusie@gmail.<strong>com</strong><br />

Word<br />

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH<br />

2420 Sherman, North Bend • 541-756-5555<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 am<br />

Praise and Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:45 am<br />

Ladies Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thurs., 10:00 am<br />

Children’s Worship and Nursery Care<br />

Pastors Sharron Kay & Jim Womack<br />

BAY AREA FOURSQUARE CHURCH<br />

466 Donnelly (across from the new Coos Bay Fire Station)<br />

Glorifying, Proclaiming and Showing Christ to all<br />

Pastors: David & Marilyn Scanlon<br />

(541) 269-1821<br />

Sunday School..... (All ages through Adult) .................................. 9:00 am - 9:45 am<br />

Sunday Worship.....(Nursery & Children’s Church Provided) .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 10:00 am<br />

We also have small group ministries meeting throughout the week.<br />

E-mail: Ba4@ba4.org Website: www.ba4.org<br />

NAZARENE - BAY AREA<br />

Located in North Bend at 1850 Clark St. (Behind Perry Electric)<br />

Sr. Pastor Ron Halvorson<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:45 am<br />

Sunday Evening Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:00 pm<br />

NURSERY • CHILDREN’S CHURCH • YOUTH PROGRAM<br />

BIBLE STUDIES • CARE GROUPS<br />

For information or directions call 541-756-2004<br />

HARVEST OF FAITH FAMILY CHURCH<br />

Bringing help and hope through the Word of God<br />

131 N. 3rd (Hall Building), Coos Bay<br />

Sunday Service...................................................................................... .........10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Service................................................................................... ........7:00 pm<br />

