ServingCentral Oregon since1903
SUNDAY August 3,2014
$1.50
rave:a aseo riis oum ia '165 MORETHAN
IN COUPONS INSIDE
COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Surrogacy in China — A black market thrives, and the women who carry the children pay a price.As
Monument ValleyStriking a balancebetween tourists and preservation. A8
MEDICAL MARIJUANA
e in a cow o 8
S
• Tumalo artist's sculpture honorsmandenied rodeo victory because ofhis race
IA I' V
I'
Pluto —Some fans are still fighting the demotion of their favorite (dwarf) planet. A3
• Many Central Oregon physicians are unwilling to sign off on weed
Cascade Lakes Relay-
Bend's Sole Brothers win again and beat their old record.D1
By Tara Bannow
Saving the orange — A
The Bulletin
New distillery — I ocal
Maggi O'Brien has seen the same doctor for nine years. A brain and spinal cord specialist, Dr. Kent Yundt first performed surgery on her spine in 2005. Then he inserted a tube into her brain when the pressure inside her skull increased dangerously. All told, Yundt has performed five surgeries on O'Brien, who, at 58, is disabled and struggles with constant pain and fatigue from rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia. O'Brien, who worked as a nurse for 20 years until her healt h problems rendered her disabled,guesses
crops, local water.E1
she'ssmoked marijuana forfour decades: first as a
disease called citrus greening poses a threat to the fruit, and scientists' efforts to help oranges survive could change their DNA forever.F1
typical child of the '70s and later to ease her pain. "I smoke pot every single day, and it makes such a
And a Wedexclusive-
difference in my life," she said. "It's the one thing that
Ben & Jerry'sisatoddswith its corporate parent, Unilever, in the GMO food fight. beetibenetie.cem/extras
actually makes me feel better." In 2010, she decided to make it legaL She asked Yundt to sign the form that allows her to buy medi-
cal marijuana, which has been legal in Oregon since 1998. Yundt, who did not return a request for com-
ment, declined, telling her he was afraid of getting swarmed with patients looking for weed.
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Like the majority of Central Oregon's more than
4,000 medical marijuana patients, the Redmond resident was forced to turn to high-volume specialty
Learning the aw without aw schoo
clinics that advertise medical marijuana approvals
because her primary care provider — specialists like Yundt who treat patients' chronic conditions often end up becoming their primary care provider — refused to approve her for the program. See Marijuana/A4
Implants Security
could help focus
By Sean Patnck Farrell New York Times News Service
When Chris Tittle meets
damaged shifts brains to Africa
new people and the topic turns to his work, he sometimes fishes in his pockets and produces a business
card that reads "Abraham Lincoln." Below the 16th president's name in smaller
type the card reads, "Just kidding, but I hope to follow
MegRoussosIrhe Bulletin
in some of his footsteps."
Tumalo artist Jerry Werner stands with his sculpture of George Fletcher in his Tumalo studio. Fletcher was a black cowboy famous for the Pendleton Round-Up finals controversy of 1911, when he was denied first prize because of his race. The bronze cast of the sculpture will be unveiled Thursday in Pendleton.
Tittle, who sports the kind of full beard more
By Megan Kehoe eThe Bulletin
alo artist has learned instead right job. The job that promises something special. The job that
"There is very little that
could make a difference — for
who is in his first year of a four-year program of prac-
him and for others. He follows his gut, and looks for signs to light the way. When Werner heard Pendleton was looking for an artist to
tical study.
create abronze sculpture of a
California is one of a apprenticeships like Tittle's in lieu of a law degree as a prerequisite to taking the
bar and practicing as a licensed lawyer. In Virginia, Vermont, Washington
and California, aspiring lawyers can study for the bar without ever setting
foot into or paying a law schooL New York, Maine and Wyomingrequirea combination of law school and apprenticeship. The programs remain underpopulated. Of the 83,986 people who took bar exams last year, according to the National Conference of Bar Examiners, only 60
were law office readers. See Law/A7
work ~ spa g hetti noodle-sized devices with an audacious goal: To rewire damaged human brains.
As he's gotten older, the Ttrm-
coln did, studying at the elbow of a seasoned lawyer.
handful of states that allow
— Deep inside Lawrence Livermore LaboSat Pannu and his research team are hard at
Jerry Werner no longer takes every job that comes his way. the importance of taking the
$100,000 or more into debt for a credential," said Tittle,
Bloomberg News
LIVERMORE, Calif.
engineering, scientist
to "read law" much as Lin-
would entice me to go
By Gopal Ratnam
Contra Costa Times
ratory's Center for Bio-
often associated with folk-
rockbands than future junior partners, is working towardbecoming alawyer under an obscure California rule that allows people
By Jeremy Thomas
Fitted with dozens of
tiny microelectrodes, each of these brain 1
rodeo cowboy for its downtown earlier this year, he wasn't inter-
ness — and provide the precise stimuli to help
ested. Then, Werner heard the
minds compensate for
storybehindthe particular cowRickSteber, fromhis book"Red White Black: ATrue Story of Race and Rodeo"I Submitted photo boy — a story steeped in rodeo, George Fletcher rides at the fifth annual Pendleton Round-Up in racial injustice and the chang- 1914, three years after being denied a first-place finish there. ing face of the American West.
what they've lost. Center director Pannu and
H e s oo n
r e a lized t u r n -
ing down a chance to sculpt George Fletcher would be an impossibility. "For me, it's among the top ones I've done," Werner, 63,
most special because you're er for a prominent placement really zoned into it. But George on Pendleton's Main Street.
said. "A lot of times, the current
the 7-foot bronze sculpture of
piece you're working on is the
black cowboy George Fletch-
was such a neat character. Peo-
ple can really relate to him." Pendleton on Thursday, ahead Recently, Werner completed of the Pendleton Round-Up in
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 90, Low 56 Page B6
The statue will be unveiled in September.
See Cowboy /A5
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Ef - 6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G f - 6L ocal/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
a protracted war with
his disciples across north and sub-Saharan Africa.
The enemy isn't a nation or an alliance, but a diverse, mobile
implants is intended to monitor the electri-
cal activity ofbrains devastated by physical injury or mental ill-
e
WASHINGTON-
More than three years after killing Osama bin Laden and daiming that the core of al-Qaida had been decimated, the Obama administration is waging
his associates envision a time, not too many
years away, when so-called deep-brain
and adaptive collection of groups loosely united by the goal of overthrowing the region's governments and replacing them with strict Islamic rule. Militants returning to the continent after
fighting in the Middle East are linking up with local groups and attacking governments in the continent
stimulation implants combatpost-traumatic
already struggling to
stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, even chronic pain or
says retired U.S. Army
addiction. See Brain /A4
Africa Command.
The Bulletin AnIndependent
control their territories, Gen. Carter Ham, for-
mer head of the U.S. See Africa/A5
Q I/I/e use recyc/ed newsprint
vol. 112, No. 215,
4e pages,
7 sections 0
88 267 0 23 3 0
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
The Bulletin How to reachus STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F ri.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
NATION Ee ORLD
I srae: o iert ou t ca ture i e i n a t t e By Steven Erlanger and Jodi Rudoren
541-382-1811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL
bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.com Cily Desk.......... news@bendbulletin.com Community Lite communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97766
Si oil.rve.
Dtsouies rr
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
Saturday to more than 1,650 to continue fighting. Sami Abu Palestinians, many of t h em Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, New York Times News Service women and children, and im- told the news agency Maan JERUSALEM — The Israeli ages of homes, mosques and that "a unilateral withdrawal military said early this morn- schools smashed into rubble or redeployment by Israel in ing that an officer thought to fill the media, Netanyahu was the Strip will be answered by a have been captured by Pal- under considerable interna- fitting response by the Hamas estinian militants during a tional pressure, from Wash- military arm." He said that deadly clash Friday morning, ington and Europe, to end "the forces of occupation must which shattered a planned 72- the conflict. The United ¹ choose between remaining in hour cease-fire, was now con- tions warned of "an unfolding Gaza and paying the price or sidered to have been killed in health disaster" in Gaza, with retreating and paying the price battle. little electricity, bad water and or holding negotiations and The announcement came a lack of medical supplies. At paying the price." Netanyahu just hours after Prime Minister the same time, Netanyahu indicated that Israel would not BenjaminNetanyahu vowed to was under political pressure at get caught up again in discuscontinue Israel's military cam- home to deliver on his promis- sions about a negotiated ceasepaign in the Gaza Strip as long es tocrush Hamas, particular- fire with Hamas and would as necessary to stop Hamas ly with 64 Israeli soldiers dead. act in its own interests, while attacks, while suggesting a He insisted Saturday t h at seeking support from Abbas de-escalation of th e g round Hamas had been severely hurt and the i nternational comwar in Gaza maybe near. and he warned that it would munity for what Netanyahu The case of the missing sol- pay "an intolerable price" if described vaguely as "a new dier, 2nd Lt. Hadar Goldin, 23, it continues to fire rockets at reality" in Gaza. became the latest flashpoint in Israel. The circumstances sur"We promised to return the rounding Goldin's death rethe conflict, prompting a fierce Israeli bombardment and calls quiet to Israel's citizens and we main cloudy, and a military from leaders around the world will continue to act until that spokeswoman declined to say forhisrelease.His disappear- aim is achieved," Netanyahu whether he had been killed ance came at the start of what said, in a nationally televised along with two comrades by a was supposed to have been speech with his defense min- suicide bomb one of the milia pause in the fighting after ister beside him. "We will take tants exploded, or later by IsraHamas militants ambushed Is- as much time as necessary, el's assault on the area to hunt raeli soldiers near the southern and will exert as much force as forhim; she also refused to anborder town of Rafah. needed." swer whether his remains had As the death toll mounted
Hamas, for its part, vowed
been recovered.
