Serving Central Oregon since1903 75
THURSDAY July 3,2014
A battep bid BUSINESS • C6
LOCAL• B1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
State found lacking on special education
DELAYS ON HIGHWAY 26
Health data miningWhat a health plan might know aboutyou ... andhow it might use it.D1
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Tim Howard, man ofthe mOment —How the U.S. goalkeeper overcameand thrives with Tourette's.C1
By Scott Hammers
Camp Road to east of Mirror
to 1 0 0 feet tall, and crashes
The Bulletin
Lake. The partial closure is ex-
involving drivers crossing the
Traffic on U.S. Highway 26 over Mount Hood will be restricted startingnext week,
Questioning the benefits of supplemental drinks.D1
dents with special needs,
best tackle the effort.
and under the new rubric, Oregon — along with 34
Transportation project to improve safety on the Portland side of Government Camp.
in2016.
Starting Monday, an excavationcompany working on
ODOT spokeswoman next week, crews will set up Kimberly Dinwiddie said the a t emporary barrier allowing to 7:30 p.m. for up to three roughly $22 million project the m to inspect the diffs. nights a week, the highway will address two long-running E stimates suggest there may will be closed to all traffic for safety issues — rocks falling be as much as 1 million cubic up to an hour. on the roadway from cliffs up y a rds of rock that needs to See Highway 26/A5
tiyear Oregon Department of
Pain treatment —Ooubt
the project will reduce traffic
cast on a commonmethod. A3
to one lane in each direction on a 2/2-mile stretch ofhighway from east of Kiwanis
Dinwiddie said that starting
adjusted its expectations for how states serve stu-
the area to determine how to
through the end of October. ODO T documented 109 Construction will be put crashes on this stretch, MaP in which people 88 were on hold between November and April and is OnA5 inj u red and four people expected to be completed were killed.
with the beginning of a mul-
Liquid nutrition?
pected to remain in place
centerline. Between 2002 and 2011,
The U.S. Department of Education last week
be removed, she said, and the contractor will begin excavating the rock and inspecting Much of the rock will be
removed through blasting, Dinwiddie said, but it is not yet clear how much will be needed. During blasting, which will be scheduled 5:30
other states — misses the
mark. In 1990, Congress passed the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act — or IDEA
— which requires public schools to serve students regardless of their disabilities, covering impairments ranging from blindness to autism to dyslexia.
TOur de FranCe — Hereare 10 riders to watch.C4
This mostrecent change
affectshow the federal
Target's gunstance-
government determines which states are in compliance with IDEA, shift-
Not in the stores, please, the retailer tells its customers.C6
ing the focus from adhering to certain policies to measuring how well states
ln WOrld neWS —Tension mounts after suspected revenge killing in Jerusalem.A2
educate special-needs students. To meet the
law's requirements, states must now demonstrate
And a Wed exclusive-
progress in shrinking the performance gap between
Breakdown in Iraq: The9th Brigade recounts its bitter experience on theborder. beetlbenetie.cem/extras
students with disabilities and those without. Despite
failing to meet the new outcomes-based goals, administrators at the Oregon Department of Education
EDITOR'SCHOICE
say there will be no effect
on Oregon's roughly $125 million share of the $11.5
:s. of
Costs turn vaccines into luxury products
billion awarded to states
annually from the federal governmenttohelp serve this population.
See Special needs/A4
Altitude
New York Times News Service
genes,only
SAN ANTONIOThere is little that Dr. Lindsay Irvin has not done for
in Tibet
By Elisabeth Rosenthal
the children's vaccines in her off icerefrigerator:She remortgaged her home to afford their rising prices. She packedthem in ice chests and moved them
when her office flooded this year. She pays a company to monitor the fridge in case the temperature rises. "The security company can call me any time of the day or night so I can go save my vaccines," said Irvin, a
Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin
By Julia Rosen
Homeland Fireworks employees Shannon Olsen, left, and Aaron McLoud, both from Oregon
Los Angeles Times
Forget climbing Mount Everest — for most humans, just eking out a living on the harsh Tibetan plateau is challenge enough. But Tibetan peo-
City, prepare for Friday night's July Fourth fireworks show atop Pilot Butte. On Wednesday, they screwed racks together that will hold 777 launching devices, enough for plenty ooohs and aaahs.
More for theholiday •.•
ple have thrived there for
thousands of years, and a
• A schedule for all your fireworks, parades and more, B1® What will be closed, B1• Races, runs and
new study says it's thanks to a genetic adaptation
bike rides for the holiday weekend, C1
they inherited from an an-
pediatrician. Those in the
cient human relative.
refrigerator recently cost $70,000, she said — "more than I paid for four years of medical school."
The study, pubhshed Wednesday in the journal
Vaccination prices have
gone from single digits to sometimes triple digits in
At a libertarian festival, dreams of utopia
the last two decades, creat-
By Ben Terns
ing dilemmas for doctors and their patients as well as strainingpublic health budgets. Some doctors have stopped offering immuni-
The Washington Post
zations because they say
they cannot afford to buy these potentially lifesaving preventive treatments that
insurers often reimburse poorly, sometimes even at aloss.
Childhood immunizations are so vital to public health that the Affordable Care Act mandates their
coverage at no out-of-pocket cost and they are generally required for school entry. See Vaccines/A5
Nature, identifies a long
LANCASTER, N.H.— Like
anygoodbonfire, the evening ritual at the Porcupine Freedom Festival deep in the White
Mountains of New Hampshire, includes a drum circle, plumes of marijuana smoke, shared bottles of whiskey and spirited debate. There are also guns. Lots of
guns. Colt.45s, Smith 8 Wessons,
and Rugers hang on hips. A bearded man dings to an AK47; a guy with a Mohawk has a shotgun with flowers coming out of the barrel strapped to his back. For this isn't your typical bacchanal inthe woods. This is the libertarianversion of Burning Man, where a kumbaya discussion around the campfire goes something like this: "It's great to be around peo-
ple who understand. I don't get how the left won't just admit
TODAY'S WEATHER Pleasant High 84, Low47 Page B6
ESSAY that income tax is theft. Who cares if it's for a good cause'? If I
heldyou atgunpoint topay for my mother's cancer treatment,
and modern-day Tibetans. The segment contains the gene scientists think gives Tibetans a
lung up over lowlanders
nisms of laws, if the market
at high altitudes. No one knew the Den-
ruled to the exclusion of all else. Want to wear a loincloth and sell moonshine, shop at an un-
Once ayear for thepast 11 years, thiscampground inthe
regulated market that accepts Bitcoin and silver, or listen to a
northern part of the Granite State turns into a libertarian
seminar called "How the Col-
isovans ever roamed the Earth until four years ago, when scientists sequenced the DNA of a finger bone unearthed in a cave in the Altai Mountains of south-
lapse of the State is Inevitable"'? Then this is the place for you. See Libertarian /A4
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
known as Denisovans
men — have paid between $45 and $100 to experience for one weekwhat life wouldbe like without the onerous mecha-
wouldn't that still be theft?"
utopia. And this year, roughly 2,000 people — mostly white
segment of DNA shared by the extinct people
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 61-2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope à S Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies
AnIndependent
ern Siberia. See Altitude /A5
Q i/i/e use recyc/ed newsprint
vol. 112, No. 1e4
C D6
5 sections 0
88 267 0 23 29
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
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Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas condemned set-
The Washington Post
JERUSALEM — Th e ab -
duction and suspected revenge killing of an Arab youth sparked intense clashes be-
tween Palestinian protesters and Israeli security forces in East Jerusalem on Wednes-
NEW S R O O M FA X
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agers were found dead in the occupied West Bank. I sraeli p o l ice
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Jerusalem, but Israeli news media, citing anonymous security officials, said authori-
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straight night to discuss a re-
sponse to the kidnappings and killings. Israel has blamed the slaying of the Israeli teens on the militant Islamist group
Hamas, and on Wednesday, Palestinian leaders accused extremist Jewish settlers of
killing Khieder.
his home for the early-morn-
ing call to prayer. Bushra Abu tlers for "killing and burning a Khieder, his aunt, said a surlittle boy." He demanded, in a veillance camera at her husstatement, that Israel "hold the band's nearby store recorded killers accountable." the scene, which showed a As reports of the Palestin- Hyundai car being driven toian teen's death spread, street ward her nephew and turning battles broke out between around three times. When it securityforces and residents stopped, one of the passenfrom the youth's neighbor- gers approached him, asked hood in East Jerusalem, which a question and then grabbed has been annexed by IsraeL him and pushed him into the Palestinian protesters hurled car, she said. Israeli police said firebombs and stones at Israe- they were reviewing the video li police officers and soldiers footage. and smashed and set fire to Khieder's mother, Suha transit stops in the neighbor- Abu Khieder, told reporters hood.Israeliforcesresponded that her son had been "robbed with tear gas, rubber bullets from my lap." Referring to the and smoke grenades. Clashes murdered Israeli teens, she were continuing Wednesday said: "Their sons were importnight but had calmed some- ant to them, just like my son is what, witnesses said. important to me." The killing of the Palestinian Netanyahu urged police to youth occurred one day after "swiftly investigate who was Israel buried the three teenag- behind the loathsome murder ers — Naftali Fraenkel, 16, Gi- and its motive" and called on lad Shaar, 16, and Eyal Yifrach, all sides "not to take the law 19 — who disappeared June into their own hands." 12 while hitchhiking home Israel police spokesman from their religious schools in Micky Rosenfeld said police the West Bank. Their bodies located the body within 90 were discovered Monday in a minutes after receiving refield near the city of Hebron, ports that a Palestinian teenprompting a national outpour- ager had been pulled into a ing of anger and grief. car. He said police were trying Relatives of the youth said to determine whether Wedneshe was abducted about 4 a.m. day's killing had a "criminal while waiting alone outside or nationalistic" motive.
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Steve Earley/The Virginian-Pilot
Road-clearing equipment is staged at the north end of Hatteras Island, North Carolina, on Wednesday to prepare for the approaching Tropical Storm
The officials said residents and visitors who may already havearrived for the Fourth of July weekend should evacuate during daylight hours before the Arthur. tropical storm brings high winds, rough seas, danEmergency officials ordered amandatory evacugerous rip currents and possible flooding on the two-lane highway that is the only way onandoff the ation of Hatteras, the fragile barrier island along the Outer Banks. island other than ferries to the south. Dare County officials said Wednesdaythat the The National HurricaneCenter hasissued ahurrimandatory evacuation of Hatteras Island would begin cane warning for all of DareCounty. Arthur is expected at 5 a.m. today. After that time, no onewould be alto become ahurricane bytoday. — The Associated Press lowed on the island.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
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The estimated jackpot is now $101 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
41 21Q 27Q 31Q 32Q Q1 Q The estimated jackpot is now $4.6 million.
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Bomb worriesprompt U.S.to seek more security atsomeforeign airports By Ken Dilanian and Eileen Sullivan The Associated Press
ate threat that led to the announcement bythe Homeland Security Department that it
or call 541-788-6227
541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com
sives. It was behind failed and thwarted plots involving suicide bombers with explosives
was requesting tighter securi- designed to hide inside undergence off icials are concerned ty abroad. wear and explosives hidden inabout a new al-Qaida effort to American intelligence has side printer cartridges shipped create a bomb that would go picked up i n d ications that on cargo planes. undetected through airport se- bomb makers from al-Qaida's It wasn't clear which aircurity, according to a counter- Yemen affiliate have traveled p orts were affected by t h e terrorism official, prompting to Syria to link up with the extra security measures, but the U.S. to call for tighter secu- al-Qaida affiliate there. The industry data show that more rity measures Wednesday at groupsareworking to perfect than 250 foreign airports offer some foreignairports. an explosive device that could nonstop service to the U.S., The counterterrorism offifoil airport security, the coun- including Paris' Charles de cial, who would not be named terterrorism official said. Gaulle Airport, Amsterdam's because he was not authorized Americans and others from Schiphol Airport and the UnitWASHINGTON — I ntelli-
to discuss the matter publicly,
Q8Q18Q 45 Q 53Q 58
Ukrainian COnfliCt —Ukrainian government troops have launched a broadoffensive against pro-Russia separatists, attacking more than100 rebel positions, sweeping the gunmenfrom three villages and spurring anevacuation of the militants' stronghold in Donetsk, officials in Kiev saidWednesday. Foursoldiers died in the fighting that has flared since President Petro Poroshenko let a unilateral cease-fire expire Mondayafter10 days, saying the gunmen occupyingmuch ofDonetskandLuhanskregionshad refusedto laydown their arms andnegotiate a peaceful resolution of the crisis.
in Real Estate
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ArreSted parentS —Anaheim, California, police arrested two parents Tuesday night who they saykept their11-year-old autistic son in a cage, possibly in aneffort to control his violent outbursts, officials said. Theparents were arrested after child protective services and police were dispatched to their home on a tip that a boy there was being kept in a largedog kennel, said police Lt. BobDunn. "There's varied reports on how long this wasgoing on," Dunn said.
— From wire reports
-i//
REDMOND BUREAU
Syrian WeapOnS — A United States cargo vessel loaded with hundreds of tons of Syria's chemical weapons left an Italian port Wednesday to destroy the arms atsea aspart of the international effort to rid Syria of its chemical weaponstockpile. The MVCapeRay steamed out of the southern Italian port of Gioia Tauroafter a12-hour operation to transfer the chemicals from aDanish ship, the Ark Futura. A statement late Wednesdayfrom the U.S. DefenseDepartment said "neutralization operations will soon begin" in international waters and is expected to takeseveral weeks to complete.
VA SCandal —The headof the Department of Veterans Affairs' medical investigation unit has steppeddown, the department announced Wednesday,just days after a federal watchdog sharply criticized the department for failing to adequately investigate allegations of poor care within its sprawling hospital system. Theofficial, Dr. John Pierce, who hadbeendirector of the department's office of medical inspector, is the fifth senior VAofficial to depart in the past six weeks, a period in which the department hascomeunder fierce criticism and intense scrutiny amid allegations that veterans hospitals hadbeen hiding long delays in patient care.
~ .x
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BeIIghaZi attaCkS —A lawyer for a Libyan militant charged in the2012 BenghaziattackssaidWednesdaythatshehadseennoevidence tying her client to the violence, but a judgenonetheless directed Ahmed AbuKhattala to remain in custody as theJustice Department builds its caseagainst him. The lawyer, Michelle Peterson, conceded that Abu Khattala had noreasonable chance of being released at the moment, given the terrorism-related charge he faces and his lack of ties to the United States. But shealso arguedthat prosecutors had failed to show, in their broad andinitial outlines of the case, that he was in anyway connected to the Sept. 11,2012, attacks that killed Ambassador Chris Stevensandthree other Americans.
Iranian talkS —World powers and Iran began afinal three-week push in Vienna onWednesday for a historic nuclear agreement, with the two sides still separated by awide gulf and accusing each other of standing in the way of progress. After five earlier rounds of talks this year, three key issues remain: the number of centrifuges Iran canoperate after the deal; the duration of the agreement; and theschedule for lifting international sanctions on Iran's economy.
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ISlamiC State —Fresh from success in Iraq, a Sunniextremist group tried to tighten its hold Wednesday on territory in Syria and crush pockets of resistance onland straddling the border where it has declared the foundation of anIslamic state. Embattled Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warnedthat the entire region is endangered bythe Islamic State of Iraqandthe Levant, whose gunmen haverampaged across his country in recentweeks. Facingpressure to step aside, al-Maliki said the focusmust be oncountering the threat — not wholesale leadership changes.Themilitant group hasfed off the chaosand superchargedsectarian atmosphere ofSyria's civil war to seizecontrol of a large chunk ofterritory there.
the West have traveled to Syr-
ed Arab Emirates' Dubai In-
declined to describe the kind of information that triggered
ia over the past year to join al ternational Airport. Nusra Front's fight against The call for increased secuthis warning. But officials in the Syrian government. The rity was not connected to Iraq the past have raised concerns fear is that fighters with a U.S. or the recent violence there, about non-metallic explosives or Western passport — and said a second U.S. counterterbeing surgically implanted therefore subject to less strin- rorism official who was not inside a traveler's body, de- gent security screening authorized to speak publicly signed to be undetectable in could carry such a bomb onto by name. Another U.S. offipat-downs or metal detectors. an American plane. cial, also speaking on condiThe U.S. has been planning Al-Qaida's affiliate in Ye- tion of anonymity, said the for additional measures for the men, called al-Qaida in the increasedsecurit y measures past month, a counterterror- Arabian Peninsula, long has had nothing to do with the upism official said Wednesday, been fixated on bringing down coming July Fourth holiday or adding there was no immedi- airplanes with hidden explo- any specific threat.
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THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, July 3, the184th day of 2014. Thereare181 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS JOIIS —The U.S. Labor Department releases employment data for June.
HISTORY Highlight: In 1863, the three-day Civil War Battle of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania ended in a major victory for the North as Confederate troops failed to breach Union positions during an assault known as Pickett's Charge. In1698, the city of Quebec was founded by Samuel de Champlain. In1775,Gen.GeorgeWashington took command of the Continental Army at Cambridge, Massachusetts. In1890,Idahobecame the 43rd state of the Union. In1913, during a 50th anniversary reunion at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Civil War veterans re-enacted Pickett's Charge, which ended with embraces and handshakes between the former enemies. In 1938, President Franklin D. Roosevelt marked the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg by dedicating the Eternal Light Peace Memorial. In1944, during World War II, Soviet forces recaptured Minsk from the Germans. In 1950, the first carrier strikes of the Korean War took place as the USS Valley Forge and the HMSTriumph sent fighter planes against North Korean targets. In1962, French President Charles de Gaulle signed an agreement recognizing Algeria as an independent state after132 years of French rule. In1971, singer Jim Morrison of The Doors died in Paris at age 27. In 1974, President Richard Nixon and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev signed a treaty in Moscow limiting the size of underground nuclear weapons tests. In1988, the USSVincennes shot down an Iran Air jetliner over the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 people aboard. In1996, Russians went to the polls to re-elect Boris Yeltsin president over his Communist challenger, Gennady Zyuganov, in a runoff. Ten years ago: U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan won a promise from Sudan's government to send troops to stop militia violence in the Darfur region. Maria Sharapova won her first Grand Slam title by beating Serena Williams 6-1, 6-4 at Wimbledon. Former Soviet cosmonaut Andrian Nikolayev died in Cheboksary, Chuvash Autonomous Republic, at age 74. Five years ago: In a surprise announcement, Sarah Palin said she would resign as Alaska governor, effective July 26, 2009. Vice President Joe Biden visited Baghdad, where he pressed Iraqi leaders to do more to foster national reconciliation and offered U.S. assistance in achieving that goal. Businessman John S. Barry, who turned rust-fighter WD-40 into a household brand, died in La Jolla, California, at age 84.
One year ago: Egypt's first democratically elected president, Mohammed Morsi, was overthrown by the military after just one year by the same kind of Arab Spring uprising that had brought the Islamist leader to power.
BIRTHDAYS Attorney Gloria Allred is 73. Folk singer Judith Durham (The Seekers) is 71. Humorist Dave Barry is 67. Former Haitian President JeanClaude Duvalier is 63. Talk show host Montel Williams is 58. Actor Tom Cruise is 52. Actress Yeardley Smith is 50. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is 43. Actress Olivia Munn is 34. — From wire reports
DID YOU HEAR?
SCIENCE
ommon ac — ain Iea men I'ovl es I e e,su sa s Patients in a randomized trial who had a steroid/anesthetic injection for spinal stenosis had no less
Report
on simpler stem cells withdrawn By Malcolm Ritter The Associated Press
pain than patients given anesthetic alone. By Pam Belluck
NEWYORK — U.S. and Jap-
.J
William Johnson, 58, of Pla-
New York Times News Service
no, Texas, a former Air Force and Postal Service employee now attending college, initiallyreceivedthe steroid. He said his pain "immediately went away," he did not need anoth-
A widely used method of treating a common cause of back and leg pain — steroid injections for spinal stenosis
— may provide little benefit for many patients, according to a new study that experts
r,(OO (I)Iq ( -, l1
„(II
er injection and, 18 months later, remains pain-free. His doctor, Dr. Thiru Annaswamy of the Dallas Vet-
said should make doctors and patients think twice about the
erans Medical Center, said by email: "There are patients
treatment.
Hundreds of thousands of injections are given for stenosis
who clearly respond to steroid injection. However, it is un-
each year in the United States,
experts say, costing hundreds of millions of dollars.
dear why some do and others don't." And it was unclear, he
But the study, the largest ran-
domized trial evaluating the treatment, found that patients receiving a standard stenosis
said, if Johnson"mayhave responded to the lidocaine-only
Lexey Swall /New YorkTimes News Service
Bonnie Merenstein participated in a large study on steroid injection for spinal stenosis. The injections, a widely used method to
steroid and local anesthetic-
injection too." Another participant, Bonnie Merenstein, 73, a retired teacher in Denver, received
had no less pain and virtually no greater function after six
lidocaine-only injections and requested another. Years ago,
injection — which combine a
treat a common cause of back and leg pain, may provide little benefit for many patients, according to a new study. But the research also leaves
slightly less depression and
anese scientists who reported that they'd found a startlingly simple way to make stem cells withdrew that claim Wednesday, admitting to "extensive"
errors inthe research. In two papers published in January in the journal Nature,
the researchers said that they'd been able to transform ordinary mouse cells into versatile
stem cells by exposing them to a mildly acidic environment. Someday, scientists hope to
harness stem cells to grow replacement tissue for treating a variety of diseases.
While researchers have long been able to perform such transformations with a differ-
ent method, the newly reported technique was far simpler, and the papers caused a sensation — and some skepticism — inthe research community. Theywere
also widely reported, induding by The Associated Press. But before long, the govern-
the options for some patients more satisfaction with treat- she said, steroid injections ment-funded Riken Center for unclear. ment, possibly because of provided minimal improve"We don't have a lot of good steroids' general mood-lifting ment, and before the study, "I search, involving 400 patients Developmental Biology in Jaat 16 medical centers, was pub- things in our toolbox for spi- or energizing effect, experts really could not walk for more pan accused one of its scientists, lished Wednesday in The New nal stenosis," Baker added. said. But those patients also than eight minutes without Haruko Obokata, of falsifying "We're really stuck with aprob- had more negative physical my legs going numb." England Journal of Medicine. data in the research. Obokata, "Certainly there are more lem, especially with an aging effects,like headaches, fever, Afterward, numb n ess the key author of the papers, deinjections than actually should population." infection and lower levels of lessened, grocery shopping fended the results during a telehappen," said Dr. Gunnar AnSpinal injections are consid- the protective stress hormone and museum-goingbecame vised news conference in April. dersson, chairman emeritus ered effective for other condi- cortisol. easier, and s h e r e c ently On Wednesday, Nature reof orthopedic surgery at Rush tions, including herniated discs. Afterward, patients and biked and canoed with her leased a statement from ObokaUniversity Medical Center in But of the 2.2 million given an- their doctors were told which granddaughter. ta and the other authors of the "I believe that the lidocaine Chicago, who was not involved nually to people on Medicare, injection they received and papers that retracted the pain the research. "It's sort of be- more than half a million are for then offered another injec- may have been as effective as pers, a rare occurrence for the come the thing you do. You see spinal stenosis, said Dr. Janna tion, the same or different. a steroid," she said. prestigious journal. this abnormality on the MRI Friedly, professor of rehabilitaand the patient complains, and tion medicine at University of immediately you send the pa- Washington and lead author of tient for an epidural injection." the new study. She said injecOften caused by wear and tions cost $500-$2,000 each. tear, spinal stenosis occurs The study helps answer when spaces within the spine questions raised by the Spine narrow, putting pressure on Society and the Cochrane Colnerves and causing pain or laboration, a group of medical numbness in the back and legs. experts. Both issued reviews t $ t I I ' I' More than athird of people old- last year finding insufficient er than 60 have some narrow- evidenceto recommend inj ecing of the spinal canal, research tions for some types of stenosis. Seized items obtained from government auctions and other "If the benefit really isn't suggests. ConSignmentS WhiCh COnStitute the majOrity Of itemS at thiS Sale. Steroid injections, which re- there and you do the proceduce inflammation, are often dure more and more, then all tried when physical therapy or you're doing is compounding anti-inflammatory medication the risk," said Dr. Christopher fails, with the aim of avoiding Standaert, a co-author of the expensive surgery, which itself study and a professor at Uniis inappropriate for some pa- versity of Washington. Rembrandt Tanzanite tients. Some insurance compaStill, the r esearch, fundEtching nies require injections before ed by the federal Agency for Diamond approving surgery. Healthcare Research and QualSolitaires The new study provides ev- ity, leaves important questions idence to tell some patients, unanswered. "This probably isn't going to Since every patient received Silk Rugs workvery well foryou," said Dr. injections, and both groups reAlexandrite L Star Gpid Ray Baker, past president of the ported similar improvement six Peter Max SaPPhire Rings Presidential North American Spine Society weeks later, researchers cannot Acrylic O' Rolex and the International Spine tell if patients would do as well Original Tarkay ROLEX Intervention Society, who was without any injections at all. not involved in the study. And Also undear is whether the anbecausesome participants re- esthetic, lidocaine, did anything Diamond ceived two injections without helpful when injected alone. greater benefit, he added, "it Some experts said the benefits Earrings strongly speaks against the patients reported seemed larger practice of performing multiple thantypicalplacebo effects. injections." The steroid group reported weeks than patients injected with anesthetic alone. The re-
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is considered a t r ansitional
species, sharing many characteristics of both dinosaurs and modern birds. The handful of
The origin of feathers and the origin of flight have been a contentious chicken-and-egg issueinthe scientificworldfor decades.Did feathers develop as a flight mechanism — or were they used for other purposes'? Now, the discovery of an Archaeopteryx skeleton with
feathered "trousers" bolsters the idea that these feathers weren't for flying and initially may have been used as impressive displays. The findings in the journal Nature shed light on the complex evolution of feathered flight. Archaeopteryx, which lived in the late Jurassic period roughly 150 million years ago,
skeletons and their fossilized
feather impressions have led to various ideas about how this dinosaur lived. Now, a team of G erman scientists has examined a re-
markably well preserved specimen and found different kinds of feathers covering different
a
Remington Bronzes Celebrity & Sports Gold Coins Memorabilia
Fossil showsArchaeopteryx sported 'featheredtrousers' Los Angeles Times
I
• •
The RiverhonseHotel andConvention Center 2850 NW Rippling River Ct., Bend, OR 97701 Directions: From N Business 97, turn onto Mt. Washington Drive. Once you cross the river, NW Rippling River Court and The Riverhouse Convention Center will be the first turn on the left.
parts of its body. It boasts long, 4- to 4.5-centimeter feathers on its hind limb, which are more than half the length of the tibi-
otarsus leg bone. But in a blow to the four-winged theory, the
feathers were symmetrical on either side of their stems, making them less useful for flight.
Marc Chagall Pablo Picasso Salvador Dali Andy Warhol
I
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I
A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
TOO BIG TOFAIL
Special needs
toughest part is figuring out
sensus that more can be done
how to close it. We tend to
Continued from A1 "It won't change fund-
make progress, and then it tends to open up again."
to serve special needs students. In Redmond, there is
ing, but it does reaffirm Wilkinson took issue with the work we are already the federalgovernment's use doing in tracking these of NAEP scores, saying it's outcomes," said Oregon better aligned with curricuAssistant Superintendent lums from states on the East Sarah Drinkwater. "What
we're asked to do now is review the resources the (federal government) has shared with us and to take advantage of the technical assistance they have made
available in areas we think would be helpful." In 2013, Oregon and 37 other states were told they met requirements for serving students with disabili-
ties ages 3 and up, but now Photos by Matthew Cavanaugh / For The Washington Post
A banner hangs In the camping area at the Porcupine Freedom Festival, or PorcFest, the Free State Projmt's annual summer gatherlng In Lancaster, New Hampshire. Once a year for the past11 years, this campground turns Into a libertarian utopla. Last week It drew roughly 2,000 people.
Libertarian /p
t
cop, interning at the St. Paul, Minnesota, police department, enforcing many of the rules peoplehave come here to disregard. He found the system too reactionary, he says, and
now helps run an organization that films police misconduct. He shows off one of his many Pete Eyre once wanted to be a police officer, but found the system tattoos in the flickering light too "reactionary" and now helps run CopBlock.org, which films police mlsdolngs. He's also worked with the Free State Project,
which organizes Porcupine Freedom Festival. Last week he found American flag tat he got in his tlme at the festival to work out. past life. "It's my journey," he says. Then someone taps him on threat the state is facing today." the hill, over by the Bitcoin It's certainly an overstate-
ATM, where reception is better,
ing a bad trip in the bathroom, ment, but the Free Staters have sotheycanpay. and in this hectic, anti-hierar- been active in the political arePuns are everywhere. One chical festival, Eyre is the clos- na. They have helped repeal popular T-shirt: "Kill the Precest thing to an authority figure New Hampshire's knife laws, edent." One popular ice cream alound. blocked implementation of a flavor: Open-Carry Cherry. "I am God," a longhaired national ID system in the state Just past the booth where a 20-something repeats to the and helped allow jurors to ac- man sells make-your-own-firepeople babysitting him in a quit defendants not because armsblueprints (hiswifewould bathroom hallway. "I am a per- they think they are innocent rather him stick to his day job fect logical machine." but because they believe the of running a cabinet-making Two girls huffing nitrous ox- law at issue is unjust. magazine), there is a series of ide from a balloon and a guy And just as Free Staters have tents hosting seminars all day. holdinga needle come by.The started to trickle into politics, A former Army officer named guy with the needle says he some more-traditional types Bill Buppert is talking about has a chemical mixture that if have found themselves drawn how "we shouldn't think of seinjected will lessen the effects to Porcfest. Former senator cessionasa four-letterw ord." of hallucinogens. "I have the Robert Smith is here trying to solution right in my hands," pick up votes for his campaign 'Uve and let live' he says. Eyre decides it's a bad against Scott Brown in the ReThere's a geodesic dome idea to inject the longhaired publican primary to be held in nicknamed the "orgy tent," but guy with a mystery drugSeptember. the biggest party at Porcfest "We can't achieve anything takes place near the end of the even if it could work in theory — and says he won't allow it to by one method alone," says week-long gathering. It's Buzz's happen. Mike Sylvia, a state represen- Big Gay Dance Party, put on by "Can anyone refute that it tative and the 589th person to Buzz Webb,47, who goes by the will work?" the guy with the move to New Hampshire for "Duchess of Dykedom," wears needle asks. the cause. By his count, the FSP combat boots and has closeIt might as well have been hasit seyeson about47people cropped, dyed-white hair. the slogan for the whole glori- it might try to recruk to run in Webb says that when she ous epic of the Porcupine Free- the coming years. A lot of peo- came to Porcfest for the first dom Festival. ple at Porcfestare software time in 2009, she couldn't find engineers, Web developers, IT another gay person. Plans for New Hampshire "I thought we were comsupport team members and Porcfest — as it's known telecommunications workers. pletely underrepresented," she here — is put on by the Free Their jobs are relatively mobile, says between dance-related State Project, a group dedicat- and uprooting to rural New carpentry projects. "I was like, ed to recruiting at least 20,000 libertarians to move to New
Hampshire. The idea — that a group of this size can make a difference in a state with a low population — came from an essay in 2001 by then-Yale doctoral student and current
Hampshire isn't outside the
'Have Imade a huge mistake
realm of possibility. coming?'" And the best wayto convince Instead of high-tailing it out, people to move, well, that's
to move. The plan is that when
members of the "Church of the
20,000 people sign the list, it will "trigger" a large migra-
Sword" — a group from Manchester that doesn't focus much
lieve in live andlet live."
Most of the time, anyway. In 2012, according to Free
State Project president Gericke, borhood of 1,500 people have meetings with a "ritual of com- a group from Connecticut set bat" involving foam swordsmoved already. up a tent serving Polish food.
tion. Somewhere in the neigh-
on worship but does start its
The ideological motivations,
constitute the only organized
To attract customers, the ven-
which Free Staters discuss over group.
dors would rev up a chainsaw.
homemade mead and beers,
The combination of the chain-
are relatively easy to understand. The U.S. government suffers from low approval ratings, we have been fighting wars for years without a satisfying result in sight, and privacy is slipping away. Why not just dissolve it all — or most of
Some rules
it — and live as individuals? In other words, live like the porcu-
cent discount to any customer m ember of the Free State Proj- who brought in one of the fliers.
ed to the state House of Repre-
sentatives (about 10 of whom currently serve), with many others serving in municipal government. In 2012, state Rep. Cynthia Chase, a Democrat,
called them "the single biggest
quite well on it," he said. "Col- — the School-Wide Integratorado made an effort to align ed Framework for Transforwith NAEP and immediately mation Center — and is the its scores went up. That ef- product of a five-year, $24.5 fort has not happened in Or- million grant to the Univeregon, Washington, Idaho or sity of Kansas from the U.S. California." Department of Education OfODE Communications Di- fice of Special Education Prorector Crystal Greene said grams. Integrating different "NAEP is a l i t tle problem- kinds oflearners is already a atic but is also probably the statewide goal, but SWIFT atbest tool we have right now,"
tempts to increase the amount
adding that as most states of time special needs students Delaware, Texas and the align their standardized tests spend with other kids. "We're really looking at District of Columbia have with the Common Core, tests been told they need "inter- aligned to those new stan- how do school systems supvention." For those states, dards will provide a better al- port fully integrated models f ederal ternative to NAEP.
of education for all students,
Martha Hinman, Redmond not just (special needs), but by the U.S. Department of School District's executive talented and gifted, low-socioEducation, as opposed to director of student services, economic, English language in Oregon, where the state suggested a better way to learners, and any other subwill have a say in where track the outcomes of special group you could put a student in," Hinman said. help is taken. needs students would be to Oregon's demotion is a focus on individual student Part of the benefit of mixresult of the state's perfor- growth. ing students, Hinman said, "I think w e n eed m u lti- derives from placing students mance on the National Assessment of Educational ple measures, especially with special needs in a setting Progress, or NAEP, a test something that can look at where they will be expected given to a representative the growth of a child while to perform the same as other population of s t udents they're in the school," she students. "We had set a really low from each state. State out- said. "As opposed to a onecomes were m easured time shot, we should look at bar for so many kids and had by looking at how each growth models, especially for low expectations," she said. state performed on NAEP special education students, "We know from research if and the ga p b etween where growth is not always a you have higher expectations, IDEA-identified s t udents nice line or trajectory." kids know right when they and those without disabilTying IDEA t o o u tcomes walk into the classroom, and ities. With multiple scores has raised questions over they really quickly adapt to for different age groups more than just what should those expectations. When we and academic subject ar-
be used to measure student
eas, Oregon earned a one
success. Wilkinson noted the on a zero-to-two scale in percent of students identified the majority of categories. as having special needs has Those ratings were add- been decreasing in his dised up andcombined with trict, a trend he attributes to a state's compliance with effective early interventions certain federal r egula- for students. "To help this population, tions, such as developing a plan for special needs we believe you have to try to students by their t hird catch them early and get them birthday. on track," W i l kinson said. Based solely on compli- "The irony is that if you drop ance tofederalrules,Ore- the (number of identified stugon meets the federal gov- dents), those who remain are ernment's standards for actually the most significantIDEA. But when combined ly handicapped. As we do a with outcomes, the state
better job of intervening and
just barely missed meeting expectations. Locally, school leaders
catching kids before they are identified, it could have reper-
are committed to shrink-
Regardless of the problems of measuring and rating the
ing the performance gap, but there ar e
cussions for our scores."
q uestions outcomes, there was a con-
about the usefulness of the new rules.
we get a picture in our mind that the child should not be able to do what every other child can. But time and time
again, we see children with significant disabilities being verysuccessful." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
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"We haven't heard much
about the change, and it seems everybody is still trying to sort out what it
means for us," said BendLa Pine Schools Superin-
say a student has a disability,
Plan Well, Retire Well
s~a CMSSIC
tendent Ron W i l k i nson. "We've monitored the
COVERINGS
achievement gap (between
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classlc-coverlngs.com
those with special needs
and those without) for quite a while, and we're
aware there's a gap. The
775 WBonnetWay,Sulte120•Bend 541-728-0 32I ~www.elinlioncapilalslrategies.com
••
g )
•
2014 Desehutes County Fair Talent Show Wednesday, July 30, Noon-3p.m. on the Eberhard's Food Court Stage Singers, Musicians, Dancers, Bands, Magicians, Jugglers 8 Acts of all kinds!
4 acts will each win a $150 prize & perform again on Saturday
saw and some rowdy evenings I'm told by a big, bearded bothered enough people in
man with a walking stick that
the kid is fine (Iater I see him giving a v ery complicated presentation about cryptocurrency), but that I should move alongbecause there is a possible security situation. A former
pine: Let your lifestyle not en- ect who has advocated violence croach on others, but if some- against the police may be tryone comes at you, don't hesitate ing to get into the campground, to protect yourself with quills. where he is no longer welcome. Or your AR-15. There aren't many rules here, "If we concentrate together, but violence and bigotry can we can affect change," says getyoubanned. Carla Gericke, president of the I leave to check out AgoFree State Project. But what ra Valley, the unregulated exactly that change would be, market in the middle of the who even knows? For some, it campground. means living outside the sysAt the entrance, a group sells tem; for others, changing the silver that its members minted. By most counts, more than 20 Free Staters have been elect-
Last year, Redmond was
selected as one of 16 districts nationwide to participate in a grant aimed at integrating the education of all learners. The program is run by SWIFT
she decided to throw her own
Porcfest. party, one that both celebrated The morning after the camp- and poked fun at gay culture. fire, I check in with the security Yes, 90percent ofthe people tent to see whether the long- who show up are straight, and Dartmouth lecturerJason So- haired, drug-addled kid from yes, some people show up in rens. Thirteen years later, the the night before is doing OK. pink speedos and wigs purely FSP has had nearly 16,000 peoAnyone can act as a de fac- as a joke, but Buzz feels good ple sign a "statement of intent" to security guard here, but about it. "People here really be-
system from within.
NAEP, and they tend to do
in classrooms with the rest of the student body.
assistance will be directed
one point he wanted to be a
the shoulder. There's a kid hav-
are closely aligned with
ment to keeping such students
tance," while California,
Drinkwater said
Continued from A1 It certainly is the place for Pete Eyre, a muscular guy with an enormous beard, standing off to the side of the fire. At
of the fire. It's an anarchist symbol tattoo covering an old
most of those states have been told they need "assis-
Coast than West Coast. "Some state curriculums
an especially strong commit-
Agora Valley that a few other vendors went into town to print
fliers urging Porcfest attendees to boycott their food. Thatwas finewiththe restau-
rateurs, who offered a 50 perItwastheperfectexample of the free market at work. Until the next year, when
Porcupine Festival organizers let them know the chainsaw
antics wouldn't be welcome back. There had been too many
complaints. It'safree society here unless you break the rules. There are
no cops, unless you get on the wrong side of the Church of the Sword. The griddles may be Across from itsstand, a food unregulated, but the eggs are vendor(sans permit,sanssafe- USDA-approved. ty inspection) sells hamburgA true libertarian utopia will ers and hot dogs for Bitcoin, always remain a hypothetical, Dogecoin, precious metals,or, even on a small scale. But perif you must, dollars (or "Federal haps for the true believers, it's Reserve Notes"). Cellphone ser- better that way. For as long as vice is bad out in the woods, so it remains the mystery solution sometimes people have tobuy a for our country's ills, who can sausage here, and walk down ever refutethatitwouldwork?
Please call 541-548-2711 for Audition Instructions or visit the Deschutes County Fair Talent Show website at: www.entertainment4dcf.wix.com/ongrounds
All audltlon materials must be submitted b S a tur da , Ju l 1 9 ' "! Notification will be completed by Sunday, July 20th. • Upto 24 acts will be chosen to compete onWednesday, July 30th • All acts mustbe residents of DeschutesCounty (an act from a neIghborIngcounty that doesnot participate In theState Fairis eligible). • A panelof threejudges will evaluateeach act! • Fouracts will be chosenfor the $150 prizes and the right to perform again in a10 to12 minute performance on Saturday, August 2nd. • Threeacts MAY qualify for theState FaIrTalent Show — 1children (1-9) — 1youth (10-17) — 1adult (18+) • A soundsystem will be provided with asound tech and a CDplayer. • CDaccom anlments must have thelead vocal tracks com Ietel removed! Instrumental and harmon t~raaks are oka . • Bands willbe expected to provide theIrown amps, keyboards, drums, etc. and io set-u pand remove theIr equipment. • All performancesmust be suitable for the family atmosphere at the stage. • Performers under16 get a pass andonefor a parent/guardian. Performers16 andoverget a pass for themselves. SOl4 D e s c l a mtes Cma nt g • Formoreinformation,call 541-548-2711.
THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Altitude
could not explain that pat-
Vaccines
tern," said Rasmus Nielsen,
Continued from A1
"Natural selection by itself
Continued from A1 The genome exhibited sim-
a computational biologist at
ment not to disclose the price
he or she paid, there is little informed shopping. "I was kind
Once a loss leader for man-
of aghast, I didn't think this
ilarities to t hat o f m o dern the University of California, humans and our extinct ¹ Berkeley, and an author of the anderthal relatives, but it was study. "The DNA sequence
ufacturers, because they are often more expensive to pro-
different enough to be consid- was too different from anyered a distinct species. thing else we saw in other Like Neanderthals, Den- populations." isovans mated with their huSo they investigated whethman contemporaries, scien- er thegene might have been
vaccines now can be very profitable. formulated with higher costs. New ones have entered the
ficient market since it means
tists soon discovered. People
market at once-unthinkable
tion to bargain."
prices. Together, since 1986, they have pushed up the av-
The result is much like that in other aspects of American medicine: Huge price variations for the same item or service. Large group practices
imported from extinct Neanderthals or Denisovans, and,
of Melanesian descent who today inhabit Papua New
bingo, they found a match. But how did the gene end up inthe genome of modern
Guinea share 5 p ercent of
their genetic makeup with the Denisovans. Now it appears that Tibet-
Tibetans? The scientists used
ans can also trace part of their ancestry to this mysterious group. In the new study, scientists
different hypotheses. Were Denisovans a n d Ti b e tans
computer models to test two descended from a common ancestor that gave the gene to both? Or did humans ac-
collected blood samples from 40 Tibetans and sequenced
quire the gene by mating with Denisovans?
more than30,000 nucleotides
Early humans and Denisovans probably diverged makes Tibetans so well-suit- around half a million years ed for life at high altitude. ago, and it's very unlikely that Then the scientists compared the gene could be maintained that sequence with those of i n both populations for s o 1,000 individuals represent- long, Nielsen said. ing the 26 human popula- "By the process of recomtions in the Human Genome bination, DNA segments beDiversity PaneL They found come shorter and shorter and the high-altitude gene in only shorter," he said. "But here we 2 of the 40 Han Chinese peo- have a very long segment that ple in the panel and no one is shared. That's very unlikeelse. ly, statistically." on a segment of DNA containing EPAS1, the gene that
Hood River
e Daiie Gov ment Camp
Multlyear
U.S. Highway 26 I
Warm SPrin9s Indian Reservation
arm Sprin adras
I
L
Sis~trs
~ A lternate routes
on ~
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Highway 26
mer and next summer will
Continued from A1 Dates for the blasting have not yet been set, but will be
removal. By summer 2016, crews will be able to shift to work that
announced in advance on
will be less disruptive to driv-
ODOT's
be largely dedicated to rock
Tr ipC h eck.com ers, she said, putting up new
website. signs, repaving the road and Drivers should anticipate installing a concrete center traffic stops of up to 20 min-
line barrier to eliminate head-
utes when blasting is not tak- on collisions. ing place. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Dinwiddie said this sum-
shammers@bendbulletin.com
it could be legal, but it is," said Dr. Gary Freed, a pediatrician at the University of Michigan School of Public Health who has studied vaccine purchases. "And it's certainly a very inef-
duce than conventional drugs, Old vaccines have been re-
physicians don't have informa-
erage cost to fully vaccinate a
child with private insurance Ben Sklar / New York Times News Service to the age of 18 to $2,192 from Two-yeer-old Violet Ayele gets e check-up from Dr. Lindsay Irvin, $100, according to data from who recently spent $70,000 on e new stock of vaccines for her the Centers for Disease Con- pediatric practice in Sen Antonio. Vaccination prices have risen trol and Prevention. Even with deep discounts,the costs for
dramatically in the last two decades.
the federal government, which buys half of all vaccines for for long-standing patients. the nation's children, have in- A survey of family-practice creased 15-fold during that pe- doctors, who along with pediriod. The most expensive shot foryoung childrenin Irvin's re-
atricians are among the low-
est-earning physicians, found
said Sally Beatty, a company spokeswoman. She noted that it takes five years and costs $600 million to build a vaccine manufacturing site, and
frigerator is Prevnar 13, which prevents diseases caused by pneumococcalbacteria,from ear infections topneumonia.
that about one-third w ere
that one batch of Prevnar 13
considering giving up immu- takes two years to create, with nizations because of the ex- more than 500 quality control pense. Another survey found tests. Development of the first that 40 percent do not offer at Prevnarvaccine took 14years, Behind the price least some required childhood Beatty said, from the initiation Like m a n y va c cines, immunizations. of research to licensing. (That Prevnar requires multiple work occurred before Pfizer %here should I go?' jabs. Each shot is priced at acquired the Prevnar brand $136, and every child in the That is why Breanna Farris, in 2009 when it bought Wyeth United States is required to a San Antonio mother, had to Laboratories, which had in get four doses before entering call 10 pediatricians in April turn acquired it from smaller school. Pfizer, the sole manu- before she found Irvin to vac- companies.) "It's a risky business develfacturer, had revenues of near- cinate her son, Traven, who ly $4 billion from its Prevnar is entering kindergarten this oping vaccines, so you can vaccine line last year, about fall. The family's usual doc- explain — if not necessarily double what it made from tors do not offer vaccinations, justify — the higher costs of high-profile drugs like Lipitor and referred Farris to local vaccination," said Dr. A l an and Viagra, which now face pharmacies (which do not Hinman, a former head of generic competitors. vaccinate children) or the city the i mmunization d i vision Michael Haydock, an an- health dinic (which would not of the CDC and now a senior alyst at the London-based take Traven's insurance). scientist at the Task Force for "I was like, 'Where should Global Health in Georgia. "A consulting firm Datamonitor Healthcare, said no vaccine I go?'" Farris said. "They say more difficult question is, after had ever been such a big sell- vaccines are covered, but that the research and development er. "It's expensive in part be- isn't really true if doctors ar- costs are recouped, why don't cause it's a very effective vac- en't giving them." prices come down?" cine," he said. "And also beThere are, of course, some Most developed countries cause they're exploiting their good reasons vaccines like demand better cost-effectivemonopoly." Prevnar are more expensive ness numbers before approval That does not sit well with than previous offerings. Vac- of vaccines and can use that to many doctors. Even though cine trials, which once includ- negotiate for discounts, said the vaccine has not changed, ed thousands of volunteers, Anthony Newall, a h e alth the price of the current ver- must now include tens, if not economist at th e U n iversision, Prevnar 13 (it protects hundreds of thousands of peo- ty of New South Wales in against 13 strains), has gone ple, as fears about side effects Australia. up an average of 6 percent like autism have grown, even The Swiss Agency for Thereach year since it was ap- though many studies have apeutic Products pays $101, proved by the Food and Drug concluded that such worries a price that has not changed Administration in 2010. are unfounded.Some of the over time. In Britain, the small "You have to make back newer vaccines are complicat- private health care market your investment and pay your ed to manufacture. sells prefilled syringes of shareholders, but at what Prevnar,for example, in- Prevnar 13 for an average of point do you say, 'Look, you've volves attaching a piece of a $82 at pharmacies; the Nationhad your steak, gravy and dangerous bacterium's outer al Health Service pays even potatoes and this is enough?'" layer to a protein that renders less, experts say. Prefilled said Dr. Steven Black, a vac- it better able to provoke a pro- syringes cost an average of cine expert at Cincinnati Chil-
tective immune reaction in
version of the vaccine.
Prevnar'sprices are justified
To deal with the rising prices, some doctors, who say they lose money on every vaccination, reserve their shots
because of its investment in "one of the most complex biologic products ever developed and m anufactured,"
' •
<'
•
1 i
'i l
I
I r v in's office
building has stopped immunizing children. A local obstetrician recently told her in tears that she cannot afford to give
pregnantpatients ashot recommended to boost the mother's immunity to whooping cough, protection that is transferred
to her unborn baby for the first months of after birth.
Nationally less than 10 percent of pregnant women are getting this recommended shot.
Though there are many reasons women go unvaccinated, studies show that patients are
far less likely to get a vaccine if their doctors do not offer it. And
the consequences can be grave: Last year, two babies, each a month old, died of whooping cough here in San Antonio. Their mothers had not been vaccinated during pregnancy.
• Composition • Ketal • Tile • New Construction • Mainteaance • "Ireen" Roofs
Because some companies, like Pfizer, require that each physician sign a legal agree-
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Happy Independence Day, Bend. Bank of the Cascades is proud to co-sponsor Bend's Fourth of July Firework Celebration. Please join us with The Bulletin and our friends and neighbors in celebration of this great comm unity event.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
BRIEFING
THIS WEEKEND • •
THORNBURGH
n
Thunderstorms spark small fires Fire officials had identified roughly1,700 lightning strikes and some 20 wildfires asof mid-eveni ngWednesday, as thunderstorms moved through Central Oregon. One fire of approximately 30acres burned in Lava Butte, said Lisa Clark, spokeswoman for the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. The fire was surroundedby the lava rock, saidClark, which created anatural fire break. Firefighters allowedit to burn somepineneedles anddownedwood in a natural way,while they monitored it andcleaned up somespots. Other fires sparked by the lightning wereall small — generally asingle tree —andfirefighters wereable tocontain them as ofapproximately 7:30 p.m. "We're getting firefighters to all of them," Clark said. Thunderstorms and lightning hadmoved through the areafrom south to north, primarily in DeschutesCounty near the eastslopes of the Cascadesbutalso through part of Crook County, Clark said. Heavy rain andhail fell in someareas, but other parts of the region remained fairly dry. The National WeatherService in Pendletonissued a red flag warning for critical fire conditions in Central andEastern Oregon. Clarkexpected thunderstorms to continue throughCentral Oregon until around midnight. Today, firefighters will continue looking for new fire starts, including possibly with aircraft. "The potential when you haveareasthat didn't getas muchrainisfires will smolder at thebase of a tree, andthentomorrow whenyouget more heat they will pop up," Clark said. — From staff reports Nore briefing, B3
CLOSURES Friday is Independence Day, afederal holiday. • Federal, state, county and city offices will be closed forlndependence Day, and nomail will be delivered. • The Deschutes Public Library system will be closed. TheJefferson and Crook County libraries will be closed. • Central Oregon Community College will be closed. • Most bank branches will be closed. • Most Central Oregon liquor stores will be open.
Correction In a story headlined "Budget includes costof-living raises," which appeared Thursday, June 26, on PageB1, the two items regarding a salary raise for Redmond School District Superintendent Mike Mclntosh were incorrect. The district has several employeesnot represented by aunion, including administrators and confidential staff. Mclntosh's salary when hired as permanent superintendent was $127,617; his salary prior to his recent 1.5 percent raise was $140,000. The Bulletin regrets the error.
w
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The Fourth of July holiday Friday means a long weekend for many Central Oregonians and their families. With sunny weather and warmer temperatures in the forecast, the Deschutes River will likely be a popular spot for daytime water activities. Keep these tips in mind for water safety:
Ruling near on
proposed resort By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
A month after Deschutes
County commissioners heard arguments about a controversial resort pro-
posal west of Redmond, the county is still trying to make sense of a case that's
spanned nearly a decade, gone through numerous appeals, a recession and an ownership change. Commissioners dove deep into the county's des-
tination resort code during deliberations on the Thornburgh resort case Wednes-
day. They spent nearly three hours on technical points in what's turned into
a massivel y complex case. Comrmssioners could
have ruled Wednesday on whether Thornburgh developers can resume work on what the county calls
a conceptual master plan Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
• Pay close attention to signs and warnings alongthe river float route (RiverbendPark to Drake Park) indicating where toexit to portage around the Colorado spillway. Oncepast the LesSchwab Amphitheater, you'll need tonavigate left facing downstream toexit the river. • A life jacket is required for each adult passenger onwater crafts. These includecanoes, kayaks, multichamber inflatable rafts, kay-
aks, flat boats, tubesandpaddleboards. Ringsandseat cushions do not meetthis requirement. • Children12 and undermust wear a life jacketwhile thewater craft is underway. • Bend city ordinance prevents drinking on or intheDeschutes River. • Protect native plants and wildlife by getting in andout of the water at designatedareas. • Help keepthe river clean by
Find everything you needto know about floating the river, including a mapof hazards, at beedbulletle.cem/riversafety
O
securing gear. • Know the water: It maybe colder anddeeperthan it looks. Very cold water hasthe potential to overwhelmanyswimmer. Also know that currents canchange rapidly in downstreamareas.
• Pay close and constantattention to children andinexperienced swimmers youaresupervising in or near the river. • Stay hydrated: Drink plenty of water at regular intervals, evenif you're notthirsty. • Check weather conditions. • Take a basicfirst-aid kit and, suitable clothing, suncreenanda cellphone in a waterproof bag. • Don't float or boatalone and designate agroup leader.
PLUS • •
Fireworks and more for a fun Fourth Oregon will perform Americana music, Broadway hits and other patriotic selections; free, donations accepted; 3 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.; www. cascadehorizonband.org or 541-639-7734. FOURTH OF JULY JUBILEE: Featuring food, live music, contests, fireworks and more; free; 4-10 p.m.; Crooked River Park, Amphitheater, 1037 S. Main St., Prineville; www.
FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION AND PARADE:Featuring a breakfast, parade, exhibits, food, music and more; free; 7 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh and B streets, Madras. FOURTH OFJULY FLY-IN:Featuring a fly-in, a car show, live music,
food andmore;free, donations accepted; 7:30 a.m.-noon;Sisters Eagle Airport, 15820 Barclay Drive; www.sistersairport.com, hmagaret@sistersairport.com or 541-549-8766. FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION ANO PARADE:Featuring a fun run/ walk, a parade, live music; free; 8-10 a.m.; Rec Barn, 12940 Hawks Beard, Black Butte Ranch, Sisters; www.blackbutteranch.com or 866-901-2961. BAND OFBROTHERSFOURTH OF JULYPARADE:Annual parade; free; 10 a.m.; Ochoco CreekPark, 450 NE ElmSt., Prineville; www. visitprineville.org. FOURTH OF JULY FREEOAY:The
museumcelebrates its anniversary with ice cream and birthday cake; free;10a.m.-4 p.m.; DesChutes Historical Museum,129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.deschuteshistory. org or 541-389-1813. FOURTH OF JULY PARADE: Featuring more than 70 entries, theme of the parade is"Land of the Free, Home of the Brave"; 10 a.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com.
ccprd.org/parks reservations.cfm
PET PARADE:Featuring kids and their special pets; bring your leashed pet (no cats, rabbits or
aggressivedogs) to bein the parade; line up on Wall Street by the BendLa Pine Schools administration building; free; 9:30 a.m. Iineup, 10a.m. parade; downtown Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-389-7275. FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION: Featuring BBQ,carnival games, face
painting, contestsandmore;free; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Downtown Sunriver; 541-593-1010. FREEDOM FESTIVAL: Featuring live music, hot dogs, chili, drinks, games and more; free; 11a.m.2 p.m.; The Garden, 837 SW Glacier Ave., Redmond; www. calvarychapelredmond.com or
or 541-447-1209. FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION: Featuring food, a yard sale, a view of the fireworks and more; free; 7 p.m.; Thinkatock Victory Baptist Church, 1034 NE ccredmond@bendbroadband.com. 11th St., Bend; 541-318-6350. FOURTH OFJULY FIREWORKS OLD FASHIONEDJULY FOURTH SPECTACULAR: Annual show FESTIVAL:Featuring games, a lights up the sky; free;10 p.m.; Pilot family fun area, live music, food Butte State Park, Northeast Pilot and artisan booths; free admission; Butte Summit Drive, Bend; www. 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Drake Park, oregonstateparks.org/park 42.php 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; or800-551-6949. www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-389-7275. MADRASSPARKLERS' FIREWORKS: Annual firework REDMOND OLDFASHIONED show; free;10 p.m.; downtown FOURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION: Madras. Celebration featuring pony rides, train rides, bounce houses, a petting REDMOND FIREWORK DISPLAY: zoo, live music and more; free; 11 Sponsored by High Desert a.m.-4p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair AggregateandPaving Inc; free; & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport 10 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair Way; www.redmondjuly4th.org or 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport 541-548-7275. Way; www.expo.deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. SOUND FOURTH:The Cascade Horizon Band, Festival Chorus SEE THERESTOFTHE EVENT and Men's Chorus of Central CALENDARONPAGEB2.
— a document outlining
the overall proposal for a resort. If no action is taken to build on the master
plan within two years of it being approved, the plan becomes void. But commis-
sioners decided to push a vote back to Monday after it became clear they would
need more time to digest thepiecesofthecase. SeeThornburgh/B6
Guilty plea in murder surprises attorneys By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
Joshua Jokinen had an apology, but no explanation, Wednesday when he
changed his plea to guilty of murdering Carolyn Burdick inherhome near Sisters with a shovel in August. Dressed in dark green jail clothes, his wrists cuffed to abelly chain, Jokinen spoke quietly just before Deschutes County Circuit Judge Alta Brady sentenced him to life in prison, with
parolepossible after25 years. "I just want to say I'm sor-
ryto the family. I wish I had an explanation," he said. "I wish I knew why." He pausedforam oment, shook his head, shrugged. "That's all."
Jokinen's lawyer, Jacques DeKalb, moments earlier
explained to Brady, while thunder from a passing storm rumbled overhead, that Jokinen,30, accepted
responsibility for bludgeoning Burdick, 78, to death.
Report on Prineville chief still under wraps
The case against Jokinen was too strong to defend against, DeKalb said in court; "the evidence is dear thathe andnooneelsecommitted this crime."
By Scott Hammers
independent
The Bulletin
group that assists city and county governments in Oregon with p e rsonnel
Prineville officials have denied a public records request from The Bulletin seeking accessto areporton the conduct of Police Chief Eric Bush.
Bush
issues, to con-
Bush, a Prineville officer since 1990 and chief since
duct an investigation into the allegations.
2003, was put on leave in
interview as part of its investigation. The group delivered its report to Prineville officials late last month. Bush is a brig-
adier general with the Oregon Army National Guard.
a personnel discipline matter, and is only subject to disclosure if Bush is disciplined, and then, only if the public interest requires its disclosure. Prineville city attorney
Captain Michael Boyd has been serving as interim chief
Carl Dutli, who has handled the majority of the city's com-
in Bush's absence.
munications concerning the
Jokinen told Bradyhe read at a 12th-grade level and understood the conse-
quences ofhis plea. Jokfnen had pleaded not guilty in November after his indict-
m ent. He was scheduledto stand trial next week. Attorneys in the case said
Forrester initially said in November 2013 that the in-
Tuesday, Prineville city recorder Lisa Morgan denied
Bush affair, did not reply to an
September 2013 for what City Manager Steve Forrester described as a "personnel matter." The city subsequently
vestigation was nearing its completion, but the group encountered some delays
a public records request from
ing when city officials might make a determination on
to a murder charge without
turned to the Local Government Personnel Institute, an
attempting to reach members of the military it sought to
Bush's employment status. — Reporter: 541-383-0387,
a lesser sentence or risk a trial. See Plea /B5
The Bulletin seeking access to the report. In her letter, Morgan ar-
gued that the report concerns
email sent Wednesday ask-
shammers@bendbulletirt.com
they could not recall a defendant ever pleading guilty attempting first to negotiate
B2 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
E VENT TODAY STEELYDAN: The hit-making
pop-rock bandperforms; $45, $99 reserved, plus fees; 6:30
p.m., gatesopenat5p.m.;Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.com or 541-322-9383. CELEBRATIONOF OUR FREEDOM: WWII veterans will be honored by name, rank, theater of service and decorations; 7 p.m., arrive by 6:30 p.m.; American Legion Community Park,850 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-288-3016. TAARKA: The Colorado acoustic Americana band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY PANCAKE BREAKFAST: Featuring
pancakes,sausageandcoffee; $5, $3 for children 10 and older, free for children10 and younger; 7-10 a.m.; Prineville City Plaza, 387 NEThird St.; 541-447-4342. SISTERSHABITAT FOR HUMANITY RECYCLE 5K RUN/WALK: Proceeds will benefit Sisters High School
boys andgirls soccer programs; $20, $25, registration required, free for spectators; 8 a.m. race, 7 a.m. pre-registration; Sisters Athletic Club, 1001 Desperado Trail; www. sistershabitat.org or 541-549-1193. SPARKYOURHEART SKWALK/ RUN:Run to support the Children's
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Heart Fund; $25, registration required; 8 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbiaSt.,Bend; dmjones©stcharleshealthcare.org or 541-706-6996. SISTERSROUNDUP OF GEMS: More than 40 displays of rocks,
Featuring a parade, arts and crafts bazaar, bake sales, plant sales, food, a barn danceandmore; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Golf Course, 5195 SWClubhouse Road; www.crookedriverranch.com,
info©crookedriverranch.comor
541-548-8939. NORTHWEST CROSSINGFARMERS MARKET:10a.m.-2 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and Northwest Crossing drives,
minerals andfossils from around the world; free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sisters Elementary School, 611 E. Cascade Ave.; www.sisters.k12. or.us or 541-549-8981. SUMMER BOOK SALE:Usedbooks, DVDs, CDs andaudio books for sale; free;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/or 541-312-1090. SUMMER BOOK SALE:Usedbooks, DVDs, CDs andaudio books for
Bend; www.nwxevents.comor 541-312-6473.
Submitted photo
Steely Dan performs at the Les Schwab Amphitheater this week.
sale; free; 11a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; fobl.org/ booksales, foblibrary©gmail.com or 541-617-7047. SUMMER BREWFEST:Featuring more than 25 local and national breweries, petadoption, live music and more, benefiting the Humane Society of Central Oregon; $5 entry includes 2 samples, .50 tokens; 1-6 p.m.; WholeFoods Market,2610 NE U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.hsco. org or 541-330-7096. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. FIRSTFRIDAY GALLERY WALK: Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and foodindowntown Bend andthe Old Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend.
MUSEUM ANDME:Explore the museum during its quietest hours, for children and teens ages 3-18 with a physical, cognitive and/or social disability, adult chaperones are required and siblings are welcome; 5-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org, sgrasser@highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754 ext. 329. LA PINE RODEO "BUCKAND BOOM":Bull rider competition; $12, $10 for seniors and children, free for children 5 and younger; 7 p.m.; La Pine Rodeo Grounds, Third Street and Walker Road; www.lapinerodeo. com or 541-536-7500. REDWOOD SON:ThePortlandbased roots-pop artist performs, with Kalai; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091.
SATURDAY CENTRAL OREGONSUMMER MARKET:Featuring a street fair, flea market, farmers market, live music and more; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.streetfair2014. com, bill©streetfair2014.com or 541-385-3364. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh and B streets; 541-546-6778. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NWWall St.; 541-420-9015. CROOKEDRIVER RANCH INDEPENDENCE CELEBRATION:
PUBLIC OFFICIALS CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley,D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend oflice: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bend oflice: 131 NW Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
U.S. House efRepresentatives • Rep. Greg Walden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bend oflice: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGOM • Gov. John Kitzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretaryof StateKateBrown,D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state. or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenRosenblum, D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LadorCommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
Phone: 541-923-7710 Email:Ginny.McPherson@ci.redmond. ol:us • Ed Onimus Phone: 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus©ci.redmond. or.us
• Jodie Barram Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jbarram@ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: mcapell@ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561
OI'.Us
BEMD POLICE DEPARTMEMT
City Council • David Asson Phone:503-913-7342 Email: dasson@ci.sisters.or.us • WendyHolzman Phone: 541-549-8558 Email: wholzman@ci.sisters.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone: 541-549-2471 Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.us • CatherineChildress Phone: 541-588-0058 Email: cchildress@ci.sisters.or.us • McKibden Womack Phone: 541-598-4345 Email: mwomack@ci.sisters. or.us
CITY OF REDMOND 716 SWEvergreen Ave. Redmond, OR 97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706
City Council • Mayor GeorgeEndicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email:George.Endicott©ci.redmond.
CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462
OI'.Us
• Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick@ci.redmond. oi'.Us
OI;us
POLICE LOG
CITY OF SISTERS
• DougKnight Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: dknight©ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell©ci.bend.or.us
• GinnyMcPherson
SUNDAY
SUMMER BOOKSALE:Used books, DVDs, CDsand audio books for sale; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/or 541-312-1090.
CENTRAL OREGONSUMMER MARKET:Featuring a street fair, flea market, farmers market, live music and more; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.streetfair2014. com, bill@streetfair2014.com or 541-385-3364.
THORN HOLLOW STRING BAND:Pioneer-inspired jigs of the frontier; free with admission;11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend;
SUMMER BOOKSALE:Usedbooks, DVDs, CDsandaudio books for sale; free;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/or 541-312-1090. VINTAGEFLEA MARKET: Vintageto
www.highdesertmuseum.orgor 541-382-4754. SUMMER BOOKSALE:Used books, DVDs, CDsand audio books for sale; free;1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; fobl.org/ booksales, foblibrary@gmail.com or 541-617-7047. LA PINERODEO: Featuringcowboys and cowgirls of the Northwest; $12, seniors and children $10, children 5 and younger free; 4:30 p.m.; La Pine Rodeo Grounds, Third Street and Walker Road; www.lapinerodeo.com or 541-536-7500. "THE BARISTATIMES": Screenings of local comedian Nathan Woodworth's original sketch comedy
re purposedgoods in the gardens; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pomegranate Home & Garden, 20410 NE Bend River Mall Drive, Bend; www. pomegranate-home.com, jantiques© bendcable.com or 541-383-3713. AROUNDTHEBLOCKFIBER ARTS STROLL: Artists display, demonstrate and sell their work in businesses throughout Sisters; free; noon-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; www.sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org or 541-549-1004.
NEWS OF RECORD
City Council
• Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.Centanni©ci.redmond.or.us • CamdenKing Phone: 541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King@ci.redmond.
series; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "HAPPY":A film showing of the 2011 award-winning documentary explorin g human happiness;$5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
City Council • KathyAgan Email: kagantNci.la-pine.or.us • Greg Jones gjones©ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mulenex Email: kmulenex©ci.la-pine.or.us • Stu Martinez Email: smartinez©ci.la-pine.or.us • KarenWard kward©ci.la-pine.or.us
DUII —Cecil Kuckup Bettles, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:09 a.m.June30,inthe2500 blockofNE Twin Knolls Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:16 p.m. June 30, in the1500 blockof NW MilwaukeeAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:36 p.m. July1, in the 300 blockof NW GreenwoodAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at9:18 p.m. June29, in the2600blockofNE U.S.Highway 20. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat10 a.m. June 30, in the 63500 block of N. U.S.Highway 97. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest madeat10:01 a.m. June30,inthe63500blockofN.U.S. Highway 97. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at11:14 a.m. June 30, in the 63500 block of N.U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Kathleen VapMcGuire, 33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:13a.m. July1, in the area ofNE GreenwoodAvenueand NE10th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:04 a.m. July1, in the 2500 block of NW
Foley Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:16 a.m. July1, in the 2800 blockof NE Red OakDrive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:16 p.m. July1, in the 700 block of NW Bond Street.
8:55 p.m. July1, in the area ofSW Newberry Avenue.
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Michael E. Donahue,64, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 6:22 p.m. July1, in the area ofU.S.Highway 97 and Sixth Street.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Thelt —Atheft was reported at ',.'Bt,T,'~.
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Aperfecttime to enjoy the coast beforethe summer surge. 800-836-3573 ~~
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Over 80 OregonNewspapers, from 36 Counties
1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone:541-388-6567 Email:TammyBaney@co.deschutes. or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone:541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.
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CITY OF BEND 710 NWWall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us • City ManagerEricKing Phone:541-388-5505 Email: citymanager©ci.bend.or.us
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A Free Public Service
DESCHUTES COUNTY
• TonyDeBone,R-LaPine Phone:541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschutes. or.us
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THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ivis ssu mi si na ures Of By Gosia Wozniacka The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Proponents of a ballot measure to require
-8 elA California have also adopted rants. It wouldbe effective Jan- laws banning or limiting geuary 2016. netically modified organisms. Signature-gathering is also There are currently 85 bills underway in Colorado and in on GMO labeling in 30 states, feed orfood served in restau-
the labeling of genetically modified foods in Oregon said Arizona to put up similar laWednesday they're turning in beling measures. more than155,000 signatures The U.S. currently does not — far more than needed to require the labeling of genetiqualify the measure for a state- cally engineered foods. Labelwide vote in November. ing ballot measures in CaliforThe secretary of state' s nia and in Washington state office will count and verify failed in recent years. A GMO the signatures. The initiative labelingmeasure was also deneeds just over 87,000 signa- feated in Oregon in 2002. tures to qualify for the ballot. But legislators in three states If adopted, the initiative by — Vermont, Maine and ConOregon GMO Right to Know necticut — enacted laws that would requiremanufacturers, require labeling of genetically retailers and suppliers to label modified organisms, though raw and packaged foods pro- those won't go into effect until duced entirely or partially by other states in the region folgenetic engineering. The mea- low suit. Counties in Oregon, sure would not apply to animal Hawaii, Washington state and
with more than half i n tro-
duced this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, as well as
asm," said Sandeep Kaushik, spokesman of Oregon GMO Right to Know.
Wlldflres —Oregon fire bosses apprehensive aboutthis season's drought conditions report thatan area ofSouthern Oregonwhere lightning touchedoff major fires last yeargot hit by lightning overnight. About 85 strikes have so far producedonly onesmall fire in Douglas County. TheDouglas Forest Protective Association reported Wednesday that firefighters were onthe fire near DaysCreek, southeast of Roseburg. It sent aplane upto lookfor morefires, and more reconnaissance flights areexpected WednesdayandThursday. Lightning strikes can smolder for aday or morebefore igniting a larger fire. Kyle Reed, fire prevention specialist for the association, said abit of rain accompanied the lightning, which wasn't the caselast July when hundreds of lightning strikes in bone-dry weather touchedoff major fires.
Critics say mandatory labels would mislead consumers
into thinking that engineered ingredients are unsafe, which scientists have not proven to be true.
"This is a costly and misdueling bills in Congress. Labeling proponents say too leading initiative that would much is still unknown about hurt thousands of Oregon GMO's, so consumers have a family farmers and small store right to know if they are eating owners, cost Oregon taxpaythem. ers millions of dollars and inBackers of t h e i n i t iative creasegrocerybillsforOregon have so far raised $1.16 mil- families by hundreds of dollars lion, including donations from each year," said Scott DahlMercola.com Health Resourc- man, executive director of Orees, Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps gonians for Food 5 Shelter. and the Organic Consumers Dahlman said if the initiaFund.
AROUND THE STATE
tive qualifies for the ballot, he
"We're really excited by the expects a wide coalition to oplevel of grassroots enthusi- pose it.
Teen dieS at fallS —A Lane County sheriff's officer says a 16-year-old boy died after he tried to rescue his younger brother, who had slipped on rocks near the top of Wildwood Falls nearCottage Grove. The younger boy survived. Sgt. Carrie Carver says the victim was walking on rocks near the falls Tuesdayafternoon with his brother when the younger boy slipped andbegan to slide down the rocks into the water. Thetop of the rock wall is about 30 feet above the base of the falls. The spokeswomansays the older brother's body was recovered after a tow truck was brought in to remove a large log from the water chute, allowing access to the victim. The boys' names werenot released.
Letter Carrier SentenCed — Aformer Albany letter carrier has been sentenced to more than six years in prison for pushing his way into a 75-year-old woman's homeand groping her. Daniel Guinn Gray, 49,was convictedinJuneofsexabuseandburglary,andsentenced Tuesday. Prosecutors said Graygrabbed the recently widowed victim, repeatedly telling her to kiss him. Investigators said shehad bruises on her arms consistent with being grabbed. Theincident happened Aug. 20 at amobile homepark. Prosecutors said the terrified victim has moved to another state.
Warrant in Slaying — OregonState Police arelooking for a
Fired workers'compensationCEOplans to sue The Associated Press
reports that newly r eleased
to interview for the Oregon job
public records show at least at a time when he'd stepped in as leader of Oregon's workers four employees say their words to be interim CEO for Pinnacol compensation agency after were twisted or used inaccu- Assurance, Colorado's version just three months on the job rately to build a case against of SAIF. "SAIF needs to act quickly has filed notice that he plans to Plotkin. sue over his ouster. One employee disputed the to addressthe serious harm John Plotkin alleges his notes a SAIF vice president that they've caused both to me predecessor at SAIF Corp. took on comments from Plot- and to the organization," Plotw antedthe CEO job back, or kin about his bulldog's attrac- kin said in a statement 'Ibeswanted continued influence, tion to black dogs. Agency day. "One way for them to do and worked with executives event planner Erika Meier said that would be to give me my still at the agency to get him the notes were inaccurate and job back so that I can continue removed. taken out of context, and that on with the positive changes After Plotkin refused to re- Plotkin's remarks were not that I was implementing." sign,SAIF'sboard ofdirectors offensive. Alternatively, he said, he fired him six days later in May. The agencydeclined tocom- wants his name cleared, an Records that journalists ob- ment. The former CEO, Bren- apology and unspecified fitained afterward showed the da Rocklin, didn't return a call nancial compensation. board determined he made ra- placed to the number attributPlotkin contends he nevcially and sexually insensitive ed to her in public records. er heard objections about his SALEM — The man fired
remarks. Plotkin has disputed
the charges, saying his comments were misconstrued. Meanwhile,The Oregonian
Plotkin moved from Colo-
tion. He refused. SAIF stands for "State Accident Insurance Fund." It is
a state-chartered nonprofit. There are five board positions,
appointed by the governor. The board checked with Gov. John Kitzhaber's office
before moving against Plotkin. The day before Plotkin was fired, Kitzhaber's chief of staff, Mike Bonetto sent an email to
the board saying the governor has a "zero-tolerance policy for workplace harassment of any kind." "It is our expectation that
any verified allegations of this nature will b e handled
promptly and with appropriate action," the email said.
44-year-old southern Oregonmansought on a murder warrant in the November 2013death of aCaveJunction man. State police detectives handed out fliers Wednesday in southern JosephineCounty to ask for help from the public in their search for Daniel JosephMartinson, who may haveashaved head,ismissingafronttoothandhasaback tattoo that shows apit bull dog with the word "Outlaw" underneath. Martinson is sought in the slaying of 39-year-old Aaron Clouser. Police say Martinson is considered armedand dangerous. Authorities have not said howClouser was killed. His body wasfound in the middle of a road inCaveJunction. Fake 911 call —A reported shooting at a northwest Portland homeTuesdaywasaprank.Theunsuspecting peopleinsidewere surprised to seeofficers outside the homewith guns drawn. The Multnomah County sheriff's office say that so-called "swatting" is a dangerous prank that wastes resources. Investigators are looking for the person responsible for the hoax. NeW OregOnian editOr —An editor at a California-based investigative reporting organization has beennamedto lead online and newspaper journalism at TheOregonian, the state's largest newspaper. Mark Katches, 51, hasbeen appointed vice president of content for the Oregonian MediaGroupandeditor of The Oregonian. Katches has beeneditorial director of TheCenter for Investigative Reporting since 2009. It's headquartered in theSanFrancisco BayArea. — From wire reports
comments until Chairwoman
rado for the job, which paid Cathy Travis called him on a $320,000 a year. A career trial Saturday morning to tell him lawyer, he said he was asked the board wanted his resigna-
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EX-trainel getS 3yearSfOr Student abuSe "This court has to send a
The Associated Press EUGENE — A former high school athletic trainer in Eu-
strong message ... that (high school) student-athletes are
ter, and the girl refused to testify, invoking her right against
gene has been sentenced to
not available sexual partners
self-incrimination.
three years in prison for sexually abusing a student.
foradults.Period,"prosecutor Erik Hasselman told Judge After h e w a s ar r e sted, Debra Vogt during Tuesday's 29-year-old Timothy Schley sentencing hearing. was twice detained for violatVogt rej ected the request of ing a court order not to have contact with the victim, who
was in court and broke down in tears at the sentencing.
A jury found Schley guilty last week of three counts of sex abuse involving sexual contact with the female high school student between October and February.
involvement with her daugh-
Eugene police a r rested Schley on Monday, saying he'd gone to the girl's home
The girl's mother testified that she felt bad that Schley had gotten into trouble for his
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to try to visit her. Earlier, he was detained for text messag-
Schley's attorney, Shaun Mc- ing the girl and then released Crea of Eugene, for probation. when additional bail money McCrea said Schley intends to was put up. appeal the sentence. Schley's wife filed for diVogt also barred Schley vorce in February after she from having contact with the victim for five years.
bendbroadband we're the local dog. we better be good
~ A BEND PARK 4 RECREATION DISTRICT EVENT ~
arrivedatthe couple's Eugene
home andfound Schley alone with the girL She told police and he resigned a few days
Live Music hosted bySabrina of New Country 99/7TheBull
later. •
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Community Entertainment brought to you byBendPark6 Recreation
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fiom Bf
uties were dispatched around 5 p.m. to the broken power pole in the northbound lane of Lamonta The RedmondSchool District Road. Daniel Stinewalt, 65, was has namedPaulNolan as Reddriving a piece of farm machinery mond High School's next assistant used to movehay, called aharrow principal. bed. Nolan previously worked in It caught one of the power lines Pendleton, teaching various soand caused the breakage.Both cial studies courses at Sunridge traffic lanes were closed for an Middle School andPendleton High hour until Pacific Power workers School. He will fill the post left by were able to clear the areaand Tony Pupo, whoearlier this year restore power. Nocitations were was named planning principal of issued in the incident. the new HughHartman Elementary School, which is slated to open local nonprofits receive in fall 2015. $61,000 in grants The new elementary school will Nine Central Oregon nonprofits be in the HughHartman facility, received $61,000 in grants from which was built in 1995 andhas the Cow Creek UmpquaIndian previously served asthe Hugh Foundation at anawards ceremoHartman Middle School andan ny in Canyonville last week. annex for RedmondHigh. The The recipients of the grants inbuilding is currently used bythe clude Neighborlmpact, TheGiving RedmondProficiencyAcademy. Plate, Bethlehem Inn, Mountain Relief Nursery, Central OrFarmmachinerycauses Star egon Disability Support, Jericho Prineville poweroutage Road, KIDSCenter, Trinity EpiscoA power pole with two transpal Family Kitchen andAssistance formers was brokenTuesday, League of Bend.Thesenonprofits causing residences between focus directly on food, safety and Grimes andGerkeroads in shelter and aresomeof 58 across Prineville to lose power. the state to receive grants. Crook County Sheriff's DepThe CowCreek UmpquaIndian
RedmondHighgets new assistant principal
OldFashionedGames Foundation hasawarded more than $13 million in grants to Oregon nonprofits since1997. Its goal is to offer youth education assistance and provide positive youth development to improve quality of life.
for kids of all ages!
PancakeBreakfast by Bend Sunrise Lions Club: 8:00 - 11:00A.M.
Sr+ 4
Driver cited after fence taken out lnCrookCounty A Prineville woman onWednesday plowed her car into fencing off Puckett Road nearDubisar Lane, according to the CrookCounty Sheriff's Office. A 2005 ChevySilverado driven by Winona GraceSnyder, 65, was traveling south on Puckett Road shortly before10 a.m. when it left the roadway andtook out more than150 feet of fenceandmore than a dozenfence posts before coming to rest in a ditch along the road, a Sheriff's Office news release said. Snyder, who wasalone in the vehicle, was not injured. Shewas determined to be impaired while operating her vehicle, the release said. She wastaken into custody but later releasedafter being cited on a charge of driving under the influence of intoxicants. — Bulletin staff reports
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Fish Fling • Flush-a-Duck Fire Truck• Smokey Bear Games &More! W>1
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www.bendparksandrec.org For accessibility information, call BPRD at 5413897275
FREEBIKEVALETat Drake Park during event. Alternative transportation .; encouraged.BESTPARKINGat downtown parking garage,outer perimeter of downtown & Harmon Parkarea. NOTE:Riverside Blvdclosed.
RIQFFpT.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
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0 en ro e On IIYOI' On
is a no- rainer end Mayor Jim Clinton apparently surprised City
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Manager Eric King with his public suggestion that the city pick up at least part of the tab to assure the future of Mirror Pond. That, in turn, surprised us, though it appears King was less surprised by the suggestion itself than by who made it. The pond, after all, is the signature feature not only of Drake Park, but of the city as a whole. Replacing the Pacific Power dam that created the pond may not be cheap, but it must be done. And the Bend Park 8 Recreation District alone should not be expected to pick up the tab. Some estimates put the initial cost at a relatively low $3.7 million, but the price tag actually could be substantially higher. Meanwhile, those who suggest that the Deschutes River north of the Colorado dam should be allowed to return to its "natural" state are living in a fool's paradise. The river on either side of that dam is far from free-flowing, and it's difficult to imagine that it ever will be. Consider: Just above the Pacific Power dam lies the Colorado Avenue dam. The park district will begin work there this summer to improve safety and provide a space for whitewater sports enthusiasts, work that will further artificially change the
flow of the river there. Going south, the Deschutes is drawn down at both Wickiup and Crane Prairie reservoirs to provide water for the summer agricultural irrigation. That's not all. North of Mirror Pond, and still inside the city, lies the North Unit Irrigation District canal dam, which allows the Jefferson County irrigation district to pull water from the river. Further north are the Round Butte and Pelton dams in Jefferson County. Each one changes the flow of the river in one way or another. One need only walk through Drake Park this time of year to see how important Mirror Pond is to the city. Because that is so, the city and the park district should extend their current collaboration on the dam to one that includes joint financial responsibility for its future.
Government has roc relationship with IT
w
e are not alone. Oregon is far from the only state that has had problems getting its computers to run as they should. Whether they're used for student standardized tests or to keep track of people with accounts at the secretary of state's office, computersseem to give government fits. Thus at least five states have had problems with computer systems used to administer standardized tests associated with the Common Core curriculum. Seven states, meanwhile, had serious difficulties with computers attached to the Affordable Care Act, though surely none of the other six were as problem plagued as Oregon's. Even the feds got into that particular act, by the way. Oregon's problems don't stop there. In recent memory the state had major difficulties with computers in the Employment Department, and, in the mid 1990s, the motor vehicles division's computers failed. Too, the city of Portland's effort to install a new program governing water department bills was so problem-riddled it took several years and more than $30 million to come up with something that worked. Back in Salem, the secretary of state's office computers were
hacked earlier this year, forcing a shutdown that denied citizens accessto databases forroughly three weeks. Now, The Oregonian reports there hadbeen Internet alerts about problems with th e open-source software at the secretary of state' office for weeks before the system was hacked, but state techies had failed to act upon those warnings. The Oregonian is keeping the name of the software secret, meanwhile, because it's unclear if all state agencies have fixed the security problems associated with it. Secrecy, at least for now, probably makes sense. Computers and the programs created for them are tricky, no doubt about it. No doubt, too, that private businesses probably have difficulties when they make major changes in the software they use. They can often keep those problems to themselves, however, while most government agencies are denied that luxury. But state agencies and those who lead them seem particularly vulnerable to the sort of hubris that refuses to acknowledge difficulties until they can no longer be ignored. The fallout would be less, we suspect, if troubles were made public sooner, rather than later.