Children’s services provided on Sunday & Wednesday<br />

Pastors David & Bridgette Whinery<br />

P.O. Box 477, Coos Bay, 541-266-0613<br />

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Achievements<br />

B U S I N E S S<br />

DIGITAL EDITOR<br />

LES BOWEN<br />

The World wel<strong>com</strong>es its new digital<br />

editor, Les Bowen.<br />

The digital editor position is also a<br />

new one. Responsibilities include<br />

overseeing the newspaper’s website<br />

and social media sites, such as<br />

Facebook and Twitter.<br />

Those kinds of duties are not foreign<br />

to Bowen. He said digital media has<br />

always been important to him since<br />

he’s “kinda been a geek anyway.”<br />

World publisher Jeff Precourt said he<br />

was looking forward to the changes in<br />

digital media.<br />

“In the past seven months, we’ve<br />

made significant improvements in our<br />

digital products. Les will add to that<br />

progress and help us grow even faster<br />

than before,” Precourt said.<br />

Bowen was born and raised in the<br />

suburbs of Salt Lake City, Utah. After<br />

high school he decided he wanted to<br />

be a writer in order to make a mark in<br />

the <strong>world</strong>. “What drove me to journalim<br />

was I wanted to do something<br />

that makes a difference in the <strong>com</strong>munity,”<br />

Bowen said.<br />

He studied journalism at the College<br />

of Eastern Utah, which is now part of<br />

Utah State University. While still attending<br />

college, he was hired as a<br />

paginator at the Sun Advocate in<br />

Price, Utah. He was later promoted to<br />

reporter. From there, Bowen became<br />

editor of the Vernal (Utah) Express in<br />

May 2007. He was there for one year.<br />

He then became editor of the Lake<br />

Chelan Mirror and Quad City Herald in<br />

central Washington state. He was with<br />

the paper until September 2010, when<br />

he moved to upstate New York and<br />

was named editor of the Genesee<br />

Country Express in Dansville, N.Y. He<br />

accepted the additional responsibilities<br />

of general manager in 2012, a position<br />

he held until May.<br />

He lives in Empire with his wife of almost<br />

seven years, Heather Myers,<br />

and their two dogs, Jet and Luna. The<br />

furry kids are a <strong>com</strong>bined 170 pounds.<br />

Precourt said Bowen was a great addition<br />

to The World’s news team.<br />

“Les has a track record of helping<br />

news sources move information<br />

quickly, through a variety of traditional<br />

and social media channels. We are<br />

excited to have been able to recruit<br />

him to Oregon’s South Coast.”<br />

Bowen said he’s happy with his career<br />

choice, even with its challenges because<br />

“every day is different.” He also<br />

enjoys “informing the <strong>com</strong>munity to<br />

help them make better decisions.”<br />

Call Valerie at 541-269-1222 for<br />

Business Achievements submission<br />

information and pricing, or send Email to<br />

Achievements@the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

CONTRIBUTED STORIES<br />

STUNNING 3.44 ACRES with amazing<br />

landscaping and a beautiful 4BR,<br />

2BA house, studio, and large<br />

detached garage/shop. Spacious<br />

home with a living and family room,<br />

bonus area upstairs, and basement.<br />

This great property is fenced for<br />

animals, has fruit trees, back patio,<br />

and lots of storage. Rare find just<br />

outside of Coquille for only<br />

$279,500. MLS#12569741<br />

Business-Finance<br />

NEW EXECUTIVE EDITOR<br />

LARRY CAMPBELL<br />

COOS BAY - Larry Campbell has always<br />

wanted to live on the Oregon<br />

Coast. Now, the Pulitzer Prize-winning<br />

journalist has gotten his way. Campbell,<br />

30-year journalism veteran and<br />

reporter and former Associated Press<br />

bureau chief is taking the editorial<br />

helm of The World newspaper. On<br />

July 24 Campbell left his Anchorage,<br />

Alaska, home to assume the role of<br />

executive editor at The World.<br />

“I can’t believe this is really happening,”<br />

Campbell said this week. “My<br />

wife (Melissa) and I have always kind<br />

of hoped we’d be able to relocate to<br />

the Oregon Coast. Now, it’s reality.<br />

We’re quite simply ecstatic.”<br />

World Publisher Jeff Precourt said<br />

Campbell immediately stood out as a<br />

person of interest during an extensive<br />

search. “Larry’s background as a journalist<br />

in Alaska was very appealing to<br />

us,” Precourt said. “Many of the topics<br />

in southwestern Oregon like the environment,<br />

native populations and government<br />

issues translate well.”<br />

Campbell began his journalism career<br />

in 1982 with the Anchorage Daily<br />

News after graduating with a journalism<br />

degree from the University of Oregon.<br />

While at the Daily News, Campbell<br />

became the first reporter on the<br />

scene of the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil<br />

spill. The same year, he was part of a<br />

team that won the Pulitzer Prize for<br />

Public Service for a 10-week series on<br />

alcoholism and addiction in Alaskan<br />

native <strong>com</strong>munities.<br />

From 2001-2009, Campbell served as<br />

the assistant bureau chief and Alaska<br />

bureau chief of the Associated Press.<br />

He’s also held executive editor positions<br />

at The Peninsula Clarion and<br />

First Alaskans Magazine, a publication<br />

devoted to telling stories of Alaska’s<br />

indigenous peoples.<br />

“His career is filled with examples of<br />

blending high quality journalism with<br />

progressive strategies,” Precourt said.<br />

“When we <strong>com</strong>bine his strengths with<br />

the talented core of journalists we already<br />

have, there is no telling how<br />

much our news team can achieve.”<br />

Campbell is more than happy to take<br />

on the new challenge.<br />

“I think we can practice the kind of<br />

journalism that folks will appreciate,”<br />

he said. “When it’s done right, real<br />

journalism tries every day to give you<br />

the facts, give you the points of view<br />

and give you the information you need<br />

to make informed decisions about<br />

your <strong>com</strong>munity and your lives. That’s<br />

our responsibility. And we’ll meet our<br />

responsibility.”<br />

The World is the only daily newspaper<br />

published on the Oregon South Coast.<br />

The paper has been owned by Lee<br />

Enterprises of Davenport, Iowa since<br />

2005.<br />

LARGE 155’ X 100’ LANDSCAPED LOT<br />

with a beautiful garden spot and<br />

clean 2BR, 1BA home with a<br />

carport and garage/shop area. This<br />

fantastic corner lot in Coos Bay has<br />

2 sand point wells and leaves lots<br />

of room for a shop, RV parking, or<br />

the possibility of dividing the<br />

property into another lot or two.<br />

What a great opportunity for only<br />

$134,900. MLS#13253016<br />

BEAUTIFUL 4BR, 2BA HOME on<br />

21.31 acres. This amazing property<br />

has an updated home with gorgeous<br />

bathrooms, new kitchen with granite<br />

tiles, and a newer roof. The home is<br />

spacious and has a large living room<br />

with wood floors. This great property<br />

has a greenhouse, barn, pasture,<br />

creek, spring, trees, and room for<br />

horses. A rare find for only $329,000 .<br />

MLS#12651791<br />

Another chapter from<br />

“Homeownerin0g 101.”<br />

Empty the bowl<br />

One of the first challenges<br />

faced by anyone who has to<br />

remove a toilet is getting the<br />

last water out of the bowl<br />

before you lift it.<br />

Stuffing absorbent towels<br />

into the bowl is traditional,<br />

but even simpler is applying<br />

the “wet” feature of your<br />

wet/dry shop vacuum to the<br />

problem.<br />

Sometimes you also can<br />

use a wet/dry vac to suck a<br />

clog out of a sink’s drain line.<br />

It’s a lot more effective and<br />

easier on the plumbing than<br />

those chemical drain cleaners<br />

— and often much faster.<br />

Ladder laws<br />

Everyone learned how a<br />

ladder works the first time<br />

they opened kitchen drawers<br />

and scaled them to get at the<br />

cookie jar, so we’ll confine<br />

ourselves to a few of the<br />

“don’ts” of ladder use.<br />

• Don’t stand on the top<br />

tread of a step ladder. It’s not<br />

yours. It belongs to the ladder,<br />

and it’s where it keeps<br />

its hinges.<br />

• Don’t lean out to the side<br />

to paint the last few inches of<br />

wall. Always keep your<br />

weight centered over the ladder.<br />

• Don’t “jump” an extension<br />

ladder, i.e. try to shift it<br />

to one side to get at those last<br />

few inches of wall. Get down,<br />

move the ladder and go up<br />

again.<br />

• Don’t wear flip-flops or<br />

tennies. It’s not a safety<br />

issue, but standing on rungs<br />

gets very tiring. You’ll be a lot<br />

more <strong>com</strong>fortable in boots.<br />

Blade sharpening<br />

A sharp mower blade clips<br />

the grass neatly; a dull blade<br />

tears the grass, making it<br />

harder for it to recover and<br />

often leaving the lawn with a<br />

brownish sheen.<br />

The blade of a lawnmower<br />

ought to be sharpened at<br />

least once a year, but twice is<br />

better (some even say<br />

monthly) — perhaps at the<br />

end or beginning of the<br />

mowing season and around<br />

Independence Day.<br />

To sharpen a blade, disconnect<br />

the spark plug cable<br />

and flip the mower over.<br />

Wedge a block of wood<br />

against the blade so it doesn’t<br />

spin, then use an adjustable<br />

Team Realty<br />

wrench or socket wrench to<br />

give the large nut a firm<br />

counter-clockwise twist.<br />

If it’s been a while since<br />

the nut was removed, a couple<br />

of spritzes of WD-40<br />

may be needed to get it loose.<br />

Remove the nut and<br />

assorted washers and washer-like<br />

gadgets (it varies with<br />

brand) until<br />

you can take<br />

off the<br />

blade itself.<br />

Keep the<br />

gadgets in<br />

order so<br />

you can put<br />

them back<br />

later; a<br />

p h o t o<br />

might be a<br />

good idea.<br />

Put the<br />

blade in a<br />

vise and<br />

use a hand-held 4-inch<br />

grinder to remove any nicks<br />

in the cutting edge, maintaining<br />

the angle of the factory<br />

edge. You can use a bench<br />

grinder, but I prefer the<br />

smaller hand-held tool<br />

because it lets me see<br />

the cutting edge while<br />

I’m working.<br />

OPEN HOUSE<br />

714 Ash St., Myrtle Point<br />

541-572-2121<br />

jeffbkrall@frontier.<strong>com</strong><br />

C<br />

Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • C3 Y<br />

You ought to know about this<br />

Smooth off the grinder<br />

marks with a file, then flip the<br />

mower blade over and do the<br />

other side.<br />

Replace the blade on the<br />

mower and reconnect the<br />

spark plug cable.<br />

Sticky drawers<br />

When things stick together,<br />

our tendency is to oil<br />

them. When it <strong>com</strong>es to<br />

wood, however, that’s a mistake.<br />

Oil attracts dust, and<br />

when it inevitably dries, it<br />

actually can make matters<br />

worse.<br />

Wax is the perfect lubricant<br />

for two pieces of wood<br />

that are rubbing together,<br />

such as a drawer and the<br />

guides it’s supposed to be<br />

sliding on. A beeswax candle<br />

is best, but an ordinary<br />

child’s crayon works in a<br />

pinch.<br />

So does a bar of soap,<br />

which is why I always hang<br />

onto a couple of those slivers<br />

that are too small to use in the<br />

shower.<br />

Send your questions to:<br />

HouseWorks, P.O. Box 81609,<br />

Lincoln, NE 68501, or email:<br />

houseworks@journalstar.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

David L. Davis<br />

Real Estate<br />

CONTEMPORARY HOME, pride of ownership<br />

throughout. Seven resident deer. Vaulted ceiling.<br />

Living room, family room, island kitchen with<br />

stainless steel appliances. New stone floor. 3<br />

bedrooms, 2.5 baths. Walk-in closets, huge<br />

deck area with paver patio for entertainment.<br />

.62 acres east of town. Triple car garage<br />

features 864 sq.ft. Economical heat pump.<br />

Skylights. MLS#12656075<br />

$ 325,000<br />

OWNER’S PRIDE AND JOY. Custom designed by<br />

owners, built in 1995. Views from every room.<br />

Home features upstairs living and dining area<br />

and master bedroom to maximize the full effect<br />

of the Oceanview. Dramatic vaulted ceiling,<br />

fireplace and outdoor covered deck with glass<br />

hand rail <strong>com</strong>plete the upstairs environment.<br />

The first floor includes entry foyer, two<br />

bedrooms, bathroom and laundry room. Built-in<br />

vacuum. MLS#13217652<br />

OCEAN DRIVE First time on Market. Hear and<br />

live the grand Pacific Ocean. 4 bedroom<br />

custom home with upgrades. Family room,<br />

living room, kitchen and dining area are on<br />

first level. Fireplace. Second level includes<br />

master suite and 3 additional bedrooms, two<br />

bathrooms upstairs. Kitchen has granite<br />

counters and features modern appliances.<br />

Large deck off back of home. MLS#12311790<br />

Now is the time to Buy.<br />

Fred Gernandt, Broker<br />

Call Fred Today!<br />

Cell: (541) 290-9444<br />

1110 Alabama Street, Bandon, OR 97411<br />

Office: (541) 347-9444 or toll free 1-800-835-9444<br />

Website: www.bandonhomes.<strong>com</strong><br />

Saturday, August 3rd<br />

1:30pm - 4:00pm<br />

1412 Maryland, Myrtle Point<br />

Huge home value priced, should qualify for any<br />

financing this home is solid!! With 4 bedrooms (could<br />

turn to 5 real easy) 2 bathrooms and a whopping 2,050<br />

+- sqft home with family room, living room, dining<br />

room, dining room, not to mention the huge .22 +- acre<br />

lot. Wow! This is one is fresh, clean and ready<br />

to be your new home!! MLS# 13494251<br />

$129,500<br />

Jeff Krall<br />

Principal Broker<br />

C:541-294-0069<br />

$ 245,000<br />

$ 395,000<br />

OPEN HOUSES IN NORTH BEND<br />

SATURDAY, AUGUST 3RD — 11:30AM - 2:00PM<br />

NEW LISTING!<br />

MLS# 13457201<br />

93611 BLUEBIRD, NORTH BEND<br />

Directions -East Bay to Quail to Bluebird.<br />

3 bedroom/2 bath, 2,560 sq.ft. Large Lot,<br />

MLS# 113447424<br />

Shop & Bonus Room.<br />

$<br />

310,000<br />

Glasgow Bridge<br />

& Bay Views!<br />

HOUSE<br />

WORKS<br />

STEVE<br />

BATIE<br />

NEW LISTING!<br />

“Breathtaking Views”<br />

MLS# 13629176 13337832<br />

94020 EAST SHORE DR., NORTH BEND<br />

Directions -East Bay Drive, 1/2 mile south of the Golf Course on right.<br />

3 bedroom/2 bath, 1,920 sq.ft.<br />

Double Lot and Bay Front.<br />

$<br />

325,000<br />

See all our listings & available rental properties at www.OregonBayProperties.<strong>com</strong><br />

BROOKE YUSSIM, CRS 1992 Sherman Ave., North Bend HERB YUSSIM<br />

Principal Broker/Owner<br />

Office: 541.808.2010<br />

Broker/Owner<br />

541.290.0881 Cell<br />

Info@OBPRE.<strong>com</strong><br />

541.290.0889 Cell<br />

M<br />

K<br />

C<br />

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541-267-6278<br />

1835 KOOS BAY BVLD., COOS BAY $329,000<br />

WIND-PROTECTED BACKYARD makes outdoor entertaining a breeze in this<br />

3,214 sq.ft. home on .35 of an acre. Beautiful deck with hot tub, fireplace and<br />

mature landscaping. Three masterfully updated bathrooms, large family room<br />

with built-in library and huge windows with views of the bay. Minutes from<br />

everything, this house is nestled in a setting that is surprisingly<br />

private. #12090568<br />

Jerry Worthen<br />

principal broker<br />

“Just good ol’<br />

fashioned service”<br />

Mariah Grami<br />

Principal Broker<br />

541-290-7808<br />

www.gramiproperties.<strong>com</strong><br />

399C N. C ENTRAL , COQUILLE , OR 97423 • (541) 260-4663<br />

WOW!<br />

791 Commercial Ave., Coos Bay • (541) 269-5263<br />

www.PacificPropertiesTeam.<strong>com</strong><br />

62560 SHELLHAMER RD., COOS BAY $315,000<br />

BEAUTIFUL HOME IN A NICE COUNTRY SETTING.<br />

Large home with brick and vinyl exterior. In addition to the<br />

attached garage there is an approx. 32x44 shop. Includes<br />

2.74 across the road - has had cows in the field, in the past.<br />

Quiet location. New roof in summer of 2012. #13159492<br />

Donna Optiz<br />

broker<br />

Shaun Wright<br />

Real Estate Broker<br />

541-404-8689<br />

Randy Hoffine<br />

principal broker<br />

Oregon Coast<br />

Home Finder<br />

A weekly advertising<br />

supplement published<br />

by The World<br />

Advertising Department<br />

CONTACT US<br />

The World Newspaper<br />

PO BOX 1840<br />

Coos Bay, OR 97420<br />

HOW TO PLACE<br />

ADVERTISING<br />

Phone: 269-1222<br />

Fax: 267-0294<br />

Contents are prepared by the Advertising<br />

Department with contributions from local housing<br />

industry representatives. Opinions expressed by<br />

contributors belong to the writers and may not<br />

represent official views of their employers or<br />

professional associations. Nothing in this<br />

publication may be reproduced in any manner<br />

without the specific written permission of the<br />

publisher.<br />

EQUAL<br />

HOUSING<br />

OPPORTUNITY<br />

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: All real estate advertising<br />

in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing<br />

Act which makes it illegal to advertise” any<br />

preference, limitation or discrimination based on<br />

race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status<br />

or national origin, or an intention, to make any<br />

such preference, limitation or discrimination.”<br />

Familial status includes children under the age of<br />

18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant<br />

women and people who have security custody of<br />

children under 18. This newspaper will not<br />

knowingly accept any advertising for real estate<br />

which is in violation of the law. Our readers are<br />

hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in<br />

this newspaper are available on and equal<br />

opportunity basis.<br />

C<br />

M<br />

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C4• The World • Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

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SHARE YOUR MESSAGE 541-267-6278<br />

Assemblies of God<br />

Christian Science<br />

Grace International<br />

Non Denominational<br />

FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER<br />

Building a Christ Centered Family<br />

Sunday School 9:30am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship 10.30am<br />

Wednesday 7:00pm: Kid’s Program/Youth/Adult<br />

P.O. Box 805/2050 Lincoln St./NorthBend<br />

Ph. 541-756-4838 www.nbfwc.org<br />

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY<br />

444 S. Wall, Coos Bay • 888-3294<br />

Sunday Service & Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 am<br />

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM<br />

Adjacent to church - Open after services, or by Appt.<br />

541-751-9059<br />

EASTSIDE CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY<br />

190 D Street, Coos Bay • 541-808-0822<br />

Rev. Betty and Russell Bazzell, Pastors<br />

Morning Worship ..................................................................10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Bible Study (Youth & Adult) ..................................6:30 pm<br />

“We preach the Gospel as it is to people as they are.”<br />

CALVARY ON THE BAY<br />

“Teaching God’s Word book by book,<br />

chapter by chapter, verse by verse”<br />

Pastor Bart Cunningham<br />

Sunday Worship .............................................................................10:00 am<br />

Wednesday Jr/Sr. High School Youth .................................................7:00 pm<br />

1954 Union Avenue, North Bend (541)756-1707<br />

www.calvaryonthebay.org<br />

Baptist<br />

EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

282 W. Sixth, Coquille OR 97423<br />

Senior Pastor Mark Elefritz ... Assistant Pastor Aaron Finley<br />

Sunday School<br />

9:30am<br />

Morning Worship Service 10:45 am<br />

Wednesday Family Night 6:00 pm<br />

Call for information about Youth Ministries, Bible Studies,<br />

Mom-To-Mom Ministry, Men’s Group & Wednesday Family Night for all ages<br />

541-396-2921 • www.ebccoquille.org<br />

Church of Christ<br />

COOS BAY CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

“Building the Church you read about in your Bible”<br />

Bob Lentz, Minister (541) 267-6021<br />

775 W. Donnelly Ave.<br />

Bible School Classes 9:45am • Evening Worship 6:00pm<br />

Morning Worship 10:45am • Wednesday Prayer & Study 7:00pm<br />

Thursday Night Youth Group 7:00pm<br />

Signing for Hearing Impaired *** Also, Nursery Available<br />

Jewish<br />

CONGREGATION MAYIM SHALOM<br />

ANNUAL PICNIC<br />

August 11th, 12:00pm<br />

Sturdivant Park<br />

Coquille<br />

For more info call 541-266-0470<br />

www.mayimshalom.org<br />

Pentecostal of God<br />

LIGHTHOUSE TEMPLE PC OF G<br />

South Empire Blvd. & Olesan Lane<br />

Pastor Ivan Sharp<br />

Church - 541-888-6114 Pastor -541-888-6224<br />

Sunday School ............................................................................ 9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship ...........................................................10:30 am<br />