AN UNUSUAL CAMPAIGN STOP
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-385-5805 Finance HollyWest..........541-383-032t HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-383-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624
TALK TO AN EDITOR
OhiO water — Toxins, possibly from algae onLakeErie, fouled the water supply of the state's fourth-largest city Saturday, forcing officials to issue warnings not to drink the water andthegovernor to declare a state of emergency asworried residents descended on stores, quickly clearing shelves of bottled water. "It looked like Black Friday," said AundreaSimmons, whostood in a line of about 50 people at a pharmacy before buying four cases ofwater. "I havechildren and elderly parents. Theytake their medication with water." The city advised about 400,000 residents in Toledo, most of its suburbs and a few areas in southeastern Michigan not to brush their teeth with or boil the water becausethat would only increase the toxin's concentration. The mayor also warned that children should not shower or bathe in the water and that it shouldn't be given to pets.
LOng-lOSt PurPle Heart — JohnTrincacouldn't rememberthe name of the soldier who died right next to him minutes after they met during World War II, andall Thomas BatemanJr. knew of his father's death was that it happened in1945 in the Philippines. The two will meet for the first time Sundaythanks largely to TomMcAvoy, who made good on aquest to return a lost war medal hefound as a child in Chicago that only hadthe recipient's engravednameasa clue: Thomas Bateman.This year — 69years after a bullet from a Japanese machine gun killed Pvt. ThomasBateman—their stories intersected for the first time, giving themanswers to questions that tuggedat them for years. At this weekend's ceremony, theslain soldier's son will receive the lost Purple Heart his father paid for with his life. Right tOfarm — On Tuesday,Missourians couldmake anovel addition to thestate constitution: the right to farm. Aproposal known as Amendment1 will betaken up in astatewide voteTuesday, leaving Missouri poised tochangeits constitution to guaranteethe rights of its people to "engage infarming andranching practices." Backers of the amendmentarewary of laws that havepassed in other states that implemented roomier living conditions for hensand bannedgenetically modified crops. Whiletheamendment would not affect federal lawsgoverning agriculture, its possible effect on localandstate laws is unclear. Rape klt backlog — Hundreds of thousands of rape kits across the country containing evidence have sat untested for years on storeroom shelves. Thereasons for the backlog, experts say, include constraints on finances andtesting facilities. Today, after years of pressure, a shift is beginning. Several cities, including most recently Memphis, Tennessee,havewon praise for aggressive new efforts not only to submit all new rapekits for testing but also to test those in storage. In just the lastyear, initial testing of old kits in Detroitand Cleveland hasyielded hundreds of indictments and revealed scores of repeat offenders. Spl8II hICUI'SIOh Ih LSh8hOh —Rebels fighting in Syria's civil war crossed into Lebanonand raided a border town Saturday, killing and capturing security force members in the most serious incursion into the tiny country during its neighbor's 3-year-old conflict. The rebels, who included foreign fighters, demanded to trade soldiers and police officers it captured in Arsal for some of the "most dangerous detainees," the Lebanesearmy said in a statement. Masked gunmen roamed the streets as Lebanesehelicopter gunships flew over the town, about 55 miles from the capital, Beirut. Ukraine jet — International experts examining the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight17 in eastern Ukraine onSaturday found the remains of victims overlooked by local emergency personnel who first searched the debris two weeksago. Theteam of Dutch andAustralian police officers and forensic experts has divided the site into small grids and intends to painstakingly search eachone. A spokeswoman for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe confirmed that searchers found humanremains Saturday. Theyalso recovered remains Friday, their first full day at the site after fighting between rebels andgovernment forces blocked access. International monitors estimate that 80 bodies remain unaccounted for.
Business TimDoran.........541-383-0360 Cily Sheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 Community Life, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home, All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff Mccaulou...........541-410-9207
— From wire reports
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 NWSixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
F(~ EgID
CORRECTIONS
rrrri.So
The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.
TO SUBSCRIBE
Home delivery and E-Edition: One mOnth: $17 <Prinonl t y:$16)
By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only: Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-365-5809 Advertising fax..................541-385-5802 Other information ............. 541-382-1811
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-383-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7825 Back issues ......................541-385-5600
All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern Communicationsinc.,1777SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9776Z Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,PO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
Q ta Q asQ esQ ssQ sr
©
The estimated jackpot is now $80 million.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
10Q 1aQ 16Q 44 32Q 39 Q Q The estimated jackpot is now $6.2 million.
I,rEE3'$
Heather Leipharr/The News Herald (panama Clty, Florida)
U.S. RepSteve Southerland, a Republican who has represented Florida's 2nd District since 2011, grins after winning anauctioned possum during the W ausau Possum FestivalonSaturday. What is usually a must-attend event for statewide candidates was notably lacking of them this year,
perhaps becausecandidates, who now raise tens of millions of dollars, focus more ontelevision ads than on making personal contact. But not attending is a missed opportunity, said SusanMacManus, a University of South Florida political science professor who drove more than 350 miles for the festival.
U.S. doctor infectedwith Ebola arrives inAtlanta for treatment By Ray Henry And Mike Stobbe
infectious diseases, created 12
The Associated Press
years ago to handle doctors who get sick at the CDC, just
ATLANTA — The first Eb-
bulance to the hospital. He climbed out dressed head to toe in white protective cloth-
ola victim to be brought to the up the hill. It is one of about ing, and another person in an United States from Africa was four in the country, equipped identical hazardous materials safely escorted into a special- with everything necessary to suit held both of his gloved ized isolation unit Saturday at test and treat people exposed hands as they walked gingerly one of the nation's best hospi- to very dangerous viruses. mslde. "It was a relief to welcome tals, where doctors said they In 2005, it handled patients are confident the deadly virus with SARS, which unlike Ebo- Kent home today. I spoke with won't escape. la canspread when an infected him, and he is glad to be back Fear that the outbreak kill- person coughs or sneezes. in the U.S.," said his wife, Aming more than 700 people in In fact, the nature of Ebo- ber Brantly, who left Africa Africa could spread in the U.S. la — which is spread by close with their two young children has generated considerable contact with bodily fluids and for a wedding in the U.S. days anxiety among some Amer- blood — means that any mod- before the doctor fell ill. "I am thankful to God for his icans. But infectious disease ern hospital using standard, experts said the public faces rigorous, inf e c tion-control safe transport and for giving zero risk as Emory University measures should be able to him the strength to walk into Hospital treats a critically ill handle it. the hospital," her statement missionary doctor and a charStill, Emory won't be taking said. ity worker who were infected any chances. Inside the unit, patients are "Nothing comes out of this sealed off from anyone who in Liberia. The U.S. Centers for Disease unit until it is non-infectious," doesn't wear protectivegear. "Negative air p r essure" Control and Prevention has said Dr. Bruce Ribner, who received "nasty emails" and at will be treating the patients. means air flows in, but can't least 100 calls from people say- "The bottom line is: We have escape until filters scrub any ing "How dare you bring Ebola an inordinate amount of safety germs from patients. All labinto the country!?" CDC Direc- associated with the care of this oratory testing is conducted tor Dr. Tom Frieden told The Associated Press on Saturday. "I hope that our understand-
patient. And we do not believe that any health care worker,
when ill Americans return to
Brantly was flown from Africa to Dobbins Air Reserve
Dr. Kent Brantly and Nan-
base outside Atlanta in a small plane equipped to contain in-
Find It All Online
E
Dante is a calm, sweet c P and handsome pit bull mix. We estimate his age at 1-1/2 years; he weighs 72 pounds. Dante scored an A+ in trainability. He appears OK with other dogs but perhapsafraid of cats. He knows sit, stay, recall and off. On a leash, he walks very nicely without pulling. Dante is attentive andveryengaged. Seemore photos at brightsideanimals.org/adoptable-dogs; meet him Tues.-sat., 10-5. C
bendbulletin.com
r
@ Sponsored by Q i
Plan Well, Retire Well
BrightSide Animal Center
00 B RIGHTS I D E A NI M A L CE N T E R
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE. REDMOND, OR
775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0 32I ~wuw.elevatoncapIalslraleIIes.csm
(541) 923-0882
Shaf Is BETTEBabout CleaningCI in/c? Your Value Our goal is not to save you money by doing the job cheaper, but by doing itbetter. Anyone can get your carpet wet and make it look cleaner. Correct cleaning involves much more and can easily double the life of a carpet.
Our Guarantee Fiber type, carpet construction, installation and maintenance may present circumstances beyond the cleaning technician's control. So we can't guarantee we can remove every stain. We do, however, guarantee that you will be happy and satisfied with our work. If
we can't make you happy, how can we possibly ask you to pay?
within the unit, and workers
are highly trained in infecany other patient or any visitor tion control. Glass walls enable fear of the unfamiliar does to our facility is in any way at able staff outside to safely not trump ou r c o mpassion riskof acquiringthis infection." observepati ents,and there's the U.S. for care," Frieden said.