IN MY VIEW
no er ma or wi ire cou e v as a e en By George Wuerthner he Two Bulls Fire should be
T
Despite the fact that fuel
a wake-up call t o B end. I predict that Bend will expe-
rience a major wildfire in the coming years that will do significant damage, because the community is being lulled into complacency. Two Bulls was ignited under "moderate"
reductions are now being prescribed across millions of acres of the West at great public expense, there ts scant evidence that they actually work to
fire conditions. Had the weather/climatic situation created extreme fire
protect communities when we haveextreme fire weather.
conditions, much of the west side
of Bend might have burned to the ground. Extreme fire conditions consist
forest types there is no unusual or
unnatural fuel accumulation. The majority of our forested areas are well within the expected his-
toric condition given the preceding climatic factors. These forest types
of lodgepole pine, fir, hemlock, larch, western white pine, aspen and other species naturally burn at infrequent and long intervals-
sometimeshundreds ofyearsapart. Fires in these forests come in irreg-
ular "waves" controlled by climate/ weather conditions. With climate change, a wave is
of prolonged drought, very low hunow cresting on the shores of Westmidity (in the single digit range), tion project is slowed or halted. ern forests. Research has repeatedhigh temperatures (typically 90 These fires burning under mod- ly shown that the best way to safedegrees and above) and high wind erate weather/climatic conditions, guard a community is not by logwith gusts of 40-60 mph or more. however, typically do not threaten ging the forest, but by reducing the The take-home message that we all communities because we can stop flammability of homes. Metal roofs, need to understand is that climate/ them if we put enough manpower screened vents, removal of wood weather, not fuels, drives the large and equipment onthem. decks and landscaping with fire-re"mega" fires. By contrast, the very fires we sistant shrubs can all improve draWith climate change, we are now most want to affect by our f u el matically the chances that a strucentering a period of warmer, dri- reductions are the ones burning ture will survive a major wildfire. er weather and severe droughtunder extreme weather/climatic In some places such building all conditions that support larger conditions. We can't slow, stop or modifications are mandatoryfires. A review of the paleo-ecology suppress these blazes unless the while in Bend they are voluntary. of wildfires documents the same weather changes to less favorable The problem with voluntary codes drought conditions have occurred conditions for burning. is that if you modify your home to many times in the past. Not surWind is the major wild card in fireproof it, and your neighbor still prisingly we find very large mega any wildfire. Wind will blow burn- has a cedar shake roof covered with firesrecorded — long before there ing embers up to several miles in pine needles, there is an excellent was any "fire suppression" or "fuels front of any fire line, over fuel re- chance that if his home catches on buildup." ductions, and often will blow flames fire, it will burn your house to the Despite the fact that fuel reduc- through the canopy of thinned ground as well. tions are now being prescri bed forests. Strategic fuel reductions adjacent across millions of acres of the West Much of the last century — when to communities that are maintained at great public expense, there is some suggest fire suppression led on a regular basis, combined with scant evidence that they actually to fewer large fires and fuel build- zoning to keep homes out of harm's work to protect communities when up that they claim is creating larger way along with reduction in home we have extreme fire weather. fires — the climate was also consid- flammability, are the proven way to You can put out small fires like erablycooler and moister — con- safeguard communities. Two Bulls that are burning under ditions that limit ignitions and fire — GeorgeWuerthner is theauthor moderate climatic/weather condi- spread.Italso favors greater seedof twobooks on fireecology and has tions and sometimes a fire that en- ling survival, leading to denser forstudied wildfire for four decades. counters a thinning and fuel reduc- est canopy. In other words, for most He lives in Bend.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submlssions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedlt submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Economists have just enough knowledge to be dangerous By Robert Latham pretty good at arithmetic. They can am aneconomist.Beware ofecon- multiply and divide with felicity. omists. Especially when they en- Transform variables and compute ter the discourse about public pol- regressions in a wink. Build sophisicy. Now, for a few comments about ticated econometric models that no public policy. regular human could possibly underWhy are economists dangerous stand. Beware of economists bearing in the debates about public policy? models. Partly because they often have comMostly, however, the dangers about
t
mand of some facts. Note the adjec-
economists are much more subtle.
Partly because they often under-
they think humans should relate to one another and to the world. And
tive "some" in the previous sentence. They all have their own underlying Beware of economists bearing facts. philosophy about the ideal way that stand how various facts relate to each other. They can sometimes accurately predict what will happen to X if we change Y. Note the use of "sometimes" in the previous sentence.Beware of economists bearing
predictions. Partly because they are usually
IN MY VIEW
ly abandon it when it comes to specific public policy decisions. They, to consider human conditions over like many ordinary Americans, just the sweep of human history or, more want to choose the worthy and the importantly, the global range of in- unworthy. And do so. The worthy are come and wealth currently in exis- awarded benefits and the unworthy tence, the picture changes. It can be are assigned burdens. But an econargued that everybody in America omist will probably have some silly is rich. Even the poorest of the poor. computer model to justify his or her The 87th or the 93rd percentile, glob- choice. ally, are loudly complaining about So, if economists are not a trusthow rich the 99th percentile is. Envy worthy source, who can we look to or jealousy are the only honest de- for wise advice on public policy isscriptors. One economist's conscious- sues? Religious leaders who activeness of thatreality is centralto her ly encourage their flocks to believe advice while another dismisses it as supernatural stuff? Politicians on a two-year re-election cycle? Universiirrelevant. Consider, for example, the idea ty professors'? Op-ed writers? Yuck! of equality under the law. Virtually Please, won't someone give us a all economists trumpet that as an reason to hope for wisdom? abstract principle. And immediate— Robert Latham lives in Silver Lake. our country. If one pauses, however,
press regular humans with their rigorous objectivity. In reality, however, economists are usually just promoting their own subjective values. Consider,for example, the question of the moral hazard. There is always a difficult balance between the
urge to help the less fortunate vs. the fear of inviting the "less fortunate" to game the system. Compassionate as-
sistance programs often encourage an unhealthy and unnecessary dethey almost all keep these underly- pendence. I strongly emphasize the ing ideologies hidden. Those hidden latter while other economists focus foundations are the real drivers in the on the former. Most, however, refuse advice that economists offer about
wide range of income and wealth in
to recognize that such preferences
public policy. The analytical exercis- are what drive their advice. es that they love to display are mostly Consider, for example, the hatred window dressing, designed to im- of the rich in America. There is a
THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
WEST NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Joseph "Joe" Phelps, Lifelong resident of lllinois
Jan. 27, 1929 - June 30, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Joe's cremains will be interred at Fairview Park Cemetery in Dekalb, IL. Contributionsmay be made to:
Heart 'n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739, (541) 536-7399 www.gohospice.com
John Smart, of Bend Feb. 17, 1922 - June 28, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Graveside service will take place on Friday, July 11, 2014, at 12:00 PM at Willamette National Cemetery. A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, July 12, 2014, at 2:00 PM at First Presbyterian church, locate at 230 NE 9th Street in Bend. Contributionsmay be made to:
Wounded Warrior Project www.woundedwarriorproj
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
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Wildfire burnsnear California wine country By Terry Collins
area's main b u siness and
The Associated Press
claim to fame.
SAN
Lake County. The blaze is 30 evening as it spread northpercent contained, officials east. State firefighters and "It has not come anywhere sard. crews from Napa, Lake and "We're hopingthat once Solano counties spent a secclose to what we consider Napa Valley wineries," said the sun goes down, the tem- ond day working in 90-deCate Conniff, a spokeswom- perature will as well and the gree weather on Wednesday. an for the Napa Valley Vint- humidity will also rise to give Similar high temperatures ners, a nonprofittrade associ- us another chance to increase were expected again on ation. "It is moving in the op- containment," Berlant said. Thursday. The fire explodposite direction, and it continCrews have r equested ed because of dry conditions ues to move that way. We're more bulldozersfrom across across the state, Berlant said. keeping an eye out on it." the state to assist the dozen The fire is not affecting the More than 1,000 firefight- on site in strengthening con- lucrative Napa Valley vineers were hoping to get a better tainment lines, Berlant said. yards nearby, fire officials handle on the blaze after they No injuries have been re- said. Pope Valley is about 20 made progress overnight ported, and the cause of the miles north of Napa Valley. Tuesday, Berlant said. But fire fire remains unknown. Gov. Jerry Brown said activity increased about noon The fast-moving blaze be- Wednesday that he has seWednesday astemperatures gan Tuesday afternoon in cured federal funds to help againsoared into the 90s and Napa County. Within hours, fire d e p artments a b sorb the blaze continued burning it covered 600 acres and then some of the cost of fighting northeast into neighboring spiked to 2,700 acres by late the fire.
F R A N CISCO
A raging wildfire in rural N orthern
C a l i fornia t h a t
spread over 5 square miles and forced the evacuation of
200 homes in Napa County expanded Wednesday,officials said. The Butts Fire in remote
Pope Valley grew to 3,800 acres, said Daniel Berlant, a
spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.
It had damaged two homes and seven other structures and t h reatened h u ndreds
more, officials said, but did not yet pose a threat to the major vineyards that are the
Fe s to cleansite o 'l976'Atomic Man' acci entatWas ington'sHanor acii By Nicholas K. Geranios
o
'
,
.
the McCluskey Room is located inside the closed Plutonium Finishing Plant and is scheduled for cleanup this summer. "It's been largely closed
SPOKANE, Wash.
Workers are preparing to enter one of the most dan-
gerous rooms on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation
up since the accident," Geoff
— the site of a 1976 blast
Jan. 18, 1937 - June 29, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A Celebration of Life Service will be held on Saturday, July 12, 2014, 1:OOPM at Living Waters Baptist Church located at 52410 Primrose Lane in La Pine. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701, www.partnersbend.org.
ing nicknamed the "Atomic
DEATHS
Man." Harold McCluskey, then
ELSEWHERE
64, was working in the
tractor CH2M HILL Plateau
"About two-thirds of the
plode. He was
Plutonium Finishing Plant is
McCluskey ex posed t o
the h i ghest dose of radiation from the cium ever recorded — 500 The Associated Pressfile photo times the o ccupational Particles of radioactive material and glass flew into this room on the
in 1983 relayed the order to
standard. Hanford,
shoot down Korean Air Lines
Flight 007 as it strayed into Soviet airspace, killing all 269 aboard. Died Tuesday. — From wire reports
Myers, a best-selling and prolific children's author and tireless
doubt over whether the narra-
champion of literacy and edu- tor was really guilty. cation, has died. He was 76. One of five siblings, he was Myers, a longtime resident born Walter Milton Myers in of Jersey City, New Jersey, died Martinsburg, West Virginia, in 'Dresday at Beth Israel Medical 1937. His mother died when he Collins announced. Aonetimetroublemakerwho
Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Richland, Washington, in 1976, injur-
ing one andexposing nineothers to radiation. Thespace, namedafcentral Washington state, ler Harold McCluskey, the so-callml Atomic Man, is inside the closed l o c ated i n
made plutonium for nucle-
Plutonium Finishing Plant and is scheduled for cleanup this summer.
ar weapons for decades. The room was used to
Ambassador for Young People's Literature, a position created in part by the Library of Congress. Well before that, he traveled the country, visiting schools and prisons and libraries.
came out in 2001. "One had to do with sports, street life and
his memoir, "Bad Boy," which establishing myself as a male. ... The other voice, the one I had from my street friends and
teammates, was increasingly dealing with the vocabulary of literature."
spoke to teens in a language Myers was gifted enough they understood. For these to be accepted to one of Manreasons, and more, his work hattan's best public schools, will live on for a long, long Stuyvesant. But he was also time," Susan Katz, president
confined spaces and poor venby a cornea transplant and a
ericium, a byproduct of plutonium.
tive bathwater and thousands
precipitous drop in his blood They will be wearing abraplatelet count, which required sion-resistant suits that protransfusions. tect them from surface con-
of towels became nuclear waste.
Cluskey was dragged from McCluskey also received the room and put into an some 600 shots of zinc DTPA, ambulance headed for the an experimental drug that decontamination
c e n ter. helped him excrete the radio-
Because he was too hot to active material. handle, he was removed by He was placed in isolation remote control and trans-
in a decontamination facility
ported to a steel-and-con-
for five months. Within a year, his body's radiation count had
crete isolation tank.
During the next five months, doctors labori-
fallen by about 80 p ercent
and he was allowed to return home.
of glass and razor-sharp But hi s r a d iation-related pieces of metal embedded medical problems proliferatin his skin. ed. He had a kidney infection, Nurses scrubbed him four heart attacks in as many down three times a day months and cataract surand shaved every inch of gery on both eyes, followed
Continued from B1 listened by telephone to the "I think it's unusual," said plea and sentencing. Char
tween them," Myers wrote in
shy, too poor to afford new
and publisher of HarperCol- dothes and unable to keep up lins Children's Books, said in a with the work. Myers began statement. skipping school for weeks at a Myers' books were usually time and never graduated. "I know what falling off the narratedby teenagers trying to make right choices when cliff means," he told The Assothe wrong ones were so much ciated Press in 2011. "I know easier. There was the 17-year- from being considered a very old hiding from the police in bright kid to being considered "Dope Sick," or the boarding like a moron and dropping out school student in "The Beast" of school."
encounter airborne radioac-
his body daily. The radioac-
a foster home by Herbert and
African-American fiction and in 2012-13 served as National
room this summer, they will
recover radioactive am-
Plea
Florence Dean, a janitor, and
manager in Richland. "Cleaning out the McCluskey Room will be a major step forward." When specially trained and equipped workers enter the tivity, surface contamination,
was 18 months old, and he was sent up to Harlem and raised in
dropped out of high school, the a cleaning woman and factory tall, soft-spoken Myers spent worker, respectively. In honor much of his adult life writing of his foster parents, he tookthe realistic and accessible stories pen name Walter Dean Myers. about crime, war and life in the Over 6 feet tall by middle streets. He wrote more than school, he was abasketball star, 100 books, including "Monster" but also a stutterer who was and "Lockdown," and was the teased often and often fought rare author — black or whiteback in r e turn. Meanwhile, to have a wide following among back home, he was happy to sit middle-school boys. He was quietly and read. "There were two very disa three-time National Book Award nominee,received five tinct voices going on in my Coretta Scott King awards for head and I moved easily be-
"He wrote with heart and he
Peschong, an assistant DOE
tired commander in chief of t he Russian air f o rce w h o
who learns his girlfriend is hooked on drugs. He is careful not to make judgments, and in the crime story "Monster" left
brief illness, publisher Harper-
deactivated — cleaned out and ready for demolition," said Jon
chemical element ameri-
ously extracted tiny bits
Center in Manhattan after a
demolition.
3
ex -
b ox t o
"McHale's Navy." Died Mon-
High schooldropout Myers became prolific children'sauthor NEW YORK — Walter Dean
Remediation Company have been preparing the plant for
action caused a glass glove
Covered with blood, Mc-
The Associated Press
tential for airborne radiation contamination."
Since 2008, the Department of Energy and con-
penter on the 1960s TV sitcom
FEATURED OBITUARY
By Hillel Italie
'
<p rrlofte'g + +gptttgp@, rg Rltgee
room when a chemical re-
Deaths of note from around theworld: Bob Hastings, 89:Actorbest known for his role as Lt. Car-
day in Burbank, California. Anatoly Kornukov, 72: Re-
Tyree, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Energy in Richland, said Wednesday. "It was restricted for the po-
CAUTfPg O
that exposed a technician to a massive dose of radiation, which led to him be-
Donna Lea (Quarry) Sommer,of La Pine
waste. The space now dubbed
'4l.ee.
The Associated Press
Friends at first avoided him
tamination and chemicals. A
dual-purpose air system will provide cool air for breathhim. The accident sapped his ing and cool air throughout stamina, and he was unable the suit for worker comfort, to hunt, fish or do any of the allowing them to work for things he had planned for his longer periods of time. The retirement. He was studied suitsare pressurized,to preextensively by doctors for the vent workers from coming rest of his life and died of cor- into contact w it h a i r borne onary artery disease in 1987 contaminants. at the age of 75. The McCluskey Room "is Hanford contains the na- going to be the toughest work tion's greatest collection of ahead of us as we finish cleannuclear waste, and for more ing the plant and getting it than two decades has been ready for demolition by the engaged in the dangerous end of September 2016," Tyree work of cleaning up that sard.
Burdick's husband, Daniel Burdick, in a state hospital,
until his minister told people it was safe to be around
fendants he's represented in murder cases, Jokinen is the first to plead guilty without
r eservation. Char an d F l aDeputy D i strict A t t orney r e a d a statement from Daniel hertysaid Jokinen's plea was John Char outside of court. B u r d ick in court. a first for them, too. "I'm sure it's hap"I do not underFlaherty said Jokinen dis-
penedbefore,butgenerally speaking they d on't have much to lose" by going to tri-
tilation, the DOE said.
stand why he killed played a shred of honor by my wife , " the state- accepting responsibility for an me n t read. "Everyoneotherwise dishonorable act. needs to be forgiven, Jokinen's is the sixth murder al. Life imprisonment as I, too, have been conviction Flaherty's staff has is the sentence man- Jokinen forg i ven. I for g ive obtained during his term in dated by state law for you." He urged Jokin- office. "I don't have Jacques' exmurder other than aggravat- en to find God. ed murder. DeKalb in court said Jok- perience," he said. "But I've DeKalb said Jokinen re- i nen does not know why been doing this 25 years and membered little about killing he killed Burdick, and that I've never seen anyone plead Burdick, except swinging a p sychological evaluation straight up to murder." the shovel. According to an found nothing that DeKalb — Reporter: 541-617-7815, account of Burdick's death could use as a defense. Flajditzler@bendbulletin.com .W . ,«~
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
-
that Char recounted in court,
.
h e r ty said outside court that
Jokinen, his girlfriend and Jokinen was not under the another man delivered a i n f luence of drugs or alcoloadof firewoodtoBurdick's hol at the time. Jokinen in home on Kent Road in Clo- August was on post-release verdale last Aug. 31. Jokinen supervision from a 2006 conwent inside with a shovel to viction for second-degree clean the fireplace. He was alone several minutes with Burdick, whom he'd never
a s sault. He beat a man with a t r a iler-hitch ball in Madras, a c c ording to court records.
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
•3
•
2014 July 4th DEADLINES For Friday, July 4, 2014 and Saturday, July 5, 2014
previously met, before he exJ o k i nen was first to report ited, saying he needed a tarp, that he had killed Burdick. according to Char. Staff at the Jefferson County "It's getting everywhere," jail turned him away when Jokinen told his friends, who he told them he'd murdered
PAID OBITUARIES
thought he meant ash from
Friday, 7/4 ......................... Thursday, 7/3, 1 p.m. Sat, 7/5, Sun, 7/6.............. Thursday, 7/3, 1 p.m.
s o m eone in Sisters, accord-
the fireplace. He meant the ing to an affidavit by inveswoman's blood, Char said. t igating sheriff's deputies. Outside of court, Deschutes Jokinen afterward turned County District Attorney h i mself in to Madras police PatrickFlahertysaidrepeat- after phoning a dispatcher ed blows had shattered Burdick's skull.
f r o m t he Madras Tiger Mart.
DeKalb said that of 39 de-
DEADLINE
Friday, 7/4 ........................... Thursday, 7/3, noon Sat, 7/5, Sun, 7/6............... . Thursday, 7/3, noon DEATH NOTICES
The Bulletin
DEADLINE
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
R
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TODAY
ll
TONIGHT
HIGH
Pleasant with plenty of sun
I f' I
ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record
FRIDAY
SATURDAY 0
LOW
86
47'
5Q
50' Mostly sunny
L
cify
Hi/Lu/W 93/73/pc 76/49/pc 77/57/pc 90/67/I 73/59/pc 86/67/pc 80/65/r 92/69/I 84/60/r 94/65/pc 85/62/s 85/64/s 98/65/s 78/64/r 79/64/r 74/56/pc 76/54/pc 72/56/I 93/74/pc 88/62/s 84/61/s 90/59/I 78/57/s 77/55/s 73/52/pc 90/59/I 80/62/s 94/68/s 90/67/pc 78/54/s 77/55/I 93/73/pc 92/75/t 76/52/s 95/64/I 80/64/s 77/54/s 74/56/pc 95n5/s 78/55/pc 81/67/1 80/57/I 76/53/s 78/57/s 86/61/s 79/57/pc 79/59/r 92/57/pc
•
•
•
•
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
FIRE INDEX
Red/d 'e Rd M M d Sisters Pl e l//e
LPP/ /M/R/M
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L
~
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L L
Source: USDA Forest Service
Little Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wi Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
90/76/I 86/73/0.00 86/67/pc 72/56/Tr 79/61/s 90/76/0.01 93/75/t Palm Spdings 106/84/0.00 108/84/s Peoria 70/62/0.13 76/54/s Philadelphia 96/76/0.29 88/71/t Phoenix 109/86/0.00 108/90/s Pittsburgh 86nO/rr 78/55/I Portland, ME 84/68/0.57 82/67/I Providence 90/71/0.00 86/71/I Raleigh erns/o'.oo 90/69/I Rapid City 75/49/0.00 86/63/s Reno 99/60/0.00 95/60/s Richmond eens/o.oo 91/72/I Rochester, NY 88/70/Tr 77/58/I Sacramento 90/57/0.00 92/57/s St. Louis 78/69/0.00 79/59/s Salt Lake City 97/64/0.00 95/69/s Ssn Antonio 93/73/0.00 95/71/pc Ssn Diego 75/68/0.00 75/67/pc Ssn Francisco 76/58/0.00 67/54/pc Ssn Jose 81/57/0.00 82/56/s Santa re 83/57/0.02 86/58/I Savannah 92/75/0.00 96/73/pc Seattle 81/62/0.00 71/54/pc Sioux Falls 73/54/Tr 78/58/s Spokane 92/63/0.00 89/58/s Springfield, Mo 79/65/Tr 78/59/pc Tampa eons/o.o7 92/79/pc Tucson 104/79/0.00 100/81/I Tulsa 83/70/0.00 85/64/pc Washington, DC 99/80/0.00 88/72/I Wichita 80/62/0.00 82/64/pc Yskimn 94/59/0.00 91/52/s Yuma 109/81/0.00 107/86/s
Omaha Orlando
84/59/s 77/55/s 87/63/s 96/71/I
Amsterdam Athens
Srnr/s
senSA 97/73/s 77/54/s
ean7/pc 64/49/r 65/51/sh 80/60/I 71/45/s 92/83/pc
«SP.
78nO/pc
5
83/65/s 64/45/s 69/60/pc 78/63/pc 80/60/pc 83/60/pc 85/78/I
82/63/r
105/88/t 75/51/pc 78/58/I
79/62/r 89/63/pc 92/62/t
96/60/s 86/60/r 75/54/pc 92/58/s 82/62/s 95/69/s 93/70/pc 77/69/pc 68/55/pc 83/56/s 88/61/t
94nO/pc 74/56/pc 79/66/pc
84/60/s 84/64/s 91/78/t 99/81/I 89/70/s 85/64/r 88/70/pc 89/60/s 102/84/pc
102/79/0.00 96/79/I 88/70/0.22 75/70/r 72/45/0.00 68/50/c Ottawa 84/66/0.02 75/57/c Paris 77/55/0.00 82/62/s Ric de Janeiro 84/68/0.00 84/69/s Rome 79/63/0.00 85/66/s Santiago 55/39/0.20 55/37/s Snn Paulo 79/57/0.00 82/62/pc Ssppcrc 77/64/0.00 80/64/pc Seoul 88/72/0.36 77/69/sh Shanghai 84/75/0.34 86/73/pc Singapore ssne/0'.00 88/78/I Stockholm 68/46/0.01 65/52/c Sydney 66/41/0.00 64/43/s Taipei eenwo'.oo95/80/pc Tei Aviv ssn2/o'.oo 87/75/s Tokyo 82/72/0.00 79/70/pc Toronto 86no/o.oo 73/54/c Vancouver 77/64/0.00 69/52/s Vienna 75/57/0.61 76/57/s Warsaw 72/52/0.00 70/54/pc
94/81/I 84/70/r 64/57/c 75/54/pc 78/61/sh
efns/o'.fo efnr/pc 9Onwpc
Osaka Oslo
66/49/I 82/58/s 60/54/pc
93/74/t 103/85/s 79/57/s
109/87/s 69/56/I 73/55/pc 71/55/c 76/51/pc
New Delhi
85/66/s
81/67/pc
111/91/0.00 112/88/s 76/56/0.49 68/57/I 84/73/0.01 81/61/c 84/64/0.06 70/51/pc 72/59/0.00 75/51/pc
Moscow Nairobi Nassau
93/72/c
85/69/r 91/71/pc
L
Montreal
94nen
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4
Mecca Mexico City
81/63/pc 87n2/s 57/51/s 115/84/s
68/50/0.00 74/59/s Boston 76/69 95/68/0.00 93/75/s • 96I65 • Mi l wn sa/8 Auckland 53/48/0.25 55/45/sh Baghdad 115/86/0.00 114/81/s Bangkok 93/82/0.00 esnen Salt Ln 7 6 4WI hnynnne ~ MT eeijing 81no/0.14 88/72/t M Beirut 84n7/0.00 86/75/s Precipitation: 1.93 < < <x 4/66 77 n n cincn Omaha Berlin 69/52/0.00 75/57/pc OII at Lubbock, TX 67/54 st.L uin +3 Denver Lnn Mgnn Bogota 68/52/0.09 66/49/I Kansas CIIV 79/59 91/63 1 Budapest 82/50/0.00 79/53/pc 80/59 Angeles • BuenosAires 57/33/0.00 60/41/pc + 8 nrt Csbc SsnLucss 88/77/0.32 87/77/I P hoenix 89/ 6 7 nhnmn h m iCIIV e Nashville • 84/62 M ke 7 • Cairo 97n5/0'.00 esn2/s I OS/ee Anchorng Calgary 77/54/0.00 84/55/s Dniin 73/5 n 0 Bir ingh m o Atlanta Cnncun eonwo.oo 88/78/t ala4 7 7 3 El Pnn Dublin 70/48/0.00 70/55/pc Edinburgh 68/48/0.27 66/57/c Geneva 66/59/0.19 83/60/s U Orleans Hsrnre 70/42/0.00 70/45/s 3 6 sn4 Hong Kong 91/84/0.04 92/84/c > < Qhihunhun 9 hc ~ f Istanbul 82/72/0.00 81/69/s 8 X$1vss Jerusalem 86/66/0.00 83/65/s Mnnter ey Mi i W%'e 93/66 Johannesburg 62/44/0.00 62/42/s efn . Lima 69/63/0.00 70/60/pc Lisbon 72/61/0.05 80/63/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 75/54/0.00 79/58/s T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 81/59/0.03 76/57/I Manila 90/80/0.27 88/78/I
97ns/r'r
OklahomaCity
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92/SS
Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRn/W 67/50/0.05 63/53/r 59/52/r 71/56/0.00 80/59/s 82/66/s 74/66/0.00 73/49/pc 76/53/s 111/87/0.00 108/86/s 103/81/s 85/68/0.37 78/56/pc 79/56/s 75/55/0.00 82/61/s 83/68/pc eonf/0'.08 84/62/pc 86/64/s 77/62/0.00 81/64/pc 84/66/pc 87/68/0.60 78/60/pc 81/59/s 69/58/0.01 74/50/s 78/56/s 89/69/0.10 82/64/pc 84/64/s eon7/0.6s 91/77/I 91/78/pc 64/61/0.05 69/54/s 73/55/s 74/54/0.01 76/59/s 79/64/pc 91/67/0.26 81/60/pc 83/59/s 95ne/o.oo 94/76/pc 91/72/pc 91/76/0.87 87/72/I 79/64/r 96/75/1.11 89/73/t 83/63/r
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln
eon2/I
48 contiguousstates)
Yesterday Today Friday
City
ssnws
WATER REPORT
aui < '
A full day of sunshine
Yesterday Today Friday
•
National high: 123 at Death Valley,CA National low: 32 at West Yellowstone,
~P Yi+
89' 51'
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 93/58 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
Hi/Ln/Prsc. HiRn/W 85 78 99' in 1924 Abilene 93/74/0.19 91/71/pc lington 92/57 68' 45' 27'in 1955 portland st/53 Akron 85no/0.09 75/52/pc Meac am Losti ne 59 Albany 90n1/0.26 87/67/I • W co 89/52 Enterprise PRECIPITATION dleten 81/4 he Oaa Albuquerque 88/67/Tr 89/67/I • 8 9/51 e 4 • Se/ 7 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.02 andy • Anchorage 71/55/0.02 73/59/pc 83/58 • JosePh Agnnfs 93n3/0.00 90/64/pc Record 0.27ein 1902 4/55 Goven • He PPner Grande • n t • u p i Condon P P 7/52 Atlantic City 82n3/0.00 84/72/t 89 52 Month to date (normal) 0.02 (0.03 ) union R R Austin 97/69/0.01 esno/I 70/ Year to date (normal ) 4.54 (5.75 ) Baltimore 93/74/0.00 88/68/I • pray Graniten Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 01 " 79/5 • 0/57 Billings 84/52/0.00 92/63/s 'Baker G Newpo 86/51 • 66/51 Birmingham 93n2/0.04 87/63/pc SUN ANDMOON 8/51 64/50 • Mitch 8 88/48 Bismarck 75/45/0.00 80/59/s 0 a m 9 S e r a n R 9 d WEST: Seasonable 86/51 Today Fri. n O rV 6 I 9 Boise 99/65/0.00 96/65/s 83/47 • John Mu Sunrise 5:27 a.m. 5: 2 8 a.m. weather will be across Yach 80/52 Boston 84/71/t 63/53 • Prineville Day 0/50 tario Bridgeport, CT 91n3/0.00 Sunset 8:52 p.m. 8: 5 1 p.m. the area todaywith a 88n3/0.28 83/71/t 87/50 • Pa lina 90 / 5 5 64 Buffalo 82no/0.07 75/57/pc Moonrise 11: 45 a.m. 1 2 :44 p.m. mixture of clouds and Floren e • Eugene 'Se d s rothers 8651 Valen 65/53 Burlington, VT 90/72/0.03 84/65/I Moonset none 1 2 :01 a.m. sunshine. Su iVern 84/47 97/65 Caribou, ME 91n1/0.00 84/65/I Nysse • 8 4 / 9 • La pine Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston,Sc 93n6/0.00 89/74/t Grove Oakridge Charlotte e5n4/o'.oo 90/66/I First Fu l l Last New • Burns Junture OREGON EXTREMES 96/59 81/51 /51 Chattanooga 94/72/0.00 85/61/pc 66 3 • FortRock Riley 90/52 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 87/48 Cheyenne 75/43/0.00 85/59/I 89/52 82/47 Chicago 70/57/0.07 74/55/s High: 103' eandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 83/66/0.06 76/54/pc Jul 5 J u l 12 J u l 18 Ju l 28 at Rome Jordan V gey 66/53 Beaver Silver 89/48 Frenchglen 82/57 Cleveland 84/71/0.04 72/56/pc Low: 42' 91/58 Marsh Lake 92/52 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 67/57/0.00 86/59/I fr3/48 at Baker City Po 0 S7/4S Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 75/61/0.00 76/56/s T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 67/ a Columbia, SC 98n6/0.00 94/72/pc • 94/59 Mercury 4:34 a.m. 7: 1 7 p.m. • Chiloquin M Columbus,GA esn5/o'.o4 94/65/pc ach 87 55 Medfo d Gold ss/49 Rome Venus 3:31 a.m. 5 : 3 3 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 86no/0.77 77/56/pc 65/ ,91/58 96/60 Mars 1:59 p.m. 1 : 0 3 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 92n1/1.51 87/68/I Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 5:44 a.m. 9 : 4 7 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi esn4/r'r 93/72/pc Bro Ings 89/5 87/48 Saturn 4:17 p.m. 2: 2 7 a.m. 69/5 88/50 93/59 Dallas 93/77/0.01 91/74/I Dayton 83/67/0.14 74/52/pc uranus 12:55 a.m. 1: 4 6 p.m. Denver 80/59/0.00 91/63/I Yesterday Today Fridny Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 68/57/0.01 77/56/s City H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W City Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 79/68/0.00 74/54/pc Portland 81/6 4/0.0076/56/s 79/59/pc Duluth 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfcrin 68/58/0.00 66/52/c 67/51/pc Ln Grande 90/52/0.00 89/52/s 90/55/s 72/53/Tr 72/50/pc Baker City 95/42/0.00 88/48/s 90/49/s Ln Pine 84/59/0.00 83/46/s 85/48/s Prineviiie 89/ 6 7/0.0187/50/s 85/54/ s El Paso 92/69/Tr 94n5/s 6 N(~ 8 ~ 8~ N 5 ercckings 69/55/0.00 69/52/pc67/51/pc Medfcrd 9 4 /69/0.00 91/58/s 93/60/sRedmond 91 / 68/0.0686/44/s 88/48/s Fairbanks 67/56/0.25 74/54/pc The highertheAccuWnniberxmmOVIndex number, eums 94/51/0.00 90/52/s 92/53/s Ne wport 64/5 7 /0.00 64/50/pc 64/50/pc Rnseburg 86 / 62/0.00 82/57/c 86/56/pc Fargo 73/51/Tr 78/56/s the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 84/58/0.00 79/52/pc80/52/pc NorthBend 68/59/0.00 66/53/c 65/51/pc Salem 85/59/0.00 79/52/s 81/53/pc Flagstaff 84/48/0.03 85/56/I 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme. Klamnth Falls 91/56/Tr 87/48/s 88/47/s O n tario 100/55/0.00 98/64/s 98/63/s Sisters 82/62/0.00 85/45/s 87/49/s Grand Rapids 70/65/Tr 73/49/pc Lnkeview 93/52/0.00 88/50/s 88/52/s Pe ndleton 95/ 6 0/0.00 89/57/s 89/61/s The Dalles 8 6 / 69/Tr 83/58/s 86/62/pc Green 6sy 68/56/0.11 73/51/s Greensboro esn4/o'.oo 88/67/I Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data sscf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 92n2/0.23 89/66/I G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 95n3/0.65 87/70/t • Hi g~h M od e rate M o derate Helena 90/52/0.00 92/57/pc Source: OregonAiiergyAssccistus 541-683-1577 Honolulu 88/75/0.00 ssn5/s ~ g s ~ t e s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~e cs ~7 08 ~ a gs ~ g gs ~foos ~ttcs Houston ~ tgs ~gs 94n4/o'.oo 95n44 Huntsville 92n1/0.11 84/61/pc cnlgn NATIONAL Indianapolis 79/67/Tr 75/55/s As of 7 n.m.yesterday • i nipng T n dnr Sny Queitnc Jackson, MS e4ns/o.oo 90/63/pc Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 89n3/0.00 esn54 YESTERDAY (for the
C rane Prairie 422 1 5 75% 50'yo Wickiup 120980 Crescent Lake 7 5 2 53 87% Ochoco Reservoir 28353 54% Prinevige 128578 87% River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 455 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 969 Deschutes R.below Bend 131 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1840 Little Deschutes near LaPine 103 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 65 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 6 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 184 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 89 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0
' '
Plenty of sunshine
OREGON WEATHER EAST:Plenty of ria sunshine todayand Seasid still very warm. 64/53 Mainly clear tonight. Cannon Staying warmanddry 63/54 77/4 tomorrow. Tdlamo • CENTRAL: Sunshine 87/49 Mc innvie for the most part today and still quite warm. Lincoln Mainly clear tonight. 65/53 Sale
MONDAY
87' 52'
0
86
Sunny andwarm
Mainly clear
SUNDAY
86/69/s 87/69/s 50/33/pc 83/62/pc 77/61/pc 86/68/s 82/72/c 89/78/t 72/55/s 67/45S/s
93/80/pc 87/75/s 75nO/r 76/55/pc 69/55/pc 81/65/s 78/58/s
Robberysuspect pickeduptips in prison The Associated Press PORTLAND — A police de-
ficers what he learned from other inmates about "what
Police stopped McDonald after noticing a man walking in a parkin 80-degree tem-
tective says a man accused of robbing a Portland bank told investigators he was having a hard time controlling a heroin addiction, so he decided to put
to ask when conducting a robbery." During a court hearing Tuesday, McDonald was ordered detained as a flight risk.
lessons learned in prison to
It was not immediately clear
good Use. Detective Darren Posey
whether he had a lawyer.
$940 in cash was found in his backpack, along with a crum-
He was arrested after a U.S. Bank branch in south-
p led-up demand n ote t h at M read, NO marked billS, no
wrote in a complaint filed in federal court that Dennis C.
peratures wearing a motor-
Thornburgh
ThorndurIIh DeStinatiOnReSOrt PrOPerty
of Appeals, the state Court of Appeals and even the Oregon
at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices
nearby. Court documents say
east Portland was robbed on transmitters, no dye packs, I Monday. will kill everybody!"
the Oregon Land Use Board
PREMIUM HEARING AIDS
cycle helmet and jacket, jeans and boots. No motorcycle was
McDonald shared with of-
Continued from B1 Thornburgh was first proposed in 2005, and the county approved the project within a year of an application being filed. But opponents appealed the county's approval, and the case bounced for years between the county,
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Supreme Court.
Amid all the appeals, the eCOnOmiCreCeSSiOn Crushed the l uxur y h o m e m a r k et.
None of the 950 homes, 475 hindrance to this case is that overnight lodging units and they stopped moving forward three golf courses has been and exercising anything." built at th e property. No Her p o s i tio n co u n t ers structures are even in place. claims made by Thornburgh B ut the a r gumentS irt t h e attorneys at t h ree counThornburgh case center on ty hearings going back to whether the developer is at February. fault for the delays. The twoDelays in building the reyear period doesn't apply if sort have been caused by developers can show delays vigorous appeals from oppoaren't their fault. nents of the plan, the onset of C ommissioner T a m m y the economic recession and Baney seemed to have the a slow response from federal strongest opinion either way. agenciesto approve certain She repeatedlyemphasized wildlife requirements for the that Thornburgh developers property,the attorneys have had several chances between said. a post-bankruptcy ownerThe opponents, including ShiP Change irt 2011, thrOugh some residents in rural Redmid-2013, to seek extensions. mond-area neighborhoods Those could have given the and theenvironmental group resort years of additional time Central Oregon LandWatch, to get off the ground, she said. maintain the resort's concepBut the extension applica- tual master plan has been extionS neVer Came. pired more than two years. M We haVe a 1Ong line of deThe commissioners have velopers in this community the final say o n t h e c ase, that have gone through bank- though any ruling could be ruptcy and lost the ability to appealed. But they were redevelop, period. They at least peatedly tripped up Wedneswere given the opportuni- day on technical points in the ty to hold their place in line county's code, things such by filing extensions," Baney as the differences between a said. "They only thing that's a conceptual master plan and
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
final master plan, which is a
much more detailed look at the specific project requirements tha n
100 /O MOney BaCk Guarantee Full purchase price due attime of sale. Rebate processed 30 days ofter invoicing. Offersvalid through July 3 I, 2014. Offer con't be combined with ony other
a co n c eptual
-
plan.
•
C ommissioners Alan Un-
•
I
a r g u ments t h at
delays weren't the developer's fault — though none of t he
•
•
ger and Tony DeBone were a bit more receptive than Baney t o
•
ee
• •
4
• ee
•
ee
A • m •
c o m missioners c a m e
out firmly for or against the proposal. Unger a r gued T h ornburgh's submission of a final master shows progress
M
r
•
•
•
m
r
•
has been made on the over-
all p l an . C o mmissioners are only supposed to rule on whether Thornburgh's conceptual master plan has been initiated, not any of the broader points ofthe resort
proposal. "To me, they initiated (the project) by submitting their final master plan," Unger said. Commissioners are sched-
uled to make a ruling at their next public meeting, at 10 a.m. Monday. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, egluci'zlichibendbulletin.com
America Hears HEARING AIDS Helpinrp People Hear Better
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Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon
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mfnvG
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Cycling, C4 Wimbledon, C2 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
GOLF
EQUESTRIAN
COMMUNITY SPORTS
Bend's Odiorne has tourney lead
e ou an run!
WOODBURN — Bend golfer Madison Odiorne holds a two-stroke lead in the girls division going into today's final round of the Oregon Junior Stroke Play Championship at the Oregon Golf Association Golf Course. Odiorne fired a1-under-par 71 Wednesday for a two-day total of 144. Entering today's final round, she leads Salem's Ellie Slamaand Klamath Falls' Kaitlin Collom by two strokes. First-round leader Sophia Schiavone, of Gresham, shot a 75 Wednesday andis another stroke backat 147. Another Central Oregon golfer, Bend's Olivia Loberg, madethe cut, shooting a 77on Wednesday for a twoday total of163. In the boys division, Riley Elmes (6778 — 135)leads by two strokes over fellow Lake Oswego golfer Alex Wrenn (72-65 — 137) going into today's final round. Among several Central Oregon players in the boys field, Bend's Ryan DeCastilhos (7374 —147) leadsthe way, part of a three-way tie for13th place. Back in the pack are threegolfers from Bend: Maxwell Higlin (78-73 —151), Jack Loberg (75-77152), and ColeChrisman (78-76 —154).