Sunday Evening Worship .............................................................. 6:00 pm<br />

Monday Men’s & Women’s Meeting ......................................... 6:30 pm<br />

Tuesday SAFE Meeting ........................................................... 7:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Teen Meeting ........................................................ 7:00 pm<br />

Thursday Mid-Week Services ................................................... 7:00 pm<br />

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

1140 South 10th, Coos Bay<br />

An American Baptist Church<br />

Pastor Gary Rice<br />

www.firstbaptistcoosbay.<strong>com</strong><br />

Sunday School ......................................................... 9:00 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship........................................10:00 am<br />

Sunday Children’s Church ...................................... 10:00 am<br />

Monday Bible Study ................................................. 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Home Bible Study .................................. 6:30 pm<br />

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF NORTH BEND<br />

Pastor J. L. Coffey<br />

2080 Marion Ave., North Bend, 541-756-6544<br />

www.firstbaptistnb.org<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Sunday Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..11:00 am & 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday SAFE Addiction Recovery Program......6:30 pm<br />

Wednesday Bible Study........................................7:00 pm<br />

SOUTHERN BAPTIST<br />

SKYLINE BAPTIST CHURCH<br />

“A Christ Centered, Biblically Based, Family Oriented, Dynamic Fellowship”<br />

3451 Liberty St., North Bend - 541-756-3311<br />

(1 block off Newmark behind Boynton Park)<br />

www.sbcnb.org<br />

David Woodruff, Sr. Pastor - Tim Young, Adult & Family Ministries<br />

Josh Kintigh, Youth & Children, Brenda Langlie, Children’s Director<br />

Sunday School........................................................ ..................9:00 am & 10:30 am<br />

Sunday Worship...................................................... ....................9:00 am& 10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Awana.................................................... .....................................6:30 pm<br />

Catholic<br />

HOLY REDEEMER - NORTH BEND<br />

2250 16th St. - 541-756-0633<br />

(West off Broadway)<br />

MASSES:<br />

Saturday Vigil: 4:00 pm<br />

Sunday: 8:00 am & 12:00 pm<br />

Confessions: Saturday 3-3:45 pm or by appointment<br />

Daily Mass: Wed 5:00pm / Thu & Fri 9:00am<br />

ST. MONICA - COOS BAY<br />

357 S. 6th St.<br />

MASSES:<br />

Saturday Vigil: 5:30 pm<br />

Sunday: 8:30 am & 11:00 am<br />

Spanish Mass: 1 pm<br />

Confessions: Saturday 3:30 pm - 5 pm or by appt.<br />

Daily Mass: Tues: 5:30 pm Wed-Fri: 12 pm<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Christian<br />

CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />

2761 BROADWAY, NORTH BEND • 541-756-4844<br />

Sunday Bible Study .................................................................9:30 am<br />

Sunday Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............10:30 am<br />

Sunday Life Group ..................................................................6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......7:00 pm<br />

Where You Can Find A Friend<br />

Church of God<br />

(Clevland, Tenn.)<br />

NORTH BEND CHURCH OF GOD<br />

1067 Newmark, North Bend • 541-756-6289<br />

Pastor Gary L. Robertson<br />

Sunday School ........................................................9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Service ....................................... 10:30 am<br />

Sunday Evening Service .......................................... 6:00 pm<br />

Wednesday Evening Service ....................................7:00 pm<br />

“Building People Through Biblical Values”<br />

Community Churches<br />

HAUSER COMMUNITY CHURCH<br />

69411 Wildwood Dr., 7 miles north of North Bend<br />

Staff: John Adams, Bill Moldt, Rob Wright, Brion Spore, Nancy Goodman .<br />

Radio broadcast Sunday @ 8:30 a.m. (K-Light 98.7 fm)<br />

Sunday Worship Celebration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............8:15 & 11:00 am<br />

Sunday School ..........................................................................................9:45 am<br />

Nurseries provided for all services. Affiliated with Village Missions - 541-756-2591<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Episcopal<br />

EMMANUEL EPISCOPAL CHURCH<br />

4th & Highland, Coos Bay 541-269-5829<br />

Rev. Stephen A. Tyson, Rector<br />

Sunday Services ........................................................7:30 & 10:00 am<br />

Sunday School Classes ...........................................................9:45 am<br />

Wednesday Services: Holy Eucharist . . .....................................6:30 am<br />

Holy Eucharist with Healing .....................................................12 noon<br />

Children’s Sermon & Nursery Care<br />

Foursquare<br />

YOUR CHURCH HERE!<br />

This could be your church<br />

information.<br />

CALL VALERIE TODAY!<br />

Lutheran<br />

CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH & SCHOOL<br />

1835 N. 15th, Coos Bay • 541-267-3851<br />

Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod<br />

Pastor Quintin Cundiff<br />

Sunday Worship (spring/summer schedule) . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8:30 am<br />

Sunday Bible Study for all ages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:45 am<br />

Midweek Bible studies meet regularly. Call office for info & times.<br />

Christ Lutheran School NOW ENROLLING -<br />

preschool through 6th grade<br />

www.clcs-cb.org<br />

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

Evangelical Lutheran Church in America<br />

2741 Sherman Ave., North Bend<br />

Pastor Sue Seiffert - 541-756-4035<br />

Office Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...................Mon.-Fri. 8:45-11:45 am<br />

Sunday School ........................................................................9:15 am<br />

Adult Study . .......................................................................... 9:00 am<br />

Worship (Child Care Provided) ...................................................10:30 am<br />

faithlutheran-nb.org<br />

Home of Cartwheels Preschool ~ faithlutheran_nb@frontier.<strong>com</strong><br />

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN ELCA<br />

1290 Thompson Rd., Coos Bay (5 Blocks East of Hospital)<br />

Pastor Jon Strasman - 541-267-2347<br />

SUMMER WORSHIP HOURS<br />

Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10:00 am<br />

Adult Bible Study . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 am<br />

All are Wel<strong>com</strong>e (Nursery available for all services)<br />

Methodist<br />

FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH<br />

Rev. Laura Beville, Pastor<br />

Worship Service....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11:00 am<br />

Communion 1st Sunday of each month -<br />

Handicapped Accessible<br />

123 Ocean Blvd. • 541-267-4410 • www.coosbayumc.org<br />

Open hearts, open minds, open doors • Childcare Available<br />

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, N. BEND<br />

541-756-6959<br />

Rev. Laura Beville, Pastor<br />

Located at Pony Village Mall, between AT&T & Sears Stores<br />

SCHEDULE<br />

Worship Service ....................... 9:30 am<br />

Communion 1st Sunday of the month<br />

Nazarene<br />

Presbyterian<br />

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, N. BEND<br />

541-756-4155 • PASTOR: Dr. Daniel Myers<br />

Harrison & Vermont St. (East side of Pony Village Mall)<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................................. 9:15 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship ........................................................................ 10:30 am<br />

Men & Womens Breakfast Bible Study (Friday) .......................................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 am<br />

Youth Meeting (Friday Evening) ........................................................ ....... 6pm-9pm<br />

Combined Youth Group (Sunday) . . .................................................. 6 pm-7:00 pm<br />

Reformed<br />

HOPE COVENANT REFORMED CHURCH<br />

580 E. 9th St., Coquille, Oregon<br />

Pastor: Ron Joling • 541-396-4183<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................9:45 am<br />

Morning Service . .................................................................11:00 am<br />

Afternoon Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..........................................4:30 pm<br />

Salvation Army<br />

THE SALVATION ARMY<br />

WORSHIP & SERVICE CENTER<br />

1155 Flanagan, Coos Bay...541-888-5202<br />

Lieutenants Kevin and Heather Pope...Corps Officers<br />

NEW SCHEDULE<br />

Free Kids Meal .......................................................................9:00 am<br />

Christian Worship ....................................................................9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship ......................................................10:45 am<br />

Seventh-day Adventist Church<br />

COOS BAY SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST<br />

2175 Newmark, Coos Bay 541-756-7413<br />

Sabbath School Bible Class ..................................................9:30 am<br />

Worship Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............10:45 am<br />

Pastor Ken Williams<br />

Unitarian Universalist<br />

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST (S.C.U.U.F.)<br />

DIVERSE BELIEFS - ONE FELLOWSHIP<br />

Liberal Religious Organization<br />

10am Sundays at 580 Newmark Ave., Coos Bay.<br />

541-266-7335<br />

for more information and childcare arrangements<br />

Unity Worldwide Ministries<br />

UNITY BY THE BAY<br />

“A spiritual <strong>com</strong>munity to <strong>com</strong>e home to...”<br />

Sunday Celebration Service - 10 am<br />

2100 Union ~ North Bend • 541-751-1633<br />

Karen Lowe, L.U.T., Spiritual Leader<br />

Call Yellow Cab for Free ride to Unity By The Bay.<br />

Office/Bookstore M-W-F 10 – 2<br />

Email: unitybythebaysusie@gmail.<strong>com</strong><br />

Word<br />

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH<br />

2420 Sherman, North Bend • 541-756-5555<br />

Sunday School .......................................................................9:30 am<br />

Praise and Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........10:45 am<br />

Ladies Bible Study ....................................................Thurs., 10:00 am<br />

Children’s Worship and Nursery Care<br />

Pastors Sharron Kay & Jim Womack<br />

BAY AREA FOURSQUARE CHURCH<br />

466 Donnelly (across from the new Coos Bay Fire Station)<br />

Glorifying, Proclaiming and Showing Christ to all<br />

Pastors: David & Marilyn Scanlon<br />

(541) 269-1821<br />

Sunday School..... (All ages through Adult) ..................................9:00 am - 9:45 am<br />

Sunday Worship.....(Nursery & Children’s Church Provided) .........................10:00 am<br />

We also have small group ministries meeting throughout the week.<br />

E-mail: Ba4@ba4.org Website: www.ba4.org<br />

NAZARENE - BAY AREA<br />

Located in North Bend at 1850 Clark St. (Behind Perry Electric)<br />

Sr. Pastor Ron Halvorson<br />

Sunday School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...................................9:30 am<br />

Sunday Morning Worship . ........................................................................10:45 am<br />

Sunday Evening Worship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .........................6:00 pm<br />

NURSERY • CHILDREN’S CHURCH • YOUTH PROGRAM<br />

BIBLE STUDIES • CARE GROUPS<br />

For information or directions call 541-756-2004<br />

HARVEST OF FAITH FAMILY CHURCH<br />

Bringing help and hope through the Word of God<br />

131 N. 3rd (Hall Building), Coos Bay<br />

Sunday Service...................................................................................... .........10:30 am<br />

Wednesday Service................................................................................... ........7:00 pm<br />