D
Licensed Bonded Insured
Serving Bend for 25 Years!
a vestibule where w orkers
suit up before entering. Any gear is safely disposed of or
cy Writebol, who will arrive decontaminated. in several days, will be treated fectious diseases, and a small Family members will be in Emory's isolation unit for police escort followed his am- kept outside for now.
•
•
•
•
'
s. •
•
•'
•
'
I
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, August 3, the 215th day of 2014.There are 150 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS MideaSt —Peacetalks could begin in Cairo as Israel says it will have completed destroying all the Hamastunnels it has discovered.
HISTORY Highlight:In1914, Germany declared war onFrance at the onset of World War I. In1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Palos, Spain, on a voyagethat took him to the present-day Americas. In1807,former Vice President Aaron Burr went on trial before a federal court in Richmond, Virginia, charged with treason. (He was acquitted less than a month later.) In1863, the first thoroughbred horse races took place at the Saratoga RaceCourse in Saratoga Springs, NewYork. In1936,Jesse Owens,of the United States,won the first
of his four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics as hetook the 100-meter sprint. In1943, Gen. GeorgePatton slapped a private at anarmy hospital in Sicily, accusing him of cowardice. (Patton was later ordered by Gen.Dwight D. Eisenhower to apologize for this and a second, similar episode.) In1949, the National Basketball Association was formed as a merger of the Basketball Association of America andthe National Basketball League. In1958, the nuclear-powered submarine USSNautilus became the first vessel to cross the North Pole underwater. In1966, comedian Lenny Bruce, 40, was found deadin his Los Angeles home. In1972,the U.S. Senate ratified the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty between theUnited States and theSoviet Union. (The U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the treaty in 2002.) In1981, U.S. air traffic controllers went on strike, despite a warning from President Ronald Reaganthey would befired, which they were. In1993, the Senatevoted 96-3 to confirm U.S. SupremeCourt nominee Ruth BaderGinsburg. In1994, Arkansas carried out the nation's first triple execution in 32 years. Stephen Breyer was sworn in as aSupreme Court justice in a private ceremony at Chief Justice William Rehnquist's Vermont summer home. Ten years agn:Homeland Security Secretary TomRidge defended the decision to tighten security in NewYork and Washington eventhough the intelligence behind the latest terror warnings was asmuch as four years old. TheStatue of Liberty pedestal in NewYork City reopened to the public for the first time since the 9/11
attacks. NASAlaunched space probe Messenger on aquest to reveal the secrets of mysterious, super-hot Mercury, the sun's nearest planet. French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson died atage 95. Five years agn:Iran's supreme leader formally endorsed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for a second term as president. A court in Los Angelesappointed Michael Jackson's mother, Katherine, permanent guardian of the late pop star's children. One year agn:President Barack Obama's trade representative, Michael Froman, vetoedayet-to-be-enactedban on imports of Chinese-made Apple iPads andiPhones, overruling the U.S. International Trade Commission anddealing a setback to rival South Korean electronics companySamsung. Zimbabwe's electoral panel declared that longtime President Robert Mugabehad won re-election by a landslide.
BIRTHDAYS Singer Tony Bennett is 88. Actor Martin Sheen is74. Lifestyle guru Martha Stewart is 73. Movie director John Landis is 64. NFLquarterback Tom Brady is 37.Actress Evangeline Lilly is 35. Actress Mamie Gummer is 31. — From wire reports
SCIENCE
STUDY
s uoa ane. onrovers ra eson
Global warming causesnuisance floods oncoasts
It's been eight years since the official number of planets in the solar system
By Seth Borenstein
a year. Now those places average about 14 days a year.
The Associated Press
was cut by one. But people are still fighting for the underdog.
WASHINGTON
All 25 of t h ose locations
Along much of America's saw increases in the number coasts, the type of flood- of minor flood days; 22 of ing that is more annoy- them saw more than doubling ing than dangerous has of nuisance flooding since the jumped more than fivefold late 1950s and early 1960s. in the last 50 years, the Those 25 cities have also seen federal government re- sea level rise nearly half a
By Delthia Ricks Newsday
MELVILLE, NY. — Pluto, a distant world on the frigid out-
skirts of the solar system, was downgraded eight years ago when scientists changed its status from full-fledged planet to planetary dwarf. Scores of Pluto fans booed the decision and terminology — dwarf planet — imposed by
ported last week.
foot since 1963.
Scientists blame rising seas, saying this is one of the ways global warming is changing everyday lives.
The biggest increases are in the mid-Atlantic region.
The National Oceanic
Charleston, South Carolina,
San Francisco and Port Isabel, Texas, also showed more than four-fold increases in
and Atmospheric Administration studied coastal
public to voice disagreement the Hayden Sphere at the American Museum of Natural History's
flooding. Annapolis, Maryland, had trends in what it calls nui- the biggest percentage insance flooding, where no crease. From 1957 to 1963 one is hurt but people have it averaged 3.6 minor flood to deal with flooded roads days a year; now it averages and buildings. more than 39 a year. In 2011, While scientists and the Maryland's capital had 66 mipublic spend a lot of time nor flood days. dealing with giant events, University of Maryland en-
with the union. And the editor
such as a hurricane, it is
the International Astronomical
Union, which voted in Prague to reduce the number of plan-
ets to eight. C ontroversy has yet wane. There's a
to
F a cebook
page devoted to reinstating Pluto. Elsewhere, a permanent online petition still invites the
of a popular astronomy magazine is calling for a presidential-style debate to settle Pluto's
Shiho Fukada/The Associated Pressfile photo
Models of the planets in our solar system are suspended around Rose Center for Earth and Science in New York. When the museum constructed the model, it left Pluto out because scientists at the museum did not consider it a planet. In 2006 that ruling became official, according to the International Astronomical Union — but
status in the heavens — once not everybody accepts it. and for all. The m a elstrom
m o u nts
as Earthlings prepare for a ers have found hundreds of first-ever rendezvous: An new objects in the Kuiper belt, American da t a-gathering Pluto's home, a region far bespacecraft will make a his- yond the solar system. Ebel toric Pluto flyby next year. refersto the area as the deep Ironically, the New Horizon freeze, a vast expanse populatspace probe was launched ed by comets and alien planetthe year the far-flung orb was like objects. demoted. On Pluto itself, the average The spacecraft will hurtle temperature is minus 380 debreathtakingly close to the grees. And, it's not just dark, Plutonian surface, havingtrav- it's superdark: Sunlight is 1,000 eled seven years and 4.5 billion times fainter than on Earth. miles to reach Pluto, deep in the W hat is a planet? icy Kuiper belt.
'A touchy subject'
Scientists who oppose Pluto's return to f ull p lanetary
spacecraft's principal investigator, debate astrophysicist and television personality Neil
Davidson said. "It is clear
"Simply stated, the cause
deGrasse Tyson, director of
that changing c l imate
the Hayden Planetarium in
and weather patterns will
of the increase in inundation frequency is sea level rise
Manhattan. Stern has gone on record
attributable to global warm-
saying Pluto should be re-
cause us to be increasingly inconvenienced and challenged in our everyday
turned to its f ormer status.
lives."
and building construction are
Tyson also has gone on the record and says the astronomical union got its vote right.
Oceanographer William Sweet looked at coastal
factors in the increased flooding, but not nearly as much as rising seas. "It's going to become the new normal," Sweet said.
"This issue needs to be set-
tled logically and with a carefulface-to-face debateoverthe meaning of what the IAU has
done," Eicher said.
Astronomers are certain status say it may have been new insights will emerge from misdesignated upon discovery the mission, but that probably in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh won't change Pluto's status, at the Lowell Observatory in they say. Arizona. "Clearly, Pluto is a touchy Tombaugh died in 1997, but a subject," said Fred Walter, portion of his ashes was placed
But Walter thinks emotion about Pluto falls unavoidably along an age divide. "When I teach astronomy 101, I lecture on whether Pluto is a planet. "I don't tell the students what Pluto is. I let them vote. And
a professor of astronomy at
aboard the New Horizon probe
Stony Brook University. As Walter sees it, powerful scientific evidence undergirded Pluto's downgrade from planet to dwarf.
and are en route to the world
overwhelmingly they say Pluto is not a planet. "It's only older people who
"It has the most extreme or-
once called Planet X. In 1930, there were no official defini-
tions of a planet. Before 1996, Walter said, "no one ever sat down and deter-
bit of any of the planets, at least mined what aplanet is." when it was a planet," Walter The astronomical union has said, noting Pluto, about the
think d i fferently," h e
et must orbit the sun and be
"It's gravitationally tied to
massive enough to exist in "hydrostatic equilibrium," which
Neptune."
means having its own potent
But just as mystery has shroudedPlutobecause of its
gravitational pull. Hydrostatic equilibrium is the reason plan-
multibillion-mile distance from
ets are spherical. The third criterion: A planet
"We haven't really fully de-
ing," Boesch said in an email. Sweet said sinking land
cusing on 25 places with records that go back beyond 1950. Fifty years ago "That is how we can identify the 25 sites averaged about with the impacts of sea level 2.5 days of minor flooding rise."