(Or bike, orwalk, or even just watch) • There are plenty of options for fit and fun activities thisweekend Bulletin staff report Looking to make room for an extra bratwurst this Fourth of July
weekend? Want to make sure you really deserve that entire growler of locally
brewed goodness? Of course you are. Runs and races are planned
throughout the weekend to help celebrate Independence Day and increase your appetite for destruction at what-
ever picnic, barbecue or buffet you happen to attend. In Bend on Friday, the Spark Your Heart 5K run starts and finishes at Riverbend Park. A fundraiser for St. Charles Bend's cardiac rehab and
wellness center, this longstanding Bend race usually draws about 500 participants, most of whom compete
in patriotic garb. The annual Todd Beamer Memorial Run in Madras offers a 10K dis-
tance for runners, a 6-mile route for walkers, and a 2-mile fun run/walk
for those seeking a shorter trek. Cyclists also have an organized group option Friday in Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation's 15th
annual Firecracker 100K road ride.
— Bulletin staff report
A group ride with three aid stations, the Firecracker starts and finishes at
BASEBALL
Brasada Ranch Resort's equestrian center in Powell Butte.
Elks rally in 8th to deat Falcons A five-run eighth inning allowed the Bend Elks to turn a 2-1deficit into an eventually 6-2 win over the Kelowna Falcons at GennaStadium on Wednesday night. The Falcons scored two runs in the top of the second inning, capped by anRBIdouble by Josh Croft. After Bend logged a runin the third on a fielder's choice, the Elks erupted for five runs — four runs with two outs — in the bottom of the eighth.
Zach Close hada hit, drove in a runand scored twice for Bend (14-11), and Justin Erlandson andJosh Cushing cameinto the game in the eighth and each delivered ahit and an RBI. Zack Carter went six innings on the mound and gave upjust two runs to get the win for the Elks, and Jordan Wilcox and Louis Cohen combined to limit Kelowna (7-17) to just one hit the rest of the way. — Bulletin staff report
On Saturday, the High Desert Omnium begins with a road race at Edison Sno-park. The two-day, three-
stage event continues Sunday with a time trial and criterium at the Bend Municipal Airport east of town.
Sunday also is the rescheduled date for the Dirty Half trail half marathon
that was originally scheduled for June 8. Registration is still open for the race that typically draws more than Kris Stalnaker / For the Bulletin
Kate Campbell and her quarter horse mare Pop Tart compete in the barrel racing at the Pacific Northwest Invitational Championships last Saturday. Campbell won the regional event with a time of 14.62 seconds.
• The Pacific Northwest Invitational Championshipwere s held this past weekend By Emily Oller
"The regional event gives
The Bulletin
The inaugural Northwest regional high school equestrian competition went off pretty much without a hitch. Nearly 400 riders and their horses
traveled from all over Oregon and Washington to compete in the Pacific Northwest Invitational Champion-
ships, which took place this past weekend at the Deschutes County
those OHSET kids the
opportunity to compete at a higher level. Most of these
other for regional titles.
"We thought it was wonderful,"
WAHSET state chair Bev Matney said. "The kids were excited and we
were excited. My role was to work with the Oregon state chair (Candi
Oregon were top-five finishers in total
of seven dasses. One of those competitors was Bend High's Kate Campbell, who was an alternate until weeks be-
fore the regional meet when one of the OHSET qualifiers dropped out of the barrel racing. competition." "Iwasn'teven supposed to compete — BendHigh coach Penny Campbell (in the barrels)," the recent graduate
kids don't see that level of
Fair 8r Expo Center in Redmond. The
top five to seven state finishers from the Oregon High School Equestrian Teams (OHSET) and the Washington High School Equestrian Teams (WAHSET) faced off against one an-
three-day meet, 10 riders from Central
Bothum) to make sure everything ran smoothly." Organizers expect the regional meet to become an annual affair, and Washington is planning to host the meet in 2015. Few changes are expected. "We'll keep the event the way it is next year," Matney said. "We might streamline some things, but everythingran the wayit was supposed to." Of the 25 events staged during the
500 runners.
Weekend events FRIDAY • Spark Your Heart 5K Walk/Run in Bend's Riverbend Park, 8 a.m.; www. foundation.stcharleshealthcare.org/ Events/Spark-Your-Heart • Todd BeamerMemorial Run (10K run, 6-mile walk, or 2-mile fun run/walk) in Madras, 7 a.m.: www.macaquatic.com/ recreation/races • MBSEF Firecracker100K bike ride, starts and finishes at BrasadaRanch in Powell Butte, 8 a.m.; www.mbsef.org
said. "I knew I had the potential, so if I
SATURDAY
just focused I knew I could do well." Campbell's alternate status heading
• High Desert Omnium road race, starts and finishes at Edison Sno-park, 9 a.m.; www.highdesertomnium.com SUNDAY • The Dirty Half half marathon at Phil's Trail in Bend, 7 a.m.; www.footzonebend. com/dirty half • High Desert Omnium time trial and criterium at BendMunicipal Airport, 10 a.m.; www.highdesertomnium.com
into the regional meet did not stop
her from grabbing a first-place finish ahead of OHSET Central District teammate and Ridgeview junior Sa-
vannah Geist, winning with a time of 14.62 seconds. Campbell also competed in the figure eight event, where she tied with Amity High's Sarah Larson for second place. SeeEquestrian/C4
WSN wins9-10 LL district title The Warm Springs Nation 9-10 softball
WORLD CUP
BASEBALL
team won theOregon 6 Little Leaguedistrict title in Hermiston on Wednesday with a12-1 victory over Redmond. For more Little League district results, see Scoreboard,C2.
U.S. keeperHoward not imited by hisTourette's
A semnd chancefor cheaters, jars andstars
By Terrence McCoy
arry Bonds is getting a second chance, hardly surprising because baseball is a game of second
CYCLING Who to watch for during the Tour
Goalkeepers are a notoriously odd bunch. In their
richer than most. Howard, who on Tuesday solidified his position as the greatest goalkeeper in na-
dress, they adopt the colors
tional history, has Tourette's
chances.
Ten riders to keep aneye on in the battles for the yellow, green, white and polka dot jerseys,C4
of a snow cone, all neons and hot greens. They wear gloves
syndrome. Though the United
that are better suited for
Belgium 2-1, the ending tally would have been much, much
Seven years after the San Francisco Giants decided hisservices would no longer be needed, a group of federal judges will reconsider Bonds' conviction for giving evasive testimony to a grand jury investigating the use of performance-enhancing
The Washington Post
space than sport. Their hairdos range from mohawks to dreadlocks to blond Afros. But
even by such lofty standards of quirk, the tale of American goalkeeper Tim Howard is
States lost its game against worse if not for Howard. He
MarcioJose Sanchez 1The Associated Press
had 16 saves, three more than the previous World Cup re-
United States goalkeeper
cord of 13.
SeeHoward/C4
Tim Howard has Tourette's sydrome, which has resulted in
some ridicule during hia career.
TIM DAHLBERG drugs. It may not be as good as a ticket to Cooperstown, but a win by Bonds would mean he can live without
"convicted felon" being written in front of his name.
SeeChances/C3
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
ON THE AIR
COHKBOARD
TODAY TENNIS
Wimbledon, women's semifinals
BASEBALL
GOLF
6:30 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 1:30 a.m. Golf
EuropeanTour,Alstom OpendeFrance Web.comTour:NovaScotiaOpen PGA Tour,Greenbrier Classic EuropeanTour,Alstom OpendeFrance BASEBALL
MLB, St. Louis at SanFrancisco 12:30 p.m. MLB MLB,LosAngelesDodgersatColoradoRockies OR NewYork Yankeesat Minnesota Twins 5p . m . MLB College, HomeRunDerby 5:30 p.m. ESPN AUTORACING NASCARSprint Cup, CokeZero 400 practice 1 p.m . FS1 N ASCAR Sprint Cup, CokeZero 400, final practice3:30 p.m. F S1
HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedLHPKevinChapman toOklahomaCity (PCL). Reinstated RH PAnthony Bassfromthe15-day DL.Agreedto termswith RHP FranklinPerez,SSMiguelangel SierraandCBrandon
IN THE BLEACHERS
Little League
Benaventonm e inor leaquecontracts.
OregonDistrict 6 at Hermiston
In the Bleachers o 2014 steve Moore. Dist. by Univerual Ucsck www.gocomics.com/Inthebleachers
9-10 soflball championship WarmSpringsNation,12, Redmond8 11-12 soflball Columbia11,WarmSprings Nation1 13-14 Juniorssoftball Hermiston16,WarmSprings Nation 4 9-10 baseball Bend North14,South Central1 10-11 baseball BendNorth5,BendSouth4 11-12 baseball Bend South11,Hermiston 0 13-14 Juniorsbaseball Columbia13,JeffersonCounty1
AA'LucKF
WCL WESTCOASTLEAGUE
All TimesPDT
FRIDAY TENNIS
Wimbledon, men's semifinals
5 a.m.
E S PN
AUTO RACING
Formula One,British Grand Prix, practice NASCARNationwide, Subway Firecracker 250, qualifying NASCAR Sprint Cup, CokeZero 400, qualifying NASCARNationwide, Subway Firecracker 250
6 a.m. N BCSN FS1 noon 2 p.m. FS1 4:30 p.m. ESPN2
BASEBALL
MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Minnesota MLB, TampaBayat Detroit MLB, Seattle at ChicagoWhite Sox
noon 4 p.m. 4 p.m.
E S P N2 E S PN Roo t
FOOTBALL
Australia, Richmond vs. Brisbane Lions Australia, Gold Coast SUNS vs. Collingwood GOLF EuropeanTour,Alstom OpendeFrance Web.comTour,NovaScotiaOpen PGA Tour,Greenbrier Classic SOCCER World Cup, Francevs. Germany World Cup, Brazil vs. Colombia MLS, NewYork at Houston MLS, Portland at LosAngeles
8 :30 p.m. F S 2 11:30 p.m. FS2 6:30 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 8:30 a.m. ESPN2
12:30 p.m. ESPN 5:30 p.m. NBCSN 8 p.m. NBCSN
Easl Division W L Y akima Valey Pippins 13 8 W enatchee AppleSox 13 1 1 WallaWallaSweets 8 13 KelownaFalcons 7 17 South Division W L CorvaffisKnights 14 10 MedfordRogues 12 9 BendElks 14 11 KlamathFals Gems 7 13 West Division W
L
Bellingham Bells 15 5 C owlitz BlackBears 1 1 10 VictoriaHarbourcats 9 12 KitsapBlueJackets 8 12
Pct GB .619 .542 11/2 .381 5 .292 71/2 Pct GB .583 .571 1/2 .560 1/2 .350 5 Pct GB .750 .524 41/2 .429 61/2 .400 7
Wednesday'sGames Bend6, Kelowna2 Corvaffis7, Medford 0 YakimaValey 7, Walla Walla 2 Bellingham 7,Wenatchee6 Victoria17,Kitsap3 Today'sGames CoryaffisatKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. Yakima Valey at Walla Wala, 7:05p.m. Cowlitz atBellingham,7:05p.m. Friday's Games Yakima Valey at Walla Wala,1:05 p.m. Cowlitz atBellingham,1:05p.m. Bendat Medford,1:05 p.m. Wenatc heeatKelowna,6:35p.m. Victoria atKitsap, 6:35p.m. CorvaffisatKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. Saturday'sGames CorvaffisatKlamath Falls, 6:35p.m. BendatMedford,6:35p.m. Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Walla Walla,7:05p.m. Cowlitz atBellingham,7:05p.m. Victoria atKitsap,7:35 p.m.
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
NBA NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Free Agents r-restricted,all othersunreslristed
Wednesday'sSummary
Elks 6, Falcons 2 Kelowna Bend
020000000 — 2 7 1 001 BOO ggx — 6 6 1
Alderman,Barr (7), Herendeen(8) and Colombini; Carter,Wilcox(7), Cohen (8)andFinfer, Wildung (9).
SPORTS IN BRIEF
W—Wilcox.L—Barr,1-2. 2B— Kelowna:Church, Croft.
TENNIS
FOOTBALL Ex-Duck AIOIISO tearS ACL —Kiko Alonso's season is over before it even beganafter the Buffalo Bills' starting linebacker was diagnosed with a torn ligament in hjs left knee. General managerDoug Whaley said the 23-year-old Alonso, who played atOregon from 2008-2012, will require surgery to repair a torn ACL,and"will likely miss the 2014season." Alonso was anNFLdefensive rookie of the year contender last seasonafter being drafted in the second round. He led Buffalo with159 tackles andtwo fumble recoveries andtied for the team leadwith four interceptions while barely missing a snap in playing all16 games.
ArbitratOr ruleS SaintS' Graham iS a tight end — Anarbitrator has sided with the NewOrleans Saints in ruling that Jimmy Graham canonly be considered atightend for the purposes of hjs franchise tag designation. The ruling Wednesday is setback for Graham, agent Jimmy Sexton andthe NFLPlayers Association, who filed a grievance arguing that Graham was used asa wide receiver often enough to qualify for the more lucrative receiver tag. NFL franchise tags, which allow teams to keeponeprized free agent, wasset this year $7 million for tight ends and$12.3 million for receivers. The NFLPAsays it's reviewing the ruling and will advise Graham onhjs options, which could include anappeal.
BASKETBALL
Wimbledon Wednesday atTheAllEnglandLawn Tennis BCroquet Club, London Purse:S42.5million(GrandSlam) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Men Ouarterlinals Grigor Dimitrov(11), Bulgaria, def.AndyMurray (3), Britain,6-1,7-6 (4), 6-2. Novak Djokovic (1),Serbia,def. MarinCilic (26), Croatia,6-1, 3-6,6-7(4), 6-2, 6-2. RogerFederer(4), Switzerland, def. StanWawrinka (5), Switzerland, 3-6,7-6(5), 6-4, 6-4. Milos Raonic(6), Canada, def.NickKyrgios,Australia, 6-7(4), 6-2, 6-4,7-6 (4). Women Ouarterlinals SimonaHalep (3), Rom ania, def. SabineLisicki (19),Germ any, 6-4, 6-0. EugenieBouchard (13), Canada, def. Angelique Kerber(9),Germany,6-3, 6-4.
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT
Atlanta
NetS reaCh agreement With HollinS — TheBrooklyn Nets reached anagreement in principle Wednesday with Lionel Hollins to become their coach, moving quickly after the departure of Jason Kidd. Thedeal with the former Memphis Grizzlies coachcametwo days after the Netsmadea trade with Milwaukee toallow Kidd out of hjs contract so the Buckscould hire him. Hollins led Memphis to 56 victories and the2013 Western Conferencefinals before heandthe Grizzlies parted ways. Hollins, 60, went 214-201 with the Grizzlies and improved the team's record in each ofhjs four full seasons. His11 seasons as anNBAplayer included his first four-plus with Portland; he was a starting guard for theTrail Blazers'1976-77 championship team.
HOCKEY SigggiIIIIS SIOWdOWnOn SeCOnd day — The frenzy of highpriced signings and big-nametrades that took place to openthe league's annual summersigning period on Tuesday, slowed to a trickle a daylater. Therewere afew notable signings that took place on Wednesday. TheNew YorkIslandersmadethebiggestsplashby signing forwards Mikhail Grabovski and Nikolai Kulemin to four-year contracts. Grabovski's deal is worth $20 million, while Kulemin will make $16.75 million. TheNashville Predators signed veteran center Olli Jokinen to aone-year, $2.5 million deal. Just as notable wasthe list of players — many of themaging veterans — still on the market. It's a group that included goalie Martin Brodeur, the league's career victory leader, forwards RadimVrbata, Dany Heatley, Mike Ribeiro, David Legwand, Ville Leino andSteve Ott.
SOCCER FIFA COuldallOWeXtra Sub in eXtra time — Substitutes have made abig impact at the World Cup, and there could more of them in four years' time. FIFA'scoaching advisers will propose that teams can use a fourth substitute in extra time before the 2018 World Cup kicks off. Up to three replacements are currently allowed. So far, substitutes havescored 29 goals after coming off the bench in Brazil, already a World Cuprecord with eight matches left to play. The previous mark was 23 atthe2006 tournament in Germany, FIFAsaid. The panel has previously rejected the fourth sub plan.
GOLF Bay Area tohost MatChPlay, PGA,PreSidentSCUPThe southwest corridor of SanFrancisco is going to getall the golf it can handle overthe next decade.TPCHarding Parkwill host the Match Play Championship in 2015,the PGAChampionship in 2020 andthe Preside ntsCupin2025.TheannouncementwasmadeWednesday. The Swinging Skirts LPGA Classic, which was held onthe last weekend of April thisyear, is set to return to LakeMerced just down the roadin Daly City in 2015.Andthe inaugural U.S.Amateur Four-Ball Championship is scheduled fromApril 30 to May 6at The Olympic Club. — From staffand wire reports
Chicago Connecticut Indiana Washington NewYork
EasternConference w L 11 5 6 8 6
7
9 9 9
.4 7 1 .4 7 1 ,47 1
3 r/2 3 '/2 3i/z
1 1 . 389 5
6 11
. 353 5'/2
W L 12 3 12 5 9 8 6 9
PctGB . 8 00 . 706 1 .5 2 9 4 .4 0 0 6
WesternConference
Phoenix Minnesota SanAntonio LosAngeles Seattle Tulsa
p ctOB
. 6 66
7 11 .3 8 9 6 '/2 6 10 . 375 6r/2
Wednesday'sGames Indiana 80,Washington77 Phoenix87,Chicago69 Today'sGames Tulsaat Connecticut, 4p.m. SanAntonioat Minnesota,5 p.m. Los Angeleat s Seattle, 7p.m.
ATLANTA —GustavoAyon, Elton Brand, r-Shelvin Mack,Cartier Martin, r-MikeScot BOSTON —JoelAnthony,Jerryd Bayless,r-Avery Bradley,KrisHumphries BROOKLY N— Alan Anderson, AndreyBlatche, JasonCollins, Andrei Kirilenko,ShaunLivingston, PaulPierce CHARLO TTE — Chris Douglas-Roberts, Ben Gordon ,JoshMcRoberts,JanneroPargo,LukeRidnour,AnthonyTolliver, D.J.White CHICAGO —D.J.Augustin,JimmerFredette, Kirk Hinrich,NazrMohammed CLEVELAND — Luol Deng,Spencer Hawes, C.J. Miles DALLAS —DeJuanBlair, VinceCarter, r-Jae Crowder,Deyin Harris, BernardJames, ShawnMarion, Dirk Nowitzki DENVER — Darreff Arthur, AaronBrooks, Nate Robinson,JanVesely DETROIT —Chauncey Bilups, JonasJerebko, r-GregMonroe, Rodney Stuckey,Charlie Vilanueva GOLDENSTATE— SteveBlake,JordanCrawford,JermainO e'Neal HOUSTON — r-TroyDaniels, FranciscoGarcia, JordanHamilton, r-Chandler Parsons INDIANA — LavoyAllen, Rasual Butler, Andrew Bynum,LanceStephenson,EvanTurner L.A. CLIPPERS — DarrenCollison, GlenDavis, DannyGranger,Wilie Green, RyanHollings, Hedo Turkoglu L.A. LAKERS —Kent Bazem ore, MarSho n Brooks,JordanFarmar, PauGasol, Xavier Henry, Jordan Hill,WesleyJohnson, ChrisKaman, r-RyanKelly, JodieMeeks, NickYoung MEMPHIS —Ed Davis, JamesJohnson, Mike Miller, Zach Randolph, BenoUdrih MIAMI — RayAllen, Chris Anderson,Shane Battier,MichaelBeasley, Chris Bosh,Mario Chalmers, Toney Douglas,UdonisHaslem,LeBronJames,James Jones, RashardLewis,GregOden,DwyaneWade MILWAUKE E —Jef Adrien,Ram on Sessions, EkpeUdoh MINNESOTA — DanteCunningham,Robbie Hummel, OthyusJeff ers NEW ORLE ANS— Al-FarouqAminu, Darius Miller, AnthonyMorrow,Brian Roberts, JasonSmith, JamesSoutherland NEWYORK—ColeAldrich, Carme lo Anthony, AndreaBargnani, KenyonMartin, ToureMurry, Amar'e Stoudemire,MettaWorld Peace OKLAHOM ACITY—CaronButler,DerekFisher, r-GrantJerrett,ThaboSefolosha ORLANDO —Doron Lamb, ETwaunMoore,JameerNelson PHILADELHI PA—JamesAnderson, ByronMullens, JasonRichardson,AdonisThomas PHOENIX —Leandro Barbosa, r-Eric Bledsoe, ChanningFrye,EmekaOkafor, r-PJ.Tucker PORTLAND —Earl Wa tson, MoWilliams SACRAM ENTO—JaredCunningham,RudyGay, AaronGray,r-IsaiahThomas SAN ANTO NIO— r-Aron Baynes, Matt Bonner, Boris Diaw, TimDuncan, Damion James,Paty Mils TORONTO — Kyle Lowry, r-NandoDeColo, r-PatrickPatterson r-GreivisVasquez UTAH —r-GordonHayward, RichardJefferson, Brandon Rush, Marvin Wiliams WASHINGTON — Trevor Ariza, r-TrevorBooker, DrewGooden, Marcin Gortat, Al Harrington,r-Kevin Seraphin,ChrisSingleton,Garrett Temple
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Points leaders 1,Jeff Gordon,618.2,JimmieJohnson,594.3, Dale EarnhardtJr., 594.4, BradKeselowski, 560.5, Matt Kenseth,555.6,CarlEdwards,536.7,JoeyLogano,519.8, RyanNewman, 514. 9, Kevin Harvick, 509. 10,KyleBusch, 506. 11, PaulMenard, 466. 12, Kyle Larson,474. 13,GregBiffle, 474. 15, Kasey Kahne,465.16,TonyStewart,460. 17,DennyHamlin, 455. 16,AustinDilon, 455. 19,BrianVickers,442.
SOCCER World Cup OUARTER FINALS
Friday's Games Francevs.Germany,9 a.m. Brazilvs.Colombia,1 p.m. Saturday'sGames Argentinavs.Belgium, 9a.m. Netherlands vs. CostaRica,1 p.m.
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Reinstated LHP Tyler Skaqqsfromthe15-davDL. KANSASCITY ROYALS— OptionedRHPMichael Mariot toOmaha(PCL). Recaled RH PCaseyColeman
from Omaha. MINNESOTA TWINS— Placed1BJoeMaueron the15-dayDL.Recaled tB/OFChris Colabello from Rochester(IL). NEWYORKYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP DeshornLakeonaminor leaguecontract.SentLHPCC SabathiatoTrenton (EL)for arehabassignment. TAMPABAY RAYS — RecalledLHPJeffBeliveau fromDurham(IL). TORO NTOBLUEJAYS—Agreedto termswith RHP Jeff Hoffman and CMax Pentecost onminor league contracts. National League ATLANT ABRAVES—OptionedRHPJuanJaimeto Gwinnett(IL).ReinstatedRHPDavidCarpenter fromthe 15-dayDL ARIZON ADIAMONDBACKS—Agreedtotermswith CNateIrvingonaminorleaguecontract. CINCINN ATI REDS—Traded RHPJair Jurrjensto Coloradofor1BHarold Riggins. OptionedRHPRaisel IglesiastoLouisville (IL). COLOR ADOROCKIES—Sent LHPBrett Anderson to Colorado Springs (PCL)fora rehabassignment. MIAMIMARLINS — Placed RHPA.J.Ramoson the15-dayDL,retroactiveto Friday.Recaled1BJustin BourfromNewOrleans(PCL). NEWYORKMETS—Agreed to termswith RHPs DanielGuzmanandAgustin Castila, OFClaudioGeraldoandSSsYoelRomero,EdgardoFerminandHansel Moreno onminorleaquecontracts. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES— PlacedOFDomonic Brown onpaternity leave.Recaled OFAaron Altherr from Reading(EL). ReinstatedRHPMiguelAlfredo Gonzalezfromthe60-dayDLandoptionedhimto Reading. TransferredRH PMikeAdamstothe60-dayDL. Sent C Wil Nievesto theGCLPhillies forarehabassignment. ST.LOUISCARDINALS— RecalledOFOscarTaveras fromMemphis (PCL). Sent2B Kolten Wong to Memphifor s arehabassignment. SANDIEG OPADRES—Placed SSEverth Cabrera on the15-dayDL,retroactive to Tuesday. Selectedthe contract of 3BBrooksConrad from El Paso(PCL). TransferredLHPTroy Patton to the60-dayDL Agreed to termswithOFSethSmith onathree-year contract. WASHING TONNATIONALS—Agreedtotermswith OFYoelAndujar,SSBryanBencosme,OFJuanEvangelista,SSAdanlis MartinezandOFBrailin Mesaonminor
league contracts.
BASKETB ALL
National Basketball Association BOSTON CELTICS—Agreedto termswith GAvery Bradleyonafour-year contract. BROOKLYN NETS— NamedLionelHollinscoach. FOOTBALL
NationalFootball League
NFL— NamedCharlesWayheadofplayerengageMLS mentdepartment. MAJORLEAGUESOCCER BALTI MORE RAVENS— Traded LB RolandoMcAll TimesPDT Clainanda2016 seventh-rounddraft pickto Dallas for a 2016 se venth-round draftpick. EasternConference HOCKEY W L T Pls GF GA National HockeyLeague S porting KansasCity 7 5 4 2 5 2 2 14 A NAHEIM DU CKS — SignedGJasonLaBarberato D.C. Untied 7 5 4 2 5 22 17 N ew England 7 6 2 23 22 2 1 aone-yearcontract. CAROLINAHURRICANES— SignedC Jay McTorontoFC 6 4 3 2 1 16 16 to aone-yearcontract. NewYork 4 5 7 1 9 2 4 2 4 Clement CHICAG OBLACKHAWKS—Agreedtotermswith D Columbus 4 5 7 1 9 16 16 Kyle Cum iskeyonaone-year contract. Philadelphia 4 7 6 1 8 25 28 DALLAS STARS— Signed CVernonFiddler to a Houston 5 10 2 1 7 1 6 3 2 two-year contractandLWBrendanRanford to athreeChicago 2 4 9 1 5 23 26 year, entry-l e velcontract. Montreal 3 7 5 1 4 16 26 DETROIR TEDWINGS— SignedD KyleQuincey WesternConference a two-year contract andFAndyMieleto aone-year W L T Pts BF BA to contract. 11 3 2 3 5 33 23 Seattle FLORIDA PANTHERS— Agreed to terms with G Colorado 7 5 4 2 5 2 3 1 8 SamBrittain onanentry-level contractandDBlake RealSaltLake 6 3 7 2 5 2 5 2 2 Parlett on aone-year,two-waycontract. FC Dallas 6 7 5 2 3 28 28 MINNES OTAWILD—Agreedto termswith RWJoel Vancouver 5 3 7 2 2 2 5 2 2 Rechliczonaone-year, two-waycontract. LosAngeles 5 3 5 2 0 17 11 NASHVILL EPREDATORS— SignedCOlliJokinen Portland 4 5 8 2 0 2 8 2 8 to a one-ye arcontract. ChivasUSA 4 7 5 1 7 16 26 NEWJERSEYDEVILS— Re-signedFsSteveBerniSanJose 4 7 4 1 6 1 5 1 6 erandStephenGionta. NEW YORKISLANDERS — Si gned Fs Mikhail Today'sGames GrabovskiandNikolai Kuleminto four-year contracts. Chicago1,TorontoFC1,tie Agreedto termswith FCoryConacher ona one-year ChivasUSA1, SanJose0 contract. Friday's Games NEWYORKRANGERS—Agreedto termswith F NewYorkatHouston, 5:30 p.m. ChrisBourque. Philadelphiaat FCDallas, 6p.m. PHILADEPLHIAFLYERS— SignedDNickSchultz ColumbusatColorado,6:30p.m. to a one-year contract. NewEnglandatReal Salt Lake,7p.m. PITTSBURGHPENGUINS— SignedFSteveDownPortlandat LosAngeles,8p.m. ie to aone-yearcontract. Saturday'sGames SANJOSESHARKS— SignedFJohnScotttoa one-year contract. D.C.Unitedat Toronto,5 p.m. VANCO UVERCANUCKS—SignedRWRadimVrSeattleatVancouver,7 p.m. bata toatwo-yearcontract. MontrealatChivasUSA, 7:30p.m. WINNIPE GJETS—Agreedtotermswith GMichael Sunday'sGames Hutchinson onatwo-yearcontractandDWill ON ' eil on Chicagoat Sporting KansasCity,noon
NWSL NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE All TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGames Washington 3, Boston3, tie Seattle FC 2, WesternNewYork1 Houstonat SkyBlueFC,ppd. Friday's Game Chicago at Portland,11 a.m. Saturday'sGame Western NewYorkat Houston,6 p.m. Sunday'sGames FCKansasCityatSkyBlueFC,3p.m. Bostonat Seattle FC,4p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
BOSTON REDSOX — Sent 3B Will Middlebrooks toPawtucket (IL) for arehabassignment. CHICAGO WHITESOX— Claimed RHPAngel Sanchez off waiversfromTampaBay and optioned him toWinston-Salem(Carolina). Agreedto terms with C Jhoandro Alfaro andINFsFelix Mercedes, RickyMota and Amado Nunez on minorleague contracts.
aone-year,two-waycontract. SOCCER Major League Soccer PORTLAND TIMBERS— WaivedM AaronLong. COLLEG E GEORGEWASHINGTON— NamedMelissaDunne women'a sssistant basketball coach. GEOR GETOWN— Named Erik Supplee assistant baseballcoach. HOLYCROSS— NamedJordanNiesmen' sassistantlacrosse coach. MARQ UETTE—Announcedmen'sjunior basketball FWallyEllensonhastransferredfromMinnesota. NORTHTEXAS— SuspendedLBSedEllisandTE ChrisLovingindefinitely fromthefootball team.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd B onneville 3,487 6 4 5 1 ,018 5 6 5 T he Daffes 2,113 36 3 5 3 5 29 8 John Day 1,507 22 1 2 6 2 12 9 McNary 2,544 5 5 6 317 154 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Wednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 306,889 41,332 17,923 6,618 The Daffes236,096 31,636 5,969 2,532 John Day 205,205 28,122 6,644 2,642 McNary 182,289 24,707 3,700 1,361
WIMBLEDON
Halep, Bouchard tomeet in semifinal By Bill Dwyre
er in the semifinals, and the
Los Angeles Times
winner will face the winner of the match between Petra
WIMBLEDON, EnglandToday's women's semifinals at Wimbledon will not trigger great name recognition from the general fan. Maybe even the ardent tennis fan.
Newcomers are beginning to emerge in tennis, and this year's women's bracket is no exception.
7vvo barely twenty-somethings, Simona Halep and Eugenie Bouchard, completed the women's semifinal field Wednesday with impressive victories.
Halep beat last year's finalist, Sabine Lisicki of Germany, 6-4, 6-0, and Bouchard
scored a 6-3, 6-4 win over another German, Angelique Kerber, who had taken out
Maria Sharapova on Tuesday. They will play each oth-
Bouchard is 20. She is a
Kvitova of the Czech Repub-
former Wimbledon junior championfrom Canada. She has improved greatly this
lic and her countrywoman
year too. At Wimbledon last
Lucie Safarova. Of the remaining semifinalists, Kvitova is best known because of her 2011 title here.
Halep is 22 and from Ro-
Despite their youth, each
player carried a bit of a swagger in her post-match news conference.
Said Halep: "I can handle year, she was No. 66. Now, the pressure." a fter her q u arterfinal w i n Said Bouchard, "I played Wednesday, she is No. 8. here last year. I won a match She also made it to the ort Centre Court. I made the semifinals at the Australian
third round. Even last year, I
and French Opens this year. felt like I belonged." Halep a n d Bo u chard The best-known players games. played at Indian Wells in in the draw are long gone. "I was a little bit lost on the March and Halep won in China's Li Na went out in the court. But in the beginning three sets. second round, Venus artd Seronly," Halep said. "My favorite thing about ena Williams in the third and She is among the more England i s Wi m bledon," Sharapova in the fourth. i mproved players on t h e Bouchard said. "It's like a tour. Last year at this time, magical two weeks here. I she was ranked No. 32. Now hope I can stay a few more she is No. 3 and if she beats days." Bouchard, she will be No. 2. Halep lost the French Open Serena Williams will retain final to Sharapova in three her No. 1 ranking no matter sets. Sharapova had beaten bendbulletin.com what the women's outcome is Bouchard in three sets in the here. semifinals. mania. She spotted Lisicki a 4-1 lead and won the next 11
Find It All
Online
THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL uutandings
American League
AH TimesPDT
Mariners 5, Astros 2
AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division W L
Toronto Baltimore NewYork Boston Tampa Bay
47 39 45 39 41 42 38 47 38 49
Central Division W L
Detroit Kansas City
47 34 44 40 41 43 40 46 38 45
Cleyeland Chicago Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston
West Division W L 51 33 47 47 37 36
36 38 47 50
Pct GB
.547 .536 1
494 41/2
.447 8'/z
437 91/2
Pct GB .580 .524 4'/z .488 7'/z .465 9'/z
.458 10
Pct GB .607 .566 3'/z .553 4'/z .440 14 .419 16
Wednesday'sGames
Toronto7, Milwaukee4 Tampa Bay6, N.Y.Yankees3 Detroit 9,Oakland3 Kansas City4, Minnesota0 Seattle 5, Houston2 Cleyeland 5, L.A.Dodgers4 Baltimore 6,Texas4 Chicago Cubs16, Boston9 Chicago WhiteSox3, LA. Angels 2
Today'sGames Texas (Darvish8-4) at Baltimore(W.chen 7-3), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Bedard4-5) at Detroit (Scherzer9-3), 4:08 p.m. N.Y.Yank ees(Tanaka 11-3) at Minnesota(PHughes 8-4),5;10p.m. Toronto(Dickey6-7)at Oakland(Gray7-3), 6:05p.m. Houston(Oberholtzer2-6) at LA.Angels (Shoemaker 5-2), 7:05 p.m. Friday's Games BaltimoreatBoston, 10:35a.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Minnesota,12:10 p.m. TorontoatOakland,1;05 p.m. KansasCityatCleveland,4:05p.m. Tampa Bayat Detroit, 4:08p.m. Seattle atChicagoWhite Sox, 4:10p.m. Texas atN.Y.Mets,4:10p.m. Housto natL.A.Angels,6:05p.m.
Atlanta Washington Miami NewYork Philadelphia Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati
Chicago
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L 38 38 43 48 48
Pct GB .553 548 '/z .488 5'I~ .435 10 .429 10'/z
43 41 37 46
Pct GB .593 .529 5'/z .524 6 .512 7 .446 12'/z
47 46 41 37 36
Central Division W L 51 35 45 40 44 40 West Division W L
SanFrancisco LosAngeles SanDiego Colorado Arizona
47 48 38 36 35
37 39 47 49 51
Pct GB .560 .552 '/z 447 gl/2 424 11r/r
.407 13
Wednesday'sGames Toronto7, Milwaukee4 Cleveland 5, L.A.Dodgers4 San Diego 3, Cincinnati 0 Washington 4, Colorado 3 Pittsburgh5,Arizona1 Chicago Cubs16, Boston9 Atlanta 3,N.Y.Mets1 Miami 5,Philadelphia0 St. Louis2,SanFrancisco0
Today'sGames St. Louis(C.Martinez1-3) at SanFrancisco(Bumgarner 9-5),12:45 p.m. Philadelphia(K.Kendrick 3-8) at Miami (Hand0-1), 3:10 p.m. Arizona (Mccarthy2-10)at Pittsburgh(Worley2-0), 4:05 p.m. LA. Dodgers(Greinke10-4) at Colorado(F.Morales 4-4),5;10p.m. Friday's Games Chicag oCubsatWashington,8:05a.m. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh,2:05p.m. SanFranciscoatSanDiego,3:40p.m. Milwaukee atCincinnati,4:10 p.m. Texas atN.Y.Mets,4:10p.m. Miami at St. Louis,4:15p.m. Arizona at Atlanta, 4:35p.m. L.A. Dodgers atColorado,5:10p.m.
Leaders ThroughWednesday's Games AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —Altuve, Houston, .343; Beltre,Texas, .335; VMartinez,Detroit, .323; Cano,Seattle, .323; Brantley,Cleveland,.312;Trout, LosAngeles, .311; Micabrera,Detroit,.311. RBI — Encarnacion, Toronto,69;Ncruz, Baltimore, 68; JAbreu,Chicago,67; Micabrera, Detroit, 67; Moss, Oakland,62;Trout,LosAngeles,62;Donaldson, Oakland, 61. HOME RUNS —JAbreu, Chicago, 26; Ncruz, Baltimore,26;Encarnacion,Toronto,26; VMartinez, Detroit, 20; Moss,Oakland,19; Ortiz, Boston,19; Trout,LosAngeles,19. STOLEN BASES—Altuve,Houston,37; Ellsbury, NewYork,23;RDavis, Detroit, 22;AEscobar, Kansas City,20;Andrus,Texas,18; JJones,Seatle,17; LMartin,Texas,17. ERA—Ta naka, NewYork, 2.10; FHernandez, Seattle, 2.10; Darvish,Texas,2.42; Buehrle, Toronto, 2.50; KazmirOa , kland,2.61; ASanchez, Detroit, 2.63; KeuchelHoust , on,2.78. NATIONALLEAGUE BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado,.351; Lucroy, Milwaukee,.331;MaAdams,St.Louis,.319; Morneau, Colorado,.315;Puig,LosAngeles,.314; Stanton,Miami, .313; AMccutchen, Pittsburgh,.313. RBI — Stanton, Miami,61;Morneau,Colorado,58; GoldschmidAri t, zona,53;AdGonzalez,LosAngeles, 52; Desmond, Washington, 51; Howard, Philadelphia, 51; Braun,Milwaukee,49; Byrd, Philadelphia,49; AMccutchen, Pittsburgh,49; McG ehee,Miami,49. HOMERUNS—Stanton, Miami,21; Tulowilzki, Colorado,18;Frazier,Cincinnati,17; Rizzo,Chicago, 17; Byrd,Philadelphia,16;Gattis, Atlanta,16;JUpton, Atlanta,16. STOLENBASES—DGordon, LosAngeles, 40; BHamilton,Cincinnati, 35;Revere,Philadelphia, 23; EYoung, NewYork, 22;SMarte, Pittsburgh,19; Blackmon,Colorado,15;Rollins,Philadelphia,15. ERA —Wainwright, St. Louis,1.89;Cueto, Cincinnati,1.99;Teheran, Atlanta, 2.29.
National League
Tigers 9, Athletics 3 DETROIT — Torii Hunter hit three
RBI singles andcapped asix-run HOUSTON —LoganMorrison burst in the sixth that propelled drove in two runs in abig sixth Detroit to a three-gamesweep. inning, Chris Youngpitched seven Justin Verlander won for the first strong innings andSeattle comtime since May30. Oakland still pleted athree-game sweep.The has the best record in the majors Mariners were down bytwo before despite its stumble at Comerica a four-run sixth inning, highlighted Park. by Morrison's double to right field that put them ontop. Oakland Detroit
Marlins 5, Phillies 0 MIAMI — CaseyMcGehee reached basethree times, doubled home a run andscored another, helping Miami send Philadelphia to its sixth straight loss. Tom Koehler allowed three hits in six innings and earned his first victory since June 4.Jarrod Saltalamacchia hit a two-run homer in
Interieague
Cardinals 2, Giants 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Adam Wainwright allowed four hits over 7'/5
innings, and Matt Carpenter had three hits and drove in arun, improving to.520 (26 for 50) against San Francisco to help St. Louis end a three-game losing streak.
Cnbs16, RedSox9 BOSTON —Justi nRuggiano, Mike Olt andWelington Castillo hit two-run homers to powerChicago in the finale of a three-game interleague series sweep.Ruggiano drove in five runs, Darwin Barney had four hits and NateSchierholtz added a solo homer for Chicago.