Children’s services provided on Sunday & Wednesday<br />

Pastors David & Bridgette Whinery<br />

P.O. Box 477, Coos Bay, 541-266-0613<br />

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Pay-as-youearn<br />

repayment<br />

plan may offer<br />

relief<br />

DEAR MARY: At age 46, I<br />

went back to school and chose<br />

University of Phoenix because<br />

I could go to school online and<br />

continue to work full time.<br />

Five years later I received my<br />

bachelor’s degree at age 51.<br />

I was proud of myself, but I<br />

work at a grain elevator in a<br />

s m a l l<br />

EVERYDAY<br />

CHEAPSKATE<br />

town and<br />

discovered<br />

that<br />

my new<br />

degree<br />

meant<br />

nothing<br />

to my<br />

employer.<br />

So it has<br />

done me<br />

no good.<br />

Now I<br />

Mary<br />

face all<br />

Hunt the stud<br />

e n t<br />

loans. I<br />

just discovered that it will take<br />

30 years to pay off my $71,000<br />

in school loans.<br />

The current $236 monthly<br />

payment is already stretching<br />

me. I can’t afford to pay more<br />

each month, and the thought<br />

of throwing away all that<br />

money on interest and paying<br />

till I die has me superstressed.<br />

Is there any way that I can<br />

get at least some of this debt<br />

forgiven? I just don’t know<br />

where to turn. — Susie,<br />

Illinois<br />

DEAR SUSIE: Reading your<br />

letter made my heart hurt.<br />

Oh, how I wish you’d written<br />

before you made the decision<br />

to take on so much student<br />

debt. I would have offered you<br />

my Rule of Thumb for student<br />

debt: Do not borrow more for<br />

college than you expect to<br />

earn the first year out of<br />

school.<br />

I can tell you that repayment<br />

plans for federal student<br />

loans have be<strong>com</strong>e more generous<br />

recently, as some new<br />

rules have gone into effect.<br />

Ask your loan servicer about<br />

the “Pay as You Earn” option,<br />

which became available to<br />

borrowers at the end of<br />

December 2012.<br />

This plan improves on the<br />

current in<strong>com</strong>e-based repayment<br />

program, pegging the<br />

amount you pay to your discretionary<br />

in<strong>com</strong>e (the<br />

amount by which your<br />

in<strong>com</strong>e exceeds the poverty<br />

line), and lowers the percentage<br />

of in<strong>com</strong>e you pay from 15<br />

percent to 10 percent and the<br />

number of years over which<br />

you pay from 25 to 20 years. At<br />

the end of that period, any<br />

remaining amount is forgiven.<br />

To qualify, you must have<br />

taken out your first federal<br />

student loan after Sept. 30,<br />

2007 and received a disbursement<br />

from at least one loan<br />

after Sept. 30, 2011. Only<br />

direct loans are covered. You<br />

can learn more about whether<br />

you are eligible for this at<br />

StudentAid.ed.gov. Type,<br />

“Pay as you earn,” in the<br />

search box.<br />

DEAR MARY: I currently<br />

have $37,000 in credit card<br />

debt. All of the accounts are<br />

current, and I’ve stopped<br />

using the cards. Settling is not<br />

an option for me. I am close to<br />

signing with a DMP (debt<br />

management program),<br />

which would resolve this in<br />

four years. I have $10,000<br />

that I can apply to these balances<br />

now. Can you suggest a<br />

better way? Thanks. — Rick,<br />

email.<br />

DEAR RICK: From what<br />

you’ve told me, it appears the<br />

steps you’re taking are exactly<br />

what I would advise: Keep<br />

your payments current, stop<br />

using the cards, buckle down,<br />

and do whatever you must do<br />

to get these things paid off as<br />

quickly as possible.<br />

My only caution is that the<br />

DMP you’re considering<br />

should be with a reputable<br />

credit counseling organization<br />

that is certified by NFCC<br />

(National Foundation for<br />

Credit Counseling).<br />

I want to make sure you<br />

understand that once you’re<br />

accepted into the DMP, your<br />

counselor will work with your<br />

creditors to reduce your<br />

interest rates and get you onto<br />

a plan that will get your debt<br />

paid off quickly — in your<br />

case, four years. That’s good.<br />

While enrolled in the DMP,<br />

you will make your payments<br />

to the DMP, who will in turn<br />

send the agreed-upon payments<br />

to your creditors. This<br />

is why you want to make sure<br />

you’re working with a reputable<br />

DMP that has a good<br />

track record and testimonials<br />

from satisfied graduates of its<br />

management program. Good<br />

luck!<br />

THE FAMILY CIRCUS<br />

MODERATELY CONFUSED<br />

DILBERT<br />

FRANK AND ERNEST<br />

THE BORN LOSER<br />

ZITS<br />

CLASSIC PEANUTS<br />

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE<br />

ROSE IS ROSE<br />

LUANN<br />

GRIZZWELLS<br />

KIT ’N’ CARLYLE<br />

HERMAN<br />

C<br />

Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • C5 Y<br />

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K B6• The World •Saturday, August 3, 2013<br />

C l ass if i e ds<br />

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Employment<br />

FREE<br />

$5.00<br />

$7.00<br />

200<br />

201 Accounting<br />

JOBS, JOBS and<br />

MORE JOBS!<br />

No Resume?<br />

No Problem!<br />

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professional to hand-match each<br />

job seeker with each employer!<br />

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Simply create your profile by phone<br />

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our professionals will match your<br />

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right now!<br />

CREATE YOUR PROFILE NOW<br />

BY PHONE OR WEB FREE!<br />

1-888-491-9029<br />

or<br />

Thewo-www2.the<strong>world</strong><br />

link.<strong>com</strong>/topads/job/top<br />

_jobs/<br />

No Resume Needed!<br />

Call the automated phone profiling<br />

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Online form today so our professionals<br />

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you with employers that are hiring -<br />