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day
Classifieds
s a i d.
-
•
•
•
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
three key criteria for a celestial
"Pluto isn't gravitationally independent," Walter added.
it, too, Walter said.
sites across the nation, fo-
"This is a sociological issue, not a science issue, because people don't want to give up what they learned in school."
size of Earth's moon, is high- body to make the cut. Dinky ly dependent on a larger, full- Pluto had trouble making the fledged celestial body, a guard- grade. ian planet in the cosmos. The union's rules say a plan-
Earth, semantics have affected
vironmental scientist Donald
minor floods that people Boesch, who wasn't part of feel more often, though not the report, said this type of as severely, said NOAA's event is probably more meanMargaret Davidson. ingful to people than the big"It's the stuff that keeps ger and less frequent storms. you from conductingyour He noted that sea level has business or picking up risen about 8 inches in Anyour kids from school," napolis since 1971.
et into
must "clear the neighborhood" of smaller bodies within its or-
bit. This complicated wording is still there," he said, referring means a planet must be dommoted Pluto. The word 'planet' to the term dwarf planet.
"But if you were Pluto," he asked, "would you rather be the runt among planets, or the
king of the dwarf planets?"
inant in its orbital zone, Ebel
said, and Pluto isn't because it's in a complex dance with several satellites surrounding it.
Yet, Pluto's ban from the so-
Another name fo r P l uto, lar system still stokes powerM Walter added, is trans-Neptu- emotions in legions of fans. "In my heart, I know that it nian object.
Denton Ebel, who chairs
really can't be a planet any-
the Earth and Planetary Sciences Department a t the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan, cring-
more," said Ken Spencer, an
amateur astronomer and president of the Astronomical Society of Long Island. "I was es at the thought of "the Pluto really sad to see it demoted. But discussion. after reading why, it's hard to Discord, he asserted, is inev-
itable when the subject is Pluto. He doesn't think it's a full-
fledged planet, either. He scoffs at Pluto proponents who say scientists are prejudiced just because it's small. "It's not in the same class of objects as Earth and Mars and the other bodies we think of as
argue with those reasons."
Carol Paty, an assistant professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at the Georgia Insti-
tute of Technology, said while it's likely the New H orizon
mission will beam back data that scientists never knew, she doubts Pluto will be reinstated. David Eicher, editor of As-
planets," Ebel said. "There's an tronomy magazine, thinks Pluobject in the Kuiper belt that is larger than Pluto, and it isn't a
planet. "There are lots of objects out
For more information, give us a call or stop by any branch to apply.
to is a planet despite the union's
stipulations, and is calling for an open public debate. He asks: Shouldn't a planet
there and we are still finding be considered a full-fledged new ones. But everything can't planet regardless of its size? be a planet."
WE'LL COVER THE COST OF YOUR APPRAISAL!*
E icher would like t o
see
In recent years, space hunt- Alan Stern, the New Horizon
ga ~NCUA
O
503.228.7077 I 800.'527.39g2
COMMUNITY CREDIT U N I O N
WWW.OA POlfltCU.COm
e5
* Lender credit of up to $550 toward the cost of your appraisal on purchase transactions only. Amount to be credited upon loan closing. Appraisal fees mayexceed lender credit.
A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
Brain
that hopes to combine neural
Continued from A1 "This technology allows
to help restore lost memory function.
us to interface with the brain
The work is being driven
ful impact in those people who (sacrificed) for this country," Sanchez said. "We're working extremely hard to make this concept a reality."
using hundreds, if not thou-
by a Defense Department interested in treating the rash of
as Pannu's implants do, to al-
brain injuries emerging from
ter the nervous system is not a
sands, of electrodes," Pannu
said. "If you had these devices implanted in the brain, you could record (neural activity) and see how therapies are working in real time." Pannu's $5.6 million project — which is in the early stages of animal testing — is part of an array of brain research underway at Lawrence Livermore, all of it linked to the implant technology. Members of the team have found success with artificial retinal implants, which are already giving some blind people crude,
implants with tiny computers
Using electrical currents,
novel idea. Electric eels were dent Barack Obama's Brain used by the ancient Romans Jim Stevens / Bay Area News Group Research through Advancing to treat migraines. Luigi Gal- This auditory implant is demodern warfare, and Presi-
Innovative Neurotechnologies initiative, which aims to map
vani — the real-life inspiration
the brain's neurons to help tar-
imented with electricity to re-
get effective treatments.
animate dead tissue. Doctors have prescribed electroshock
Continued from A1 For O'Brien, going around her regular doctor was expensive and lodged a barrier between her and the person who knows her and knows her medical condition.
"There is a relationship," she said. "We have to ci rcumvent that process to get
a medicine that's relatively harmless." U nless doctors work in a
clinic whose policy forbids it, they can choose whether or not to sign an attending physician's statement, the form that
confirms a patient has one of the conditions that r enders
them eligible for the Oregon Medical Marijuana Program. Although Oregon's medical marijuana law intended for the statements to be signed by
patients' long-term primary care providers,things haven't shaken out that way.
In many cases, the doctors refuse out of fear they'll be labeled a "pot doc" and flooded with patients seeking weed. There's also a powerful stigma within the medical community that causes some doctors
look down upon colleagues who sign the forms. Others
simply don't see medical marijuana as an efficacious therapy given the lack of scientific research supporting its health benefits.
Who's doingthemost approvals here? Listed below arephysicians in Deschutes andJefferson counties who've approved 10 ormoremedical marijuana patients in Central Oregon. Nophysician in Crook County hasapproved that many.
DESCHUTESCOUNTY Brian Dossey*: 405 Andrew Dorfman*: 292
Paul Vancamp: 155 Christopher Hatlestad*: 103
Stephen Knapp:96 Dawna-Marie Townsend-Fixoit: 56 Laura Schaben:40 David Stewart: 30 Timothy Hill: 30
Robert Boone: 25 Stephen Kornfeld: 19 Gary Buchholz: 19 Jon Lutz: 19 Michael Feldman: 16 Thomas Warlick: 14 William Martin: 13 Anita Kolisch: 12 Guy "Bruce" McElroy: 12 Daniel Murphy: 11 Hans Russell: 10
schutes, Jefferson and Crook
counties, according to OHA data.Doctors with addresses in Central Oregon, howev-
to build. The technological
"At least if there was some ested in getting high. "How much of what they're good physician education on telling me is so they can get good ways to use it and ways through the system'?" he said. to track problems that develop Among doctors who treat on it," Dorfman said. "If the cancer patients, there is far whole thing could be made less stigma around approv- transparent, we'd have a beting marijuana. Their patients ter situation." are e x periencing s evere If Oregon voters approve pain and side effects from r ecreational m a r ijuana i n chemotherapy. November, it's likely to shift "There's absolutely no way the dynamic of the medical I'm going to be taken advan- program as medical patients tage of as a doctor," said Dr. are given the option of simStephen Kornfeld, an oncolo- ply buying legal marijuana. gist with the St. Charles Can- O'Brien said she thinks peocer Center who has 19 mari- ple will do whatever is less juana patients on his roster. "I expensive. Getting medical think oncologists would have marijuana ends up costing her no hesitation." about $400, including the fees, doctor visits and the product
sicians. Dr. Sanjeev Sharma,
said. "It will be interesting as more and more claims are
made about the health benefits, are the sellers and the ad-
vertisers going to be required to prove these benefits in order to make the claims'?" — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
Kornfeld, the St. Charles on-
ers make about marijuana's
benefits. Lately, he's had more
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.com
t h e p r o ducts,
Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V
"Some of them ar e very
good, they're nonprofit, patient-oriented businesses, but p r ofit-motivated,"
said Dorfman, the high-volume approver who now lives in California. Doctors like Dorfman and
different strains with differ-
Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?
na, are often the best bet for patients looking for informed advice on using the drug. Dorfman, for example, said he suggests newbies try strains with lower THC content — the
substance that products psychoactive effects — and higher CBD contents, which he's observed to have anti-inflammatory properties. He also advises patients start with a
very low dose and work their wayup. "It's pretty hard for a docnot provide the OHA recourse These doctors, however, are against doctors who clearly tor to say, 'You want to go get not going to see patients reghave built businesses around a productthat has 20 percent ularly and provide follow-up medical marijuana, despite THC,' because that might care like a primary care phythe fact that patients may not work for one person or not sician would. Dorfman said be getting the medical care another," said Burns, of the he has been working to devise OHA. "The industry is so new physician education programs they need, Burns said. "I've got one doctor here and the studies are just not that would teach primary care has written 6,000 of t h ese
claims about products," he
Hatlestad, who work in clinics that specialize in marijua-
Ashland, has 7,444 medical
The law as it's written does
sell it — people make a lot of
"It's going to be a simple matter of economics," she said.
Staff members at dispen-
some are
and more patients asking him about marijuana's anti-cancer properties, a claim he said is not supported by research. "As itbecomes more of a commodity, as people can
itself.
started.
ent levels of active ingredients tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) marijuana patients. Dr. Shaun and cannabinoids (CBD), and stigma sometimes causes peo- Hedmann, of Portland, has scientific research currently ple to want to go someplace 6,099 patients. doesn't offer solid data around
There are 4,071 medical
is "lower resolution" — than what Pannu's team h o pes
but they're also running a business.