San Francrsco ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt3b 4 0 3 1 GBlanccf 4 0 0 0 H ollidylf 4 0 2 1 Pencerf 4 0 1 0 Chicago Boston ab r hbi ab r hbi M Adms1b 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 0 0 0 the ninth. ab r hbi ab r hbi Crispcf 4 2 3 1 AJcksncf 5 2 3 1 Seattle Houston Craigrf 4 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 C oghlnlf 3 2 1 2 Holtrf 6230 Gentrycf 1 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 5 2 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi YMolinc 4 0 1 0 Morse1b 4 0 0 0 Philadelphia Miami cf 6 1 3 5 Pedroia 2b 5 2 3 1 Callasp3b 5 0 0 0 Micarr1b 3 1 1 2 Enchvzdh 5 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 J hPerltss 3 0 0 0 Colvinlf 3 0 1 0 Ruggin ab r hbi ab r hbi Rizzo1b 5 2 2 0 D.Ortizdh 4 12 1 Cespdsdh 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzrf 4 0 1 0 J.Jonescf 5 1 1 0 Presleycf 4 0 0 0 Taverscf 3 1 1 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 0 0 R everecf 4 0 2 0 Yelichlf 4 1 0 0 Scastross 5 1 2 1 Navaph 1 0 1 2 Mossrf 4 1 4 2 TrHntrdh 4 0 3 3 Cano2b 3 2 1 0 Springrrf 4 0 0 0 Bourioscf 1 0 0 0 Panik2b 3 0 2 0 Roginsss 4 0 2 0 Lucasss 4 1 2 1 Valuendh 5 2 2 1 Napoli1b 4 0 2 1 DNorrsc 4 0 2 0 Cstllns3b 3 1 0 0 Seager3b 3 1 2 1 Singltn1b 4 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 3 1 1 0 Vglsngp 0 0 0 0 C astilloc 4 2 1 2 JGomslf 5 0 1 2 V ogtlf 4 0 1 0 Avilac 3 1 0 0 utley2b 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 3 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 4 1 1 2 MDmn3b 3 0 0 0 W nwrgp 3 0 0 0 Affeldtp 0 0 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 McGeh3b 3 1 2 1 Schrhltrf 5 2 2 2 Bogarts3b 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 0 0 0 AnRmnss 3 1 1 0 B uckc 4 0 2 1 Corprnc 2 0 0 0 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 B yrdrf 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 1 1 0 Olt3b 5 2 2 2 Przynsc 4 1 1 0 Freimn1b 3 0 0 0 RDavislf 4 1 2 2 MSndrsrf 4 0 0 0 DoSntnlf 3 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 HSnchzph 1 0 1 0 Howard1b 3 0 1 0 Sltlmchc 3 1 1 2 B arney2b 5 2 4 1 Bettscf 5 2 2 2 Punto2b 4 0 0 0 Ackleylf 4 0 3 0 KHrndzdh 3 1 1 1 J.Perezpr 0 0 0 0 Mayrrylf 4 0 0 0 JeBakr1b 3 0 2 0 JHerrr ss 4 1 1 0 Totals 37 3 113 Totals 3 4 9 139 BMillerss 4 0 0 0 MGnzlzss 3 1 2 1 Romop 0 0 0 0 Asche3b 4 0 0 0 Solano2b 4 0 1 1 Oakland 2 00 000 100 — 3 Totals 3 6 5 104 Totals 3 0 2 3 2 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Totals 2 90 5 0 Totals 4 3 161916 Totals 42 9 169 K.Hillc 3 0 0 0 Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 — 9 Chicago 300 321 016 — 16 Detroit 101 106 Bgx Seattle 0 00 004 100 — 6 S t. Louis 002 0 0 0 0 00 — 2 Boston Hamelsp 1 0 0 0 Bourph 1 0 0 0 0 01 220 013 — 9 DP — Oakland 1. LOB—Oakland 8, Detroit 6. Houston 001 010 000 — 2 San Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 GwynJph 0 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 E—Dlt (5). DP—Boston 1. LOB —Chicago 5, Moss (15), A.Jackson (16), Mi.cabrera(30). LDB —Seattle 7, Houston 2. 28 —Cano (19), 2B — DP — St. Louis 2, SanFrancisco 2.LOB—St. Louis Boston14.28—Coghlan(4), Ruggiano(9), Valbuena —Crisp (7), Moss(19). CS—Crisp (3), R.Davis Rosnrgp 0 0 0 0 Greggp 0 0 0 0 Morrison (4), Ackley(14). HR— K.Hernandez (1), HR 5, San Francisco5.28—Taveras(2). S—Vogelsong. Gilesp 0 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 (21), Ol t (4), Barney (9), Pe droi a (24), D.Ortiz 2(13), Ma.Gonzale(4). z (8). S —An.Romine. IP H R E R BBSO Napoli (13). 3B —Barney (1). HR—Ruggiano (3), IP H R E R BBSO CHrndzph 1 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO St. Louis Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 Oakland Seattle WainwrightW,11-4 7 2-3 4 0 0 2 1 Castillo (6),Schierholtz(5), Dlt (11),Betts(1). SB—Coghlan, L,6-5 5 8 5 5 4 5 ABlanc2b 0 0 0 0 C.YoungW,8-4 7 2 2 2 1 8 J.chavez NeshekH,11 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 Rizzo(2), S.castro(3). S—Coghlan. SF Totals 32 0 5 0 Totals 3 2 5 9 5 D.crtiz, J.Gom es. JiJohnson 1 3 4 4 4 0 0 FarquharH,B 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 R osenthal S, 2 5-28 1 1 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 P hiladelphia 00 0 000 000 — 0 San Francisco MedinaH,13 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Cook 000 120 02x — 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 Miami RodneyS,24-26 1 0 0 0 0 1 Abad VogelsongL,5-5 7 6 2 2 1 8 Chicago DP — P hi l a del p hi a 1. LOB — Ph ila de l p hi a 7, Mi TWood 32-3 7 3 3 4 3 Francis 1 0 0 0 0 1 Houston 23 2 0 0 0 0 ami 8. 28 —Lucas(2), McG ehee (20), Je.Baker (5). Affeldt W,4-5 2 2 2 2 1 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Viganueva PeacockL,2-5 5 1-3 6 4 4 2 6 Detroit J.Guti e rrez Saltalamacchia (8). SB—Rogins (15), Lucas Romo l 11-3 2 1 1 0 1 9 2 2 0 4 HR — 12-3 3 1 1 0 2 VerlanderW,7-7 6 Bass 1 0 0 0 0 1 RusselH,4 (1), Stanton (8). Schlitter 1 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 T—2:51.A—41,321 (41,915). Sipp 1 1 0 0 0 2 Alburquerque 1 IP H R E R BBSO Grimm 1 4 3 3 0 2 B.Hardy 1 0 0 0 0 2 Qualls 1 0 0 0 0 0 Nathan 1 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Bostorr HBP —byPeacock(Cano). WP—Peacock. HamelsL,2-5 5 5 3 3 4 3 Pirates 5, Diamondbacks1 J.chavezpitchedto 2batters in the6th. WorkmanL,1-2 4 5 6 6 3 3 T—2:47. A—17,209(42,060). 1 1 0 0 0 1 Doubront 11-3 4 3 3 0 2 HBP —by Verlander (Freiman). WP—Cook, Albur- Rosenberg Giles 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 2-3 10 0 0 1 querque. PITTSBURGH —GregoryPolanco Badenhop Hollands 0 3 2 2 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 2 T—3:02.A—35,445(41,681). Muiica homered, Charlie Morton contin- Breslow Rays 6, Yankees3 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 0 2 2-3 4 4 4 0 1 Miami 1-3 3 2 2 0 0 ued his effective pitching at home Tazawa K oehler W, 6 -6 6 3 0 0 1 7 Russellpitchedto 1batterin the8th. NEW YORK — Sean Rodriguez hit Royals 4, Twins 0 M.DunnH,14 1 1 0 0 0 3 and Pittsburgh won for the fifth HBP —byTWood(J.Herrera). a tiebreaking homer in the sixth GreggH,4 1 1 0 0 0 0 time in six games. Polanco, a high- T—4:19. A—37,055(37,499). Hatcher 1 0 0 0 1 0 MINNEAPOLIS— Jason Vargas and drove in three runs, helping ly touted rookie who hasreached Hollands pi t ched to 3 batt ers inthe8th. threw seven scoreless innings thestreakingTampa BayRays lndians 5, Dodgers 4 HBP —byHamels(Saltalamacchia). safely in19 of 21 major league T—3:11. A—20,084(37,442). extend their longest winning string and Raul Ibanezhomered in his games, had adouble, awalk and
this year to five andhand the New York Yankeestheir season-worst fifth straight loss. BenZobrist doubled twice among his three hits for the Rays.
second gamefor Kansas City. Vargas allowed four singles and two walks while striking out five, allowing only two runners from a diluted Twins lineup to reach second base.
ninth to lift Chicago. Alejandro De Aza, whoenteredearlier as a runner for Paul Konerko, started the winning rally with a one-out single in the ninth. Conor Gillaspie followed with a broken-bat single past a diving Albert Pujols at first base to put runners on the corners for Garcia.
Jones hit his16th home runof the season andhadthree RBls.
Braves 3, Mets1 ATLANTA —Chris Johnson hit a three-run double, Julio Teheran pitched sevenstrong innings and Atlanta polished off a three-game sweep. Teherangave upfour hits and three walks while lowering his
St. Louis
his third home run for Pittsburgh, which clinched its fourth consecutive series victory.
LOS ANGELES — Mike Aviles capped a three-run eighth with a two-run single against Brian Wilson to rally Cleveland.
Arizona
PINsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Inciartcf 5 0 0 0 GPolncrf 4 2 2 2 GParrarf 5 0 0 0 SMartelf-cf 4 1 1 2 Gldsch1b 4 1 3 0 AMcctcf 4 0 2 1 MMntrc 2 0 0 0Melncnp 0 0 0 0 A.Hill2b 4 0 1 1 NWalkr2b 5 0 1 0 DPerltlf 3 0 1 0 RMartnc 3 0 2 0 Prado3b 4 0 1 0 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 JHrrsnph-3b 1 0 0 0 CAndrsp 2 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 3 0 1 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 C.Rossph 1 0 1 0 Mercerss 3 1 3 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 Mortonp 3 0 0 0 Stitesp 0 0 0 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Kschncph 1 0 1 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Sniderph-If 1 1 0 0 Totals 3 4 1 8 1 Totals 3 55 125 Arizona 001 000 000 — 1 Pittsburgh 1 2 0 0 0 0 02x — 5
Cleveland Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi TampaBay New York Kipnis2b 5 0 0 0 DGordn2b 3 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Acarerss 5 0 2 0 A.Ellisc 3 0 1 0 KansasCity Minnesota DJnngscf 4 1 2 0 Gardnrlf 5 1 3 2 Brantlycf 4 1 0 0 HRmrzph 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Z obristdh 5 1 3 0 Jeterss 5 0 0 0 AEscorss 5 1 1 0 Nunezss 4 0 0 0 C Santn1b 4 1 1 0 Ethiercf 4 0 2 2 Guyerlf 3 0 2 1 Mccnnc 4 1 2 1 Y Gomsc 4 1 1 0 Kemplf 5 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 2 0 1 1 Dozier2b 4 0 0 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 0 Beltrandh 4 0 2 0 ERA to 2.29. Raburn rf 3 1 1 2 CRonsn 1b 3 0 0 0 BButlerdh 5 0 0 0 Parmel1b 4 0 2 0 Loney1b 5 0 1 1 KJhnsn1b 4 0 0 0 DvMrp ph-rf 1 1 1 1 BWilsn p 0 0 0 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 F orsyth2b 5 2 2 0 ASorinrf 4 1 1 0 Chsnhll3b 3 0 1 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 S .Perezc 4 0 1 0 Wlnghlf 3 0 0 0 New York Atlanta SRdrgzss 4 1 2 3 ISuzukicf 3 0 0 0 Avileslf 4 0 2 2 AdGnzlph-1b1 0 0 0 I banezrf 4 2 2 1 Arciarf 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Hanignc 2 0 0 0 BRorts2b 4 0 2 0 Bauerp 2 0 0 0 VnSlykrf-1b 4 1 1 1 L.cainrf 0 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 3 0 1 0 EYonglf 4 1 2 0 Bi)ptoncf 3 1 1 0 Kiermrrf 4 1 0 0 Solarte3b 4 0 0 0 Pestanp 0 0 0 0 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 I nfante2b 4 1 1 0 Fryerc 3 0 0 0 Lagarscf 4 0 2 0 ASmnsss 3 1 2 0 Totals 3 5 6 125 Totals 3 7 3 103 Bournph 1 0 0 0 Roias3b 3 1 2 0 M ostks3b 4 0 1 1 Fuldcf 3 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 3 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 3 1 1 0 T ampa Bay 0 0 1 1 1 2 001 — 6 JDysoncf 4 0 2 1 Shawp 0 0 0 0 uribe3b 1 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 2 0 0 1 J.uptonlf 4 0 0 0 N ew York 101 1 0 0 0 0 0 — 3 Totals 36 4 9 4 Totals 3 0 0 4 0 Swisherph 1 0 0 0 Triunflss 4 0 0 0 Meiiap 0 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 1 0 E—Solarte (8). LOB—Tampa Bay 9, NewYork K ansas A tchisnp 0 0 0 0 Ryup 212 1 City 0 2 0 0 0 0 011 — 4 Campll3b 4 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 2 3 9. 28 — Zobrist 2 (17), Forsythe(7), B.Roberts (11). M innesota Agenp 0 0 0 0 Puigph-rf 2 0 1 0 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 Duda1b 4 0 0 0 LaStell2b 3 0 0 0 HR—S.Rodriguez (8), Gardner(8), Mccann(10). Totals 37 5 9 5 Totals 3 5 4 9 4 DP — Kansas City 1. LOB—Kansas City 10, dArnadc 3 0 0 0 Bthncrtc 4 0 0 0 CS — Kiermaier (3). S—Guyer. C leveland 000 2 0 0 030 — 6 Minnesota6. 2B—A.Escobar (24), Infante(8). HRTeiadass 3 0 0 0 Tehernp 2 0 1 0 E—Prado (13), G.Parra (4), Gregorius (3).DPIP H R E R BBSO Ibanez Angeles 0 0 0 0 3 0 010 — 4 (4). SB—Hosmer(3), J.Dyson(13), Fuld(8). deGrmp 2 0 0 0 JSchafrph 1 0 0 0 Arizona1,Pittsburgh1.LDB —Arizona10, Pittsburgh L os TampaBay E — K em p (5), T ri u nfel Roias(2). LOB—CleveIP H R E R BBSO B lackp 0 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 11. 28—Goldschmidt (29), G.Polanco(2), S.Marte land 8,LosAngeles 9. 28(1), OdorizziW,4-7 5 2 - 3 8 3 3 1 4 KansasCity —A.cabrera2 (21), Ethier Niwnhsph 1 0 0 0 JWaldnp 0 0 0 0 (16), R.Martin(7). HR —G.Polanco(3). SB—S.Marte C.RamosH,2 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 VargasW,8-3 7 (12), Ryu (2). HR —Raburn (2), Van Slyke(7). SB4 0 0 2 5 F amilip 0 0 0 0 (19). DviedoH,3 1 0 0 0 1 2 W.DavisH,16 1 0 0 0 0 2 E dginp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Brantley(10),Aviles(8). S—D.Gordon. Jo.Peralta H,10 1 1 0 0 0 2 G.Holland IP H R E R BBSO 1 0 0 0 1 1 CYoungrf 0 0 0 0 Arizona BoxbergerS,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 Minnesota Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 3 1 3 8 3 C.AndersonL,5-4 32-3 8 3 3 3 5 Cleveland New York 52-3 6 3 3 2 2 CorreiaL,4-10 6 6 2 2 2 3 N ew York 000 1 0 0 000 — 1 Delgado 21-3 1 0 0 2 4 Bauer NunoL,2-5 5 8 4 3 2 5 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Guerrier 1 0 0 0 1 1 Atlanta 300 000 Ogx — 3 Thatcher 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pestano Kelley 1 1 1 1 0 2 Shaw W, 3 -1 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 LOB— New York 6,Atlanta 8.28— C.Johnson Stites 1 3 2 2 0 1 11-3 2 0 0 1 1 Fien Warren AtchisonH,4 2 3- 1 1 1 0 0 1 2 1 1 1 1 (17). SB —E.Young (22), A.Simm ons (3). CS—E. Pittsburgh 12-3 1 1 1 2 1 Perkins Huff 11-3 1 0 0 1 2 HBP —byCorreia(S.Perez). Young(3). S—B.upton. SF—Granderson. MortonW,5-9 6 5 1 1 3 5 Allen S,8-9 Nunopitchedto 1batterin the6th. T—3:00.A—28,860(39,021). IP H R E R BBSO Ju.WilsonH,11 1 1 0 0 0 1 Los Angeles C.Ramos pitchedto 1batterin the7th. Ryu 7 7 2 2 0 8 New York WatsonH,21 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byNuno(Guyer). PB—Mccann. 3 3 1 deGrom L,1-5 5 6 3 3 2 8 Melancon 1 2 0 0 0 1 B.WilsonL,1-3BS,2-3 1-3 2 3 T—3:32. A—42,343(49,642). Howell 23 0 0 0 0 1 Black 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—byWatson(M.Montero). WP —Morton. Orioles 6, Rangers 4 C.Perez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Familia 1 2 0 0 0 1 T—3:14.A—24,161 (38,362). T — 3: 3 0. A — 50,1 99 (56,00 0). Edgin 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 BALTIMORE — Adam Jones and 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 White Sox 3, Angels 2 Meiia Nationals 4, Rockies 3 Atlanta Ryan Flaherty hit solo homers, TeheranW,8-5 7 4 1 1 3 5 Blue Jays 7, Brewers 4 CHICAGO — Leury Garcia drove and Baltimore beatTexas for the Varvaro H,9 1 1 0 0 0 1 WASHINGTON —After a replay in the winning run with a pinch-hit third straight time in agamedeJ.Walden S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 2 review, lan Desmond's solo homer TORONTO — Edwin Encarnacion WP — Teheran. single off Michael Morin in the layed 1 hour, 38 minutes by rain. T—3:11. A—23,601(49,586). provided the go-ahead run for hit a three-run, walk-off home run
Flaherty, who started at third base
inplaceofthesuspendedManny Machado, hit his fourth homer of the season. Texas
Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Choodh 2 2 1 0 Markksrf 3 1 0 0 Andrusss 3 1 0 0 Pearcelf 2 2 0 0 C .Pena1b 4 0 0 0 Loughlf 0 0 0 0 Rosalesph 1 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 3 1 2 3 ABeltre3b 4 1 2 2 N.cruzdh 4 1 1 1 Riosrf 4 0 2 1 C.Davis1b 3 0 1 0 LMartncf 4 0 2 1 JHardyss 4 0 2 1 Gimenzc 4 0 1 0 Schoop2b 4 0 0 0 Odor2b 3 0 0 0 Flahrty3b 3 1 2 1 Choicelf 4 0 0 0 CJosphc 4 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 8 4 Totals 3 0 6 8 6 Texas 1 03 000 000 — 4 Baltimore 000 1 0 3 20x — 6 E—C.Joseph (2). DP—Texas 1. LDB—Texas 8, Baltimore6. 2B—A.Beltre(19), Gimenez(8). HR —A. Jones(16), Flaherty(4). CS—L.Martin (8). S—Odor. SF — A.Jones.
Los Angeles Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi C owgillrf 4 0 1 0 Eatoncf 4 1 1 0 Calhonrf 0 0 0 0 GBckh2b 3 1 2 0 Troutcf 4 0 0 0 JAreu1b 3 0 1 0 Puiols1b 4 0 0 0 Viciedolf 4 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 4 1 1 1 AIRmrzss 4 0 1 2 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 0 Konerkdh 3 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 0 1 0 DeAzapr-dh 1 1 1 0 Crondh 3 0 0 0 Gillaspi3b 4 0 1 0 G reenpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Sierrarf 3 0 0 0 Freese 3b 3 1 2 1 LeGarc ph 1 0 1 1 lannettc 3 0 1 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 33 9 3 Los Angeles 00 0 000 110 — 2 Chicago 000 200 001 — 3 IP H R One outwhenwinning runscored. Texas DP — LosAngeles 1, Chicago1. LOB—Los An- Mikolas 51-3 3 3 3 geles 6,Chicago7. 28—G.Beckham(17). HR —J. FrasorBS,2-2 2-3 2 1 Hamilton(5), Freese(3). CS—Green(3). Cotts L,2-5 1 2 2 IP H R E R BBSO Rowen 1 1 0 Los Angeles Baltimore Skaggs 72-3 5 2 2 1 6 Tillman 52-3 7 4 3 Morin L,2-2 2-3 4 1 1 1 0 BrachW,2-0 11 - 3 1 0 O'DayH,11 Chicago 1 0 0 Joh.Danks 7 2-3 7 2 2 1 10 Z.BrittonS,11-13 1 0 0 PutnamW,3-1 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2 WP — Frasor. Balk—Cotts. T—2:49. A—18,207(40,615). T—3:14.A—13,478(45,971).
Chances
most revered numbers meaningless. That cost Cruz the final 50 regu-
Continued from C1 lar-season games for the Texas RangManny Ramirez is doing even bet- ers last year, though the Baltimore ter. He is getting a third chance. Orioles did not seem to mind. They 7fvice suspended by baseball for signed Cruz to an $8 million, oneviolating its PED rules, the 42-year- year deal in spring training and he old has been signed by the Triple-A has rewarded their investment by hitIowa Cubs as a part-time player and ting 26 home runs through Tuesday, coach. The plan is for him — please, tied with Jose Abreu of the Chicago don't laugh — to serve as a men-
White Sox for the lead in the Ameri-
tor to aspiring Cubbies on how the can League. game should be played in the major Cruz also is the runaway leader in leagues. balloting for designated hitter in the "Do the right thing, bro. Follow the All-Star Game with some 3 million rules. That's it," Ramirez said Mon-
votes, even more proof that baseball
day, somehow keeping a straight face fans are truly a forgiving lot. Less when asked what advice he will give than half a season after finishing his young players. suspension for juicing, Cruz has been Nelson Cruz should have followed officially rehabilitated and will surethat advice and stayed out of trouble ly becheered when he comes to the himself. Like Ramirez, though, he plate in Minneapolis just like he has could not stay away from the drugs been in Baltimore since he was welthat for a quarter of a century now comed to the city on opening day. have infested the game and made its
That fans do not seem to have a
Padres 3, Reds0 SAN DIEGO— Tyson Rossthrew a three-hitter for his first career shutout and ReneRivera hit a three-run single off big league ERA leader JohnnyCueto to give San Diego its first three-game sweep since September. Ross struck out nine andwalked none.
Washington and thevictory that in the ninth andToronto dealt Milfinished off a three-gamesweep. waukee its third straight loss. Jayson Werth also homered for Washington, whichhaswonasea- Milwaukeeab r hbi Toronto ab r hbi son-high five straight. RWeksdh 4 1 1 0 Reyesss 5 1 2 0 Colorado
Washington ab r hbi ab r hbi B lckmnrf 4 0 1 0 Spancf 4 0 1 0 Stubbscf 4 0 1 0 Rendon2b-3b4 1 1 0 M ornea1b 4 0 2 0 Werthrf 4 1 2 2 Tlwlzkss 4 1 1 0 LaRoch1b 3 0 0 0 Dickrsnlf 4 1 1 0 Zmrmn3b 2 0 0 0 RWhelr3b 4 0 1 0 Espinos2b 0 0 0 0 McKnrc 3 1 1 3 Harperlf 3 1 1 0 Culersnpr 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 3 1 2 2 LeMahi2b 4 0 1 0 Loatonc 3 0 0 0 M atzekp 3 0 0 0 Fisterp 2 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 Frndsnph 1 0 0 0 Dttavinp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 Rutledgph 1 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 3 9 3 Totals 2 94 7 4 C olorado 030 0 0 0 000 — 3 Washington 0 0 0 3 0 0 10x— 4 DP — Colorado 2, Washington1. LOB —Colorado 6, Washington2. 2B—Blackmon (16), Harper(5).
Braunrf 4 1 2 2 Mecarrrf-If 4 1 2 0 Lucroy1b 3 1 1 1 Bautistdh 3 1 1 1 CGomzcf 4 0 1 1 Gosepr-dh 1 1 0 0 A rRmr3b 4 0 0 0 Lind1b 3 0 2 1 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Mstrnnph-rf 2 0 0 0 Maldndc 4 0 1 0 Encrnclf-1b 4 1 2 3 EHerrrlf 3 0 0 0 DNavrrc 4 1 1 0 Bianchi2b 3 1 1 0 CIRsmscf 3 0 0 0 JFrncs3b 2 1 1 2 StTllsnph-3b 0 0 0 0 Kawsk2b 4 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 7 4 Totals 3 57 117 M ilwaukee 1 0 3 0 0 0 000 — 4 Toronto 1 01 200 003 — 7
San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 3 0 1 0 RSantg3b 4 0 0 0 Denorfirf 4 1 1 0 Frazier1b 4 0 2 0 Headly3b 4 1 1 0 Two outswhenwinning runscored. Phigips2b 3 0 0 0 Medica1b 3 1 0 0 E—ArRamirez(6). DP—Milwaukee2. LOB—MilBrucerf 3 0 0 0 Venalecf 4 0 1 0 waukee 3, Toronto 8. 28—R.Weeks (9), Lucroy(29), H eiseylf 3 0 0 0 Riverac 4 0 1 3 Reyes(18), Me.cabrera(21), Lind(15), D.Na varro B.Penac 3 0 1 0 Amarstss 3 0 1 0 11). 38 —Braun(5). HR —Bautista(17), Encarnacion C ozartss 3 0 0 0 Falu2b 2 0 1 0 26), J.Francisco (13). SF—Lucroy. I ) ( Cuetop 2 0 0 0 TRossp 3 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO HR — McKenry (1), Werth (7), De smond (15). SBE R BBSO Vottoph 1 0 0 0 Milwaukee Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Rendon(7). W.Peralta 6 9 4 4 3 4 2 4 Totals 30 0 3 0 Totals 3 0 3 7 3 IP H R E R BBSO Duke 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 Colorado W.SmithL,1-1 1 1 2 2 1 2 — 3 6 1-3 6 3 3 1 6 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 2 1 1 San Diego 3 0 0 0 0 0 Ogx Matzek Kintzler —Cincinnati 3,SanDiego6. 28—B.Pena(11). 0 1 0 LDB Belisle L,2-4 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 Toronto IP H R E R BBSO Dttavino 1 0 0 0 0 2 Happ 7 6 4 4 0 4 4 2 Cincinnati Washington Loup 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 CuetoL,8-6 7 7 3 3 3 8 FisterW,7-2 7 7 3 3 0 5 Janssen W,3-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 0 ClippardH,19 1 1 0 0 0 2 W.Peraltapitchedto 2 batters inthe7th. 0 0 2 San Diego R.SorianoS,20-22 1 1 0 0 1 1 W.Smithpitchedto 2baters in the9th. HBP —byW.Smith (St.Tolleson). TRossW,7-8 9 3 0 0 0 9 WP —Matzek. T—2:20. A—19,250(42,302). T—2:42.A—28,943 (41,408). T—3:01. A—24,286(49,282). Cincinnati
problem with a player recentlybusted for PEDs being held up as a shining example of what a big league slugger should be is hardly new. Giants fans packed AT&T Park game after game when Bonds was chasing home run records, roaring at every swing even when it was painfully obvious that the bloated Bonds was doing things normal human beings simply cannot do. For all anyone knows, Cruz could still be using. So could a lot of other
players, because even with increased — and more sophisticated — testing
in baseball, the odds of being caught are still small. And the suspensions in the Biogenesis scandal show that a lot of players are still more than
willing to take the chance, mostly because the payoff can be so huge. Thankfully, we will be spared the sight of Cruz bashing balls out of Target Field in the Home Run Derby. He told the Baltimore Sun recently
cause it might hurt his swing, though the guess is someone from baseball whispered into his ear that it would not be a good idea for more obvious
Whether judges in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals are as forgiving with Bonds is anyone's guess. They tend to take lying more seriously than baseball fans, especially when the ly-
reasons.
ing is done not to sports writers but to
We can also be thankful that Ryan Braun has suddenly lost his home run power and likely will not be an
a federal grand jury.
that he would not compete in it be-
All-Star pick either. The admitted liar
But it may be that by now fans are
simply numb to steroid use and accept cheating as part of the game. Or it
and cheat who plays for the Milwau- could be that so many fans have quit baseball in disgust that the only ones since April 20 yet is still fifth among left are willing to suspend belief for outfielders in All-Star voting. anything. More than 2.5 million fans have They are content to keep spending voted for Braun to be in the All-Star their money on an uneven playing Game, even more than the 1.9 million field, as long as it is their player hitballots cast for another cheater, Melky tingthe home runs. They are happy to Cabrera of the Toronto Blue Jays, who vote for them for the All-Star Game no is in fourth place among American matter how much they cheat and lie. League outfielders. They have sent And they are a big part of the reathe message that the teams who keep son baseball is becoming an increasshelling out millions for tainted play- ingly marginalized game. ers already have: As long as you say Time Dahlbergis a columnist "I'm sorry," everything is forgiven. with the Associated Press kee Brewers has only five home runs
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
TOUR DE FRANCE
Howard
What'snext?
Continued from C1
Qualifying for the 2018 World Cup in Russia does not being until next summer — and theUnited States likely won't play its first qualification game
"Between now and four
years ago, I've played a couple hundredgames for my club and country," Howard said after the game. "Just
more experienced.I don't really get too high or too low. I think when you have a big tournament, that's the important thing, managing
xplosive sprinters, svelte climbers, powerful time trialists: The Tour de France is not just about the handful of allrounders who will vie for the coveted yellow jersey when the race begins on Saturday in Leeds, England. Team Sky's Chris Froome is favored to repeat as champion, but he'll be tested by the 2,277-mile route, which was laid out with the aim of encouraging riders to take chances, with more short-but-treacherous mountain stages like those in the relatively little-used Vosges region. Should Froome dominate the race as he did in 2013, however, there will be other storylines to
— Greg Keller, The Associated Press
>i$' q (" + J
ko
Thedefendingchampion has every chance of repeating, and : g i ving Team Sky its third Tour victory in as manyyears. The 29-year-old Kenyan-born Brit grabbed the yellow jersey with a c ~ ' victory at Ax 3 Domaines in the Pyrenees in Stage 8and held it for the rest of the race. His closest rival, Colombian , /rl sensation Nairo Quintana, finished over I It four minutes behind him, and is skipping this year's Tour to focus on theSpanish Vuelta in September. Froomealso won't have to worry about managing his sometimes-fraught relationship with teammate Bradley Wiggins, the 2012champwho was left out of Sky's s q uad.
I
I
The 29-year-old "Manx Missile" will again bea contender for the sprinter's green jersey in his second year riding for the Belgian squad OmegaPharma Quick-Step.Cavendish,who has the mostTourstagewins (25) of any active rider, also has achanceto wear theyellow jersey for the first time in his careerafter route planners decided to start the racewith a sprint stage that just so happens to finish in his mother's hometown of Harrogate. A bout of bronchitis prevented the2013 British road champion from defending his title inJune,butCavendishhopesto bebackto full strength for theTour.
At 31, the Spaniard known as"El Pistolero" is the most decorated stage racer of his generation, with five grand '. tours in his palmares, including two Tours de France. TheTinkoff-Saxo rider will be out to reclaim his position at the top of the sport after he was stripped of the 2010Tour title for a doping violation, and lost a podium spot in the 2013Tour on the penultimate stage. His form hasbeengood this season, with stage wins andoverall victories in two important weeklong races: Tirreno-Adriatico in March and Tour of BasqueCountry in April, as well as a close second-place finish in June's Criterium du Dauphine. As aheadline in French newspaper L'Equipedeclared, "The King is Back."
without any warning, and it increases the nearer an im-
portant game draws," he said. "It always occurs more when I am particularly nervous." When the ball is far away, he says he indulges his twitches. "I don't suppress
readies an attack — which
happened over and again on 'Ibesday — his muscles miraculously calm. "I have no idea how I do it," he said. "Not even my doctors can
explain it to me. It's probably because at that moment my concentration on the game is
stronger than the Tourette's syndrome."
AndrewIalansky , The 25-year-old Garmin-Sharp rider was the 7 ~,4, top-performing American last year, finishing 10th. He also turned morethan a few heads after winning June's Criterium du Dauphine, using wily tactics to defeat Contador, Froomeand Nibali on the race's final summit finish in the Alps for the biggest victory of his career.
The 2012 white jersey winner had a disappointing Tour last year, but his BMCRacing teambelieves in him enough to tap him asteam leader over former yellow jersey winner CadelEvans.The25-yearold will be supported by asquad that's been largely revamped since 2013, with five new riders, including fellow American Peter Stetina.
and movements that may afflict between I and 3 percent of the world's population — is
an image of a person cursing
one of the world's best — but
exhibit that symptom, and
his sickness took on greater
importance. "I've never had a curse word The British press, never simply slip out," he said. known for its magnanimity, What does slip out: tics was particularly cruel. "We and twitches. Theyhave been swear it's t r ue: Tourette's with him his entire life. At 10, sufferer is target for United," Howard's facial tics started taunted London's Mirror. when he was growing up in "United want American with New Jersey. Unfamiliar situa- brain disorder," The Guardtions made him anxious and ian snickered. "Manchester he developed obsessive-com- United trying to sign disabled pulsive behaviors. Things goalkeeper, "the Independent could n ever b e st r a ight offered. One Dutch newsenough. Ordered enough. paper called him "handiCounted enough. He compul- capped," and another reportsively touched cracks in the edly called him "retarded." floor or bricks in the wall. "A During his second season certain pattern had to be fol- with the team, he made some lowed, an exact routine," his major blunders, one of which Howard is not one of them.
mother, Esther Howard, told The New Yorker. "He had to put his clothes on the same
eliminated Manchester from
way every day." The tics would come in
of the game. The press said he was "under scrutiny" and "way off the standard" and
The 34-year-old Spaniard will leadTeamMovistar in Quintana's absence.Valverde returned to cycling in 2012after a two-year doping banand has racked up some impressive performances since then, including a podium finish behindFroome andSkyteammate Richie Porte in last year's difficult Stage 8 summit finish at Ax 3Domaines, and a fourth-place finish on Mont Semnoz.Valverdecan also take hopefrom the hilly time trial in the penultimate stage: Heconceded only 30 seconds to Froome in a similar stage last year.
Madison Lillesve and Riann
levels. The meet did not have
Cornett was fourth. Madras' Jacob Palin was fourth in the
team results and followed a
standard individual competi-
"I was the first one to com-
individual flags. tion format. "(Regionals) was fantastic "The regional event gives recounted, "so that was kind for Bend," Lava Bears coach those OHSET kids the opporof scary because I had to Penny Campbell said. "We tunity to compete at a higher watch everyone go after me." had two champions, one relevel," Penny Campbell said. Also among the top fin- serve champion and o ne "Most of these kids don't see ishers from Central Oregon fourth place. I'm ecstatic. I be- that level of competition. And was Bend High's Georgann lieve the Central District rep- it was a really great opportuIreland, who was first in the resented OHSET well." nity for those kids to meet and saddle seat equitation, and The coach said the regional interact with other kids from Redmond's freestyle fours event was an opportunity for Washington and around the drill team of Kaycee Hansen, riders from Oregon and Wash- state." Billie Richardson, Kelsey To- ington to showcase their tal— Reporter: 541-383-0375, bin, Amie Simpson and Re- ents beyond district and state eoller@bendbulletin.com gion Hayden also won the gold. Ridgeview's Deborah Dial came in second in the pole bending, Bend's freestyle fours drill team of Kath•• TheBu l letin IiaaGILZDQE pete in my event," Campbell
g
INDOW TREAT)
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the Champions League tournament in the 90th minute
wondered whether his Tourette's had worsened. "It was brutal," he told The New Yorker. "It seemed like they
wanted my downfall." He eventually rekindled
body, and, bam, six months his career elsewhere — and or a year later, a new tic has since come to define the would come." U.S. soccer team in a way few But early on, he found an other players have, starting outlet: soccer. His abilities a record eight times in the made sense to his mother. World Cup as goalie for the "I believe there's a certain team. yin and yang to things," she On Tuesday, however, it told The New Yorker. "If you
was unclear whether there
have a disorder like this,
would be any more World Cups for Howard. He is 35.
then you also have a gift that
you've been given and you just try to learn what it is. Soccer was his gift. It provided anescape from Tourette's — it absorbed that energy." He got a hot hand in the
The World Cup is a tourna-
ment pervaded by 20-somethings — and by the time the next one comes around, he
willbe nearly40. But he says he is not going
U.S. youth soccer leagues, anywhere. He is most proud began traveling around the that he did not "allow myself country and, when he was to be restricted by Tourette's only 18, went pro with the syndrome." M etroStars in N e w Y o r k . And today, "one of the bigIt was there that he drew gest things I can do for Tothe attention of Manchester urette's awareness is be in the United, which in 2003 would public eye," he told Neurology bring hi m t o t h e U n i ted Now. "I'm on television, tic-
Kingdom. There, he began cing and twitching. I think to build his reputation as that's kind of cool."
kEDM OND
leen Mitchell, Kate Campbell,
uncontrollably. But only 10 percent of Tourette's patients
out how a tic worked with my
~~®y~~ g AlejandroValverde
This serves as awarmup for the 2018World Cup, featuring the six continental champions, the defending World Cup champion, andhost Russia.
petitive, involuntary sounds
15, it was just this chaos of different tics, and they were pretty strong," Howard explained to Neurology Now. "I would just begin to figure
4~® 4~
Arts 5 Entertainment
CONFEDERTI AONSCUP
Tourette's — a neurological disorder characterized by re-
waves. "From the age of 9 to
The 29-year-old Italian climber, known as"The Shark," won last year's Giro d'Italia and wasrunner-up at the Spanish Vuelta. TheAstana rider's coach told the Italian newspaper Gazzetta dello Sport that Nibali has spent recent weeks in the Italian Dolomites preparing his attack, with the aim of hitting peak form just before theTour. His recent victory at the Italian championships suggests he's ready.
Continued from C1
2017
The standard stereotype of
VincenzoNidali
Equestrian
2016 RIO DE JANEIROOLYMPICS The Olympics is a U-23 competition. The United States missed out on qualifying for the 2012 London Gameswhen El Salvador scored a stoppage time goal in the group stage to eliminate the Americans.
lication. But when an opposing striker approaches and
The Spaniard known as"Purito" (Little Cigar) remains a threat for the Tour podium atage35. TheTeamKatusha rider grabbed athird-place finish in last year's Tour thanks to a standout performance in the penultimate stage in the Alps, where only Quintanawas able to outclimb him to the finish at Semnoz.This season, his best result has been avictory in the Volta a Catalunya in his hometown of Barcelona in March, when hebeat Contador and Froome.
The charismatic Slovak is the favorite to win the sprinter's green jersey for a third year in a row.The . ~jgnnOnd ' 24-year-old Cannondale rider won only one s t age last year but was a constant threat, with four second-place andtwo thirdplace stage finishes. Knownfor his humorous finish-line salutes, aswell as his bike-handling skills, which rivals call the best in the peloton, Sagan is consistently one of the most exciting riders to watch.
Narcel Kittel
2016 COPA AMERICA The South American championship will be played in the United States and will feature six North American teams as well as the 10South American teams. It is set for June with host sites to be determined.
line. "It happens all the time,
Peter Sagan
The26-year-old German dethronedCavendish last year asthe fastest man onthe Champs-Elysees, ending the Brit's four-year winning streak in the final stage finish. TheGiant-Shimano rider has wonstages in all three GrandTours, including two at this year's Giro d'Italia, to add to his haul of four stages at last year's Tour — double Cavendish's take.
for the right to enter the 2017 Confederations Cup. If the U.S. wins, it qualifies automatically.
it," he told the German pub-
TejayvanGarderen
AldertoContador
will face the United States
in a game," he said in a 2013 interview with Spiegel On-
"g Q
Nark Cavendish
The championship of North America is set for July 2015 in anation to be determined. Thewinner
counted how many tics I have
JoaquimRodriguez
ChrisFroome
2015 GOLDCUP
It has always been that way for Howard. He always has had to think about managing emotion. The bigger the game, the bigger the moment, the more his tics and symptoms flare. "I've never
aiming to claim the crown of Tour Sprint King? Who among the young American riders will emerge brothers'? And does aging veteran Jens Voigt still have one more thrilling breakaway victory left in him'?
plenty to keepthe national team busy until them.
emotion."
keep fans interested: Will Mark Cavendish fight off the new generation of German and French sprinters as the next great hope of U.S. cycling? What's happened to Luxembourg's once-formidable Schleck
until 2016, but there is
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
BRIEFING Strong jobgrowth surprises in June Private employers added a surprisingly strong 281,000 net new jobs in June, the most since late 2012, payroll firm Automatic Data Processing Inc. said Wednesday. The figure was up sharply from 179,000 in May and is apositive sign heading into today's official jobs report from the Labor Department. Analysts had expected the closely watched ADP report to show that private-sector job growth improved in June, but hadanticipated an increase of just
en com an rea o icense a e e c noo • OnTo Technology'process s allows the reuseand recycling of lithium-ion batteries
The Washington Post
Target on Wednesday said it would "respectfully request" thatits customers
no longer carry firearms inside its stores, after facing
mountingpressure from gun-control activists who put the chain in the cross-
hairs of anational debate about open carry laws. The change will apply toboth concealed andunconcealed guns in all of the
The June figure was the best since ADPreported 293,000 net new private-sector jobs in November 2012. "The job market is steadily improving," said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody's Analytics, which assists ADP in preparing the report. "Job gains are broad-based across all industries and company sizes," he said. "Judging from the job market, the economic recovery remains fully intact and is gaining momentum."
Minneapolis-based retail-
er's nearly 1,800 U.S. stores, the company confirmed. "This is a complicated
issue, but itboils down to a simple belief: Bringing firearms to Target creates an
environment that is at odds with the family-friendly shopping and work experience we strive to create," John Mulligan, the company's interim chief executive,
said in a memo posted on Target's website.
Target is the latest large retailer to be drawn into the gun-control debate.
— From wire reports Photos by Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin
City of Bend • Oregon Department of Transportation, 63055 N. U.S. Highway97, $1,350,000 • Margaret A. Cole, 2250 NE U.S. Highway20, $280,000 • No owner listed, 19500 Century Drive, $289,267 • DKS LLC, 3811 NEPurcell Blvd., $180,085 • FC Fund LLC,609 SE GlencoePlace, $153,438 • Randall L. Eddy, 61690 SE Rigel Way,$237,781 • FC Fund LLC,605 SE GiencoePlace, $153,438 • FC Fund LLC,1089 SE Sixth St., $215,571 • GRPVC III LP, 700 NE Isabella Lane,$196,174
BEST OF THE
BIZ CALENDAR TUESDAY • Membership101Driving YourMembership: New and current members can connect andlearn about the benefits available through the chamber. RSVP required; free; 10 a.m.; BendChamberof Commerce, 777NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. JULY11 • ConstructionContractor Course:Two-day testprep course thatmeets the OregonConstruction Contractors Board testeducation requirement. Continues Saturday, July 12. Prepayment required; $305, includes Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, BoyleEducation Center, 2600 NW College Way, Bend;541-383-7290 or ccb©cocc.edu. JULY15 • Membership101Driving YourMembership: New and current members can connect andlearn about the benefits available through the chamber. RSVP required; free; 10 a.m.; BendChamberof Commerce, 777NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. JULY16 • Bend Chamberof CommerceWomen's RoundTable Series: Social event at the Oregon High Desert Classics horse show; $10 chamber members, 15 nonmembers; 5:30-7:30p.m. J BarJ Youth Services, 62895 Hamby Road,Bend. More information: www. bendchamber.com • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbttlletin.com/bizcal
please Rebecca Robbins
213,000.