NOW!<br />

Choose from one of the<br />

following main job codes to<br />

enter your information:<br />

#10: Accounting / Finance<br />

#11: Airline/Airport<br />

#12: Arts<br />

#13: Banking<br />

#14: Call Center/Customer Service<br />

#15: Childcare<br />

#16: Computers / IT<br />

#17: Counseling & Social Services<br />

#55: Dental<br />

#45: Drivers/Transportation<br />

#18: Education<br />

#19: Engineering<br />

#20: Environmental<br />

#24: Factory & Warehouse<br />

#57: Health Care Assistants<br />

#44: Hotel & Hospitality<br />

#23: Human Resources<br />

#21: Insurance/Financial Services<br />

#25: Janitorial & Grounds Maintenance<br />

#26: Legal<br />

#27: Management<br />

#28: Materials & Logistics<br />

#29: Mechanics<br />

#30: Media & Advertising<br />

#58: Medical Records<br />

#56: Medical Technicians<br />

#53: Medical Therapists<br />

#52: Nursing<br />

#31: Office Administration<br />

#32: Operations<br />

#33: Personal Care<br />

#54: Pharmacy<br />

#46: Printing<br />

#34: Protective Services<br />

#35: Quality Control<br />

#48: Real Estate<br />

#36: Research & Development<br />

#37: Restaurant<br />

#38: Retail<br />

#39: Sales<br />

#51: Skilled Trades: Building General<br />

#47: Skilled Trades: Construction<br />

#40: Skilled Trades: Building Prof.<br />

#41: Skilled Trades: Manufacturing<br />

#50: Specialty Services<br />

#42: Telephone/Cable<br />

#49: Travel and Recreation<br />

#43: Trucking<br />

207 Drivers<br />

Log Truck Drivers<br />

Coos Bay operations.<br />

$15.50 per hour with benefits.<br />

Call 541-863-5241 or<br />

541-863-1501, Cell.<br />

Ireland Brothers<br />

Trucking<br />

Looking for a Tow Truck Driver in<br />

Coquille, Reedsport & Bandon.<br />

1-2 years experience preferred<br />

and clean driving record.<br />

Must pass drug test.<br />

Call 541-297-5043<br />

208 Education<br />

South Coast Head Start, part of<br />

Oregon Coast Community Action,<br />

is currently accepting<br />

applications for<br />

Full Day Associate<br />

Teacher<br />

in the Coos Bay area. Call<br />

541-888-3717 or visit<br />

www.orcca.us<br />

for more info. Closes 8/14/13<br />

or until filled. EOE<br />

211 Health Care<br />

$12.00<br />

$12.00<br />

$17.00<br />

RN POSITIONS<br />

Offering $5,000 Hiring Bonus<br />

for these FT positions:<br />

RN Supervisor<br />

1 - Full-time/Day Shift<br />

RN - ED<br />

2 - Full-time/Night Shift<br />

RN - Med/Surg<br />

1-Full-time/Night Shift<br />

Also need:<br />

RN - Per Diem Pool<br />

ED or Med/Surg<br />

Southern Coos Hospital<br />

in Bandon, OR<br />

Great work environment,<br />

wages,benefits<br />

hrsupport@southerncoos.org<br />

541-347-4515<br />

EOE & Tobacco-Free<br />

213 General<br />

Millwright<br />

Gilchrist, OR<br />

5 years industry experience<br />

Machinery repair and PM exp.<br />

required. Please apply to<br />

debb.kraft@interfor.<strong>com</strong><br />

Interfor offers a <strong>com</strong>petitive salary<br />

and benefits package. All<br />

applicants offered a position must<br />

<strong>com</strong>plete a pre-employmentdrug<br />

screen. EOE<br />

215 Sales<br />

Circulation Sales<br />

Coordinator<br />

The World is seeking a Circulation<br />

Sales Coordinator. This position<br />

reports to the Circulation Director<br />

and is responsible for the creation<br />

and implementation of circulation<br />

sales initiatives to build audience<br />

for The World newspaper and<br />

affiliated products.<br />

Priorities include developing new<br />

sales for home delivery and digital<br />

subscriptions, as well as building<br />

new opportunities with retail<br />

businesses. This position will<br />

oversee single copy sales and<br />

distribution with regular analysis<br />

and adjustment of draw. Circulation<br />

Sales Coordinator will review<br />

reports and manage collections and<br />

adjustments for single copy<br />

accounts receivable. As a member<br />

of the circulation team, coordinator<br />

will cross-train for maintaining<br />

department work flows while<br />

co-workers are absent or on<br />

vacation. Customer Service work<br />

will also be required. Responsibilities<br />

include inbound and outbound<br />

calls with circulation customers,<br />

and <strong>com</strong>munication with independent<br />

contract carriers. This position<br />

will include some routine hours<br />

driving a <strong>com</strong>pany vehicle, occasionally<br />

working outside in all<br />

weather conditions and the physical<br />

ability to lift and carry 25 to 40<br />

pounds using both hands, negotiate<br />

stairs and entry and exit of<br />

standard van.<br />

As part of Lee Enterprises, The<br />

World offers excellent earnings<br />

potential and a full benefits package,<br />

along with a professional and<br />

<strong>com</strong>fortable work environment<br />

focused on growth opportunities for<br />

employees. We are an equal<br />

opportunity employer and drug-free<br />

workplace and all applicants<br />

considered for employment must<br />

pass a post-offer drug screen and<br />

background/ DMV check prior to<br />

<strong>com</strong>mencing employment.<br />

For more information and to apply<br />

online please go to<br />

http://www.lee.net/careers<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

The<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/classifieds<br />

215 Sales<br />

Value Ads<br />

Sales Manager<br />

The World in Coos Bay, OR has<br />

an exciting opportunity for a<br />

multi-media advertising sales<br />

541-267-6278<br />

manager who will oversee our<br />

outside media consultants and<br />

their sales initiatives. This sales<br />

manager will grow revenue and<br />

market share by selling and<br />

servicing new and current<br />

customers on Oregon’s southern<br />

coast. Competitive benefits<br />

package offered.<br />

For more information<br />

Apply on our Website at<br />

http://www.lee.net/careers<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

Equal Opportunity Employer/Drug<br />

216 Law Enforcement<br />

The City of Coquille is accepting<br />

applications for<br />

Police Lieutenant.<br />

For more information<br />

please visit the<br />

cityofcoquille.org website.<br />

Closing date is<br />

08/23/2013 at 4pm.<br />

The City of Coquille is a equal<br />

opportunity employer.<br />

217 Technology<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

Webmaster<br />

The World Newspaper is seeking a<br />

full time Webmaster to serve as our<br />

primary programmer and web<br />

server administrator for<br />

http://www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/.<br />

This position would also serve<br />

related news and advertising sites<br />

to support The World and affiliated<br />

sites. Working with key leaders the<br />

Webmaster will help champion and<br />

support the online and digital traffic<br />

growth on our website, mobile app,<br />

and social media sites.<br />

As part of Lee Enterprises, The<br />

World offers excellent earnings<br />

potential and a benefits package,<br />

along with a professional and<br />

<strong>com</strong>fortable work environment<br />

focused on growth opportunities<br />

for employees. We are an equal<br />

opportunity employer and drug-free<br />

workplace. All applicants considered<br />

for employment must pass a<br />

post-offer drug screen and<br />

background / DMV check prior to<br />

<strong>com</strong>mencing employment. For more<br />

information and to apply please go<br />

to http://www.lee.net/careers<br />

Care Giving<br />

225<br />

227 Elderly Care<br />

HARMONY HOMECARE<br />

“Quality Caregivers provide<br />

Assisted living in your home”.<br />

541-260-1788<br />

Business<br />

300<br />

301 Business for Sale<br />

1973 Glastron V-215 Vagabond<br />

$2500 OBO 21 ft. Glastron,<br />

Camper-Cruiser, Tri-Hull Boat w/ a<br />

302 Engine. Comes w/ a 2 axle<br />

trailer. Located in Bandon, OR.<br />

email bob@mac-mar.<strong>com</strong>, or call<br />

(702) 378-2011.<br />

NICE MOTEL FOR SALE by owner<br />

in Bandon. Unique opportunity.<br />

Priced to sell at $775K.<br />

Pls. visit & contact thru<br />

www.shootingstarmotel.<strong>com</strong>.<br />

Serious inquiries only.<br />

304 Financing<br />

$$EASY QUALIFYING real estate<br />

equity loans. Credit no problem.<br />

Oregon Land Mortgage.<br />

541-267-2776. ML-4645.<br />

COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS<br />

COOS COUNTY<br />

is recruiting for<br />

Probation Officer I<br />

Salary $2,852-$4,426 p/mo. Provide supervision and<br />

investigative services to the Court and Parole Board for<br />

individuals placed under formal supervision. Bachelors<br />

degree in criminal justice, psychology, sociology or<br />

related field; and one year working adult corrections,<br />

law enforcement or social work; Additional education<br />

and experience will be considered<br />

**EOE**<br />

County application required.<br />

Visit www.co.coos.or.us for Application and full job<br />

description, or contact HR at 250 Baxter,<br />

Coquille, OR 97423<br />

541-396-7581<br />

Closes 8/21/13 @ 5:00 P.M.<br />

306 Jobs Wanted<br />

CAREGIVER/ CNA SEEKING<br />

WORK. Experienced, references.<br />

541-297-0073.<br />

DRIVING JOB WANTED: I’m looking<br />

for a part time or full time driving job;<br />

(pick ups & deliveries), (local & long<br />

distance). Available weekends. Extensive<br />

experience on the road. Reliable.<br />

References. Rae, 541-332-0229.<br />

402 Auctions<br />

Notices<br />

400<br />

COOS BAY PUBLIC<br />

ESTATE AUCTION<br />

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />

Sale Date:<br />

SUN. AUG. 4 @ 1:00 pm<br />

Previews:<br />

Fri. Aug. 2 - noon–7 pm<br />

Sat. Aug. 3 - noon–6 pm<br />

Sun. Aug. 4 - 11 am–1 pm<br />

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />

Quality Furniture, Fine Jewelry, Coins<br />

& Bullion, Firearms, Boats, Autos,<br />

Tractor, Farm Equipment & More!<br />

Quality Furniture, Dining Room Sets,<br />

Armoires, Dressers, Desks, Recliners, Easy<br />

Chairs, Sofas, more • Fine Jewelry • Clocks,<br />

Watches • Gold & Silver Coins & Bullion • 23<br />

Firearms • Boats • Autos, incl. Mustang<br />

Convertible • Two-behind Back Hoe • Gas<br />

Golf Cart • Tractor with Belly Blade • Baby<br />

Grand Piano, French Upright • Organ •<br />

Musical Instruments & Amps • Electronics,<br />

Cameras, iPods, Computer • Solid Sterling<br />

Silver Coffee-Tea Service • Fine China Set •<br />

Fishing Tackle, Rods, Reels • Pool Tables •<br />

Navajo Rugs & Jewelry • Swords, Knives •<br />

Weathervanes • Pot Belly Stove, Wood Cook<br />

Stove • “Scat” Hovercraft & Trailer • Gone-<br />

With-The-Wind Oil Lamps • Yakima Roof<br />

Rack • Chainsaws, Lawnmowers,<br />

Weedtrimmers • Antique Sluice Box • Antique<br />

Cranberry Bog Cart • Much, much more!<br />

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />

Come in to preview as we prepare for the auction!<br />

• Always open to the public<br />

Tues - Sat, 11am-5pm<br />

• See website for Photos & Catalog!<br />

www.OregonAuctionHouse.<strong>com</strong><br />

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />

• Cash, Credit Cards, Cks. w/ID.<br />

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<br />

The Auction House<br />

347 So. Broadway ( Hwy. 101 So.) , Coos Bay<br />

(541) 267-5361<br />

(541) 267-6570 (aft hrs)<br />

403 Found<br />

Some Highlights:<br />

Found in Bandon , CD case with<br />

CD’s. Call and identify.<br />

541-347-4463<br />

Found in the Glasgow area, young<br />

male dog, Call 541-751-0046 to<br />

identify.<br />

Your daily<br />

classifieds are<br />

ON-LINE AT<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

403 Found<br />

Free Ads<br />

$15.00<br />

All free ads must fit the<br />

criteria listed below.<br />

$35.00<br />

$45.00<br />

They also include free photo.<br />

$20.00<br />

Merchandise for Sale<br />

$55.00<br />

under $500 total.<br />

$59.95<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobiles.<br />

Found & Found Pets<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobile.<br />

Lost & Lost Pets<br />

6 lines - 3 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, and The World<br />

link, the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

Smart Mobile.<br />

404 Lost<br />

Free Ads<br />

All free ads must fit the<br />

criteria listed below.<br />

They also include free photo.<br />

Merchandise for Sale<br />

under $500 total.<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobiles.<br />

Found & Found Pets<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobile.<br />

Lost & Lost Pets<br />

6 lines - 3 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, and The World<br />

link, the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

Smart Mobile.<br />

Lost: Congo African Grey Parrot.<br />

In Coquille. Talks. $100 reward if<br />

found. Call 541-396-5504<br />

Services<br />

425<br />

428 Housekeeping<br />

Sue’s Housecleaning<br />

I have 15yrs. experience,<br />

Excellent References, Honest,<br />

Reliable, Efficient.<br />

541-347-3095 or 541-543-0027.<br />

Please leave message<br />

429 House Sitting<br />

Professional couple seeking house<br />

sitting job. Coos Bay/ Bandon area.<br />

House sat NFL player home in<br />

Central Oregon. $15.00 References<br />

available. 541-382-7706<br />

Real Estate<br />

500<br />

501 Commercial<br />

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE<br />

All real estate advertising in this<br />

newspaper is subject to the Fair<br />

Housing Act which makes it illegal<br />

to advertise “any preference, limitations<br />

or discrimination based on<br />

race, color, religion, sex, handicap,<br />

familial status or national origin, or<br />

an intention, to make any such<br />

preference, limitation or discrimination.”<br />

Familial status includes children<br />

under the age of 18 living with<br />

parents or legal custodians, pregnant<br />

women and people securing<br />

custody of children under 18.<br />

This newspaper will not knowingly<br />

accept any advertising for real estate<br />

which is in violation of the law.<br />

Our readers are hereby informed<br />

that all dwellings advertised in this<br />

newspaper are available on an<br />

equal opportunity basis. To <strong>com</strong>plain<br />

of discrimination call HUD<br />

toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The<br />

toll-free telephone number for the<br />

hearing impaired is<br />

1-800-927-9275.<br />

504 Homes for Sale<br />

3 bedroom 2 bath home on a<br />

quiet North Bend culdesac. 2 car<br />

garage, large living/dining rooms,<br />

and bonus room. Large beautifully<br />

landscaped lot w/ covered deck<br />

and sunroom. 756-2629, 297-6419<br />

$239,000<br />

Beautiful Custom Log home All in<br />

the convenience of in town.<br />

www.homesbyowner.<strong>com</strong>/40183<br />

Also Zillow and Craigs List.<br />

$198,000 541-888-6234 or<br />

949-690-7557<br />

Serving Oregon’s South Coast Since 1878<br />

HOME DELIVERY SERVICE:<br />

For Customer Service call 541-269-1222 Ext. 247<br />

Office hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Friday.<br />

If your World newspaper fails to arrive by 5 p.m. Monday<br />

through Thursday or 8 a.m. on Saturday, please call your<br />

carrier. If you are unable to reach your carrier, telephone<br />

The World at 541-269-9999.<br />

RURAL SUBSCRIBERS: Due to The World’ s expansive daily<br />

delivery area, rural or remote motor route customers may<br />

receive regular delivery later than the times above. Missed<br />

deliveries may be replaced the following delivery day.<br />

To report missed deliveries, please call 541-269-9999.<br />

ADVERTISING POLICY<br />

The Publisher, Southwestern Oregon Publishing Co., shall<br />

not be liable for any error in published advertising unless<br />

an advertising proof is requested in writing and<br />

clearly marked for corrections. If the error is not<br />

corrected by the Publisher, its liability, if any, shall<br />

not exceed the space occupied by the error.<br />

Further, the Publisher will reschedule and run the<br />

omitted advertisement at advertiser’s cost. All<br />

claims for adjustment must be made within seven<br />

(7) days of date of publication. In no case shall the<br />

Publisher be liable for any general, special or<br />

consequential damages.<br />

To learn more or to find the right person for your job,<br />

visit your local partner at the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong>/jobs<br />