"There are certain stigmas whose license says he's in
marijuana patients in D e-
precise — the technical term
could ease their symptoms. cologist, said he worries that if Even if their primary care patients bypass doctors, docphysician approves them, tors won't be able to contradict he or she probably won't of- the constant stream of basefer much advice on getting less claims he hears support-
for medical marijuana. sure or other pharmaceutical They're still a far cry from medications they're used to Medical Marijuana Program. The same thing happens with the state's top marijuana phy- prescribing. There are many
Road trips for weed
those devices are much less
culties for patients who are new to marijuana but feel it
which administers the Oregon
sympathetic environment."
d eep-
brain stimulation devices that improve their symptoms. But
Such dynamics pose diffi-
pharmacy programs for the Oregon Health A uthority,
treated in a more friendly and
been implanted with
Straight talk
Douglas Lieuallen: 39 Gary Plant: 31 Matthew Foster: 27 Kristine Delamarter: 21 *Physician does not practice primarily in Central Oregon.
Source: Oregon Health Authority
where they think they will be
ple with Parkinson's disease and other brain disorders have
JEFFERSON COUNTY
think drives them elsewhere,
that still exist in medicine," Burns said, "and the fear of a
ready, more than 100,000 peo-
saries know
In some cases, patients' own fear of what their doctor will
HIV patients, he said.
brain implants in humans.
William Schmidt: 10
TOTAL NUMBER OFPATIENTS Deschutes County: 3,359 Crook County: 372 Jefferson County: 340
said Tom Burns, director of
signed for use in lab rats. Such
for Dr. Frankenstein — exper- devices are paving the way for
According to Defense Advanced Research Projects therapies to treat depression, Agency program manager schizophrenia and other psyDr. Justin Sanchez, the next chiatric disorders for about generation of brain implants the past 80 years. It's long been clear that could provide hope for the estimated 2.2 million veterans more targeted electrical stimand active military personnel ulation could yield better and but functional, vision. Pannu's who have sought help for a safer results, Pannu said, beNeural Technology group re- mental health disorder. cause you can manipulate "There's a huge potential for damaged areas without affectcently got a $2.5 million grant for a "neuroprosthetic" project this study to make a meaning- ing healthy brain tissue. Al-
Marijuana
challenge is huge, because of how groups of neurons in those areas communicate, sweeping set of effects. and then fashion smaller elec"With TBIyou have many trodes that can interface with — and direct — those neurons. t hings that come from it memory loss, changes in A n early v ersion of t h e personality and other symp- implants is currently being toms," said scientist and team tested on animals, to analyze member Vanessa Tolosa. "The how memory and speech are brain is a huge black box that formed. The Defense Departno one understands. Here, ment hopes to have a protowe're going to get a better un- type implant that can both derstanding of the brain, and record and modulate brain acwe're hoping to come up with tivity ready for Food and Drug therapies that work. The im- Administration approval and pact is huge." testing on human subjects But there's a lot of work to within five years. be done first. Essentially, reUsing MRIs and other imagsearchers want the implants ing techniques to show where to be able to encode, decode, the devices should go, surrecord and transmit electrical geons would drill small holes signals that can tell a dam- through the skull, implanting aged brain what to do. To ac- the devices in multiple areas of complish that, they must iden- the brain. The devices would tify what areas of the brain are be wirelessly monitored and affected by various disorders, powered by a battery embedgain a better understanding ded in the pectoral muscles. traumatic brain injury has a
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.
what levels help with what.
thereto answer those types of
prescript ions a year, "he said. questions."
er, have only signed a total of "That's500 prescriptions per Dr. Keith Harrington, an 1,772 attending physician's month.... That's a pretty darn urgent care physician with statements. The latter num- heavy workload, and it does Mountain Medical Immediate ber is misleading, as some of give mepause for concern.Is Care in Bend, usually doesn't Central Oregon's highest-vol- this doctor really understand- give patients much instruction ume marijuana approvers ing the needs of the patient?" when he signs their marijuana — doctors Brian Dossey, Anapprovals. Most of the patients drew Dorfman and Christo- Docs in the dark he sees tell him they're using pher Hatlestad — are actually Many of the physicians in it for chronic pain, and most based elsewhere. Central Oregon who do ap- know plenty about the drug Still, the numbers show prove their patients for medi- already. that most Central Oregonians cal marijuana do so reluctantIf they don't, they're not seeking medical marijuana ei- ly. And most — as evidenced going to learn about it in Harther go across the state to get by the more than a dozen phy- rington's office. "Honestly, I wouldn't be approved or they see doctors sicians who declined to comwho visit every now and then ment for this article — don't able to tell a patient how often to sign approvals. want their name associated they should be usingit — three For the clinics specializing with doing so. puffs versus five puffs or what"I'vebeen surprised and dis- ever," said Harrington, who in marijuana — such as The Hemp & Cannabis Foundation appointed by how polarized has six marijuana patients. "I and Mothers Against M i s- physicians have been about it," don't use the stuff myself, so I use & Abuse, both of which Dr. Christopher Hatlestad, a don't have any personal expehave clinics in Bend — other physician at the Center for En- rience on how to dose it." doctors'refusal to approve vironmental Medicine in PortPatients usually ask Harhas been a boon to their land. A longtime proponent of rington to sign the forms; he businesses. alternative therapies such as said he would never suggest Dossey has more medical medical marijuana, Hatlestad it unless all other options marijuana patients in D e- is not shy about helping pa- had failed. He said he views schutes County than any oth- tients get it. He has 103 med- marijuana similarly to alcoers in the county: 405. All told, ical marijuana patients who hol in that people use them Dossey, who did not return live in Deschutes County and t o self-medicate, but b o t h a request for comment, has 430 statewide. have serious consequences if at least 2,251 medical mariWhen primary care physi- they're overused. juana patientsspread across cians do agree to approve their Doctors also are sensitive six counties in Oregon. Dorf- patients for medical marijua- to being used by patients who man, who has 292 marijuana na,they're rarely ableto offer don't have legitimate medical patients in Deschutes Coun- guidance with respect to how conditions and simply want to ty, has 900 patients in seven much they should take, how get marijuana. counties. Dorfman recently t hey should take it o r h o w Hatlestad, who often sees moved to California and is no often. That's because many patients in clinics designed longer seeing patients in Ore- doctors simply don't have ex- for marijuana approvals, said gon, but said he used to travel perience with the drug. Not he mostly sees middle-aged around the state specifically only that, marijuana is a lot adults with chronic pain who to evaluate patients' eligibility different than the blood pres- they tell him they're not inter-
Raising Awarenesswith Strength R Courage
for moreinfovisit www.lclerodermalnlel.orl
physicians to talk to patients
about marijuana.
•
•
Come learn the ABC's and D's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.
Free classes open to the public: BEND — Thursday, August 7, 4:30pm Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road Sponsored by:
For mors information call 541-241-s927 www.Medicare.PacificSource.com
Medicare This event is only for educational purposes. No plan-specific benefits or details will be shared. PacificSource Community Health Plans, Inc. is an HMO/PPO plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in PacificSource Medicare depends on contract renewal. Y0021 MRK2005
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Cowboy
Africa
Continued from A1
Continued from A1 "Those borders might as
Werner is a
p r o l ific ar t-
ist whose work is on display acrossthe state.He has created 14 large-scale art pieces for Central Oregon, including the bronze loggersculptures in the Old Mill roundabout, the
bronze reliefsculptures depicting the history of Central Oregon in Farewell Bend Park and the 16-foot clock tower in
Redmond's Centennial Park. Werner is at home using a
variety of media to create his art — clay, paint, metal, or even neon. His Tumalo studio
is a shrine to this conceptpeppered with sculpture marquettes (small-scale sculptures the artist does before creating the larger version), paintings in progress, stained glass lamps, neon sculptures and decorative metal pieces. "Most artists are vertical in
the sense that they only work in one style," Werner said. "I'm a horizontal artist. I work in
different mediums across all different techniques."
Meg Roussos Irhe Bulletin
The detail on the clay master of the statue shows Fletcher's ornate chaps. "Everything about him is historically accurate," Werner
said. See more of Werner's work at www.wernergraphics.com. largerpushbythe citytore- c amera, he actually had a vitalize areas of the city while model who looked similar to simultaneously
c o m m emo- F l e tcher dress up in authentic
rating its history through art. Western wear at Pendleton's Pendleton Mayor Phillip Houk Hamley and Co. and sketched said the city is planning to in- him. These sketches helped stall one bronze piece a year. W e rner complete the sculp"We've taken a look at a tureaccurately. numberofourpeoplefromthe It w a s during this visit to past, and we're trying to rec- Hamley and Co., a Western
Originally from Cornelius, ognize them for their contri- g e a r store, that Werner said butions," Houk said. "George he received an unmistakable Oregon for nearly three de- was really well-liked. He was sign that he made the right cades. As a commissioned a great competitor, and he c hoice in taking the Fletcher artist, he often gets to work was someone the crowd really commission. on pieces chronicling and enjoyed." While taking a break from showcasing the history of los ketching, Werner t oo k a cal towns and cities. Werner's Sculpting Fletcher seat on a bench in the shop. Fletcher piece stands out for Werner was chosen to take A moment later, he realized him as something quite mem- on the commission after he h e w a s sitting across from a orable — both for Fletcher's submitted some sketches to l arge bronze statue of a Native unique story, and the artist's the city's art c ommission A merican in a full headdress, own journey creating it. for consideration. Houk said w rapped in a buffalo robe. the sculpture has cost about Which wouldn't have been all Ablackcowboy $30,000, all of which is being that unusual — except that Werner has lived in Central
G eorge Fletcher w a s
a
paid for through arts grants.