PERMITS
Target: No guns in stores,
OnTo Technology intern Kira Egelhofer builds a test battery in a controlled atmosphere.
By Valerie Smith
Sloop shared OnTo's latest
The Bulletin
research at the innovation
After 10 years of research, Bend-based OnTo Technology is preparing to license its technologyforrecycling and reusing lithium-ion batteries, those
summit, a gathering of emerging technology that's ready for commercialization, and he received a great deal of interest
from multiple vehicle and battery manufacturers, he said. Emmaline Pohnl, program managerforDriveOregon,a Portland nonprofit that pro-
used in smartphones, electric
vehicles and other gadgets. The ability to reuse lithium-ion batteries can decrease
manufacturing costs up to 30 percent, according to Steven
motes electric vehicles, sees
Sloop, the founder of OnTo. For example, the lithium-ion Leaf electric vehicle costs
$18,000, according to the automaker. It's the most expensive component in the car.
The reaction vessel at OnTo Technology is part of the process for deactivating the batteries, making them safe for disposal.
The technology could also our work and scientific engineering skills. The results are duce the amount of toxic waste ways to address this importfrom battery disposal, along ant long-term problem for our with the associated costs. partners in manufacturing." Sloopand hisresearch staff OnTo Technology has have developed environmenreceived about $2.5 million tally friendly processes for over the years from federal recyclingbatteriesforporand state agencies to fund its lower battery-replacement costs for consumers and re-
table electronics and electric
research.Ithas also received
vehicles. "Recycling lithium-ion
research funding from manufacturers and the Oregon
batteries has some significant
Nanoscienceand Microtech-
technical challenges," said Sloop. "We've overcome
nologies Institute. As partofitsresearch, OnTo received recycled
those, which is a testament to
their guns at home, and Chipotle, Jackinthe Box, Sonic Drive-In, and Chili's Grill & Bar all made similar
requests in May. Facebook and Instagram also recently announced plans to tighten
policies governingimages and posts selling firearms. Target found itself drawn
into the fray this spring when a Texas gun-rights group posted photos online ofsome ofitsmembers openlycarryinglong guns
OnTo Technology's recycling techniques as a necessity for
in Target stores. The photos
future battery manufacturing.
National Rifle Associa-
"Automakers and battery manufacturers have a very big
battery pack in the Nissan
LastSeptember,Starbucks asked its patrons to leave
prompted rebuke fromthe
incentive to invest in cost-ef-
tion's lobbying arm, which calledthe demonstrations "downright weird" in a
ficient processes," said Pohnl.
statement on its website. A
"Manufacturers want to save money and at the same time
few days later, NRA's top
material for testing in new
keep producing as many bat-
lobbyist backtracked on that criticism, sayingit had
cells from XALT Energy, a
teries as they can."
come from anunauthorized
battery manufacturer for-
Drive Oregon supports OnTo Technology's research
staffer.
merly owned, in part, by Dow Chemical Co. It also tests the recycling process on scrap batteries provided by Nissan, Chrysler and XALT. Last month, Sloop attended the third National Innova-
tion Summit in Washington, D.C., to network with battery manufacturers. The summit
showcased industry-vetted emergingtechnologies ready for commercialization.
and hopes to connect it with different companies that can
benefit from OnTo's work. "Steve Sloop is not in a re-
Thephotos spurred a month-longcounter-campaign from the gun-control group Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in Amer-
gion that's famed for battery technology," said Pohnl. "The work that he is doing is necessaryforloweringthecost of lithium-ion batteries, and
ica, which took to social me-
electric vehicles."
has attributed other retailers' similar moves to its prevlous calnpalgns.
— Reporter: 541-383-0325 vsmith@bendbulletin.com
dia and launched petitions to urge Target to prohibit customers from carrying guns in its stores. The group
COmPanieS ayOLItre CarPet Or OnCe-OWy internS setts-Amherst was enough to make an Amazon internship
"It shows that they really do care about employees and interns and so on," Kuan said. "They want to make you very happy and make it very easy." Amazon and Boeing declined to offer specific de-
in Seattle his first choice last
tails about the costs of their
summer.
programs. While Boeing has long offered a housing stipend and search assistance, the company this year also began offering managed housing, and about 20 percent of its
By Colleen Wright
at those three companies.
The Seattle Times
Dan Masi is a Seattle intern veteran. One visit to a career fair at
Amazon.com, Microsoft and Boeing sweeten already-lucrative job offers in Seattle with subsidized,
furnished housing. Transportation is covered from anywhere in the country, including airport food, baggage fees and taxis. There's free breakfast and dinner, biweekly housekeeping, a private party with Macklemore and Deadmau5. And that's just for the interns.
"We are all competing
for those top students," said
Heidi Dowling, intern-program manager for university
the University of Massachu-
A computer-science and mathematics junior hailing from a Boston suburb, Masi
worried about the challenge of moving across the country, especially for only 12 weeks. "I think the little things
— finding my own housing, dealing with flights, dealing with relocation — would've just been really difficult,"
what can we do to make our program stand out and what
wouldn't have been my first
is attractive for a college student to spend their summer
choice."
with Microsoft?"
Their strategies are working. More than 3,000 students have brought their talents to Seattle this summer to work
Interns from Amazon charge off in a paintball match versus interns
have chosen that option. Boeing contracts with Altair
from Microsoft last month in Monroe, Washington.
Global Relocation to furnish its apartments.
corporate housing company,
ics and more. And it offers housekeeping and catering. As a program manager
competitive with the mar-
intern at Microsoft, Lauren Kuan, a computer-science se-
the northwest U.S. at Boeing.
"We absolutely want to be
Masi said. "It would kind of
push me to find something closer to home. It probably
recruiting at Microsoft, "and
1,000 Seattle-area interns Bettrna Hansen/The Seattle Times
to cater to interns. ABODA rents out rooms in more than 150 locations in Seattle, in-
ket," said Doug Cisler, global staffing regional manager for "There's a lot of competition out there that we compete
wouldn't be an issue.
cluding apartment buildings, hotels and spare housing at the University of Washington.
Amazon and Microsoft both contract with ABODA, a
ABODA also fully stocks rooms with televisions, bed-
of Microsoft forthe free-
dom of exploring the Pacific
in place the program that we have to be competitive with
Redmond, Washington-based
ding, towels, dishes, electron-
Northwest.
the market."
But Amazon recruiters were clear: Relocation
nior from Cornell University, drivesarentalcarcourtesy
with for this talent. We put
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Suppementheath drinks ack substantia benefits
MONEY
By Richard A. Marini San Antonio Express-News
ma n ufacturers of these drin k s (Abbott for Ensure,
start to think that, at least
Nes t l e for Boost) have
for older adults, the secret to a long and healthy life
lo o ked to expand the market for t hem. Hence, they're now sold in supermarkets
of Boost, Ensure or anand advertised on TV with other brand of what are commercials featuring musknown as liquid nutritional c l e-bound, anthropomorphic supplements. bottles and silver-haired seWith taglines reading nior s vigorously walking the "Stay strong, stay active" dog and kneeling down to and "Nutrition in charge," hug their grandchildren. they're marketed as an easy, B u t many medical exdo-it-yourself way perts question the to stay vigorous as N U T R ITION b enefits of, and you age. need for, these sup"They're seen by many ple m ent drinks. people as something they For example, in its Chooscan do without a prescriping Wisely recommendation for good measure as you tions released in February, get older," said Dr. Paul Mul- the American Geriatrics Sohausen, chief medical officer ciety advised against using for the Iowa-based health hig h -calorie supplements in management firm Telligen. t h e "medically ill or frail elThe milkshake-like derly." The recommendation drinks, which are high in noted that while these drinks calories and contain vita(as well as prescription appemins, minerals and other tite stimulants) may help oldnutrients, originally were er folks gain weight, there's developed for hospital pano proof they improve qual-
ln
Koren Shadmi/The New York Times
By applying household data to health, insurers may make medical care more efficient, but some experts worry that the practice may ultimately result in unequal treatment.
ena
tients who were at risk of
ity o fl i fe, mood, functioning
becoming malnourished because they were unable to
or e v en survival rates.
Vicky Hallett
up a buffet of ways to trans-
The Washington Post
form the nation's 12th-larg-
a sunny Sunday in early
11OWS
June, and Annette Calderon w as prepared for a stroll.
She had sneakers on her feet, shades over her eyes, an iced tea in her hand and a Fitbit activity tracker
around her wrist. The only thing the 36-year-old was missing'? A sidewalk. Tysons Corner, Virginia, isn't built with pedestrians in mind. But that wasn't
By Natasha SingereNew York Times News Service
here may be a link between your Internet use and how often you end up in the emergency room. At least that's one of the curious connections to emerge from a health care analysis project at the insurance division of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
which can be expensive. Data sets of
often unaware of the kinds of intimate details about their households that insurers
past health care consumption are fairly
and hospitals may use to try to sway their
standard tools for predicting future use of health services.
But the insurer recently bolstered
its forecasting models with details on members' household incomes, education
the area is for anyone on foot. After stints in the pedestrianparadises of Manhattan, San Francisco Calderon can't help but
number of children at home, number of cars and so on. One of the sources for the
feel confined in Tysons. In the four months since the couple moved here, she has seen her weekly step count plummet from 140,000 to
consumer data UPMC used was Acxiom,
95,000 — mostly because
a marketing analytics company that obtains consumers' information from both
she has nowhere to go. But Tysons appears to be on the verge of change. Fairfax County has been cooking
levels, marital status, race or ethnicity,
publicrecords and private sources.
See Health plan/D2
est employment center into somewhere people can walk, run and bike as well
as work. The Tysons Comprehensive Plan, adopted by the county's Board of Supervisors in 2010, calls for an entirely new landscape by 2050. It envisions a "greenway" of connected trails anchored by a central park, and dotted with other places to play. "Complete streets,"
going to stop Calderon, her featuring bike lanes and husband and a posse tree-lined sideof other arearesi- FIT NESS walks, will form an easy-to-navigate grid. dents participating in "It's taken much too long," Tysons First Mile Walk to highlight how inhospitable says Bruce Wright, the
and Santa Monica, Calif.,
contain costs. But patients themselves are
See Health drinks/D5
Step bystep, cities add more waysfor waking WASHINGTON — It was
treatment decisions. prise that owns hospitals in western PennThe Pittsburgh health plan, for insylvania as well as ahealthinsurance plan stance, has developed prediction models with about 2.4 million members. It is at that analyze data like patient claims, the forefront of an emerging field called prescriptionsand census records to depredictive health analytics, intended to im- termine which members are likely to use prove patients'health care outcomes and the mostemergency and urgent care,
Over time, however, the
Watch the commercials or read the ads and you'll
can be found in a bottle
UPMC is a $12 billion nonprofit enter-
eat regular food.
chairman of Fairfax Advo-
cates for Better Bicycling, who has been riding in the region since 1979, "but it's
coming." And it's coming to a lot of
places. Nationwide, government leadersare reconsidering decades-old policies that have prioritized car
traffic. Instead of making streets fast, they want to
make them welcoming — to kids on tricycles, seniors with canes and everyone in
between. See Walking /D4
Vietnamese er ai sinvarious eat
ene its
By David Templeton
When his blood-sugar levels
He said he is aware of the
that it is safe."
Ptttsburgh Post-Gazette
rise to unhealthy levels, Tinh con s u mes the extract, with
many claims about natural remedies for common ail-
country for a visit can prowhat appeared to be benefivide a few surprises, as Ngoc cial results.
ments, but many show no benefits when tested. This test turned interesting. In obese rats with type 2
Returning to one's native Thai came to realize.
When the Allegheny General Hospital transplant surgeon returned to Vietnam,
"I think the use of herbal
remedies is much more common i n A sia and India than it i s here," Dr. Thai said. "A lot
he met an uncle for the first are used commonly and most time in his family's home of them I don't care about village of Pleiku. His uncle, a n d ignore. But for some Tinh, would soon reason with this one, pique the doctor's M EDIC I N E t h ere was something curiosity by using a compelling about it." local herb that he said lowThe h e rb, designated only ered his blood-sugar levels as N T 619, shows no pro-
His uncle's herb also produced other notable benefits for the laboratory rats.
Their blood pressure — taken by putting a blood-pressure cuff around the tail rather than the leg-
diabetes the herb produced
went from 14 0/100 to 12 0/80
results so impressive that Dr.
and as low as 11 0/70 mm Hg. The upper limit of blood pres-
Thai presented his findings this month during the American Diabetes Association
Scientific Sessions in San Francisco.
sure for people with diabetes, according to the ADA, is 14 0/80 with recommendations that treatment bring it down
— then processes the plant
pit a l 's center for abdominal
enough to bring the herbal
tific rigor necessary to prove
to isolate an extract, which
tr ans p lantation thought
powder back to Pittsburgh
whether or not it actually low-
"When given this extract, to 120/80. The herb also lowtheir blood glucose levels ers cholesterol levels. "It is pretty impressive," would go from more than 200 (mg/dL) — from 250 to 300Dr. Thai said of the avuncudown to 100 to 150," he said. lar herb. "What's so compelNormal blood sugar levels in ling for me is that a single humans range from 70 to 100 substance can potentially mg/dL. treat three major diseases"So (100 to 150) is not a diabetes, hypertension and normal level but it does help. high cholesterol — and do it We don't know if it will work naturally."
and put it through the scien-
ered his uncle's blood-sugar.
on humans but we do know
to help him control his type 2
d u c t ive hits on the Internet.
diabetes. Tinh routinely gathers the wild plant — which Dr. Thai described simply as a green plant with green leaves
People in Asia do use Tianqi,
sometimes used to make tea
a combination of 10 herbs
Pam Panchak/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Jonathan Pollett, a researcher at Allegheny General Hospital in
tha t reportedly reduces blood Pittsburgh, says research on an extract from an herb found in su g ar. But this is not Tianqi, Vietnam shows promise in reducing blood-sugar levels. Dr. Thai said. The d i r e ctor of the hos-
can be turned into a powder. t h e extract was intriguing
See Herb /D3
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
MONEY Cheaper premiums in 'copper' health plans maymeanhigher costs if youget sick If you offer it, will they come?Insurers and some U.S. senatorshaveproposedoff eringcheaper,skimpier "copper" plans onthe health insurance marketplaces to encourageuninsured stragglers to buy. But consumer advocatesandsomepolicy experts saythat focusing on reducing costs onthe front end exposes consumers to unacceptably highout-of-pocket costs if they get sick. Coverage on the health insurance marketplaces now is divided into five types ofplansthat require different levels of cost-sharing byconsumers. All the plans cover10 so-called essential health benefits, including hospitalization, drugsanddoctor visits. Preventive care iscovered without any cost-sharing.
Health plan
Platinum planspay 90percent of medicalexpenses, on average;gold plans, 80percent; silver plans, 70 percent; andbronze plans, 60percent. Premium tax credits areavailable for people with incomes upto 400 percent of thefederal poverty level ($46,680 for an individual in the2015 plans). The proposals put forward byAmerica's Health Insurance Plans, atrade organization and agroup of senators led byMark Begich, D-Alaska, would add a new level ofcoverage onthe marketplaces. The copper plan proposed byBegich andAHIP's "lower premium catastrophic plan" wouldpay50 percent of coveredexpenses, onaverage,andbe eligible for premium tax credits.
The goal, Peele said, is for the insurer to steer those patients to primary care physicians or specialists who can provide care that is more coordinated, more consistent and less costly than sporadic emergency-room visits. The system might pinpoint, for example, highrisk asthma patients who have not yet been prescribed inhalers — and try to manage their care before they end up in emergency rooms
Continued from D1 With the addition of these household details, the insur-
er turned up a few unexpected correlations: Mail-order
shoppers and Internet users, for example, were more likely than s ome other m em-
bers to use more emergency services. Of course, buying furniture through, say, the Ikea catalog is unlikely to send you
with asthma attacks.
to the emergency-room. But
it could be a proxy for other factors that do have a bearing on whether you seek urgent care, says Pamela Peele, the chief analytics officer for the
health status separate from their shopping and social
president for client strategy, described othertechniques c ircles, digital n atives ar e for influencing well-insured now publicly swapping mi- patients. Hospitals c ould nutiae about their medical send bi rthday m essages conditions on p a tient sites "to all high-value men and and social networks. And women," he wrote, or notifitness-tracking devices that fy "profitable individuals personalize messages for 18 and above" about speusers, based on their work- cial round-the-clock health outs and sleep routines, are care call-in lines staffed by proliferating. nurses, and encourage those Second, the new health revenue-generating patients care law encourages hospi- to schedule medical tests or tals and medical groups to appointments. After I sent questions by contain costs for certain patient populations. To do that, email, MedSeek removed the providers are turning to more blog post. The company did sophisticated analytics. not respond to the questions
UPMC insurance services di-
vision. A hypothetical patient might be a catalog shopper, for instance, because he or
she is homebound or doesn't have access to transportation.
"It brings me another layer of vision, of view, that helps me figure out better prediction models and allocate our
clinical resources," Peele said during a
r e cent i n terview.
She added: "If you are going to decrease the costs and improve the quality of care, In the vanguard are insur- themselves. you have to do something ers like UPMC, along with Hospitals have long tried to different." specialized marketing com- appeal to moneyed patients The UPMC health plan has panies. Predilytics, a health by offering them specially not yet acted on the correla- care analytics company in furnished floors or private tions it found in the house- Burlington, Massachusetts, rooms. But specifically tarhold data. Bu t i t a l r e ady taps into socioeconomic, de- geting profitable patients and segments its members into mographic and c onsumer trying to channel them into different "marketbaskets," purchasing data for health moneymaking medical probased on analysis of more insurers seeking to identify cedures is different, health traditional data sets. Then it those highest-risk members expertssay, because it could assignscare coordinators to who could benefit most from be problematic for themand perhaps more so for socertain members flagged as medical intervention. called low-value patients. high risk because they have After an East Coast insurThe pitches might encourchronic conditions that aren't er asked for an analysis of being properly treated. hospitalization trends among age the worried well to have The goal, Peele said, is for its members, Predilytics dis- unnecessary screening tests, the insurer to steer those pa- covered that patients who for instance, potentially puttients to primary care physi- couldn't get timely appoint- ting them at r isk fo r f a l se cians or specialists who can ments wit h t h ei r p r i m ary alarms and unneeded biprovide care that is more co- care doctors or who lacked opsies. And by devoting so ordinated, more
c onsistent t ransportation w e r e
m o r e much attention to pulling in
likely to end up in the hos- low-risk or well-insured papital. That kind of finding tients, health providers could explains why analytics com- end up overlooking — or not panies may include house- having timely appointments available for — ailing, poorly hold car ownership and other
and less costly than sporadic emergency-room visits. The system might pinpoint, for example, high-risk asthma p atients who h ave not y et
been prescribed inhalersconsumer data in their health and try to manage their care care prediction models. "What we are really doing beforethey end up in emergency rooms with asthma is looking a t m u l t i factoriattacks. al data and systemic issues The very idea of using con- that are getting in between sumer data-mining and mar- i ndividuals and t h eir a b i l keting segmentation on pa- ity to maintain the highest tients troubles some technol-
health status," explains Chris p r e sident o f
Becausetheproposed changes would require congressional action andbecause plansfor the 2015 open seasonarealready beingset up, the earliestany of these newplans could be implemented would be 2016, KarenIgnagni, president andchief executive of AHIP says. Some policy experts areskeptical that people will be enticed byanother type of high-deductible/ low-premium plan.Theynote that bronze plans weren't particularly popular sellers lastyear. "I don't think people will necessarily be satisfied with a policy with a cheappremium that doesn't really pay for much," says Larry Levitt, senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation. A plan
that meets thehealth law's coverage requirements but reduces theproportion of medical expensesinsurers pay to 50percent would require adeductible of about $9,000 perperson, hesays. Looking ahead,ananalysis by Avalere Health of2015 premium rateproposals innine statesfoundthat insurers are proposing 8percent rate hikesfor silver plans. "Premiums arecoming through somewhatlower than expected," saysCaroline Pearson, avice president at AvalereHealth, aresearch and consulting firm. "Do we really thinkthere's apremiumaffordability problem suchthat we should shift the benefit design toward that?" — Michelle Andrews,Special to TheWashington Post
FITNESS EVENTS
Howto submit Events:Email event information to healthevents©bendbulletin. com or click on "Submit an Event" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly and will appear at bendbulletin.coml healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
July 11
SATURDAY NAVY SEALPHYSICALTRAINING: Join a group of retired NavySEALs in morning calisthenics; free, 18 and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078. FOAM ROLLER WORKSHOP: Learn the proper technique for using a foamroller to reduce tightnessand increase flexibility; $10, registration requested;10-11:30 a.m.; Bend Pilates, 155 SW Century Drive, Suite104; info@bendpilates.net or 541-647-0876.
J01910 GOOD FORM RUNNINGCLINIC: Learn about running easier and be injury free, focus on proper mechanics; 5:30-7 p.m.;FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www. footzonebend. com, angela@ footzonebend.com or 541-3173568.
LIVING APEACEFULAND JOYFUL LIFE:Learn how to increase inner awareness through proper breathing, positive focus and openheartexercise; $25, registration required; 6-7:30 p.m.; Cafe of Life Chiropractic, 519 NW Colorado Ave., Bend;www. heartofmotivation.webs.com, angelheartofmotivation©gmail.com or 971-217-6576.
july 12 NAVY SEALPHYSICALTRAINING: Join a group of retired NavySEALs in morning calisthenics; free, 18 and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078. MIKE THE MUGGER:Free self defense workshop for womenages 12to adult, reserveyour spot online; free; 6-9 p.m.; SmashConditioning Studio, 338 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.smashconditioningstudio. com or 541-923-8563.
HEALTH
PEOPLE • John Allen,MD, has joined Bend Memorial Clinic in the Internal Medicine department. Dr. Allen previously was a hospitalist at St. Charles. Dr. Allen will work out of the Eastside Clinic.
Get a taste of Food, Home 5
EVENTS
Garden In
AT HOME
JHl1/ 13 CHILDREN'S VISION SCREENINGS:Seven step screening; free; noon-3 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe,135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-330-3907.
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
< • TheBulletin
-
JHl1/ 14
•
•
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend,'s
•
teestside.
FOOT ANONAIL CLINIC: Service provided by Sundance Footcare includes inspection of feet, toenails, foot massage, proper foot care education and a referral to a physician if needed; free, donations accepted, reservations suggested; noon2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NEFifth St.; www. bendscommunitycenter.org or 541-323-3344.
www.northwestcrossing.com
541 382-6447 ~ 2090 NE wyatt court ~ suite 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
S U r olo S~
insured patients.
"Is the larger mission to improve public health, or to make insurers and hospitals
more profitable?" asks Anita Allen, a privacy law expert and the vice provost for faculty at the University of Pennsylvania. "I think we should
ogy and health law experts. C oloian, th e Their concern is that such Predilytics.
be careful of running gungho into an area of health care
practices could ultimately re-
Some specialized health
analytics that may disadvan-
individual consumers to help
er culture, patients may ul-
care marketing companies tage deserving patients." In a more-data-the-merriare tapping into specifics on
sult in the inequitable provision of medical care. "This intensive, intrusive
timately be unable to choose whether their health insurers know they prefer organic courage them to seek more foods, hunt big game or own medical care. MedSeek, a software and a dog. If health insurers misanalytics company in Bir- takenly peg certain people as mingham, Alabama, offers dog owners, patients probaservices intended to help hos- bly won't find that out, either. pitals "virtually influence" (Acxiom, one of the sources the behavior of current and for the household informawould-be patients. According tion UPMC used in its prediction models, has publicly to MedSeek.com, thecompany offers a "21st-century tool acknowledged that its details kit" that can r efine health about consumers can be out care marketingpitches based of date or just plain wrong.) Perhaps health insurers on sex, age, race, income, risk assessment, culture, religious and hospitals that use con-
kind of data analytics that hospitals identify their most leads to differential treatment profitable patients and enof customers, even if we are fine with it i n t h e business
context, needs to be disclosed in the medical context," says
Frank Pasquale, a professor in health care regulation at the Seton H al l
U n i v ersity
School of Law. Analyzing details about h ousehold a t t r i butes
and
habits of individual consumers is a long-standing practice in retailing, travel and fi-
nance. Credit card marketers, for instance, may analyze consumers' buying patterns beliefs and family status. One and financial wherewithal to client, Trinity Health System decide whether to pitch them in Michigan, used MedSeek's elite-level special-privilege services "to scientifically cards. identify well-insured prosNow two factors are con- pects," among others, and verging to speed the adop- encouragethem to schedule tion of these techniques in screening tests and doctor medicine. visits, a company case study We live in a sharing soci- said. In a blog post this month, ety. While older generations may still prefer to keep their Bill Andrae, MedSeek's vice
• • / I
sumer data to steer patients into dif f e rent t r e a t ment
tracksshould be required to make public their predictive findings and prove that they are plausible and equitable, suggests Pasquale at Seton Hall.
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programs do work," he says. "But they are kind of untested right now."
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
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THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MEDICINE
newa ta est e ouseca tot enext eve By Bernard J. Wolfson
What Medicast offers is a form of "concierge" medicine, in which patients agree to pay out of their own pockets for quicker access and longer visits with doctors.
The Orange County Register
Marcus Welby, welcome to the 21st century. If the fictional Santa Moni-
ca doctor from the early 1970s were still plying his trade today, patients would be able to find him at the touch of a
visits with doctors. Zebarjadi
thinks the company stands to profit from the fact that many p rimary-care doctors a r e overburdened — a situation likely to be exacerbated by millions of newly insured pa-
smartphone application. He
would listen to their woes and conduct a quick triage over the phone, deciding whether the symptoms warranted a house call, an ER visit or nothing at all. Medicast, a
launched in Miami last summer, offers exactly such an
app — and a network of doctors to go with it. The tiny company, which has big plans for nationwide expansion, just opened shop in Los Angeles earlier this month. And that's not TV fiction.
It is part of a growing trend in on-demand consumer services, notably exemplified by Uber, the mobile-driven taxi
request service that has provoked the ire of cabdrivers around the globe. It is also the latest fron-
t P Isaac Arjonilla/Orange County Register
Dr. Jeremy Williams checks the heartbeat of Los Angeles resident Nora Resnick, who made the house call through the IPhone app, Medicast.
tier in the burgeoning world o f telemedicine — a w o r l d i n which m edical test r e -
"We want to make it availfor a home visit, and the docsults can be transmitted over able to anyone, which is why tor keeps $170 of it. In addition smartphones in a heartbeat we have all three options," to the patient-doctor introand companies like Teladoc, said Sam Zebarjadi, Medi- ductions, Medicast provides cast's CEO and co-founder. MDLive and American Well billing and other back-office connect patients with doctors At the same time, Zebarjadi services. Monthly payment in video conferences or over said, Medicast "is focused on plans are also available: $39 a
checks and trains them in the
the Internet. Unlike t hose c ompanies,
decide whether they want to request a consultation. If they
whose bread and butter is virtual c onsultation, M edicast collects only if the doc-
the 30- to 64-year-old market
— people with an affinity for technology and some interest
month entitles you to two vis-
its a year; for $75 you get four. M edicast's service is n ot
"best practices" of house calls. People in need of medical services can consult the
profiles of on-call Medicast doctors — as well as reviews from previous patients — and do, they are asked to enter
generallycovered by health their credit card information. insurance plans, but the doc- They will get a call from one
in fitness and wellness."
The company has only five full-time employees — Zebar- tors give patients receipts for jadi, two o ther co-founders prescription drugs that might In a nod to the calmer, kind- and two marketing people. be covered. And some insurer era of house-calling physiThe company contracts ers will count the cost of the cians it evokes, Medicast also with its doctors — 20 in Los house calls against a patient's makes its service available Angeles and 5 in Miami so far, deductible for out-of-network on the company's website. though Zebarjadi envisions services. It even has an old-fashioned the network growing to hunThe company says it puts 800 number for the luddites dreds of physicians. all doctors it contracts with amongus. The company charges $249 through rigorous background
tor makes a house call in the flesh. No visit, no charge.
of the doctors within a cou-
ple of minutes. If the doctor decides a house call is in ord er, the credit card will b e
charged. What Medicast offers is a
form of "concierge" medicine, in which patients agree to pay out of their own pockets for quicker access and longer
near future, Zebarjadi said.
care system under the Afford-
The company also expects to launch its service in other major U.S. cities over the coming months: first in San Francisco and San Diego, then Washington, Chicago and New
able Care Act.
York.
tients coming into the health
s t artup t h at
with iPhones, will be available for Android devices in the
"With urgent-care centers It might face some competicrowding up and retail clinics tive head winds in New York, packed tothe rafters,we see where a company called Pagbig opportunity," he said. er is already providing a simiAnd with annual deduct- lar mobile-based doctor house ibles on health plans rising as call service. The company, high as $5,000, "a lot of peo- launched in early May, was ple are starting to forgo their co-founded by Oscar Salazar, insurance and going to a ser- one of the big brains behind vice like ours. Because they're Uber. So far, it operates only going to pay the same out-of- in New York City and is availpocket. So why pay for subpar able only evenings and weekservice?" ends. Medicast is a 24-hour Jeremy Williams, a Los An- service. gelesemergency room doctor Pager charges $300 for a who moonlights for Medicast house call and $50 for a condoing house calls, said the ser- sultation with n o f o llow-up vice is a good thing for physi- visit. cians and patients. Medicast does not seem to Because there is no t i me be a company that is likely to limit on a M e d icast house be put off by a little competicall, "the doctor can spend tion. Acknowledging the link time with you to really ascer- between Uber and his own tain what's going on," he said. line ofbusiness, Zebarjadi not"You may have a sore throat, ed that his company is starting but you're also a smoker. May- to think about crossing over be we can have a little con- into other consumer sectors. versation about smoking. Or He also said there has been maybe you'reoverweight.We some international i n terest — from the United Kingdom, can talk about that." That does not happen very China,Germany and Indiaoften in the truncated office in the on-call physician servisits of a t ypical medical vice Medicast provides. practice, Williams said. With But Medicast's near-term Medicast, "the doctor gets to priority is rolling out its serpractice medicine the way he vice across the U.S. "We definitely see this growreally likes." The company plans to ex- ing," Zebarjadi said. "We want pand on many fronts. Its app, to grow into a national on-call currently compatible only doctor home visit service."
Marrow transplantscanreverseadult sickle cell By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press
CHICAGO — Bone marrow transplants can reverse severe
sickle cell disease in adults, a small study by government
©«
yO
po
© qj©o o OOO
scientists found, echoing re-
sults seen with a similar technique used in children. The researchers and oth-
ers say the findings show age need not be a barrier and that Courtesy National Institutes of Health I The Associated Press the technique may change practice for some adult pa- Here shown are red blood tients when standard treatment fails.
The transplant worked in 26 of 30 adults, and 15 of them were even able to stop taking
©Oo.©
cells in a patient with sickle cell disease at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center in Bethesda, Md., during
a government study. drugs that prevent rejection one year later. "We're very pleased," said technique could extend their Dr. John Tisdale, the study's lives.
on average, and some patients
from an early phase of the study have been off anti-rejection drugs for more than seven years. Tisdale said based on the latest results, adults with se-
veredisease shouldbeoffered transplants if drug treatment doesn't work. One limitation is that fewer than 1 out of 4
adults with sickle cell disease likely have siblings who In this sample, red blood cells would bea good match. But are shown from a different sick- Tisdale said NIH scientists le cell patient after a bonemarare studying whether relarow transplant at the National tives who aren't as close a Institutes of Health Clinical match would also be suitable Courtesy National Institutes of Health1 The Associated Press
Center in Bethesda, Md.
for the patient.
d onor marrow. T hat
mar-
Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with rjo lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?
If you areexperiencing any one ormoreol thesesymptoms, it may be anautoimmune diseasecalled Scleroderma.Call your doctor for an appointmentwith documentedsymptoms as soon aspossible to either rule out or confirm Sclerodermadiagnosis.
donors. specialists a t Wa s h ington University in St. Louis said
the study shows that limiting the transplants to c h ildren
should be reconsidered. "These f i ndings o f f er what we hoped for." row before replacing it with hadn't worked, a drug called hope," Drs. Allison King and The treatment is a modihealthy donor marrow cells. hydroxyurea, and they had John DiPersio wrote in t he fied version of bone marrow In children, bone marrow is t ransplants at a n N I H r e - editorial. transplants that have worked completely wiped out. In the search hospital in Bethesda, in kids. Donors are a brother adult study, the researchers Maryland. or sister whose stem cell-rich only partially destroyed the The treatment failed to rebone marrow is a good match bone marrow, requiring less verse sickle cell in four of the diation to destroy bone mar-
f
A JAMA editorial by blood
study, involving patients aged 29 on average, were published senior author and a s enior The t r e atment i n v olves Tuesday in the Journal of the investigator at the National using chemotherapy and ra- American Medical AssociInstitutes of Health. "This is
~
ation. The usual t reatment
Raising Awarenesswith Strength R Courage
for moreinfovisit www.sclerodermalniel.ori
30 patients and one died of a
Tisdale said doctors have row's healthy blood cells out- disease-related complication. avoided t r ying s t andard last sickle cells and eventual- Another patient died suddent ransplants i n a d u lts w i t h ly replace them. ly a few weeks ago — an elsevere sickle cell disease beSickle cell disease is a ge- derly man whose transplant cause the treatment is so tox- netic condition that damages four years ago had been a sucic. Children can often tolerate oxygen-carrying hemoglobin cess. Tisdale said that man it because the disease typical- in red blood cells, causing had lived longer than the norly hasn't taken as big a toll on them to form abnormal, sickle mal lifespan for sickle cell patheir bodies, he said. shapes that can block blood tients but that his death was The disease is debilitating flow through the veins. It can unexpected and an autopsy and often life-shortening; pa- cause anemia, pain and organ was to be performed. tients die on average in their damage. The disease affects T he researchers are u n 40s, Tisdale said. That's one about 100,000 A m ericans, sure why the technique didn't reason why the researchers mostly blacks, and millions work for everyone but they decided to try the transplants worldwide. note that most patients surin adults, with hopes that the R esults f ro m t h e a d u l t vived morethan three years
An art-based camp providiny a safeand healing environment mhere children areable to express
their feelings of loss and grief
J uly 22 - 25 2 0 1 4 Hollinshead Barn 8z Historical Park Bend, Oregon
Herb
better — feel lighter," he said.
Third, we have to determine
Now the goal is testing the what the active ingredient is. herb's impact in humans, with "We have a b r oad-stroke Continued from D1 Other advantages include plans already in the works. framework to do this," he said. "We have to sit back and the fact that the herb already Dr. Thai said he hopes to is safe for human consump- debate whether we should have some conclusions withtion. People in Vietnam have
try this treatment in humans,
in six months concerning the
used the herb for tea for hun- have clinical trials in h udreds of years, even though mans," Dr. Thai said. "Second it isn't commonly consumed. we have to find the (biological) Dr. Thai said he even has con- mechanism" that occurs that sumed it. "It makes people feel causes blood sugar to decline.
biological mechanism that allows the herb to lower sugar levels in the rodents:
"We hope to start a trial in humans very soon."
For additional information and registration: CallEileen Grover at (541) 382-5882. To see a video on the program and more details: www.partnersbend.org (Other Services tab/Camp Courage)
Partners In Care
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
FjTNEss Plan B: Ahome
gym to go
DAYTON, Ohio — It
Exerciseprogramcaters to developmental disabled
can be more difficult to keep a consistent schedule at the gym during summer
Vicky Hagett
months. With kids out
contest.
of school, vacations and heat and humidity zapping your energy, its nice to have analternative workout plan. By putting aside just a few minutes a day, you can get a great workout when traveling or in the comfort of your home when its convenient for you. The majority of options for setting up a home gym require little to no maintenance, don't take up much floor space and are far less expensive than a gym membership. Qumhhells:A staple of most home gyms, dumbbells allow you to work all major muscle groups and move in a non-restrictive way during exercise. Ankle weights: Exercises using ankle weights include hip abduction, adduction and extension, leg curls and leg extensions. Hip abduction can be performed by lying on your side and slowly raising the top leg upward, adduction by bringing the lower leg upward. Standing hip extensions can be performed by bringing the leg straight behind you, with standing leg curls, the heel is raised toward the rear end. Seated leg extensions are performed by simply straightening the leg. Resistance tubing/ bands:Exercise bands/ tubing can be used for both upper- and lower-body strengthening, as well as for flexibility. Lightweight and easy to store, they are ideal for home or when traveling. Although strength gains can be achieved, there are a few drawbacks. The amount of resistance is not measurable with bands, making it different than most other exercise equipment. With bands, the greatest amount of resistance is only felt at the end of the movement when it is fully stretched, while the body normally generates the most force at the start of the movement. Hand/wrist weights: If you are restricted to doing light-weight resistance training, or have difficulty grasping and/or holding on to objects, hand and/ or wrist weights are a good choice. Most have adjustable velcro straps, or come in different sizes that slip right over the hand onto the wrist, making the need to hold onto
weights unnecessary. Tip: Wrist weights usually range from 1/2 pound to as much as five pounds, and can be used as additional resistance when exercising with dumbbells or resistance bands. Exercise videos can be helpful if you are a beginner, or are looking for variety in your workouts. Great for cardio, strength training and flexibility, exercise videos can also help teach you how to use home gym equipment and can be found to fit nearly any exercise goal and fitness level. Body weight exercisus:It is also possible to get an effective workout at home or on the road by doing body weight exercises. Options include lunges, squats, calf raises, leg lifts, crunches, pushups and pull-ups. — Marjie Gilliam, Cox Newspapers
Spirit — which stands for "Social Physical Interactive Respectful Inclusive Teamwork"
The Washington Post
Don't ever challenge Sam Smith to a n e n t husiasm
— offers classes that help clients with developmental disabilities build muscle,
The 29-year-old fitness instructor has the booming
increase flexibility and improve their diets.
voice of a radio announcer,
the optimistic outlook of a cheerleader and the boundless endurance of a marathon
runner. (He's finished four.) So when he starts a warmup by shouting, "Welcome to Spirit Club! Let's clap it out," it's impossible not to put your
feels involved, however, it's
all aspects of health," says
easy to overcome those hurdles, Ciner adds.
Ciner, who notes that there
It also helps to be able to turn to Smith, who seems like
he was born to do this.
Il k
"By the time I was 3 years
old, I was kicking around soccer balls," Smith says. A
hands together.
There's no question the program Smith is leading de-
year later, "he rode the train-
are several options for clients who think the class format isn't the right fit or enough of a challenge. Sprit Plus is for clients who would benefit from having a family member or counselor join in alongside them. There's also one-on-
autism.
ing wheels right off his bike," one fitness training, as well as adds his mother, Sara Sonet. Spirit coaching, which is foHis role model recently has cused on healthful behaviors, been Jillian Michaels because such as smart grocery shophe loves how the "Biggest ping, taking a walk or going Loser" trainer motivates peo- swimming. ple. But despite his enduring Romit Mitra, 34, who meets interest in all things athletic with Ciner twice a week in — as well as his fitness certifi- addition to taking classes, had cation — he couldn't persuade attended another gym prior a gym to hire him. to Spirit Club. "The exercises "With Sam, there is no ly- there were harder to do. I felt ingback. He's so determined," sad," he says. But now, he's all Sonet says. "But I was wor- smiles about getting to be acried. I thought the social com- tive and see his friends. ponent of personal training Wybierala credits the classwould be too challenging." es with tightening her waist,
"Sam getsthem engaged more than a typically functioning trainer would be able
This past year has altered
bettering her balance and en-
her perspective on what's possible. He's grown more
to," says Jared Ciner, who
p atient with c l ients — i n -
couraging her to drink water. "It works," she boasts. And although Berg ad-
launched Spirit in April 2013. Sarah L.Voisin i Washington Post Ciner had two jobs at the The Spirit program, led by Sam Smith, is tailored to the needs of
cluding her. ("Now he says, mits that he often skips his 'If you can't do this, try this homework — like many of us instead,' " Sonet marvels.) He when it comes to exerciserecognizes when he needs he thinks it's fun to "get my to explain things again. And moves moving." He hadn't he's continued to expand his had access to any sort of fitprofessional horizons. The ness program since he was latest development'? Smith in school, notes Berg's father, and Ciner just got certified to Jeff, who takes him to and teach Zumba, which they're from class. "Sometimes he can get sedincorporating into the Spirit entary," Jeff Berg adds. "After program. "Okay, we're going to do he works out, he wakes up Zumba, everybody. Zumba a little and his energy level is dance fitness, everybody. jumps." It's dance and exercise at Everyone perks up after spending an hour with Smith, the same time," Smith proclaimed during that recent who speaks almost exclusiveSunday class, before shaking ly in affirmations. On stretchhis rear end and jumping up ing: "Your arms will take care of you." On diet: "You can and down. With the opening of the eat those vegetables. VegeSpirit Club studio, Ciner plans tables make you healthy and to add specialized offerings to strong." On running, Zumba the schedule so students will and several other activities: soon be able to sign up for "Move those hips!" hour-long classes devoted to But his most positive words Zumba, yoga or self-defense. of all are saved for what Spirit
serves the applause. Spirit-
which stands for "Social Physical I n t eractive R espectful Inclusive Teamwork" — offers
classes that help clients with developmental
di s a b ilities
build muscle, increase flexibility and improve their diets. As a population, they have limited opportunities when it
comes to health, Smith says. "And a lot need more social in-
teraction," he adds. What makes Smith such an expert? He's a certified per-
sonal trainer, and he also has
time: as a personal trainer at
developmentally disabled clients.