8-27-12<br />

C<br />

M<br />

C<br />

M<br />

Y<br />

K<br />

Y<br />

K


C<br />

Y<br />

M<br />

K<br />

504 Homes for Sale<br />

Views of Bay, bridge, ships &<br />

boats from NB mobile home in Sr<br />

Park. 2bd/1/ba. New kitchen, roof,<br />

decks, carport. Spc rent $330/mo<br />

incl W/S/G. $46,500<br />

(541)756-6419<br />

WANTED:HOUSE<br />

Coos Bay or North Bend area<br />

for under $50,000, in any<br />

condition. Have cash and can<br />

close quickly.<br />

Call Howard<br />

541-297-4834<br />

510 Wanted<br />

RENTALS &<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

SPECIALS<br />

Choose any of these specials<br />

and add a photo for $5.00 extra.<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 1<br />

1 week - 6 lines,<br />

$35.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 2<br />

2 week - 6 lines,<br />

$45.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 3<br />

3 week - 6 lines,<br />

$55.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 4<br />

4 week - 6 lines,<br />

$59.95<br />

All specials will appear in<br />

The World, Bandon Western<br />

World, Umpqua Post,<br />

Wednesday Weekly, Online<br />

& Smart Mobile.<br />

All specials are category<br />

specific. There are no refunds<br />

on specials.<br />

541-267-6278<br />

Rentals<br />

600<br />

601 Apartments<br />

1 BDRM $525 + dep. Bright! Clean!<br />

Quiet! near Mingus Park. W/S/G<br />

paid. NO SMOKING & NO PETS.<br />

Walk to all! CRIM/CRED REQ.<br />

541-347-3150 or 541-297-1012.<br />

APARTMENTS AVAILABLE<br />

Studio C.B. $325.<br />

Sleeping RoomC.B. $195.<br />

1 bedroom C.B. $450<br />

C.B. 2000sq. ft. 2 bdrm $850.<br />

C.B 2 bedroom House $775.<br />

Call for info.<br />

541-297-4834<br />

Willett Investment<br />

Properties<br />

FURNISHED 1 bdrm apt. Everything<br />

furnished except electricity.<br />

$395/month, first/last/deposit. No<br />

smoking/pets. Background check &<br />

references required. 541-888-3619.<br />

601 Apartments<br />

Coos Bay, 2 bed. W/D hook up.<br />

W/S pd. Your own garage. Quiet,<br />

clean. Ideal for seniors, near shopping<br />

and park. Must see to appreciate.<br />

No smoking/pets. $710 mo.<br />

plus dep. 541-888-6078 before<br />

8pm.<br />

Coos Bay: 2 bedroom, 1 bath.<br />

Nice and clean! Off-street parking.<br />

W/S paid. No pets/smoking.<br />

$600/mo. + $550 deposit.<br />

1063 S. 4th street.<br />

References, background, & credit<br />

check required. 541-888-5859<br />

Beachfront 2 bedroom, 1 bath. 5<br />

mins to Charleston CG station, 15<br />

mins to NB CG station. No smoking,<br />

no pets. Flat fee for all utilities<br />

year-round included in rent.<br />

$875/mo. + deposit. 541-888-5859.<br />

In a park like setting,<br />

Stove/Fridge/Drapes. W/D hook<br />

ups. W/G pd. 2 bed. $410. Apply at<br />

324 Ackerman. 541-888-4762<br />

602Commercial Property<br />

FOR LEASE: Office/Retail building,<br />

off street parking, handicap<br />

accessible, 1100 sq ft. plus 1100<br />

sq ft. of storage $900 per mo.<br />

Unfurnished or $1000 per mo.<br />

Furnished, depending on term of<br />

lease. 541-913-1277. Located<br />

across st. from the front of court<br />

house, Coquille.<br />

603 Homes Furnished<br />

Fully furnished 2 bdrm. 1 bth home in<br />

nice neighborhood. Newly remodeled.<br />

By weekly house cleaning and Garbage<br />

included. No smoking/pets.<br />

$1500 month.1st/last/dep. required.<br />

541-297-3456<br />

604Homes Unfurnished<br />

MYRTLE POINT, Very clean 2<br />

bed, 1 ba. home. Appliances included.<br />

No pets. No smoking. Good<br />

rental references a must. $650/mo<br />

+ $750 dep. 541-404-5075.<br />

Victorian 3 bdrm, 2 bath. Very clean.<br />

Natural gas. All appliances incl., W/D,<br />

deck, landscaped fenced backyard,<br />

single car garage. Close to amenities.<br />

No smoking/ pets. $1100/mo + $1500<br />

sec. dep. 541-756-2408.<br />

BARVIEW $695.00 2bdrm. 2 bath<br />

remodeled, decks, fenced storage,<br />

w/d hook ups,lawn service, No<br />

smoke/ Sm. Pet with Deposit Application<br />

and Credit Ck fee<br />

541-888-3981 695<br />

LEASE WITH OPTION. NEW studio 2<br />

story 900 sq ft., plus garage. Lake<br />

front / ocean view. Covered RV with<br />

hook-ups. References 1155 13th St.<br />

Port Orford. Call 208-263-9845<br />

604Homes Unfurnished<br />

COQUILLE: 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath.<br />

On dead end street, carport, deck, no<br />

smoking/ no pets. Washer/ dryer included.<br />

References required. $675/<br />

month + $900 security/ cleaning deposit.<br />

Please call 415-310-7632.<br />

Myrtle Point, Clean 2 bedroom,<br />

1 bath home, garage, outside building<br />

for workshop/garden tools, No<br />

smoking property, No pets allowed.<br />

Good rental references. $650<br />

month plus $750 security deposit.<br />

Call 541-260-5198<br />

North Bend, Very Clean. 1<br />

bedroom, quiet neighborhood,<br />

oversized corner lot, W/D,<br />

dishwasher,No smoking/pets.<br />

Excellent references<br />

required. $810/mo. + $1000<br />

deposit. 541-267-0673.<br />

Peace & Privacy! 5 miles from CB.<br />

Avail. August 15. 1 bdrm, 1 ba, newly<br />

remodeled. Wood heat, yard, garden<br />

area, & outbuildings. $650/mo + $400<br />

damage deposit. Call 541-999-8148<br />

for appointment & application.<br />

Reedsport, 3 bed 2 bath.<br />

Stove/Fridge/Dishwasher, deck w/<br />

view of town, hot tub, 2 car garage.<br />

1600 sft. Avail August 10. $850 mo.<br />

541-759-4950 or 541-707-0828<br />

606 Manufactured<br />

3 bedroom, 2 bath,<br />

Mobile, Bear Creek Rd.,<br />

$800/mo plus $400 deposit.<br />

Available Aug. 10, 3013.<br />

541 396-5237<br />

COQUILLE: Immaculate 3 bd. 2<br />

bath home in rural setting close to<br />

town. Includes refrig, stove, dishwasher.<br />

Nice deck off back and<br />

separate small shop/storage.<br />

Room to park RV or boat. No<br />

Smoking allowed. No pets allowed.<br />

Good rental references. $800<br />

month/$900 sec dep. Call<br />

541-404-5075.<br />

610 2-4-6 Plexes<br />

2 bed 11/2 bath w/garage, No smoking,<br />

no pets. W/S/G pd. $600 rent<br />

$500 deposit Coos Bay Also, Studio<br />

Apt. in North Bend $375mo, $300 dep.<br />

Good Credit required. 541-294-0775.<br />

Bay view, NB 2 bedroom in upscale<br />

4-plex. Energy efficient, immaculate, 2<br />

car garage w/opener, luxurious carpet/<br />

dishwasher, W/D hookups, upgrades<br />

no smoking, W/S/G paid. $850/mo +<br />

deposit. 541-217-8072 / 541-217-8107<br />

MUST SEE!<br />

Newly refurbished unit. 2 bedroom,<br />

1 bath. Hardwood & laminate flooring,<br />

granite counter tops, fireplace,<br />

W/D in unit, carport, patio. 1.5<br />

blocks West of BAH, W/S/G paid.<br />

No smoking/pets. Only $800/mo +<br />

cleaning & security dep.<br />

541-267-2626.<br />

612Townhouse/Condo<br />

BAYFRONT TOWNHOMES<br />

Wooded setting, fireplace, decks,<br />

view of bay and bridge.<br />

2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths.<br />

Tamarac 541-759-4380<br />

614 Warehouses<br />

RENTALS &<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

SPECIALS<br />

Choose any of these specials<br />

and add a photo for $5.00 extra.<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 1<br />

1 week - 6 lines,<br />

$35.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 2<br />

2 week - 6 lines,<br />

$45.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 3<br />

3 week - 6 lines,<br />

$55.00<br />

Rentals / Real Estate 4<br />

4 week - 6 lines,<br />

$59.95<br />

All specials will appear in<br />

The World, Bandon Western<br />

World, Umpqua Post,<br />

Wednesday Weekly, Online<br />

& Smart Mobile.<br />

All specials are category<br />

specific. There are no refunds<br />

on specials.<br />

541-267-6278<br />

701 Furniture<br />

Other Stuff<br />

700<br />

Free Ads<br />

All free ads must fit the<br />

criteria listed below.<br />

They also include free photo.<br />

Merchandise for Sale<br />

under $500 total.<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobiles.<br />

Found & Found Pets<br />

4 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobile.<br />

Lost & Lost Pets<br />

6 lines - 3 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, and The World<br />

link, the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

Smart Mobile.<br />

701 Furniture<br />

Merchandise<br />

All merchandise ads must be<br />

classified in categories<br />

700 to 710 & 775 to 799<br />

Good Ad - $5.00<br />

3 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobiles.<br />

Better Ad - $7.00<br />

4 lines - 2 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobile.<br />

Best Ad - $12.00<br />

(includes a photo & boxing)<br />

6 lines - 3 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, and The World<br />