W e r ner said he had seen the
black cowboy who lived most of his life in the Pendleton area. He emigrated to Oregon from Kansas with his family at the turn of the century,
He said Werner's sculpture very same Native American, turned out just as in the very same t he city h oped i t clothing, in a dream "That day he'd had one year would. "I just love the jf 7 gggg e arlier .
when there were only about
work h e' s
five African-American fami- Houk said. "We aplies living in Eastern Oregon, preciate how great th e W ay the said Prineville-based Western this is." g/gS$(QDUgp( author Rick Steber. After beI t took Werner 8 p p IJ( /gSg/f ing discriminated against in four m o n th s to white schools, Fletcher elected complete the piece. Suddenly, to live on the Umatilla Indian First, he created the yygg gg8 Reservation instead, where master clay sculp-
the same," Werner said o f t he bronze
he learned how to ride horses.
t ure.
t imes
He was the first black person to compete in the Pendleton Round-up, and is well-known for the controversy surrounding the 1911 round-up saddle
was then sent to a I' BBCPIOII, foundry a factory $$6$ f'88/IZ8$
The
pie c e
t hat creates metal ~ ~
~
statue."I was just
like , 'Wow. This is a mazing.' I t confirmation
wa s for
me that I was doing the right job. Somet h er e ar e
signposts along the w ay . " W erner said h e
castings. After a is attending t he lengthy process in- mO re thaA unvei l i ng c e remobronc finals. volving cutting the /j gg JyQggfl'g n y i n P endleton on Those finals came down to sculpture into piecThursday. Also in three cowboys; John Spain, es, creating moids, attendance will be a white man; Jackson Sun- making a wax cast, WI785h6 178Cf at l east 60 mayors, down, a Native American; dipping it in a slur- CpfTI jflg $p in town for the Orand Fletcher. It was w idely ry of porcelain and egon Mayors Asbelieved that Fletcher had the sand, and then addV soc i ation summer best run of the three compet- ing a bronze patina, be C auSe Of confe rence. "It's (the sculpitors, but he was denied first the final pr oduct $Qg Cp/pfpf place by the judges because eventually c ame . ture) a little bit like „ ~. of the color of his skin, Steber t ogether to f o r m a pebble in the wasaid. Spain, the only white a bronze statue of ter in the sense that competitor in the finals, took George F l etcher. RickSteber when people leam first. Werner drove the the story behind it, Steber, who recently pub- piece, which ended it creates a ripple lished a book called "Red up weighing around effect," Werner said. White Black: A True Story of 500 pounds, to Pendleton in a "It encourages them to go out .
Race and Rodeo" about the
U-Haul.
controversy, said the crowd
The master clay sculpture ple and the character of the has been put back together, town."
that day was livid with the
and know more about the peo-
rodeo ruling, the majority be- a nd now stands in Werner's The au t h o r S t eber, w h o lieving Fletcher was the right- studio. It shows a larger-than- visited Werner while he was ful winner. The Pendleton life Fletcher staring out coolly sculpting the Fletcher piece, sheriff at the time, Til Taylor, from behind the clay with his said he didn't think anybody was so unhappy with the de- hands on his hips, and one could have done as good a job cision that he took Fletcher's foot raised and resting on a a s Werner because the artist hat, ripped it up into piec- box. Werner used a portrait u n d erstood the significance of es and sold the pieces to the of a 21-year-old Fletcher as his Fletcher's story. "I think i t's important to crowd for $5 each. The $700 guiding image for the piece, he raised went to Fletcher so
and the artist takes pride in
s t o p an d look at w here we
he could buy the same saddle the fact that everything about were 100 years ago and where that was awarded to Spain for
the sculpture is h istorically
w e a r e now a s far a s race
finishing first. accurate — from Fletcher's goes," Steber said. "It's a character telling a "That day in 1911 changed MontanaPeaks Hat Company the way th e
W est t hought hat, to his ornate leather tooled u n i que story." Werner said. "And to see him get this hon-
about itself," Steber said. chaps, to his cowboy boots. "Suddenly, with the crowd's The sculpture even depicts the reaction, they realized that a famed ripped hat lying in piecman more than likely hadn't es at the cowboy's feet. receivedwhat he had coming Because Werner only had to him strictly because of the color of his skin. I think that
a photo of Fletcher facing the
or, and to be the artist to help represent him — that's very special." — Reporter: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbuIIetin.com.
forces, Army Lieutenant Colo-
local grievances to global goals, said Rep. Frank LoBi-
nel Vanessa Hillman, a Penta- ondo, R-N.J., a member of the gon spokeswoman, said in an House Intelligence committee well not exist," Ham said email. She declined to provide who specializes in Africa. "You've got these al-Qaida of the porous region abut- a breakdown of U.S. forces by ting Libya, Tunisia, Niger country. affiliates who are trying to and Algeria. Militants are The U.S. provided advisers outdo each other to show that t hriving in n o rthern A f - and reconnaissance drones to they're worthy of funding and rica's "weak, ungoverned aid in efforts to rescue more operational help," LoBiondo spaces,"and more ofthem than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls said in an interview. "Their reare returning from Syria kidnapped by Boko Haram in cruitment is soaring. They're and Iraq "with battlefield April as the Twitter hashtag getting the funds necessary experience and credibility." ¹ BringBackOurGirls u s e d to do the bad things which at by first lady Michelle Obama some point are going to come Training troops went viral online. The school- back to the U.S." African g o vernments girls still haven't been found. A variety of extremist ordon't want American comOne of the primary lessons ganizations operate in Africa, bat troops any more than of Afghanistan and Iraq is that from al-Shabaab in Somalia the U.S. wants to deploy wars against Islamic extrem- and the Movement for Openthem after losing more ism can't be won by military ness and Jihad in West Afrithan 6,800 lives in Iraq and means alone, and U.S. offi- ca to al-Qaida in the Islamic Afghanistan. Instead, the cials say their strategy reflects Maghreb and organizations U.S. military is training that. Still, economic aid fell such as Boko Haram in Nigeg overnments across t h e from 2009 to 2012 as military ria, which began as a domescontinent to confront milifinancing rose, according to tic terrorist group "but is now tant groups. the most recent State Depart- engaged in regional activity U.S. efforts to provide ment data available. against Cameroon and Niger," such training are compliIn 2009, U.S. economic and saidJohnnie Carson, a former cated by the reality that other nonmilitary aid for all U.S. assistant secretary of some of America's allies of Africa was $10.4 billion, state for African affairs who are authoritarian regimes compared with $8.26 billion served as ambassador to sevthat use their militaries as in military assistance through eral sub-Saharan nations. "The emergence of these private armies and some the Foreign Military Financhave blotted human-rights ing program. In 2012, econom- extremist organizations, some records. ic aid dropped to $8.1 billion of which have a religious or "The problem is that Af- while military financing rose f undamentalist base, h a s rican states often exist for to $16.8 billion. brought into stark relief the the elites, and the military The U.S. military's budget need for greater training and exists also for the purpose for Africa Command peaked assistance" by the internationof these elites," said Hus- at $273.7 million in 2010. Since al community, said Carson, sein Solomon, a political then, it's declined to $261.6 who's now a senior adviser to studies professor at the million in 2014. For the coming the U.S. Institute of Peace in University of the Free State year, the Pentagon is seeking Washington. in Bloemfontein, South Af$244.5 million. The U.S. has encouraged rica. "I'm asking for a more African governments operatnuanced American en- Africa summit ing under the umbrella of the gagement in Africa and a Economic development in African Union to take on such more nuanced perspective, Africa will be on the agenda at groups, Carson said. "In a place like Somalia, an understanding that the the U.S.-Africa Leaders Sumstate itself is problematic." mit that Obama is hosting in which has done well over the With no realistic alterna-
"He was exactly
d o ne,"
often working alongside local
Washington next week. The
last few years, the effort there
tive, though, the U.S. war three-day conference includes has been largely led and drivagainst Somali p irates, a daylong U.S.- Africa Busi- en by Africans," including Nigerian kidnappers, Lib- ness Forum on Tuesday host- Ugandans, Ethiopians, Burunyan militias and nomadic ed by Bloomberg Philanthro- dians, Kenyans, and DjibouIslamic extremists remains pies and the U.S. Commerce tians, Carson said. "The U.S. focused on training and ad- Department. Bloo m b erg has been a partner and supvising African militaries. Philanthropies is led by Mike porter, but it hasn't taken ownAcross north Africa, ter- Bloomberg, the founder and ership of the problem" and has rorist groups are exploiting majority owner of Bloomberg helped Africans "bring Somaancient transit c orridors LP, the parent of Bloomberg lia back from the brink of the and the limited capability News. failed state." of states to provide borSolomon said that the U.S. While Somalia has made der security, said Amanda should use its leverage to push some gains against militants, Dory, the U.S. deputy as- fordemocratic reform and an- the U.S. has failed to stop Libsistantsecretary ofdefense ti-corruption efforts and that ya from sliding into chaos affor African affairs. counterterrorism s t r ategy ter assisting in the overthrow "The
t rade
of dictator Moammar Gad-
through the Sahel into the
r ou t e s must be tailored to the political context of each country. "The U.S. military is an esMaghreb that have existed for thousands of years for sential but not a decisive comcommerce ofalltypes are ponent," Ham said. "What the