Sport & Health, a D.C. area gym chain, and as a support counselor with the Jubilee As-
sociation of Maryland, which provides residential services to disabled adults.
Recognizing that many of his Jubilee clients were un-
County and — as of t his month — Spirit's own studio. the Jubilee headquarters in Kensington, Maryland, was
church group," shared Van Berg, 25, during a recent Sunday meet-up, before showing the other half-dozen participants a punching move. (Ciner
formerly a u sed bookstore.
demonstrated how to make it
The space, at the front of
Ciner and his small team of d eveloped trainers, including Smith,
harder by squatting down and throwing his fists faster.) Next came Mary-Jo Wybierala, 52, who proposed, "Let's do head,
comfortable in typical fitness
settings, Ciner
a curriculum just for them. Each class included partner
worked to transform it into
a welcoming fitness facility on a shoestring budget. With ties, proceeded at a pace that the help of Jubilee's direcleft plenty of extra time for tor of development, Stephen answering questions and end- Allen, Spirit scraped togethed with a homework assign- er the funds to put in gym ment that included an exer- flooring, a wall of mirrors, a cise to practice and a nutrition boxing stand, a weight rack exercises and group activi-
tip to follow. A fter tw o
shoulders, knees and toes."
While stretching, she revealed that she'd just "made oodles of friends" playing bocce. These types of i nteractions establish connections and empower students, Cin-
er says. Like every group he works with, this class has a mix of mobility issues, communication limitations and sensitivities. (Berg will stand
with dumbbells and a sound s essions at a
branch of Sport & Health, Ciner spun off Spirit Club as
system — "so we can make it fun," Ciner says. But more important than
runs full-time. Over the past
the equipment or location are the people. Every Spirit
year, more than 100 students
class starts in a circle, with
a separate entity that he now
back-to-back with a partner
have participated in its classes introductions and exercise at Chevy Chase Athletic Club, suggestions. "I'm s inging wit h m y the Arc of P r ince George's
Walking
to pass a medicine ball, for
"It's evolving into an envi-
instance, only if there are a
ronment where people with
few inches of air in between them.) As long as everyone
and without disabilities can
l i fe," Smith says, "Because I get to
feel comfortable working on
be a part of it."
director of Boston Bikes. Hub-
exercise that aren't so much
not merely possible, but com- now popular in other cities.
way, her city's program, has Continued from Df says. cycle tracks just opened in expanded its reach further by The movement is inspired, Fewer places in this coun- Memphis, Tennessee. Now, providing$5 annual memberin part, by Americans' ev- try are safer for walking than only two of the four lanes on ships to low-income residents. "Equity is the key goal er-expanding waistlines. In New York — based on the its Riverside Drive allow cars, the fight against obesity, pub- report's "pedestrian danger says bicycle/pedestrian coor- here," says Freedman, noting lic health experts are push- index," it's ranked 48th out of dinator Kyle Wagenschutz, that a new partnership is uning more physical activity, 51 large metro areas. But that who said he hopes such proj- derway with Boston Medical and they hope to get some won't cut it for Mayor Bill de ects will boost the city's activ- Center, which treats a large help from the redesign of Blasio, who is pushing to em- ity level along with its reputa- underserved population. Phycommunities. ulate a Swedish policy called tion. In the American College sicians there are being en"Vision Zero." Through a se- of Sports Medicine's just-re- couraged to prescribe bike The first step — and the second, and so on — is obvi- ries of new regulations, such leased Fit City Index, it ended riding to patients, who can go ous to Scott Bricker, executive as slower speed limits and in- up dead last. "No one says, directly from an appointment director of A m erica Walks, creased penalties for moving 'I'd love to live in the most un- to signing up for Hubway. "If you tell people to do 10 a nonprofit organization that violations, the goal is to have healthy city in America,' " he promotes "the forgotten form no traffic fatalities by 2024. adds. If he can persuade his push-ups a day, it usually of transportation." Seskin says other cities neighbors to swap their bar- doesn't happen. We're trying "Walking is a wonder drug," have copied New York before: becue for bikes, he reasons, to find ways to get them to he says, noting that regu- For example, Times Square's Memphis might be able to turn lar doses can burn calories, transformation into a pedes- those numbers around. strengthen bones, improve trian plaza five years ago has To get more folks riding, attitudes, relieve stress and re- spawned many smaller-scale dozens of American cities have duce the risk of a whole lot of imitators. And the Big Ap- started bike-share programs. ple's protected bike lanes have The impact has been immeunwanted diagnoses. But there a r e o b stacles served as inspiration for those diate, says Nicole Freedman, along this path. One of the biggies, Bricker says, is a fortable and convenient, she
One of the nation's newest
has done for him. "It's changed my
like work," says Alan Meyers, a pediatrician who's promot-
ing the effort among his colleagues at the hospital. "The hope is that if a person starts using it, they'll like it so much
that it'll make a change in daily habits." That pretty much sums up the mission of the "active transportation"
mo v e ment,
which encompasses all of these walkability and bikeability efforts. And it contin-
ues to grow in major cities, small towns and even rural
areas, Seskin says. Good ideas are out thereeven when sidewalks aren't.
201 4
well-foundedfearof accidents.
More than 47,000 people were killed and 676,000 were injured while walking in the United States between 2003
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The Bulletin
THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
New tests for helmets proposed inconcussionfight By Lauran Neergaard
Health drinks
A s for safetygear, last fall's Institute of M e dicine
The Associated Press
report found little scientific evidence that current sports
WASHINGTON — There is
no concussion-proof football helmet, but manufacturers
helmet designs reduce the
risk of concussion.
may soon have tomeet new
testing standards against certain concussion-causing
Indeed, football
h e lmets
forces — a step in the quest
have gottenbigger and heavier in recent years but "our
for more protection. The organization that sets
concussion problem has not g otten b etter," s ai d D a v e
safety standards for athletic
Halstead, a sports biome-
equipment was preparing to adopt the testing criteria on Friday.
versity of Tennessee and the Southern Impact Research
It is part of a movement to
Center testing laboratory who
try to make contact sports safer, as concern about con-
advises the athletic equipment standards committee.
cussions is growing. There's even a new smartphone app
Testing
chanics specialist at the Uni-
to help parents and coach-
es recognize right away if a player may have a brain injury. Football helmets were designed to protect against catastrophic injuries such as skull fractures and bleeding
onto a crash test dummy-like
of these drinks by those who are otherwise healthy,
in the brain, and are consid-
ered highly effective at that. They're tested for how they
hind the impact. "It's about time," was the
reaction from concussion researcherSteven P.Broglio of
and forth.
Although there is currently no concussion-proof football helmet, the Southern Impact Research
Initial proposal
Center in Tennessee has been preparing newtesting criteria in hopes to contribute information on a problem that plagues several sports.
The proposed new stan-
Noting that the primary ingredients in these drinks are water, severaltypes of sugar, oils and flavoring, he described them as "liquid candy bars with vitamins."
the University of Michigan and National Athletic Trainers' Association.
Broglio wasn't involved in the NOCSAE move but compared it to how car-crash rat-
dard would add an additional
according to The New Old Age blog in The New York Times.
ferentspeeds and as ifdifferent-si zed players were be-
Courtesy Souther Impact Research Center/The Associated Press
t han
I million providers have developed lists of things physicians and providers should question. To see all the lists, visit choosingwisely.org). The Choosing Wisely recommendations were intended specifically for the elderly ill. But at the geriattific meeting in May, Mulhausen took aim at the use
a ram to hit the head from d ifferent directions, at d i f -
make the brainbump back
r epresenting m or e
ric society's annual scien-
A machine then positions
r
Continued from 01 (Choosing Wisely, by the way, is an intriguing campaign intended to raise red flags about questionable medical tests, products and procedures and to spark dialogue between physicians and patients. To date, almost 60 medical groups
To test rotational acceleration, labs will put helmets head with a moveable neck.
withstand direct blows, socalled linear forces that can
D5
test of how helmets perform Once the standard goes when an impact also makes a into effect, expected in about player's head suddenly spin, a year, it would apply only to causing the brain to stretch new helmets.
the sidelines until it's healed. The federal Centers for Dis- ings focused first on head-on Although millions of U.S. ease Control and Prevention's collisions and then on side children and t eens p l ay "heads-up" campaign teach- impacts. "We're adding another layschool or commues signs of con"We don't foresee any need nity sports, it's not and twist inside the skull as it cussion — which er to get a better understandchanges direction. Scientists to replace all the helmets that c'ear h o ma n y It' S n Otju S t ing of what helmets are capacall that rotational acceler- exist with new and different suffer concussions, right away — and ble of," he said. It's not clear whether helation, and brain specialists helmets," Oliver said. "This is in p ar t b e cause fOOtbalir what steps to take. say limiting both kinds of a first step." many go undiag- COnCuSSiOnS Sy m ptoms includemet changes really will help, forces is an important piece nosed. The Institute OCCur In a confusion, weak- cautioned Dr. Thom Mayer, Concern for youth to the puzzle. o f M edicine s a id ness, a p pearing medical director of the NFL "We're p l o wing new Concern a b ou t c o n cus- 250,000 people 19 range Of dazed or stunned, Players Association. ground here," Mike Oliver, sions has been constantly and younger were sp o r t s, from lack o f c o o rdina- But "we're committed to executive director of the Na- growing a mi d h e adlines treated in emergen- hOCPey and tion, mood or bemaking sure we look at what tional Operating Committee about f o rmer p r o fessional cy rooms for conhavior changes and are the most cutting-edge on Standards for Athletic players who suffered long- cussions and other laCrOSSe tO eve n a b r i eflossof helmet testing s tandards Equipment, told The Associ- term impairment after re- sports- or r e cre- SO CC er and consc iousness. Re- available. This is a step in the ated Press. peated blows to the head. It's ation-related brain wreStljng' cent guidelines say right direction," he said. The hope is that the stan- not just football; concussions injuries in 2009. anyone suspected Helmet standards can't afChildren and of having a concus- fect rotational acceleration dard might eventually spur occur in a range of sports, safer helmet designs. from hockey and lacrosse to Being prepared sion should be tak- caused by strong tackles to teeris, Wlth "I don't believe helmets soccer and wrestling. Chil"Parents a nd t h e i r s t i l l en out o f play im- the body rather than a hit to will ever be th e sole soludren and teens, with t heir coaches need to be mediately and not the head, Halstead said. tion for concussion," said Dr. still developing brains, ap- prepared and edu- de v e loPIng allow e d back until Specialists emp h asize Robert Cantu, a Boston Uni- pear at special risk. cated about what b r a i n s , cleared by a trained other steps, such as teachversity neurologist, a leading The Institute of Medicine, the nature of this ing players not to lower their prof e ssional. sports concussion expert and an independent organiza- injury is," advised appeara t Gioia he l p ed heads during a hit, said USA vice president of the athletic tion that advises the govern- neuropsychologist sp e c i al rlS~ tur n t ha t a d v ice Football's Gioia. "Helmets are a small part equipment standards com- ment, warned last fall that G erard Gioia o f into the "concusmittee. But, "it puts us on the too many young athletes still Children's National sion r e cognition of the efforts that need to be road to developing helmets face a play-at-all-costs cul- Medical Center in Washing- and response" smartphone undertaken to protect players that will l essen the chance ture that discourages report- ton and medical adviser to app to offer guidance on the against concussion," agreed for concussion." ing the injury and staying on USA Football. field. NOCSAE's Oliver. .
"Real food is not only more palatable than these overly sweet liquid
supplements... It's also a better source of calories and micronutrients
you don't get from highly processed food, such as liquid supplements." — Dr. Paul Mulhausen, chief medical officer for the lowa-based health management firm Telligen
An 8-ounce serving of Ensure Original "milk chocolate" nutrition shake,
for example, contains 9 grams of protein, 26 vita-
m ins and minerals and 220 calories. But it also has no fiber and 15 grams of sugar. The same size bottle of Boost Original in "rich chocolate" has a
s i milar
nutrition profile but also contains 240 calories and a whopping 28 grams of sugar. That's almost twice as much as two frosted straw-
Stressfrom interpersonal conflict mayspur highblood pressure By Eric Boodman
tored for five to six days. Cohen
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
discovered that the more social
Fighting with friends and family may have more lasting effects than just ruining your day.
roles one played — such as being a parent, spouse, friend, vol-
In a recently released study,
psychologists Rodlescia Sneed and Sheldon Cohen of Carnegie Mellon University found thatnegative socialinteractions can increase the risk of hypertension in older adults. But their
unteeror member ofa religious
group — the stronger one's immunityto colds. But social contact is a dou-
ble-edged sword. Almost all previous research was about how many social contacts or
roles you had, and not about their quality, said Cohen and
findings weren't true across Sneed. An even tinier fraction of scholarship existed about the possible negative impact of more than men do. social interactions. And of that, For decades, scientists have almost all of it looked at the efknown that the wider your so- fects on mental health. cial circle, the healthier you are The two psychologists were likely to be. As far back as 1987, interested especially in the conresearchers found that, in Ala- sequences of those social situameda County, Calif., residents tions we find unpleasant. They
the board. Women, it t urns out, take conflict to heart much
with more close friends and
wanted to know how criticism,
family members had higher chances oflivinglonger. "It is very clear that people who are lonely and who feel socially isolated are at greater
data from the Health and Retirement Study, a l ong-term
"lt is very clear that people who are lonely and who feel socially isolated are at greater risk of heart disease."
been advised to help people avoid developing high blood pressure. Other tips include doing more exercise, reducing salt intake and limiting alcohol
— Karen Matthews, professor of psychiatry and epidemiology consumption. For Sneed, the disease's prevat the University of Pittsburgh alence makes it an especially important subject for psychoCohen suggested that women the clinic, said Matthew Mul- logical research. At least 70 put more stock in their social doon, an internal medicine spe- percent of all Americans have lives than men do, and that cialist at UPMC. high blood pressure by the age "It's one thing to say that those 65 or over might have of 65. Itis one of theleadingrisk figured out how to better miti- dietary salt raises blood pres- factorsfor heart disease, the gate the damage of toxic rela- sure," Dr. Muldoon said. "It's single biggest killer in the Unittionships, but the gender and less obvious how being in a ed States. age differences are still open to stressful relationship can raise The exact mechanism that interpretation. blood pressure." allows social interactions to From a physician's perspecYet many ofhis hypertension affect our cardiovascular systive, Sneed and Cohen's study patients attribute the condition tem remains unknown. But as is well put together, but the idea to stress, and he feels this study Sneed has observed, "Social will require more research be- is a step inthe right direction. stress is the most commonlyrefore its effects can be seen in Lowering stress has long portedkind ofstress."
let-downs and nagging could affect your physical health. To find out, they looked at
For more than 10 years, Mat-
pealing low-salt diet or they may live alone and don't want to eat because meal-
times are lonely andboring. But relying on nutrition in a bottle isn't the answer, M ulhausen told th e E x -
press-News. Instead, they (or their family or caregivers) should make the effort to find ways to prepare real, whole foods.
"Real food is not only more palatable than these overly sweet liquid supplements," he said, "It's also a bettersource of calories a nd m i cronutrients y o u
don't get from highly processedfood,such as liquid supplements."
OSPICE
You Have A Choice. Ask For Us By Name.
tions and hypertension in 2006 and 2010, but Sneed and Cohen
excluded all who had been preand cardiovascular health. viously diagnosed with hyperShe has equipped her subjects tension. They wanted to see if with cuffs that measure blood the frequency and intensity of pressure once every 30 or 45 unpleasant interactions reportminutes throughout their day. ed in 2006 were linked to the When the cuff inflates, partici- onset of hypertension among pants stop and write downtheir the 1,502 participants who did recent activity: where they are, not already have high blood who they have been with, and pressure. what they havebeen doing. What they found was strikThose who have had social ing. If, on average, you rated contact in the last 10 minutes your negative interactions at generally have lower blood 2 out of 4, you were 38 percent pressure, Ma tthews said. more likely to develop hyperCohen has himself spent tension in the next four years 30 years looking at how psy- than if you had rated those inchological factors influence teractions at l. And for each our susceptibility to colds. In higher rating of unpleasant inthese studies, participants were teraction, participants were 38 asked about their social lives percent more likely to get high before researchers dropped blood pressure. virus-infected liquid into their Yet these findings were only nostrils. Then, the participants true of women between the were quarantined and moni- ages of 51 and 64. Sneed and
forces them to eat an unap-
o f Redmond 54 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3
survey conducted by the Unien Matthews, professor of psy- versity of Michigan. More than chiatry and epidemiology at the 6,000peopleprovided informaUniversity of Pittsburgh. tion onboth their social interacriskofheartdisease,"said Kar-
thews has been studying the
berry Pop-Tarts. W eight losscan be a red flag for the elderly. Many have trouble eating enough healthy food. They have difficulty shopping for and preparingmeals,therema y be a medical condition that
I I I I
linkbetween social interactions
g
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
as a s or
S o wSma er
TV SPOTLIGHT
nomenon of FOMO — fear of 7ttvitter and your entire feed
give (viewers) what they want. If we see something is really resonating with the fans, we
is people talking about something, if you're not watching
like to create more content around that."
missing out. When you're on By Alicia Rancilio The Associated Press
N EW Y ORK
— Du r i n g
publicity teams at ABC Family huddle in a conference room
Mullin added, "In this day and age it's very hard for any Rewarding viewers showrunner or writer's room N etworks tr y t o r e w a r d to stay off social media. It's a
to tweet live with fans.
viewers for their tweets. Not
So do cast members and the show's producers from where
only will they retweet fan's the people.... If there's a certweets from show accounts tain character people don't but sometimes air tweets on like or a certain couple people screen live, in reruns or during love. (Feedback) is a great tool promos. for storytellers to use when de-
fresh episodes of "Pretty Lit-
I c
••
and when they can — and the
dialogue often pays off. N ielsen's T w i tter
you start to feel left out."
tc
tle Liars," the marketing and
abc
tr a c k-
ing division said "PLL" is the top-tweeted show and ranked No. 1 for the week of June
When it was revealed that Jen Arnold of TLC's "The Lit-
?
16-22.
Courtesy ABC Family via The Associated Press
"From a very top level per- According to Social Guide, "Pretty Little Liars" consistently ranks
spective we talk about twitter being the new w ater cool-
er," said Danielle Mullin, the network's vice president of
marketing. While some critics argue the second screen experience
of looking at a device while a show is on serves to distract viewers, networks see nothing
but an upside. Some insight into hashtags and while watching TV:
How hashtags work Hashtags make it easier to filter and search for a topic. Liz Myers, in the TV Partner-
ships division at Twitter, said viewers "don't have to be mu-
tually following somebody or digging around." S ometimes hashtags ar e
straightforward with a show's title (¹TrueBlood.) Other times
great way to hear the voice of
as one of the most tweeted about shows while new episodes are
ciding what direction to take
their show in."
tle Couple" had cancer, the
Tweeting about a show also
network selected sentiments
keeps people interested for the long haul.
from fans with the hashtag ¹GetWellJen to show later on screen.
airing. While somecritics argue the second screen experience of
Said Variola: "We are look-
ing at social media as a way to connect with fans year-round,
More and more actors, like the cast of ABC's "Scandal," not just when our shows are and doesn't hurt. are getting into the game and on the air. With TLC's 'Cake tweeting with fans while a Boss,' we're talking about show is airing. cakes year round. Not just they're used as conversation vide an incentive to tune in "Back in the day you had to when you see (its star) Buddy starters and are episode or when it counts, in real time. send aself-addressed stamped Valastro on the air." "The more people who envelope to get back an 8-byscene specific. (The hashtag 7tvitter isn't the only form ¹TobyIsBack aired in a recent talk about it, the more people 10 glossy photograph and a of social media engaging TV "PLL" episode when actor watch," said Jenn Deering Da- sticker (from a celebrity,) Mul- viewers. ABC Family said Keegan Allen's character re- vis, co-founder and chief cus- lin said. during big "tent pole episodes" turned from an absence.) tom officer of Union Metrics, a (Iike a premiere, finale or speMyers said hashtags "can company that analyzes social Immediatefeedback cial episode) "someone is monpinpoint moments, drive vot- media use. Tweeting about a TV show, itoring Pinterest and live pining (on a competition series), And it could bring in new and using specific hashtags, ning fashion tips, somebody create content" and offer in- viewers by "creating impres- is like an immediate focus is taking snippets of scenes sight into how to l ater talk sions for those who aren't al- group. and putting them up on Tum"We always look and see blr as gifs. Instagram is hugeabout a show. ready talking about the show to see that conversation and what people are saying about ly popular. We have talent Encouragingliveviewing hopefully change the chan- our shows and it helps us in- taking selfies of themselves If DVR's are helping people nel," added Myers. form our strategy," said Kris- while they're live tweeting and watch TV shows at their leiMullin said she believes ten Variola, director of social they're posting those selfies.... sure, live tweeting may pro- tweets can "play into this phe- media for TLC. "We want to Fans love it." looking at s device while s show is airing detracts from the viewing
experience, networks have adifferent perspective, saying it helps
TV TOOAY 9a.m. onAMC, Movie:"Rocky" — Sylvester Stallone rose to superstardom with this1976 blockbuster about a small-time Philadelphia boxer who reclaims his self-respect by taking on world heavyweight champ Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) in awellhyped title bout. Taking his long shot seriously, Rocky Balboa prepares with the help of awise old trainer (Burgess Meredith). Talia Shire and Burt Young also star in the drama that would inspire several sequels and aBroadway musical. 12p.m. on GOLF,"PGAToor Golf" —The OldWhite TPCin White Sulphur Springs is the scene for the next four days asthe PGA Tour makesits only stop in West Virginia with the Greenbrier Classic. A field including Sean O'Hair, Justin Leonard, Angel Cabrera andDarren Clarkewill tee it up on the historic 7,287-yard par70 course thatfeatures generous fairways and undulating greens. Jonas Blixt won this tournament ayear ago by astroke over Steven Bowditch and Matt Jones. 8 p.m. on 29, "BlackBox"For a music-contest winner, the aftermath isn't necessarily happy, as the newepisode"Sing Like Me" suggests. Dr. Black (Kelly Reilly) deals with such a victor — a womanwho no longer can gauge musical pitch — as part of a study. The research also involves a manimpacted by being struck by lightning. Dr. Black finds herself unprepared for the proposal that Dr. Bickman (Ditch Davey) makes. David Rascheand Frankie Faison guest star.
8 p.m. on(CW), "TheVampire Diaries" —DamonandElena(lan Somerhalder, NinaDobrev) dress up as Henry Vlll and AnneBoleyn to attend the Whitmore Historical
Ball, whereElenareceivesa
rot er's ocritica e avior
MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movietimes are subject tochangeafter presstime. l
Dear Abby: Iam a gay man who has had a difficult, distant relationship with my only brother, "Bill."
He has made many nasty, homophobicremarks, and my partner, "Jon," has been excluded from many family gatherings. Because Jon wasn't welcomed I also did not attend
those g a therings, and I endured further wrath because I
DFP,R
didn't.
Bill's daughter has just announced that she is a lesbian. His reaction is mystifying. He has embraced her and her partner and has lovingly included them into the heart of the family.
I am happy that my niece has found love and support. I am also jealous that she has a better father
than I did a brother. Are my feelings justified?
when a child of theirs is involved.
Now let's see if your brother's attitude toward you changes, and how forgiving you and your partner can be if it does. Dear Abby:I bought a friend a gift recently. Her response? "You should have j u st given me the money because I really need it." A few years ago, I was going to buy another friend an expensive pair of shoes and she convinced me not to because she said she could buy 10 pairs from a discount store for the amount I was planning to spend. I love giving gifts during the holidays and for birthdays, and enjoy choosing things I think my friends might like or need. I hate giving money! Isn't part of the gift-giving experience for the giver, too?
giver selects things the recipient can use and enjoy. A grateful recipient doesn't look a gift horse in the mouth and say she'd prefer the
cash. However, the woman who convinced you not to spend hundreds
of dollars on a pair of designer shoes she might not be able to return was, I think, doing both of
you a favor. While it's your prerogative to give whatever you want to whomever you want,don't you
think it makes more sense to bestow something the person can use and enjoy than to satisfy your ego? Dear Abby:Can you settle a disputeforme? When you go up to a house with two doors — a regular
door and a screen door — and there is no doorbell, is it proper to open the first door and knock on the sec-
ond door or is it considered rude'? — Knock, Knock
Dear Knock, Knock:Because in Dear Sad Sibling: Of course buy whatever I want for someone, the absence of a doorbell the only your feelings are justified. You are and their response should just be, way you can make your presence human, and your skin isn't made "Thank you." It irks me when peo- known would be to knock, open of Teflon. It's sad that your broth- ple dictate to me what I should give the screen door and knock. Then er couldn't have treated you and them. Am I just being a control step back and close the screen Jon with more compassion and freak, or do I have the wrong idea door so you're not intruding on the understanding. of gift-giving? spaceoftheperson who answers it. I find it interesting how people's — Gift Giver in Texas — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com perspective can radically change DearGift Giver: A thoughtful gift or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 — Sad Sibling in Virginia
I feel it should be my choice to
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014:This yearyou are far more stable than you have been in thepast.You know whatyou want,and you know what direction you are heading in. You will witness an increase in your funds in the next12 months, though you couldspend asm uchasyoubring in.Try to simplify. Ifyou are single, you could
meetsomeone out
Starsshowthekind ofthebiue. This of dayyou'llhave pe r son might just ** * * * D ynamic be your souimate. ++++ Positive If you are attached, the two ofyou can be explosive in * Difficult
arguments, yetyou
always kiss and make up. Try to get to the bottom of what causesthese upsets.VIRGO hasa cold yet deliberate style of asking questions.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Let others fuss about the last-minute details of getting together this July 4th. A partner or dear friend will take the lead, but he or she still might complain. You'll witness a change of tune with an older friend. Check in, and make sure that he or she feels OK.Tonight: In party mode.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
with others. Make it a point to let go of a problem that has been on the backburner. Tonight: A little rest and relaxation.
CANCER (Jone21-July 22) ** * * You'll feel much better than you have in a while. Others might not agree with your plans for a fun few days. Thoughyoulovestaying athomeand enjoying all the creature comforts, not everyone else does. Be open to different suggestions. Tonight: Let the fireworks begin.
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * Be aware of your tendency to be overcritical. You suppress your ingenuity when you fall into a negative mindset. Pressure could build around what you must do. Understand that you might need to reorganize your schedule. Tonight: Treat a loved one to a celebration.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) *** * Zero in on friends' plans,and maintain an even pace in order to clear up what must be done. Be more forthright in how you deal with a close relative or loved one. This seems to be changing in front of
your eyes.Tonight: Wherethe peopleare. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) ** * *
You might feel pressured once
more by aparent or lovedone. Besure to respond to others' authority and concerns. You could feel as if you have to respond to each request, thus creating more stress for yourself. Allow others to pitch in more often. Tonight: Celebrate.
CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Connect with someone at a distance whom you might have plans with for the holiday. You have the ability to clear out a lot of obstacles quickly. A friend or loved one might seem remote. Don't read too much into this, as he or she behaves like this often. Tonight: Switch
gears. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
** * * Someone you care a lot about ** * * * You might not be aware of how could be quite demanding. Don't allow much your natural, relaxed ways draw this person to force your hand. How you others to you. Resist becoming upset see a situation could be changing. Listen to your intuition about what is going on. because of a hassle or two — it is not TAURUS (April 20-May20) worth it. An important bond you have with Maybe you can root out the problem. To** * * * Y our imagination soars and achil d seems to bechanging.M akean night: Join a friend. clears up obstacles with ease. You might adjustment. Tonight: Let it all hang out. be more in the mood for a holiday party PISCES (Feb.19-March20) than you realize. Don't hesitate to delegate LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * Others come forward with sugany work involved with planning a get-to- *** You need somedowntime. Even gestions. Theyseem to bevery concerned gether. Tonight: Let the party begin. if you are out and about, you are likely to about how you feel. Let them dote on you remain closed off. Wouldn't it be better for a change, as it usually is the other way GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * Stay anchored. You know what to take off for a day or two and get some around. Do yourself a favor and relax. "you" time? Reach out to a loved one at a Forget about entertaining; instead, be enyou want and how to get it. You could be exhausted by recent activities, and distance and share what ails you. Tonight: tertained. Tonight: Enjoy the evening. you easily could be cranky when dealing Nap first, then decide. © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22JUMPSTREET(R) l,3:45,7,9:45 • AMERICA(PG-13) 11:10a.m.,1:45, 4:30, 7:05, 9:40 • DELIVER US FROMEVIL (R) 12:40, 3:30, 7:15, 10:10 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:55, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 1:50, 6:20, 9:25 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 10:45 a.m., 1:35, 4:35, 7:55 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)10:55a.m.,1:30, 4:05, 6:40 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 23-D (PG)9:15 • JERSEYBOYS(R) 10:50 a.m., 2:05, 6, 9 • MALEFICENT(PG)11:25 a.m.,2,4:50,7:25,9:55 • TAMMY(R) 11:45a.m., 12:50, 2:15, 3:20, 5, 6:05, 7:30, 9:05, 10 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)10:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:40, 6:15, 9, 10:05 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION 3-D (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:55, 7:45 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION IMAX3-D (PG13) 11 a.m., 2:45, 6:30, 10:15 • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST(PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 8 • Accessibility devices areavailable for some movies. •
r
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)9 • TRANSCENDENCE (PG-13) 6 • After7p.m., showsare2f andolder only. Younger than 2f may attend screeningsbefore 7p.m. ifaccompaniedby a legal guadian.
disturbing message from Dr.Maxfield (Rick Cosnett), and Caroline
(CandiceAccola) gets herheart broken. Damontries to makea deal with Silas (PaulWesley), who demandsthat hedo something unthinkable in "Monster's Ball." 8 p.m.on58 ,"Hollywood Game Night" —Betty White is absent, but the other principal stars of the sitcom "Hot in Cleveland" are on hand to play games in "Hot in Hollywood." Valerie Bertinelli, W endie MalickandJaneLeeves define"friendlycompetition" as theyaim to win for their respective team captains. Mekhi Phifer, Billy Eichner andAndy Richter are the other celebrities on aquest for the $25,000 grand prize. Jane Lynch is the host. © Zap2it
EVERGREEN
In-Home Gue Servlces
Care for loved ones. Comfort forall. 541-389-0006
www.evergreeaiahome.com
2 Locationsin Bend Main Center 2150NE StudioRd,Suite10
NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio
541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • JOOOROWSKY'SDUNE (PG-13)6 • SNOWPIERCER (R) 3:30, 8 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 2:45, 4:45, 6:45, 8:45 • TAMMY(R)1:45,4:I5,6:45,9:l5 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)2:I5, 5:30, 8:45
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 5, 7 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 7:15 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGONS 2 (PG)5 • JERSEYBOYS(R) 4:30 • TAMMY (R)5:30, 7:45 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)7 r$• r
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 2:40, 5:05, 7:30 • DELIVER US FROMEVIL (R) 4:10, 6:50 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 2:50, 5, 7:10 • TAMMY (R)2:20, 4:40, 7 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)3:15 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION 3-D (PG-13) 6:30 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 4, 7 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (UpstairsPG-13) 3:30, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GG! Magazine
•
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Pure. &m/6 t"o.
aj. B~ du Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
Step upto Boachl ssHE43RL5UC Stainless steel 4 wash cydes
Holds14 place settings
gSS79 PluS • ¹SHESAR52 whilerrrvrt, $499 irmired urrrNres
Hbp30N TV.APPLIANCE
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 •
•
• I
•t•
«,'c;
Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate alt onl
Call for package rates
kfl
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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280
286
Estate Sales
Sales Northeast Bend
ESTATE SALE 68 yrs in same house! Old trunks, furniture, oil lamps, Griswold & other cast iron, crocks, enamelware, framed prints, linens 8 vintage clothing, kitchenware, glassware & china, silver, watches & knives, marbles, books, early Bend calenders & other Bend memorabilia, post cards, Guardianware, records, lots small interesting collectibles. Fri. 7/4 & Sat. 7/5, 9-4 numbers Fri 8 a.m. 468 NE Hawthorne in Bend. See pics O www.atticestatesandappraisals.com 541-350-6822
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin serving central oregonsince aot
Seigle family estate 288 sale 52020 Read Loop, La Pine. July 4, 5 & 6, Sales Southeast Bend 8-5. Big Shop/household items. 2 snowmo- 3-Family Sale! Combiles with trailer. fully puter desk, couch and loaded mec h anics small bar fridge, mens truck, grader, 2000 Al- & womens clothes, Liv pine hauler/rec. veh. dolls w/ access., misc. 61579 American Loop 282 ¹105, Sat. July 5, 8-2. Sales Northwest Bend Camping gear, electronfurniture, furs, cloth21244 Gift Road. Fri ics, ing and other items. 9-3, Sat. 9-noon. A/C 8am-1pm, Sat 7/5 only, 61246 Ladera Road 290
I RETIREMENT
Sales Redmond Area DON'T MISS THIS ONE!