link, the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

Smart Mobile.<br />

703 Lawn/Garden<br />

TOPSOIL DELIVERED to Bandon<br />

$25 per yd, Coos Bay $29 per yd.<br />

541-551-0989.<br />

710 Miscellaneous<br />

2 Cemetery plots # 4 and 5 for<br />

sale at Ocean View Memory Gardens.<br />

Near baby land. Normally<br />

$1295 ea. Sacrifice $1000 ea. Call<br />

541-832-2644<br />

ALL AND ANY scrap metal wanted.<br />

Pretty fast, super friendly, almost free<br />

service, 541-297-0271.<br />

FOR SALE:<br />

Kennedy items, old newspapers,<br />

and stamps. Call 541-269-0601<br />

For Sale: Kilm cress. Includes, furniture,<br />

cones, glazes. $400 Potters<br />

wheel, kick/ electric includes<br />

clay, batts and tools $300.<br />

541-888-5859<br />

FOR SALE: Several Wood<br />

Pallets. $8.00 Each. Call<br />

541-756-5123.<br />

Michelin tire P235-60R17- 50% $50<br />

call 541-297-6019. 911 only cell<br />

phone $15. No mo. fee. 541-297-6019<br />

Wedding Dress and Veil for sale.<br />

$100. Size 10. Sealed for protection.<br />

call Susan at 541-366-2088<br />

Willamette Country Music Aug. 16,<br />

17 and 18. 2 tickets, 3 Nights<br />

camping $300. 541-267-4388<br />

Recreation/<br />

Sports 725<br />

734 Misc. Goods<br />

2 Yakima bike racks $150, MountainSmith<br />

backpack $140, 2-person<br />

dome tent $60, 541-297-8102 obo<br />

C<br />

Saturday, August 3, 2013 • The World • B7 Y<br />

734 Misc. Goods<br />

14 ft Red Mad River Canoe 2009<br />

Model R7, Adventurer, T, 140,I,<br />

Polyethylene, width 37 in. Padded<br />

seats and back rests Equipment includes<br />

inflatable roof top car carriers,<br />

paddles, 30 lb thrust Minn Kota<br />

2010 Electric motor with side saddle<br />

mount and marine battery 2010.<br />

Plus carrier with solid wheels to<br />

transport from car to water.<br />

$975.00 Excellent condition call<br />

541-888-6234 ask for Larry<br />

Market Place<br />

750<br />

754 Garage Sales<br />

Freedom Fellowship Annual Flea<br />

Market Sat, August 3 from 9-2 -<br />

1545 Maple, Myrtle Point. Call<br />

541-572-2622 to rent $10 tables.<br />

Enchilada luncheon available.<br />

Friends of the Coos Bay<br />

Public Library.<br />

Used book sale, Sat. Aug 03,<br />

10-4 pm. 9 am open for members<br />

Sun. Aug. 04 Noon to 4pm $1<br />

bag at 3pm in Myrtle wood room<br />

6th and Anderson<br />

Coos Bay<br />

BANDON - ANNUAL CHURCH<br />

Rummage Sale. First Presbyterian<br />

Church, 592 Edison Ave. S.W., Fri.,<br />

Aug. 2, 9am - 3pm; Sat., Aug. 3,<br />

9am - noon.<br />

Coos Bay: Multi- Family Garage<br />

Sale. 625 H. St. Sat/Aug.3, 9-3pm.<br />

Household items, wedding supplies<br />

and tools.<br />

DAVES PIZZA: 740 KOOS BAY<br />

BLVD. 5 FAMILY GIANT FUND<br />

RAISING GARAGE SALE SAT-<br />

URDAY AUGUST 3,9-3PM. SOME-<br />

THING FOR EVERYONE!!!<br />

Estate Sale - Final Day 9-5 Sat.<br />

8/3/13. Many new items, Everything<br />

must go. 92644 Cape Arago Hwy<br />

1 mile from corner in Empire.<br />

Garage Sales<br />

All garage sale ads includes<br />

Photos and must be<br />

classified in categories<br />

751 to 756 & 826 to 830<br />

Good Ad - $12.00<br />

4 lines - 1 day in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and Smart<br />

Mobiles.<br />

Better Ad - $17.00<br />

(includes boxing)<br />

5 lines - 2 days in The World, 1<br />

day in Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, The World link,<br />

7 days on the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

and Smart Mobile.<br />

Best Ad - $20.00<br />

(includes boxing)<br />

5 lines - 1 week in The World,<br />

Bandon Western World,<br />

Umpqua Post, and The World<br />

link, the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong> and<br />

Smart Mobile.<br />

M<br />

K<br />

SUNDAY, AUGUST 4, 2013<br />

A number of pleasant surprises<br />

could be in store for you<br />

in the year ahead. One might<br />

involve your work, while a few<br />

others are likely to pertain to<br />

your social life.<br />

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)<br />

— You’ll figure out how to reach<br />

someone whom you’ve thought<br />

of as being cold and aloof.<br />

You’ve been misreading this<br />

individual, and will now find him<br />

or her warm and wel<strong>com</strong>ing.<br />

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)<br />

— This is an excellent day to<br />

make a long-contemplated<br />

change that could improve your<br />

finances. Once you iron out any<br />

wrinkles, make your move.<br />

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)<br />

— If you feel that you have to<br />

make an important decision that<br />

involves others and could have<br />

far-reaching effects, it’s important<br />

to have the courage of your<br />

convictions.<br />

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)<br />

— A situation in which you’ve<br />

worked hard for something that<br />

is being denied you is likely to<br />

be rectified today. It pays to<br />

keep the faith.<br />

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)<br />

— Although you have established<br />

a valuable contact, thus<br />

far you haven’t handled a relationship<br />

to the best of your<br />

advantage, or even to the other<br />

party’s. Try to make up for lost<br />

time.<br />

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)<br />

— Don’t give up on something<br />

worthwhile that you’ve been<br />

pursuing. The results you’ve<br />

been hoping for could be much<br />

closer than you think.<br />

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)<br />

— Your mental acuity can be<br />

your greatest asset. If you think<br />

resourcefully, there’s no doubt<br />

that you’ll have the ability to<br />

interest the right people and get<br />

the help you need.<br />

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)<br />

— You’ll have the rare knack of<br />

being able to turn an unusual<br />

development to your advantage.<br />

Once you get on a roll, you<br />

might do this in two or more<br />

instances.<br />

ARIES (March 21-April 19)<br />

— Don’t delegate an important<br />

chore to a less-talented person.<br />

This can be a rewarding day for<br />

you, provided you select the<br />

right person to do the job — it<br />

might have to be you.<br />

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)<br />

— Allow your extremely perceptive<br />

mind to spot where your<br />

best chances for making a good<br />

profit lie.Your instincts should<br />

be right on the money, so pay<br />

attention to them.<br />

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)<br />

— Because you’ll work effectively<br />

in most group involvements<br />

today, try to avoid solitary<br />

pursuits. When all is said and<br />

done, the results will be exceptionally<br />

gratifying.<br />

CANCER (June 21-July 22)<br />

— Don’t be hesitant in attempting<br />

to fulfill an important ambition.<br />

Numerous challenges will<br />

awaken all kinds of latent talents<br />

that you may not have<br />

known existed.<br />

MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 2013<br />

Your involvements with<br />

resourceful and progressive<br />

individuals should <strong>com</strong>e off well<br />

in the <strong>com</strong>ing months. However,<br />

don’t expect the same results<br />

with those who lack your imagination<br />

and go-getting qualities.<br />

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)<br />

— A disagreement with either a<br />

family member or a good friend<br />

needs to be settled as speedily<br />

as possible. If fences aren’t<br />

mended quickly, a small rift<br />

could get much worse.<br />

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)<br />

— If someone recently did<br />

something that you resent and<br />

you’re still holding a grudge, you<br />

need to get over it.You need to<br />

let bygones be bygones and<br />

move on.<br />

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)<br />

— This is an especially good<br />

day to review how much time<br />

and money you’ve been spending<br />

on inessential items and<br />

activities. Once you identify the<br />

waste, you’ll find ways to weed<br />

it out.<br />

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) —<br />

Objectives you set for yourself<br />

might not be easy to reach. If<br />

you’re aware of this fact from<br />

the get-go, you won’t be<br />

inclined to quit the moment<br />

things get rough.<br />

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)<br />

— You might have too many<br />

doubts for your own good. Being<br />

cautious is one thing, but just<br />

being negative is detrimental<br />

and prohibits progress.<br />

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)<br />

— Don’t overlook or ignore an<br />

old financial obligation to a<br />

friend just because he or she is<br />

a pal. The quickest way to end<br />

the relationship is to fail to do<br />

what you promised.<br />

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)<br />

— If at all possible, avoid<br />

friends who tend to be pessimistic.<br />

Sadly, they will have a<br />

negative effect on your outlook<br />

and end up putting a damper on<br />

your day.<br />

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)<br />

— Your way of doing things is<br />

likely to turn insignificant tasks<br />

into major undertakings. Do<br />

your best to plan your moves in<br />

advance before you swing the<br />

hammer.<br />

ARIES (March 21-April 19)<br />

— Don’t waste time worrying<br />

about things that have little<br />

chance of happening. If you<br />

want to succeed, concentrate<br />

on your goals and not on nonexistent<br />

problems.<br />

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)<br />

— If things go wrong in your<br />

household today, don’t try to pin<br />

the blame on any one person;<br />

view the entire picture. It usually<br />

takes more than one cause to<br />

make things go askew.<br />

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)<br />

— Stick to the facts if you’re trying<br />

to promote something special.<br />

The worst thing you could<br />

do would be to embellish your<br />

wares.Your deception will quickly<br />

be discovered.<br />

CANCER (June 21-July 22)<br />

— If you need to make a purchase<br />

of financial consequence<br />

today, be certain that you’re getting<br />

exactly what you want.<br />

Don’t let yourself be saddled<br />

with something that’s not perfect.<br />

C<br />

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754 Garage Sales<br />

North Bend: First Christian<br />

Church 2420 Sherman Avenue<br />

HUGE garage sale<br />

Fri.Aug 02, 9am to 1pm<br />

Sat. Aug 3, 9am to 12pm<br />

North Bend: Garage Sale Fri/Sat.<br />

9:30-? 68947 Wildwood Rd. across<br />

from Hauser Store. Huge sale 30<br />

yrs of stuff, anything you can imagine.<br />

Price to sell!<br />

North Bend: Garage sale, collectables,<br />

classic car parts and misc.<br />

items. Sat. 9-4pm.2680 Ash St.<br />

Reedsport: Indoor sale,<br />

everything must go !! 361 N.9th<br />

Fri/Sat/Sun 10-3pm only.<br />

802 Cats<br />

Kohl’s Cat House<br />

Adoptions on site.<br />

541-294-3876<br />

805 Horses/Equine<br />

HORSESHOEING<br />

HONDA WORLD<br />

$12,990<br />

2004 Honda Element E X<br />

Low Miles, 4x4,Auto.<br />

#13180B/312213<br />

$11,990<br />

‘03 Honda Accord LX<br />

4 Door, 38K Miles, Auto, 1 Owner.<br />

#B3345/613411<br />

Your resource for<br />

LOCAL NEW S<br />

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Yachats: 17th Annual Holistic Health,<br />

Psychic & Crafts Fair, Pathways to<br />

Transformation. Sat. 8/3, 10am-6pm<br />

and Sun. 8/4, 9am-5pm, $3. Inside<br />

Yachats Commons. 22 Seminars, 75<br />

Exhibitors. Products, Readers, Crystals,<br />

Crafts, Jewelry, Henna, Cafe.<br />

Free Book Exch., Family-Friendly.<br />

541-547-4664.chucklingcherubs.<strong>com</strong><br />

the<br />

the<br />

Electronics<br />

775<br />

776 Appliances<br />

Maytag Washer and Dryer $200 China<br />

Hutch $150, Coffee Table. You haul.<br />

Call 541-294-7043 or 541-435-4714<br />

777 Computers<br />

I will pick up & safely recycle your old<br />

<strong>com</strong>puters, printers & monitors, CB,<br />

NB, CQ. No charge. 541-294-9107<br />

TOSHIBA LAPTOP-WINDOWS<br />

7-INTEL T4500-4 GIG DDR3. $275<br />

CALL 541-297-6019<br />

802 Cats<br />

Pets/Animals<br />

800<br />

FERAL CAT CLINIC<br />

is <strong>com</strong>ing to Coquille!<br />

August 18, 2013.<br />

Please call 541-294-4205, leave a<br />

message and please speak clearly.<br />

LOST *Pong” a white & black cat.<br />

Male, neutered, 13 lbs. Blk ears & tail<br />

with large blk markings. Crown Point<br />

Rd. 541-294-0520<br />

Bulletin Board<br />

It’s your best choice for professional services • 541-267-6278<br />

Bandon • Coos Bay • Coquille • Myrtle Point • North Bend • Port Orford • Reedsport<br />