hafi, said Michael O'Hanlon, a national security analyst at
increasingly being used U.S. military is good at is tactifor a variety of trafficking," cal training. We're less good at including weapons, people institution-building or ethical and "most recently the in- values training. That was one creased flow of extremists" of our weaknesses in Mali, into and out of the region, where we focused exclusively Dory said in an interview. on small-unit tactical training The American military
effort is spearheaded by
the Brookings Institution in
Washington. "We missed an opportunity that was fairly straightfor-
ward to build up an indigenous security force and maybe backstop it with a peacekeeping force for a short time," O'Hanlon said. "We didn't
and not on institutions to exercise civilian controL"
do that, and now you've got a Libya that continues to be
who want a separate nation
The U.S. evacuated its Lib-
Mali's military led a coup in a sourceof fighters for other set up in 2007 and based 2012 seeking better resources countries and also to drag itin Stuttgart, Germany, its to fight separatists. The rebels, self down." the U.S. Africa Command, distant location a reflection of sensitivity in Africa to-
in the north, initially aligned yan embassy July 25, sending ward a large U.S. military themselves with a l-Qaida- staff elsewhere and advising profile. The command has linked militants. France sent all American citizens to leave ratcheted up the American troops to Mali last year to re- the country after clashes bemilitary presence on the pel the advance of the Islamist tween militias. A U.K. embascontinent with about 4,000 militants. sy convoy was attacked the U.S. troops, civilians and Some mi litant g r oups next day. China, Norway and contractors at Camp Lem- across the continent have ex- France asked their citizens in onnier in Djibouti, the only panded their ambitions from Libya to leave. permanent U.S. military base in Africa. An additional 1,000 or
so U.S. troops and military advisers conduct s h ortterm missions at the invitation of African nations,
changingSmiles Denture a Implant center
SATURDAY
FARIvIERS
MARKET p resented byrrarcourts
The Garner Group Real Estate
Every Saturdayi 10am-2pm NorthWestCrossing Neighborhood Center
Call 541-388-4444 for $100 OFF your new denture
NORTHWEST CROSSING www.nwxfarmersmarket.com
Pure. &md.6 Co.
aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
was one of those defining moments that made people aware
of prejudice and bigotry." Steber said it wasn't until 1960 that a person of color took first at t h e P endleton
Round-Up finals. Fletcher went on to serve in
ablack regiment in World War I, where he was wounded. He was never able to participate in another rodeo after that but
stayed in the Pendleton area and worked as a ranch cow-
boy. He died in 1973. Fletcher was inducted into the National Multicultural Western Heri-
tage Museum's Hall of Fame in 2006, the same year as fellow competitor Jackson Sundown,
and as famous black lawman,
Partners In Care can provide expert, compassionate care for you
Bass Reeves. Fletcher was deemed the
or a family member in your own horne — or our Hospice House,
"people's champion" during
a unique, comfortable haven where families can stay while
the 1911 rodeo finals. Today,
surrounded by 2<hour medical care. If you need support with end-of-life care, choose your cornrnunity's leader in hospice care.
he may very well still be the people's champion. Choosing from an extensive list of Pendleton notables, Pendleton citi-
zens voted last year for Fletcher to have his likeness cast in bronze for a statue on Main
Street. The statue is part of a
A5
(541) 382-5882
p a r t n e rsbend.org
Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House Transitions I Palliative Care
Partners In Care HOSPICE HOUSE
A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
IN FOCUS: CHINA
Will sanctions work against Russia? Iranoffersafew dues ANALYSIS
By Rick Noack The Washington Post
stantial sanctions so far are
WASHINGTON — When the United States first threatened Russia with sanctions
in April, Iranian officials reportedly cautioned the Kremlin against ignoring the American warnings. Having experienced the effect of such restrictions on their
Sim Chi Yin/The New YorkTimes
A rural woman going by her surname, Kong, six months pregnant acting as a surrogate, looks out the window at the place she is staying in Wuhan, China, in April. She will earn $24,000 for a surrogacy that
is illegal but an increasingly widespread practice in China, where wealthier couples often wait until their late 30s to start a family, only to find it hard to conceive a child.
n er roun mar et or is oomin
CI
By lan Johnson eNew York Times News Service
WUHAN, China — In a small conference room overlooking this city's smog-shrouded skyline, Huang Jinlai outlines his offer to China's childless elite: for $240,000, a baby with your DNA, gender of your choice, born by a coddled but captive rural woman. The arrangement is offered to Thailand, where surrogacy by Huang's Baby Plan Medical is legal, to donate their sperm Technology Co., with branches and egg. A Chinese surrogate in four Chinese cities and up is flown there, too, and reto 300 successfulbirths each ceives the implant. The three year. return to China and the surAs in most countries, surro- rogate is installed in a private gacy is illegal in China. But a apartment with a f u l l -time combination of rising infertil- assistant. To make sure she ity, a recent relaxation of the does not get ideas about fleeone-child-per-family p o licy ing with the customer's fetus, and a cultural imperative to she is cut off from her family have childrenhas given rise and receives daily visits from to a booming black market a psychological counselor, in surrogacy that experts say Huang said. produces more than 10,000 If all goes well, the baby is births ayear. born at a private clinic, which The trade links couples des- Huang says has an agreement perate for children with poor with Baby Plan to accept the w omen desperate for cash in couple's identity papers, legala murky world of online bro- ly registering the child as their kers, dubious private clinics own. Often, the couple never and expensive trips to foreign meet the surrogate. If the fercountries.
"China's underground market shows that there is a need for surrogacy in society," said Wang Bin, an associate profes-
tilization works on the first try,
Baby Plan makes a profit of $24,000, Huang estimates, the
$19,000, versus the $24,000 that Baby Plan offers Chinese surrogates. "I just want the implant to
take place as quickly as possible so I can go home sooner," she said. For the surrogates, the earnings are relatively substantial, but they bear most of the risks
and have few legal protections. Besides the physical risks of hormone treatment and the
1,000 baby brokers nationwide, often results in trouble.
One woman who asked to be identified only by her family name, Zuo, said a friend put her in touch with a w oman
from the countryside who had already given birth and needed more income. Another friend recommended a private clinic in Beijing that would conduct the embryo implantation and follow-up treatments; a surrogate mother requires months
of hormone shots to prepare her body for the implanted embryo and prevent its rejection.
The surrogate became pregnant but said she wanted to keep the child and dis-
appeared. "We paid 30,000 yuan," about $5,000, "as a down payment," Zuo said. "And we got nothing and have no way to find the woman."
Here in Wuhan, Baby Plan offers a more expensive, but at times grimly controlled, program. Chinese couples fly
cently visited the woman.
"It's not easy for them ei-
posed after the seizure ofthe American Embassy in Tehran in 1979. "There was a s e nse of overconfidence. The Iranians did not expect that major international sanctions
not the most recent ones but
could be imposed without a serious backlash on the
sian citizens in the immedi-
those implemented in March
— "simply because they created a precedent." " Today's sanctions w i l l
not be catastrophic for the Russian economy and Rusate future," he says. Furthermore, R u s sia's economy is m uch m ore
own country, the Iranians ap- West," says Suzanne Maloparently advised Russia not ney, a senior fellow on Iran to underestimate the possible at the Brookings Instituimpact. tion. But the Iranians had Last week, t h e U n i t ed underestimated the power States and t h e E u r opean of concerted international Union imposed their strict- sanctions. est sanctions yet on Russia. While OPEC's oil producN evertheless, Russian o f tion got back on track after ficials seem confident that the 2008 crisis, Iran's extheir nation would weather ports and revenue declined. the storm. Sanctions took about half of The most important ques- Iran's oil exports offline and t ions now a re: How l o n g cut off Iranian banks from and how many measures the rest of the world. will it take for Russia to feel The shock w aves w ere the pressure'? And even if massive: Iran's economy the effects become visible c ontracted i n 20 1 2 a n d — how much pressure will 2013, with the inflation rate it take for Russia to change topping 40 percent. Conseits policy on Ukraine? The quently, political debates Iranian example could be began to emerge that led to illuminating. the current negotiations on There are some obvious Iran's disputed nuclear pros imilarities b etween I r a n gram, though their outcome a nd Russia: Oil is a n i m - is still u ncertain. Could portant source of revenue the same strategy work on for both countries, and they Russia? behaved similarly confident Although numerous sancwhen the danger of tougher tions against Russia had alsanctions loomed. In 2009, ready been announced,this I ranian P r e sident M a h - week's measures appeared moud Ahmadinejad called to show a clear upgrade in U.S. sanctions "childish"; targets. The largest state Russian President Vladimir banks and Rosneft, the state Putin criticized the United oil company, are on the States earlier this year, say- sanctions list. Apart from ing that s anctions would that, the E.U.'s measures be "harmful to the national are now at a level similar to long-term strategic interests those of the United States,
i ntegrated into
Confronted with new sanc-
tions, Russia could decide to retaliate and confiscate companies' foreign direct investments in the country.