i love, sex), art, shoes i 2- Family Sale: Remodeling leftovers, house(Women 7), Blazers l (Women 8), party l wares, clothes, big variety. Sat 7/5, 9-2, decorations, chairs 2054 SW Reindeer St. I Saturday/Sunday, I
L '"'" "
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
J
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 284
Sales Southwest Bend
Finally cleaned out storage unit WOW! Full garage & more! 2641 NW 15th Fri. -Sat. 292
Sales Other Areas
NOTICE Remember to remove your Garage Sale signs (nails, staples, etc.) after your Sale event is over! THANKS! From The Bulletin and your local utility
Garage Sale, contents of 2 storage units, so lots of misc. Wed-Sun, 8-6, 61054 Chuckanut Drive. companies. Garage sale July 3, 4, & 5,from 9-4 The Bulletin t«««tntt Central Oregon sincefmt 59976 Hopi Rd., in Deschutes River Woods www.bendbulletin.com Jim & Carmelita Harper )Itjffat~ +
NIOVING SALE ~ ~
~
19950 SE DRIFTWOOD LANE, SPACE 302 IN ROMAINE VILLAGE
Fri., July 4 • Sat., July 5, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Crowd control admittance numbers 8 a.m. Triday (Take Hwy 97 south to Romaine Village Way. Right to Mahogany-Follow to Driftwood Lane) FOURTH OF JULY GREAT SALE! 2001 Itasca 31' Motorhome 55,000 miles; Nice utility trailer; 1864 Burnside Rifle; 8 Other Rifles; Both End recliner sofa; Four other recliners; Occasional chairs; Stressless chair 8 footstool; Lamps; Queen bed; Bottom Freezer refrigerator; Dining room set; Duncan Phyfe Card table; Electrical appliances; Cookware; two Griswold pans; Other cast iron; Lots of Linens; Bath and cleaning supplies; Lawn furniture Cast Iron two burner propane cooktop; Lots of side and end tables; Office chairs; Computer desk; Books; Pots and pans; Glassware; Plastic Ware; Canners; Large Cook Pots; Grinder on Stand; Tools; Wheelbarrows; Small Compressor; Two small welders; Golf clubs and balls; Collectibles; Bookcase; Stuffed Bears and other animals; Yard art; Custom made sewing cabinet; Large air conditioner; Cheval mirror; Kenwood compiete Stereo system; Wood gun cabinet; Queen air bed; Set of dishes; lots of cowboy hats; Men's and womens clothing; Craftsman tools; saw; drill, etc: Flex wire feed welder; Lincoln Arc Welder' Craft items; Two GPS units; XM sattelite radio system; Lots and lots of o ther itemsiiiii!ii
Handledby Deedy's Estate Sales Co. 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves www.deeedysestatesales. com
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Tools
Fuel & Wood
English Springer Spaniel Leather rocker/recliner BUYING 8« SE LLING Woodworking shop puppies. AKC, field chair, orig $750; asking Bend local pays CASHII All gold jewelry, silver equipment: Sh op- Pine & Juniper Split champion blood lines, $70. 541-317-2890 and gold coins, bars, smith with upgraded for all firearms & rounds, wedding sets, table saw; Band saw; PROMPT D ELIVERY liver & white, avail. 7/1. Oak China cabinet, ammo. 541-526-0617 class rings, sterling sil- Lathe; Jointer; Disk, 541-389-9663 $800/ea. Beaver Creek w/glass shelves. $60. Beretta 12 g a. , o / u, ver, coin collect, vin- Sander and working Kennels. 541-523-7951 541-385-6012. M/F, 28" barrel, good tage watches, dental tools; Shopsmith 12" armnjamOq.com 269 condition $450. Call gold. Bill Fl e ming, planer wit h s t and, 202 Oak dining table with 541-382-9419. or text 541-419-9961. Gardening Supplies Sears 12" wood lathe 6 chairs. $275. Want to Buy or Rent 541-548-4601 with Copy Crafter and & Equipment CASH!! How to avoid scam working tools. Tormek For Guns, Ammo & CASH for wood Refrigerator Maytag w/ and fraud attempts Reloading Supplies. Super grinder 2000 dressers and wood icemaker, very clean. 541-408-6900. with many a t tach- BarkTurfSoil.com VBe aware of internadinettes. 541-420-5640 $450; 541-815-48'I 1 ments and i n strucFrenchton Puppies. 75% tional fraud. Deal loFind exactly what tions. Porter Cable PROMPT DELIVERY Wanted: $Cash paid for french bulldog, 2 5% cally whenever pos4"x8" belt/disc bench vintage costume jew- Boston terrier. Parents Twin E rgo-motion you are looking for in the sible. 541-389-9663 elry. Top dollar paid for on site. Born 6 /21. 500 automatic bed sander. Central MaV Watch for buyers CLASSIFIEDS Gold/Silver. I buy by the $1350. Put your deposit with memory foam chinery 4"x6" belt/disc who offer more than Estate, Honest Artist down now. 541-279-3588 mattress, like new, your asking price and bench sander; Sears For newspaper Elizabeth,541-633-7006 8tA" slide compound IT IIS THIS who ask to have dehvery, call the only used for a short HOH miter saw. AMT 4600 t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . money wired or Circulation Dept. at 203 handed back to them. scroll saw ; B e n ch 541-385-5800 541-383-7603 Holiday Bazaar DO YOU HAVE grinder; Router table To place an ad, call Fake cashier checks with Sears r o uter; SOMETHING TO and money orders 541-385-5809 & Craft Shows Makita router; Ryobi SELL are common. or email The Bulletin cleeeifiedCbendbolletin com t able w i t h Se a r s FOR $500 OR VNever give out perGerman Shepherd, 3 recommends extra ' 40th Year of Central router; Makita router; LESS? sonal financial inforOregon Sat. Market! y rs old, n am e i s l caution when purBulletin Ryobi t ri m r o u ter; The Non-commercial Open Sat., 10am-4pm Louie. Needs a loving chasing products or • mation. serving c«et«elo««een sincettet Router bits; Bench advertisers may Downtown Bend, home. $300 adoption services from out of I VTrust your instincts vise; various clamps. across from library. place an ad fee. Must be only dog I the area. Sending I and be wary of 541-549-9383 with our July 4th Weekend in home! Neutered, • cash, checks, or • someone using an INSTANT GREEN we're featuring "QUICK CASH v accinated, pot t y l credit i n f ormation escrow service or McPheeters Turf 265 Shred Town FoodCart! SPECIAL" trained, knows basic may be subjected to agent to pick up your Lawn Fertilizer Building Materials Delicioussandwiches, 1 week3lines 12 commands, & micro l FRAUD. For more merchandise. nachos, noodles and ot' chipped. Comes with information about an I other great finger foodREDMOND Habitat The Bulletin bed, blanket, toys, advertiser, you mayl ~2 e e k s 2 N servtnecentral oreyon since t903 541-389-9663 don't missthis! RESTORE Ad must collars, leash, medi- $ call th e Or e gon $ include Where theMaker Building Supply Resale price of cation and bowl. Call ' State Atto r ney ' el e «e of «5«D is the Seller!! Quality at 541-598-4472. 270 ~ l General's O f f i ce 541-420-9015 LOW PRICES or less, or multiple Lost & Found Consumer Protec- • 1242 S. Hwy 97 items whose total 208 tion h o t line a t i 541-548-1406 does not exceed PATIO SET FOUND: 15 keys w/ i 1-877-877-9392. Pets & Supplies Open to the public. $500. Glass table with 6 colored tags, on 8th & chairs and cushions, > tervin TheBulletin > Call Classifieds at 266 Greenwood in Bend. ecen«ral oregon since ao« umbrella & stand, Most are Do Not DuThe Bulletin recomHeating & Stoves 541-385-5809 $200. HAVANESE PUPPY glicate and are NOT mends extra caution www.bendbulletin.com AKC, Dewclaws, UTD 212 vehicle keys. To claim when purc h asNOTICE TO Call 951-454-2561 call Bend Dispatch ing products or ser- shots/wormer, non-shed, Antiques & ADVERTISER hypoallergenic, $850. Fish Cat 8' pontoon boat, (in Redmond) vices from out of the Since September 29, 541-693-6911 Collectibles 541-460-1277. $200. Caddis float tube, area. Sending cash, 1991, advertising for Case ¹14171807 SOLD. Both excellent! checks, or credit in- Lab Pups AKC,black & The Bulletin reserves Swamp cooler, heavy used woodstoves has 541-280-0570 f ormation may be yellow, Master Hunter the right to publish all like new, 3ft. x been limited to modsubjected to fraud. sired, performance pedi- ads from The Bulletin High Standard super duty, 3 ft., p o rtable o r els which have been REMEMBER:If you For more informa- gree, OFA cert hips & el- newspaper onto The matic trophy model stationary. $375. certified by the Ortion about an adver- bows, 541-771-2330 106 military, 22 long have lost an animal, egon Department of Bulletin Internet web541-382-6773 www.kinnamanretrievets.com don't forget to check tiser, you may call rifle, $900. Rem 1187 Environmental Qualthe O regon State Labradors AKC - Choc. site. p olice riot, 1 2 g a . The Humane Society ity (DEQ) and the fedBend Attorney General's $800. Slide Fire for Wanted- paying cash eral E n v ironmental & white, 2nd shots, 12 The Bulletin 541-382-3537 Office C o n sumer wks, wormed, healthy/hip serving cant«vc«ettansincetec« AK47, $200. for Hi-fi audio & stu- Protection A g e ncy dio equip. Mclntosh, (EPA) as having met 541-550-7189 Redmond Protection hotline at guar. 541-536-5385 216 J BL, Marantz, D y541-923-0882 1-877-877-9392. www.welcomelabs.com smoke emission stanRuger 10/22 22LR, Bull naco, Heathkit, SanMadras Coins & Stamps cer t ified Barrel, Bushnell Vari- sui, Carver, NAD, etc. dards. A (chocolates), 541-475-6889 The Bulletin Labradors w oodstove may b e se««inece««eefo««eoesincefee« no papers, ready 7/22. Private collector buying able Scope, Laminate Call 541-261-1808 Prineville identified by its certifiStock, Excellent con$300. 541-977-6844 541-447-7178 postagestamp albums 8 cation label, which is $450. Call or 7-mo.-old pups, lots of Min Pin AKC pups. collections, world-wide dition Check out the or Craft Cats permanently attached text 541-419-9961. 541-389-8420. snow white w/black Beautiful, potty train- and U.S. 573-286-4343 classifieds online to the stove. The Bulhighlights, great fam- ing, shots, chipped. (local, cell phone). Ruger 22mag, 8-shot, www.bendbulletin.com letin will not know4" bbl, as new, $350. ily dogs, parents on Born 4/14/14 $600. ingly accept advertisUpdated daily 242 site. 3 O$150 each. 602-284-4110 541-279-7092 ing for the sale of 541-447-1323 Exercise Equipment Smith & Wesson .357 WHEN YOU SEE THIS uncertified woodstoves. mag model 60, 2" barAdopt a rescue cat or BowFlex XTL home gym rel, takes .38 special kitten! Altered, vacci267 w/leg lift a ttachment, (128 shells) $ 550. nated, ID chip, tested, $175. 541-389-9919 Fuel & Wood 541-447-7676 MorePi x at B e n d b jjl l e ti j . com more! CRAFT, 65480 On a classified ad 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM 246 Wanted: Collector seeks go to Pekingese male Sat/Sun. 389 8420, high quality fishing items WHEN BUYING Golf Equipment puppy, adorable, hand www.craftcats.org. & upscale bamboo fly www.bendbulletin.com to view additional FIREWOOD... 308 raised, spoiled, smart, rods. Call 541-678-5753, photos of the item. dews, an d sh o t s. or 503-351-2746 To avoid fraud, Farm Equipment $400 541-514-8160 The Bulletin & Machinery 247 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS recommends payAussie, mini/toy, POODLEpups, toy. 1985 Cub Electrfc Sporting Goods Search the area's most ment for Firewood female, 1st shots, $380 Fuel tank, 300-gal dieolder pup to adopt. Golf Cart only upon delivery sel w/stand, filter, hose, cash. 541-678-7599 comprehensive listing of - Misc. Schnoodle pups also. Newer batteries, and inspection. classified advertising... 541-475-3889 $4503541-480-1 353 good tires, in good Boxers AKC & Va lley cord is 128 cu. ft. EurekaTimberine real estate to automotive, • A condition, and runs Tent: 4' x 4' x 8' Bulldogs CKC puppies. Queensland Heelers 2 -person, like n e w merchandise to sporting Call a Pro $700-800. 541-325-3376 Standard & Mini, $150 well. $700. goods. Bulletin Classifieds • Receipts should $35. 541-383-4251 8 up. 541-280-1537 541-447-7906 include name, Whether you need a appear every day in the Cairn Terriers pups 7 www.rightwayranch.wor 255 phone, price and print or on line. fence fixed, hedges wks, 1st shots, 2 dpress.com kind of wood Computers CHECK YOURAD Call 541-385-5809 wormings, $500 will de trimmed or a house www.bendbulletin.com • purchased. STUD SERVICEliver to Redmond. Firewood ads built, you'll find T HE B U LLETIN r e Yorkie Silky 8 Ibs, 503-501-0462 MUST include quires computer adThe Bulletin $350. 541-416-1615 professional help in te«int c«n«««loregonsince fee species 8 cost per vertisers with multiple Corgis, AKC, 1 male, 1 Yorkies, small females, The Bulletin's "Call a cord to better serve ad schedules or those female, 1st shots, tails cute, playful, shots & 261 our customers. Service Professional" multiple sysdone. $500 not req'd; on the first day it runs selling $650 reg'd.541-447-4399 docks, parents on site. tems/ software, to dis- Medical Equipment Directory to make sure it is cor$550. 541-536-3108 or www.mysweetcorgis.com the name of the The Bulletin rect. "Spellcheck" and close teo«ng CentralOregon since19«e 541-385-5809 text to 541-915-5754. business or the term human errors do ocDachshund AKC blk/tan "dealer" in their ads. Power Chair cur. If this happens to Private party advertis- Jet 10 Ultra full-size Call The Bulletin At Kubota B7100 HST-D pups, $550.541-508-4558 Furniture & Appliances your ad, please congo tobendweenies.com chair with anti-tip (4WD) Diesel Tractor, 1 ers are defined as 541-385-5809 tact us ASAP so that owner, 202 hrs. Snow wheels. 4-way joy those who sell one Place Your Ad Or E-Mail blower Donate deposit bottles/ corrections and any Mid-Mount Mower stick with 5-speed computer. At: www.bendbulletin.com cans to local all vol., A1 Washers&Dryers adjustments can be Rototiller Have serial ¹. control settings. $150 ea. Full warnon-profit rescue, for made to your ad. 260 $7800/offer. Call/text Solid 10" wheels. All Year Dependable ranty. Free Del. Also feral cat spay/neuter. 541 -385-5809 541-410-1109 or 18.5" truing radius. Misc.ltems Firewood: Seasoned; wanted, used W/D's 541-419-9961 Cans for Cats trailer The Bulletin Classified Easy to operate. 541-280-7355 Lodgepole, split, del, at Jake's Diner, Hwy Buying Diamonds Like new. B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 People Lookfor Information 325 20 E & Bend Petco 2 new 12-volt bat/Gold for Cash or 2 for $365. Call for near Applebee's, do- G ENERATE SOM E About Products and Hay, Grain & Feed teries. On-board Saxon's Fine Jewelers multi-cord discounts! nate M-F a t S mith EXCITEMENT in your Services Every Daythrough battery charger. 541-389-6655 541-420-3484. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or neighborhood! Plan a The Bvlletin Classifielis Range = 25 miles. 1st Quality mixed grass CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. garage sale and don't Log truck loads of BUYING hay, no rain, barn stored, $640 - Can deliver. msg. for pick up large forget to advertise in New Maxfli travel/ Juniper firewood logs. Lionel/American Flyer $250/ton. amts, 541-389-8420. classified! protector golf club bag, trains, accessories. $900 local. Call 541-549-3831 Ca/I 541-548-5004 www.craftcats.org 541-385-5809. 541-408-2191. 541-419-5174. Patterson Ranch, Sisters $50. 541-306-0166
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E2 THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
732
Apt JMultiplex General CommerciaNnvestment Hom e s for Sale Properties for Sale CHECKYOUR AD NOTICE Excellent Commercial All real estate adverSThNLEYSTE L ocation! O n 11 t h tised here in is subStreet between High- ject to the Federal land & G l a cier in F air Housing A c t , chasing products or l Redmond. Perfect for which makes it illegal Carpet Cleaning services from out of a on the first day it runs s mall b usiness o r to advertise any prefTechnician for I the area. Sending to make sure it is cor- continue to lease with erence, limitation or STANLEY STEEMER c ash, checks, o r rect. "Spellcheck" and current tenant. Cute discrimination based Must have ability to I credit i n f ormation boutique-style build- on race, color, relihuman errors do ocmove and/or lift 50 lbs. I may be subjected to ion, sex, handicap, cur. If this happens to ing would be great for (avg); have valid FRAUD. your ad, please con- C4 zone b u siness amilial status or nadriver's license; pass a For more informaprofessional, hair sational origin, or intentact us ASAP so that pre-hire background about an adverlon, barber s h op, tion to make any such check and drug test. I tion corrections and any tiser, you may call flowers, coffee shop. preferences, l i mitaadjustments can be Applyin person at: Oregon State Separate garage or tions or discrimination. 20727 High Desert Ct. I the made to your ad. Attorney General's storage building. With We will not knowingly 541-385-5809 Suite 1, Bend, 97701 h Office C o n s umer h little TLC this prop- accept any advertis(Ca/1 541-706-9390 l Protection hotline atl The Bulletin Classified a erty and location can ing for real estate for appointment I 1-877-877-9392. work for you! which is in violation of prior to arrival.) Garage Sales $125,000 this law. All persons LThe Bulletin g Garage Sales ¹201404633 are hereby informed CDL Truck Driver Dennis Clark, Principal that all dwellings adNeeded. Broker, 541-771-8730 veitised are available Garage Sales Looking for your next Our wood chip and Century 21 on an equal opportuemployee? lumber drivers averFind them Gold Country Realty nity basis. The BullePlace a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES Place a Bulletin help age 54K annually. tin Classified in foronly $15.00 parweek. wanted ad today and New Listing, .88 acre Starting at 3 lines Off weekends,paid commercially zoned USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! reach over 60,000 vacation, health inThe Bulletin "UNDER'500in total merchandise OVER'500 in total merchandise readers each week. p roperty wit h t w o s urance. For 3 5 Classifieds s tick-built hom e s Door-to-door selling with Your classified ad 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 years we have serwill also appear on rented at $575 and fast results! It's the easiest 14 days................................................ $16.00 viced Eastern Or7 days.................................................. $24.00 541-385-5809 $850. You also get an bendbulletin.com egon, Central Or*tlllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 which currently additional tax lot in the way in the world to sell. egon, Sou t hern Senior Apartment28 days .................................................$61.50 deal. This location is receives over 1.5 Garage Sale Special O regon an d th e Independent Living million page views off of the Madras Hwy The Bulletin Classified 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) Boise Valley and ALL-INCLUSIVE in Prineville, and there 541-385-5809 every month at you can live in any with 3 meals daily no extra cost. have been some new of these locations. Month-to-month lease RV Parking! Large Lot! b usinesses i n th e Bulletin Classifieds We run late model A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: check it out! 3 bedroom, 2 bath Get Results! area. Asking P etes an d K e n Call 541-318-0450 $ 210,000. Agen t home, Northeast side Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. Call 385-5809 worths all 550 cats of town. MLS or place owned property. with 13 speeds, our BELOW M A R K E D W (TH AN (*) 201405258; Heather Hockett, Broyour ad on-line at trailers are C urtin Houses for REQU(RE PREPAYMENT as well bendbulletin.com ker, 54 1 - 420-9151 $185,000. Call Don vans (no tarps to Chapin, Broker, Rent General C entury 2 1 Gol d deal with) 4 0'-23' as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin 541-350-6777. Country Realty. doubles year around 486 bcndbulletimcom Redmond Re/Max Land reserves the right to reject any ad at PUBLISHER'S work. We our look- Independent Positions Own a Piece of History fk Homes Real Estate. NOTICE any time. is located at: ing for long term Fort Rock Tavern 8 All real estate adverdrivers, our average Sales Recently remod- Spacious and afford1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. tising in this newspa- Grill. employee has eled. 4 p oker ma- able living! 2 b e dper is subject to the Bend, Oregon 97702 w orked for us f o r Earn over and lottery, full room, 2.6 bath, 1416 F air H o using A c t chines over 8 years. So if bar, pool table and sq ft home has gas which makes it illegal $1,000 vaulted you are looking for a more. 4 full RV fireplace, to a d vertise "any much PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction home, give us a call a week! hookups fo r RV. ceilings, slate in the preference, limitation is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 541.523.9202 guest bathroom and or disc r imination $200,000. to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these tiled cou n tertops. MLS201306884 Welcome to YOUR based on race, color, newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Master bedroom has NEIGHBORHOOD Duke Warner Realty religion, sex, handiClassified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. COUNTER TOP private access to the 541-382-8262 PUBLICATIONS. cap, familial status, Fabricator/installer outside an d l a r ge We are establishing marital status or naLocal countertop shop 740 bathroom with plenty 325 341 476 a branch in tional origin, or an inseeking semi-experiof closet space. Great Central Oregon. Hay, Grain & Feed Horses & Equipment Employment tention to make any Condo/Townhomes enced fabricator/infloor plan includes a We are looking for such pre f erence, for Sale Opportunities staller. Must have double attached garesponsible and limitation or discrimisome woodworking ambitious individuals to rage. Large patio over Looking for your nation." Familial staEagle Crest lakefront experience and clean sell subscriptions to Caregivers Needed the garage is w e ll next employee? townhome 2 bdrm, 2 tus includes children Spanish-speaking, in driving record. E-mail in the afterPlace a Bulletin The Bulletin at under the age of 18 bath 1410 sq. ft., sgl shaded Bend/Redmond area. resume to edgenoon for entertaining. established sales help wanted ad living with parents or level. Great room floor $119,900 REDUCED! We are a Christian wiseObendbroadlocations. today and legal cus t odians, p lan, L akefront 8 ¹201404958 home care agency that band.com 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, reach over pregnant women, and Smith Rock v i ew. Dennis Clark, Principal specializes in 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good Control what you earn MLS¹ 60,000 readers accommodating the people securing cus- $219,500 cond. Logan Coach Inc. 476 by working a Lynn Broker, 541-771-8730 each week. Hispanic community. tody of children under 201401507 21 $4200 obo. 305-794-0190 DRIVERS designated local Employment 18. This newspaper Johns, Principal Bro- GoldCentury Your classified ad Must meet the following: Country Realty territory and essentially will not knowingly ac- ker, 5 4 1 -408-2944, • High school diploma or 345 will also Opportunities Local moving build your own GED cept any advertising Wes Johns, Broker S TUNNING Widg i appear on Livestock & Equipment business! company seeks • Driver's license & for real estate which is 541 408-2945 Creek sign a ture bendbulletln.com insurance Class A and Class CAUTION: in violation of the law. Central Oregon home! 3 bdrm, 3 bath, which currently Reg. mini donkeys for To learn more about O ur r e aders a r e Ads published in • Must 18 years or older B CDL Drivers. Resort Realty 3281 sq. ft., Master receives over sale, $ 2 0 0 up, "Employment • Have neat appearance Opthis new Must be able to hereby informed that with fireplace a nd 541-548-5216 1.5 million page The Bulletin • Pass criminal back employment porlunilies" include work hard, pass all dwellings advergym, vaulted ceilings, views every ground check To Subscribe call 383 employee and indeopportunlty tised in this newspamaple inlaid f l oor U/A and backmonth at no Call Mon.-Fri., 9am-3pm, magnificent rock wall pendent positions. please call us at per are available on 541-385-5800 or go to Produce & Food ground check. 541-923-4041 extra cost. Ads for p o sitions an equal opportunity www.bendbulletin.com fireplace, s p acious No experience 458-206-0905 Bulletin basis. To complain of light kitchen, central THOMAS ORCHARDS that require a fee or necessary. or email us at Classifieds Good classified adstell upfront investment d iscrimination ca l l 745 island eating bar papsrman09©hotmaii.com Kimberly, Oregon Get Results! must be stated. With the essential facts in an HUD t o l l-free a t seating for 6. , T i le Homes for Sale U ick or Read icked Call Bill, any independentjob interesting Manner. Wri t e 1-800-877-0246. The roof, pavered driveCall 541-385-5809 Your Nelghborhood Dark Sweet Cherries 541-383-3362 or place your ad opportunity, please from the readers view not toll f re e t e lephone Publlcatlons 8356 SW Pumice Ct. way, triple g arage Rainer cherries i nvestigate th o r - the seller's. Convert the for more info. number for the hear- Ready to move in. 3 w /storage. De c k s on-line at Apricots oughly. Use extra Sales Help Wanted: ing i m p aired is Bdrm, 2 bath home overlooking 11th Tee, facts into benefits. Show bendbulletin.com BRING CONTAINERS caution when apE nergetic kios k 1-800-927-9275. the reader howthe item will located in the heart of and lake, and private for U-PICK!!l MOTEL- Housekeepinti sales person needed plying for jobs onhelp them insomeway. CRR on 1 acre. Large fenced pavered deck. Open 7 days week, line and never proStaff, Full-time. Expen- immediately for the Pami r garage/shop. Located $ 797,500. 341 This 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! vide personal inforence helpful but not Houses for Rent Bend-Redmond on a cul-de-sac which Properties, Inc., Mara advertising tip Horses & Equipment 541-934-2870 necessary. Apply in permation to any source Stein, Broker Redmond provides privacy. MLS brought to youby son at front desk, Sug- area. Secured locaVisit us on Facebook for you may not have 541-420-3400. ¹201404446. tions, high commis17" Aussie saddle, good updates and look for arloaf Mountain Motel researched and t/a The Bulletin Country 3 bdrm, 1 $132,000. sions paid weekly! c ondition, $245 . for us on Wed. at Bend deemed to be repuSNVlltg CNltfBI OIPgOll SIAM r9ts 62980 N. Hwy 97, Bend. Juniper Realty, 541-548-0875 For more informa- bath, mfd. 1000 +IFarmers Market and table. Use extreme Northwest Bend Homesj ft., on 1 acre. No 541-504-5393 tion, please call Tim sq. Sat. at NW Crossing. c aution when r e smoking/pets on apFACILITIES I at 801-735-7351 or Great home in very des ponding to A N Y Exceptional NW proval. $850 mo., NAINTENANCEII POSITION 801-735-9526. You online employment sirable location at the location, skyline 1st-last and deposit. ' • ., • 8 , , Get your c an a l s o em a i l 503-989-8877 base of Pilot Butte. 3 ad from out-of-state. views and privacy. business Crook County School District has an immeditcoles©yourneighbedroom 1 bath 1050 We suggest you call Custom craftsman ate opening for a Facilities I Maintenance II le v e l sq ft. Extensive custhe State of Oregon borhoodpublications. D esirable s g l Tour Home borders position. Full-time with excellent benefit packConsumer Hotline com for more infor- 3br/2ba, lots of up- tom tile work includ- Quail Park by Awbrey e ROW I N G age. Starting salary: $18.03 to $19.85 per hour 2001 Silverado grades, pets neg. No ing granite tile kitchen at 1-503-378-4320 Golf. Interior upmation. DOE. 3-horse trailer5th smoking $1200 mo For Equal Opportuand bath countertops grades, Courtesy to 415-596-2006 wheel, 29'x8', deluxe with an ad in and backsplash, cusnity Laws contact Realtors. $575,000. Comprehensive facilities maintenance backshowman/semi living Oregon Bureau of tom t i l e flo o ring 2772 NW Rainbow The Bulletin's Rm()ICC) 671 ground with 10 or more years in general conquarters,lots of ext hroughout most o f Labor fk I ndustry, Ridge Dr "Call A Service struction and maintenance experience. Heavy ® lRI&ic)M Mobile/Mfd. tras. Beautiful condiCivil Rights Division, home, large pantry 541-848-0040 emphasis on HVAC/R, communications, data, tion. $21,900. OBO Professional" back deck, f enced 971-673- 0764. for Rent and electrical. 541-420-3277 750 yard. Extensive parkDirectory The Bulletin ing w it h d e tached Redmond Homes 2 bdrm, 1 bath, with servingcentral oregon srncer9ls Apply on-line through 2-car g a rage/shop, w oodstove, $700/mo in 541-385-5809 TalentEd Recruit & Hire at Are you and your a ttached 1 ca r g a - Bank owned, 3 bdrm, Bend, 541-213-0488 https:I/crookcounty.cloud.talentedk12.com/hire horse ready to ride? 541-550-7535 rage & carport, RV 2.5 bath, 2080 sq.ft., Ilndex.aspx. Open until filled. Get you and your parking. $ 2 18,500. home built in 2006 528 Call 541-447-5099 with questions. horse on the same ¹201310366 TURN THE PAGE and located on 1 flat Loans & Mortgages CCSD is an EOE. page - with fast Jodi Clark, Principal acre, new carpet and l3snH For More Ads results! Broker, 541-771-8731 vinyl. Extended front WARNING The Bulletin Ppoop ©g)h Century 21 and rear decks. MLS General The Bulletin recomRussell Hunston, now residing in Central Gold Country Realty 201404793. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturmends you use cauOregon from Missoula, Montana works with $194,900. Call Pam day night shift and other shifts as needed. We tion when you proModern Architecture + horse and rider using soft 8 gentle techniques. Add your web address Lester, Principal Brocurrently have openings all nights of the week. vide personal to your ad and readQuaint Farmhouse Be thehorseman you've always wanted to be. Century 21 Gold Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts information to compaR astra block c o n - ker, erson The Builetin's Learn the language of Equus in order to Country Realty, Inc. start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and nies offering loans or web site, www.bendstruction, passive so- 541-504-1338 create a safe and joyous horse/rider relationend between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Al l pocredit, especially lar, 4 b e droom, 3 bulletin.com, will be s hip; i t ' s si m p ler t h a n you thi n k ! 732 sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. those asking for adbath, 2954 sq ft. Ra- Cascade View Estates, Visit: pr o f essional-horseman.blogspot.com able to click through Commercial/Investment diant floors and reStarting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a vance loan fees or automatically to your Redmond - 4 bdrm 3 for interesting stories. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts companies from out of Properties for Sale website. cycled timbers keep bath home with 2046 Call Russell: 805-451-2594 are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of state. If you have this h o m e eco - sq ft of living. Amazloading inserting machines or stitcher, stackconcerns or ques- 51540 Huntington Rd., friendly. Sits on nearly ing Northeast view ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup tions, we suggest you La Pine ca r w a sh 19 acres of Cascade just a bove V a lley and other tasks. For qualifying employees we consultyour attorney business opportunity. view pastoral farm- View Park. offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, or call CONSUMER AD¹1512 land. $899 , 000. MLS¹201404003, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid HOTLINE, TEAM Birtola Garmyn MLS¹201404611 $254,900. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required 1-877-877-9392. High Desert Realty Call Terry Skjersaa, Scott McLean, prior to employment. 541-312-9449 541-383-1426 Principal Broker BANK TURNED YOU Call54 I385580f to promoteyour service• Advertise for 28dslt startingat'lf0 pta assl frctrtrt natsiirbir onoursrtstrl www.BendOregon Duke Warner Realty 541-408-6908 DOWN? Private party Please submit a completed application atten541-382-8262 RealEstate.com Realty Executives will loan on real estion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available tate equity. Credit, no at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanproblem, good equity Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be is all you need. Call obtained upon request by contacting Kevin YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE To 2,000,000 Oregon Land MortNOTICE: Oregon Land- Aeration/Dethatching Eldred via email keldred Obendbulletin.com ). EXPOSURES FOR ONLYa50! 1-time or Weekly Services gage 541-388-4200. scape Contractors Law No phone calls please. Only completed appliNOTICE: Oregon state o g C I ~ Ad t ~ N~ k naos N m Pa i l A cations will be considered for this position. No LOCAL NONEYfWebuy law requires anyone (ORS 671) requires all Ask about FREEadded Week of June 30, 2014 svcs w/seasonal contract! businesses that adresumes will be accepted. Drug test is rewho con t racts for secured trustdeeds & vertise t o p e r form Bonded & Insured. quired prior to employment. EOE. construction work to note,some hard money be licensed with the Landscape Construc- COLLINS Lawn Maint. loans. Call Pat Kellev Ca/i 541-480-9714 Construction Contrac- tion which includes: 541-382-3099 ext.13. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 p lanting, deck s , serving central oregon since fslo tors Board (CCB). An Tierra Landscaping LLC fences, arbors, 541-385-5809 Look at: active license clean-up, means the contractor water-features, and in- Maintenance, Bendhomes.com pavers, full irrigation, is bonded & insured. stallation, repair of irfire pits. LCB¹9267 for Complete Listings of The Bulletin Verify the contractor's rigation systems to be sewing renrral oregonsince rss 541-981-8386 Area Real Estate for Sale CCB l i c ense at l icensed w it h th e Landscape ContracThe Bulletin Circulation department is looking www.hirealicensedDIVORCE $155. C o m p lete p r e paration. tors Board. This 4-digit Need help fixing stuff? for a District Representative to join our Single contractor.com Call A Service Professional Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week or call 503-378-4621. number is to be in- find the help you need. BSI)I)j Clk Includes children, custody, support, property position. Overall focus is the representation, The Bulletin recom- cluded in all adversales and presentation of The Bulletin newspamends checking with tisements which indi- www.bendbulletin.com cate the business has per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, the CCB prior to conand billS diViSiOn. NO COurt aPPearanCeS. Allen Reinsch Yard tracting with anyone. a bond, insurance and Illlaintenance special events and news dealer outlets. Daily & Illlowing workers c ompensaresponsibilities include driving a company veSome other t rades other things!) Divorce in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772also req u ire addi- tion for their employ- (& many hicle to service a defined district, ensuring 541-536-1294 or tional licenses and ees. For your protec- Call541-815-5313 newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, tion call 503-378-5909 certifications. managing newspaper counts for the district, 5295. WWW.ParalegalalternativeS.COm or use our website: building relationships with our current news 616 www.lcb.state.or.us to Painting/Wall Covering dealer locations and growing those locations Want To Rent legalalt@mSn.COm check license status with new outlets. Position requires total ownerDebris Removal before contracting with ALL AIIIIERICAN ship of and accountability of all single copy ele- Seeking small furnished the business. Persons PAINTING ments within that district. Work schedule will be ground-floor rooms/apt/cadoing lan d scape Interior and Exterior Thursday through Monday withTuesday and sita w/sep entrance from maintenance do not JUNK BE GONE Family-owned W ednesday off . Requires good communication 7/15-10/15; prefer east r equire an LC B l i Residential & Commercial I Haul Away FREE DRIVERS- START WITH OUR TRAINING a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift side of Bend. Old retiree cense. 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts skills, For Salvage. Also 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to uy from Deschutes Nat'I 5-year warranties Cleanups 8 Cleanouts multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong orest, non-smkr, no pets; OR CO NTINUE YOUR S OLID CAREER. Summer Special! Mel, 541-389-8107 service/team orientation, sales and problem local refs. 541-279-3700 Call 541-337-6149 solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: CCB ¹193960 You haVe OPtiOnS! COmPany driVerS, leaSe 630 clrculation©bendbulletln.com Handyman WESTERN PAINTING Rooms for Rent Zorfer QnaPiep CO. Richard Hayman, Applications are available at the front desk. PurChaSe O r O W ne r O P e ratOrS n e e d ed. Zava4 Cttf e /,a, I DO THAT! a semi-retired paintDrop off your resume in person at Large furnished master Home/Rental repairs Full Service ing contractor of 45 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; bdrm+ bath, full use of 877-369-7104. Small jobs to remodels Landscape Management years. S mall Jobs No phone inquiries please. house & appliances, all Honest, guaranteed 541-390-1466 Welcome. Interior & Pre-employment drug testing required. utilities included. Close WWW.CentraltruCkdrivingjobS.Com. work. CCB¹151573 Experienced Exterior. c c b¹5184. EOE/Drug Free Workplace to Walmart in Redmond. Dennis 541-317-9768 Commercial & Residential 541-388-6910 Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. $500. 541-815-1171
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ACROSS 1 Knock silly
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Ageney
Today's d ea l a r o s e i n the desperately c l ose f i na l o f the V anderbilt Teams at t h e A C B L Spring NABC. To test your defense, cover the West/South cards. Against four spades, your partner leads the ten of diamonds. Declarer takes d ummy's a c e, playing the deuce from his hand. A trump is won by your ace; West plays the seven. At the third trick, you cash the jack of diamonds: seven, three, six. What now? At th e t a ble, E ast c o ntinued diamonds. South ruffed, forced out West's king of trumps and later ran the hearts to pitch a club, making four. (In the replay, after different bidding and a club lead, four spades failed.)
right, opens one diamond. What do you say? ANSWER: This is a matter of personal style and judgment. Many good players would enter the auction. Some would double, others would overcall one heart or 1NT. Since no action is especially attractive and the hand has plenty of defense, my inclination would be to stay out, at least for the moment, and hope for a plus on defense. East dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 44 J96
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DIAMON D LO SE R East could infer that South held three or more hearts, else he might have discarded his diamond loser before he led trumps. If West had a trump trick or if South had a six-card spade suit, a club shift at Trick Four couldn't cost. As it happens, you get lucky. You still win the match by two IMPsand the Vanderbilt — if you failed to beat four spades.
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(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg.
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: L O B S
P T S W O W A R L E M E K E U N A N T E H E A D A L P A P L O M B E D O I T Y O U R AC T D O R K T H O S E L Y T A R S Q U A R E P E A U N T A L D K I T E L 0 I I ZO D M Y T xwordedltor@aol.com 5
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By Greg Johnson (c)2014 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC
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07/03114
E6 THURSDAY, JULY 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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933
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940
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Utility Trailers
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Ford F250 Lariat 2008 Crew cab
Chevrolet Tahoe 2009 LT1
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Utility Trailer, 5'3 0 wide x 10' long x 33" high. has cranking tongue jack, and 2x6 decking, Tows great, very nice condition. $795. 541-977-9944 or 541-318-0068
6.4L V8, Diesel, 4WD, automatic, 65k mi. Vin¹A32746 $33,977
5.3L V8, 4WD, auto, 69k miles, 20 MPG Hwy, Vin¹103597
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29,997
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MercedesML350 2003, Toyota Sienna 2011, AWD, moonroof, pw, LE model, 7 passenpdl, power seats. ger, stow-n-go seatVin ¹414134 ing, alloy wheels. Stock ¹44376A Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A $7,979
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$24,999 S IJBARU .
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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205
Dlr¹0354
Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible
Automobiles
LX 2010
6.0L V8, Diesel, 4WD, auto.„55k miles, vin¹A49325
$33,977 ROBBERSON
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541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. See to believe! $14,000or best offer. 541-923-6049
Vin¹239718
Chevrolet Trailblazer Nissan Murano 2012, ROBBERSON 4 AWD, auto, cloth, CD, 2008 4x4 pw, pdl. Automatic, 6-cylinder, Vin ¹229346 tilt wheel, power win541-312-3986 Subaru Outback 2012 Stock ¹83013 dows, power brakes, 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, Dlr ¹0205 air conditioning, keyauto. trans., AWD, $17,979 less entry, 69K miles. leather heated seats, BIJBARIJ. Excellent condition; AWD, power moon tires have 90% tread. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. r oof, a n d mo r e ! $11,995. 25,600 miles. Below 877-266-3821 Call 541-598-5111 KB O $27 , 500 Dlr ¹0354 IU 54'I -344-5325 annie2657Oyahoo.com Chrysler 200 LX 2012, Nissan Murano SL pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. 2011 VIN ¹292213 Kia Forte EX 2011 Stock ¹83014
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
Crew Cab 2001, big lift, AWD, pw, pdl, tilt; Vin ¹A17200 Stock ¹82918B
$14,979 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K S UBA R U orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 obo. 541-480-3179 Dlr ¹0354
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Ford Ran er 2005 Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 Ready for some yard work! RWD, automatic, 78k miles Pontiac
$9,977
Firebird 1998 Alcohol Funny Car Current certification,
race-ready.
$25,000 obo. 541-386-1929 WHEN ONLY THE BEST WILL DO!
Vin¹A70560
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
Buick Skylark 1972 17K orig. miles. Please see hemmings.com for details. $20,900. 541-323-1898 933
Pickups
Extra nice 4x4, great mpg. Only $19,977 Vin¹541238
ROBBERSON LUIOOL N ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
1 Q6 2005 DieSel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
black w/ leather seat trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 miles. vin¹362484 26,977 ROBBERSON
2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, 45k miles, 36 mpg Hwy Vin¹448537
$12,977
541-312-3986 dlr¹0205
940
Vans
Audi A6 Quattro 2008
Chrysler 2012 Town &
Jeep Wrangler2007 4 dr, silver, hard & soft top, new tires/ brakes runs great, $18,450.
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
Nissan 300zx 1993 Glass T-tops, 5-speed n/t, 41,000 $16,979 miles, black with tan, Stillen upgrades, high S UBA R U performance tires & Fit Sport 2010 battery, excellent 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Honda with Navi. Absolutely condition. For more 877-266-3821 Perfect, Loaded. 17K information go to Dlr ¹0354 Miles. C l ea r t i t l e. www.buffalois.com/ $15,500. 3~003X. 0 541-322-6995. $20,000 541-318-6368
ROBBERSON ~ U
Country Touring steel blue, 27,000 mi. ¹223391 $ 2 1 ,995
541-536-9281
Dodge Avenger 2013, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. Vin ¹535474 (photo for illustration only) Stock ¹83015 Hyundai Elantra 2011, Touring, leather, auto, $16,979 CD, pw, pdl. S UBA R U Vin ¹090677 UUBBUUOUBUUU.OOII Stock ¹82995 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
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877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Ford Focus 2006 ZX3,
AWD, automatic. Ready to go for only
541-598-3750
People Look for Information aaaoregonautosource.com About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classifieds —I U
$24,977
Vin¹055921
ROBBERSON LINUNLN ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & Buick LeSabre, 1995, out, one owner, nonwith 102K miles, autosmoker,. loaded with matic, air, power winoptions! 197,892 mi. dows, doors & seats. Service rec o rds Excellent cond, well available. $4 , 950. maintained, all records available. Must see to Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m. appreciate! $3000 or best offer. 541-475-0537
JEEP WRANGLER 2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8
cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.
Ford Fusion Sport
Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900.00 obo.
Tick, Tock
$23,900.
TiCk, TOCk...
541-419-5980
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
U
541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Jeep Wrangler Sahara 2012 III(f Spotless! 3.6L V6,
Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000
miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285
miles. Must See!
$29,977
Ford F150 2009 XLT,
5.6L engine, canopy. 65,000 miles. Local, clean title. $23,900. 208-995-4408
Ford F150 LIGHTNING 1993, 500 miles on rebuilt engine. Clean interior & new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723
Ford F-150 XLT 2006Su er Cab
Looking good for $13,998
Bargain Corral Vin¹B51951
ROBBERSONi mmma
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
Fun & economical for $12,998 Vin¹419869
Olds 98, 1990, runs excellent studded tires, new
ROBBERSON
$1200. 541-389-9377
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
batt, great gas mileage.
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Subaru Impreza 2.5i 2011
Vyy Jetta GLI 2012 I
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Mazda Miata 1991 fun car, good shape, 5 spd. $3500. 541-410-7282
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Sporty, Fun and a manual trans. Vin¹108574
$19,977 ROBBERSON LIIIOOLII ~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
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www.aaaoregonautosource.com
DLR¹0205
975
Automobiles ra
2003 AUDI, convertible, curb hugging white, turbo charged. Great for road trips. Incredible MPG. $25,000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Redmond, O r egon LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o unty 9 7756. Amount o f Risk Management is lien: $2942.00. PerToyotaTundra requesting proposals son foreclosing lien: Limited 2012 from ind e pendent Kimeric V. DeLashcontractors for mutt. DESCRIPTION Workers' Compensa- OF PROPERTY: One (1) two (2) year old tion Third Party Administrators, certified Registered Black Angus B r e d Cow in the State of OrY 227 5.7L V8, 4WD, auto., egon, to act as the T ag/Tattoo ¹ due to calve in late C ounty's agent f o r 2 2k mi., 1 7 m p g s ummer/early fal l hwy, Vin¹220384 Workers' Compensat ion C l aims. R e - 2014 to R egistered $42,977 quests for Proposal Black Angus Bull. One (1) Nine (9) month old will be received in ROBBERSON person, mail, or email Black Angus Steer at t h e D e s chutes c alf Tag ¹ A22 7 . C ounty Risk M a n- D ATED: June 2 7 , (541) 312-3986 agement Department, 2 014. K i meric V . dlr¹ 0205 DeLashmutt. located in the Deschutes Ser v ices LEGAL NOTICE 935 Building, 1300 N.W. PURSUANT TO ORS Sport Utility Vehicles Wall Street, B end, CHAPTER 87 Oregon, 97701. Pro- Notice is hereby given p osals will b e r e that the following veVolvo S60T5 2013 ceived until 5:00 p.m., hicle will be sold, for T hursday, July 3 1 , cash to the highest 2014. Interested per- bidder, on 7/22/2014. sons should contact The sale will be held Deschutes C o u nty at 10:00am by ORRisk Management at EGON ADJUSTERS 541-617-4747 or INC., 20515 M U RAWD, less than 11k email at kenh©des- RAY RD., BEND, OR. mi., auto, 6 spd. chutes.org to obtain a 2003 DODG E 1500 vin ¹202364 copy of the Request PU. VIN $30,977 for Proposal docu- 1D7HA18D238305222. m ents. A c opy o f Amount due on lien ROBBERSON i these documents can $3628.00. R e puted "«o. ® maaaa a lso be f o und a t owner(s) LORI ANN www.deschutes.org/rf THOMPSON, WELLS 541-312-3986 P. F ARGO A UT O F IDLR ¹0205 NANCE INC. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC LEGAL NOTICE «'Th. 43SALE: N o t ic e is REGULAR MONTHLY hereby given pursuBOARD MEETING ant to O.R.S 87.152, ARNOLD IRRIGATION et seq., that there will DISTRICT be a public sale on property listed in The Board of DirecBMW X3 2 0 07, 99K the notice on July 29, tors of Arnold Irrigamiles, premium pack- this age, heated lumbar 2014 to foreclose on tion District will hold lien . their regular monthly supported seats, pan- P ossessory oramic moo n roof, Owners or r eputed b oard meeting o n owners of the propT uesday, July 1 0 , Bluetooth, ski bag, XeLy n da Hard- 2014at3:00pm. The non headlights, tan & erty: black leather interior, w ick A l bers an d meeting will be held at n ew front & re a r Megan Albers. Time the District offices lobrakes O 76K miles, a nd date o f s a l e: cated at 19604 Buck one owner, all records, 9:00 a.m. July 2 9, Canyon Rd., Bend, very clean, $16,900. 2014. Place of sale: OR. 541-388-4360 3220 Northwest Way, LINOOL N ~
grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
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Ford E350 Super Duty 2011 12 pass. 40k mi, ¹B03133 $19,995
4WD, automatic, 28k
Nissan Frontier 2013, SV model, Crew cab, 4x4, 5 speed trans., Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 pw, pdl. VIN ¹715664 with camper s hell, Stock ¹44326A ood cond., $1500 BO. 541-447-5504. $25,979
$1000 tires. $3000 obo. 541-633-8951
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything,
VW Beetle 2007
Loves snow and ice! Automatic, 52k miles, Vin¹511494 16,998 ROBBERSON
(photo for illustration only)
Chevy 3/4ton 1982, built 350 with 450 HP and
®
541-420-3277
2011 3.5L V6, AWD, auto. AWD, 45k miles, 24 MPG Hwy, Vin¹190537 $20,977 ROBBERSON 4
541.312.3986
S UBA R U .
$23,979 S UBA R U
Convertible.
5-spd, new tires, AC, CD, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 91K miles, great mpg, Dlr ¹0354 $5000. 541-526-5477 Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily
.
LINUULN ~
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N issan Versa S 2012 white 10,250 mi.
$15,979 S UBA R U
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Stock ¹44184A
-
ROBBERSON
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
®
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205
Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1969Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662
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541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
©
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Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab
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Well cared for Great on gas! Vin¹076238 15,998 ROBBERSON
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Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, (photo forillustration only) Ford F350 Super Duty $5995. 541-610-6150
$14,979 S UBA R U
Mercedes Benz e320, 1999 wagon, white 120k mi., incl. studded tires, exc. cond., Subaru Outback 3.6R $4500. 541-318-4502. Limited 2011, moon roof, AWD, pw, pl, Call The Bulletin At leather, Vin ¹381548
U
Antique & Classic Autos
Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT Limited 2005, loaded, leather, roof, a l loy wheels. VIN ¹210360 Stock ¹42935A
Honda Civic
Inspected & Ready! Bargain Corral $4,977
(photo for illustration only)
932
LINBULN~
Mazda RX-8 40th Anniversary Edition 2008 Gray Mica Paint, Red 8 Black Leather Interior, Bose Sound, Sunroof, 4-Door, 6-Speed Auto. Trans. w/Paddle Shifters. Original Owners. 34,000 Miles. $17,000. 541-588-6670
with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)
975
Ford F-350 Lariat 2007 Crew Cab
F lexible vehicle t o w hitch, $275. 541-815-4811
Chevy Cavalier 2000
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Buick LeSabre 2002 w/cloth seats, $4695; and 1995 w/leather seats, $2999. Both auto., loaded, 130k miles 541-419-5060
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There's good stuff in here. Shouldn't YOU > be looking •
Classifl:ds www.bendbulletin.com
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