DIRECTORY<br />

BUILDING/CONSTRUCTION<br />

RP & T Trucking LLC ....... 541-297-4001<br />

Weylin Silva Roofing ....... 541-267-0208<br />

Mal<strong>com</strong>b Builders ........... 541-279-9205<br />

Neil E. Hannigan Const. . . 541-808-2014<br />

CLEANING SERVICE<br />

Ana’s Housekeeping ....... 541-217-1997<br />

LAWN/GARDEN CARE<br />

Garcia Maintenance ........ 541-267-0283<br />

Jose Hernan Lawn & Garden .... 541-217-5540<br />

Quality Lawn Maintenance .... 541-297-9715<br />

Sunset Lawn & Garden ... 541-260-9095<br />

Hedge Hog Lawn ............. 541-260-6512<br />

PAINTING<br />

G.F. Johnson House Painting ..... 541-297-4996<br />

ROCK/SAND<br />

Main Rock ..................... 541-756-2623<br />

WOOD<br />

Slice Recovery Inc .......... 541-396-6608<br />

Bldg./Const.<br />

VACATIONS<br />

Peaceful Reflections ... 541-266-9878<br />

Bldg./Const.<br />

Isit tim e fora<br />

NEW ROOFthis<br />

SPR IN G & SUMMER?<br />

Wehavea<br />

K n ow ledgea ble Profession a lTea m<br />

T hat w ill go a greaterd istance<br />

to install a Better QualityRoof<br />

every tim e at a Pricethat<br />

fits you r n eed s.<br />

From Flat to Steep<br />

Wedoitall.<br />

AtW eylinSilvaRoofing<br />

you getm oreforyourm oney.<br />

C all for an E stim ate tod ay<br />

541-267 -0208<br />

C C B #168389<br />

GET YOUR BUSINESS<br />

ADVERTISEMENT IN<br />

THE BULLETIN<br />

BOARD TODAY!!<br />

Call Call Michelle Valerie at<br />

541-269-1222 Ext.<br />

ext.<br />

269<br />

293<br />

TEJUN FOWLER<br />

541-297-5295<br />

tejunfowler@gmail.<strong>com</strong><br />

808 Pet Care<br />

CCB# 158261<br />

Bldg./Const.<br />

Residential Jobs -<br />

Our Specialty!<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

Credit Cards Accepted<br />

Paving & Asphalt<br />

Driveways - RV Pads Repair<br />

Jobs - Rock<br />

Dirt - Sand<br />

Landscape Material<br />

French Drains<br />

Concrete Work<br />

Excavation:<br />

Driveways - Site Prep<br />

- Road grading<br />

541-756-6444<br />

93355 Oakway Rd.<br />

Coos Bay, OR<br />

Cell: 541-297-4001<br />

www.Rpttruckingllc.<strong>com</strong><br />

CCB# 191789<br />

Pet Cremation<br />

541-267-3131<br />

809 Pet Supplies<br />

Dog kennel/ House, cyclone fence<br />

4x12Ft. For large dog. $275 Call<br />

541-269-0293<br />

903 Boats<br />

Neil E. Hannigan<br />

CONSTRUCTION<br />

36 Year General Contractor<br />

BONDED & INSURED<br />

• Home Improvements<br />

• Home Repairs<br />

• Additions & Remodels<br />

• Decks<br />

• Dry Rot Work<br />

• Painting<br />

• Windows & Doors<br />

• Roof Moss Removal<br />

• Gutter Cleaning<br />

541-808-2014<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

FREE CONSULTATIONS<br />

General Construction<br />

• New Homes<br />

• Remodels<br />

• Windows • Decks<br />

• Fences • Siding<br />

• Kitchens •<br />

Bathrooms<br />

• Weatherization<br />

CCB# 196518<br />

Automobiles<br />

900<br />

18ft. Alumaweld Boat and trailer with<br />

two outboard motors; $9600 OBO.<br />

Lots of extra’s. Must see to appreciate.<br />

541-267-5406 by appointment.<br />

19 Ft. Glass Ply boat, cutty cabin,<br />

Volvo in/out, on trailer $5000.<br />

541-269-0293<br />

15’ GREGOR BOAT for sale. with 15<br />

horse Honda electric start motor and<br />

trailer. $1995 OBO. 714-307-2603.<br />

915 Used Cars<br />

2006 Toyota Prius 4 Door<br />

Hatchback gets 38-52 mpg.1<br />

Owner 88,000 miles. White with<br />

Grey interior $10,000<br />

541-269-1926.<br />

Bulletin Board<br />

Rod - 541.279.9205<br />

Kelly - 541.610.4818<br />

E-mail:<br />

L.R.MALCOMB@GMAIL.COM<br />

2000 Honda C RV LX<br />

4x4, 5 Speed, Clean<br />

#217042/13164A<br />

2007 Hyundai Accent<br />

4-Door, 1 Owner, Low Miles<br />

#B3323B/117299<br />

2003 Toyota Highlander<br />

V6, Auto, Low Miles.<br />

#B3313/569789<br />

2006 Honda CRV LX<br />

1 Owner, Low Miles, Auto<br />

#B3356/042415<br />

Cleaning Services<br />

Ana’s Housekeeping<br />

“High Quality General<br />

Cleaning At A Fair Price”<br />

541-217-1997<br />

Lic#006418<br />

$5,990<br />

$14,990<br />

2006 Honda Civic Hybrid<br />

4 Door, Auto, Nav System, Low Miles.<br />

#B3295/026797<br />

$11,990<br />

1999 G MC Sierra Ext Cab 4x4<br />

SLE, 37K Miles, V8, Auto, PW & More.<br />

#B3328/501108<br />

$9,990<br />

$14,990<br />

$17,990<br />

1350 Ocean Blvd., Coos Bay<br />

HondaWorld.<strong>com</strong><br />

541-888-5588 • 1-800-634-1054<br />

Residential Homes and Apartments.<br />

Available for Real Estate Agencies.<br />

Serving Coos Bay, Charleston<br />

& North Bend Areas.<br />

Lawn/Garden Care<br />

Lawn/Garden Care<br />

Reasonable Rates<br />

• MOWING<br />

• BLOWER<br />

• EDGING<br />

• AERATING<br />

• WEEDING<br />

• FERTILIZING<br />

• TRIMMING<br />

• HAULING<br />

• THATCHING<br />

• WEED EATING<br />

• HEDGE TRIMMING<br />

• INITIAL CLEANUPS & MORE<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

License #0006816<br />

Licensed & Insured<br />

O UTSMART<br />

COMPETITION!<br />

YOUR<br />

Place your ad<br />

here and give<br />

your business<br />

the boost it<br />

needs. Call<br />

541-269-1222<br />

Ext. 269<br />

for details<br />

Lawn/Garden Care<br />

Sunset<br />

Lawn &<br />

Garden Care<br />

For all your lawn and garden needs<br />

• TREE SERVICE &<br />

HEDGE TRIMMING<br />

• WEED EATING<br />

• BARK • BLOWER<br />

• INITIAL CLEAN-UPS<br />

• LOT MAINTENANCE<br />

• THATCHER<br />

& MUCH MUCH MORE!<br />

Reasonable Prices<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

541-260-9095<br />

541-266-8013<br />

License #8351<br />

J OSE H ERNAN<br />

LAWN & GARDEN CARE<br />

L AWN & G ARDEN C ARE<br />

- Q UALITY S ERVICE -<br />

FREE ESTIMATES<br />

• TRIMMING<br />

• BLOWER<br />

• WEEDING<br />

• AERATING<br />

• MOWING<br />

• FERTILIZING<br />

• EDGING<br />

• HAULING<br />

• INITIAL CLEANUPS<br />

AND MORE!<br />

QUALITY JOBS DONE<br />

AT A GREAT PRICE!<br />

License# 0009256<br />

Licensed & Insured<br />

541-217-5540<br />

541-297-4826<br />

D4VID_21@HOTMAIL.COM<br />

Quality<br />

Lawn Maintenance<br />

“Expect the best”<br />

Affordable &<br />

Reliable Service<br />

• MOWING<br />

• WEEDING<br />

• TRIMMING<br />

• MULCHING<br />

• BRUSH CLEARING<br />

• GENERAL CLEAN U P<br />

• AND LOTS MORE<br />

Call for your free estimate<br />

(541) 297-9715<br />

License #9935<br />

Your daily<br />

classifieds are<br />

ON-LINE AT<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

Lawn/Garden Care<br />

Hedge Hog<br />

LAWN MAINTENANCE<br />

Trimming<br />

Hedges<br />

Bushes<br />

Roses<br />

Mowing<br />

Rototilling<br />

~ HONEST ~<br />

~ DEPENDABLE ~<br />

~ AFFORDABLE RATES ~<br />

Call Jeremy<br />

541-260-6512<br />

Painting<br />

Business License #7874<br />

Painting<br />

Frank Johnson<br />

541-297-4996<br />

CCB# 155231<br />

WOOD PRESERVATIVES<br />

ON SHAKE ROOFS<br />

MOSS & MOLD REMOVAL<br />

GUTTER CLEANING<br />

DECK & FENCE STAINS<br />

CONCRETE CLEANING<br />

Your daily<br />

classifieds Rock/Sandare<br />

ON-LINE AT<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

Rock/Sand<br />

Coos County Family Owned<br />

Crushed Rock<br />

Topsoil<br />

Sand<br />

Serving Coos Bay, North Bend,<br />

Reedsport, Coquille,<br />

Myrtle Point & Bandon<br />

Kentuck<br />

541-756-2623<br />

Coquille<br />

541-396-1700<br />

CCB# 129529<br />

Wood<br />

Slice<br />

Recovery, Inc.<br />

Mile Marker 7, Hwy. 42<br />

Coquille, OR 97423<br />

541-396-6608<br />

LUMBER<br />

Cedar Siding, Decking, Paneling,<br />

Myrtlewood, Madrone,<br />

Maple Flooring,<br />

Furniture Woods<br />

FIREWOOD<br />

Madrone, Oak, Maple,<br />

Fir, Myrtlewood<br />

Your daily<br />

classifieds<br />

Vacations<br />

are<br />

ON-LINE AT<br />

www.the<strong>world</strong>link.<strong>com</strong><br />

Vacations<br />

“Peaceful<br />

Reflections”<br />

• Breathtaking ocean<br />

and forest views<br />

• Sleeps 2-20 plus<br />

Gorgeous hilltop estate dedicated<br />

to the Lord for Retreats,<br />

worship and intercessory<br />

weekends, family reunions,<br />

vacations and special events<br />

www.PortOrfordVacationRetreat.<strong>com</strong><br />

for virtual tour and info.<br />

Call Dana<br />

541-266-9878<br />

GET YOUR BUSINESS<br />

ADVERTISEMENT IN<br />

THE BULLETIN<br />

BOARD TODAY!!<br />

Call Call Michelle Valerie at<br />

541-269-1222 Ext. ext. 269 293<br />

C<br />

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