And we shouldn't forget that the country produces about
three times as much oil as Iranand supplies30 percent of the gas consumed by the E.U.
Cliff Kupchan — who has s tudied both R u ssia a n d Iran — thinks that sanctions
could nevertheless have a certain impact. "Putin and
Russia are vulnerable because the economy was floundering even before the Ukraine episode," he said. Growth predictions for Russia have indeed worsened
over the past months: Are Europe and the United States willing to risk the
backlash from their sanctions? Even if they are, they may have to put up with that
risk for quite some timeRussia's Reserve Fund and its National Wealth Fund
would be equipped to help the country out in the short run, and its economy will
prove to be more resilient than Iran's.
which means that Russian
Barry Ickes, a professor at
American people."
companies and banks will have to look eastward for funding.
Pennsylvania State University, predicts that ultimately it will come down to a test of wills: "For whom is Ukraine more important? And who
When international pressure on Iran i n creased in
2009, the country could alIs that enough to f o rce ready look back at decades Putin to back away from of experience with U .S. Ukraine? Sergei Guriev is willing to suffer the most sanctions that had been im- from Sciences Po in Paris for it'?"
pregnancy, many suffer psychological problems. One 24-year-ol d in Wuhan who asked to be known by her family name, Yang, said she was on her second pregnancy for Baby Plan. After she went home with $24,000 in 2012, she
said, her alcoholic boyfriend stole the money and gambled it away. That pregnancy had come with a cost: Yang said she
•
•
•
•
•
' • •
•
'
•
mon development. "Our liaison staff tells them
every day that the baby in your stomach isn't your baby," Life as a surrogate Huang said. "A nice way of Huang said his surrogate putting it is emotional comfort; mothers were a l l C h i nese less nice is brainwashing." women recruited from the Even for more mature womcountryside by friends and en, the toll canbe substantial. A family members. He said his 30-year-old rural woman who upper-class clientele would not asked to go by her surname, accept a foreign woman they Kong, is another Baby Plan regard as inferior as a surro- surrogate. Now si x m o nths gate, even though the cost is pregnant, she says her living lower. conditions are good and she "Chinese don't want their has clear goals for her $24,000; children carried by people she plans to start a housecleanwho are more backward than ing business in a small city upthey are," he said. stream on the Yangtze. Still, foreign women are She was even given special widelyused as surrogates. dispensation to talk to her son, One Vietnamese woman, a a 4-year-old who is staying 30-year-old who asked to go with her mother. "At first he called me on the by her family name, Nguyen, said she was recruited in Ho phone and said, 'Mom, when Chi Minh City. She left home, are you coming home?'" she telling her mother and her two said. "He was angry, then he daughters that she was going cried," she continued, her voice to China to work for a year. becoming ever softer. "Now he She stands to make nearly won't talk to me on the phone."
th e g l ob-
al economy than I r an's.
of the American state, the
same amount the surrogate became a surrogate to earn mother makes. money for her sick father. But "The baby is guaranteed, as during her pregnancy, her sor at Nankai University's law school. "And where there is a well as a DNA check," Huang father died. Baby Plan did need, there is a market." said. "Otherwise you d on't not allow her to return home pay." for his funeral because she Baby brokers One Baby Plan client is would have missed hormone The rise of surrogacy is of- a 49-year-old professional treatments. "That was a mistake on our ten linked to the increase in from Shanghai who asked to wealthier, b e t ter-educatedbe known only by her fam- part," Huang acknowledged. Chinese couples waiting until ily name, Zhang. Zhang's "But if we had let her go home, their late 30s to start a family, 18-year-old daughter commit- the client family would have a trend that makes it harder to ted suicide in 2012. Because lost their child." conceive.Some academics say of China's single-child policy, Now Yang is back to give China's severe air, water and she was the only offspring of birth a second time for a Baby soil pollution contribute to in- Zhang and her husband. Af- Plan couple, this time because creasing infertility, although ter a year and extensive coun- she needs money for her sick that claim has not been scien- seling, the couple decided that mother. tifically demonstrated. they could heal only if they had Huang said the company Regardless, failure to re- another child. A medical test, preferred women who had produce is less of an option however, showed that Zhang's been mothers already. They than it is in the West. Tradition eggs were probably too old to will be less worried about holds that couples must have be fertilized. Zhang said she possible side effects, including a child. A folk proverb warns suggested to her husband that whether manipulating their rethat "among the three unfil- they use another woman's egg. productive cycle might affect "At least with his sperm it ial deeds, having no offspring their ability to have children is the worst." Some women will look a bit like her," Zhang later. They are also more menthink they must have a child said of her dead daughter, her tally stable, he said. or their husbands will divorce hands shaking. "It will be a bit But to be safe, Huang said, them. Some couples seeking like having my child backthe company hires women to surrogacy have sadder stories, half the blood will be hers, so visit every day to make sure sometimes hoping to replace my heart will be soothed." the surrogate does not form Zhang's surrogate is four emotional attachments to the only children who have died. China's unregulated mar- months pregnant, and she re- baby they are carrying, a comket, with a network of roughly
claims that the only sub-
•
ther," she said.
•
•
;
I
•
•
•
•;
•
•
•
•
•
•
'
•
•
•e•e
ERIQLN EXPRES
'
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
exceptions: Jeffrey Smoot, a law reader, was recently Continued from A1
made partner at one of Seat-
But at a time when many in
tle's oldest firms, Oles Mor-
legal education — including the president, a former law professor — are questioning the value of three years of law study and the staggering debt
rison Rinker & Baker. "It's a
ships as an alternative that
the state bar association. A
makes legal education availableand affordable to a m ore diverse population and could
volunteer board sets study standards and assigns a liai-
validation of the program," he said. Washington state's program forapprentices— called that saddles many graduates, law clerks there — stands out proponents see apprentice- for the extent of support from
be a b oon t o
son to each lawyer-apprentice u n derserved duo to monitor their progress.
communities.
Students must also be employed by the office in which Expanding oppodunities they study. Of law clerks who "Attorneys have carved took the Washington bar last out a place that is high in- year, 67 percent passed. come and inaccessible," says Talia Clever, who coordiJanelle Orsi, co-founder of the nates the program for the Sustainable Economies Law state bar, says she routinely Center, a nonprofit in Oak- fields calls from people who land, California, that focuses want to know how hard it is to on legal aspects of the "shar- become a lawyer without law ing economy." school. Her answer: very. "It's To Orsi, a graduate of the a lot of work. It's four years highly ranked Boalt Hall and you don't get summers School of Law at the Univer- off. You're on the line worksity of California, Berkeley, ing with a lawyer every day." apprenticeships are a way to reorderthe economics of law
Hands-on experience
school and law work. Without For some, that's the appeal. loans to pay back, she argues, Instead of spending years in lawyers won't have to chase
big paychecks or prestige
lecture halls, time is spent in courtrooms or with clients-
with corporate clients and could instead work in n o n-
experience most traditional
profit, environmental and
only get during a semester of clinical practice. For para-
community law. "Attorneys trained in this
way will be able to be average people," Orsi said, "not just because they don't have debt, but because law school tells us that we're really special."
law school students might legals, the method makes it
possible to hold down a job or keep payingoffa mortgage while earning an advanced credential. " I didn't just want t o u p
Orsi and two other lawyers are mentors to four apprentices who are chronicling their experiences on a blog curated by the center gikelincoln.org).
and quit my job and go to law school and become a student again," said Megumi Hack-
Tittle is director of organizational resilience at the center,
under the tutelage of Jon McMullen, a c r i minal defense
ett, a paralegal in Vancouver,
Washington, who is studying
where he spends six hours a lawyer. "It has been a hell of a lot week in his supervising lawyer's office "helping her do of work," said McMullen of client work or small research his new role as teacher. "I've assignments, or it might turn into a m i ni-lecture on th at
had to reacquaint myself with stuff I wish to God I didn't
particular kind of law that she's working in." Fridays
have to think about again."
often find him and the other
but supervising lawyers are expected to instruct their stu-
apprentices in the county law library, studying. Before the prevalence of law schools in the 1870s, apprenticeships were the prima-
ry way to become a lawyer.
Rules vary from state to state, dents in all areas of law covered bytheirstate'sba r exam,
and administer and grade tests. "It does take a lot of time
"Stop and think of some of and effort," said D.R. Dansby, the great lawyers in Ameri- the Virginia lawyer superviscan history," said Daniel Co- ing Fehrenbach. Dansby, who quillette, a law professor at
Boston College who teaches and writes in the areas of legal history and professional responsibility. "John Adams, Chief Justice Marshall, Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jef-
ferson. They didn't go to law school at all." The earliest law schools,
read law in t h e l ate 1970s, has mentored three lawyers
through the state's program, each passing the bar on the first attempt.
Most supervisors just want to give back. "It's worth it," Dansby said. "We have plenty of lawyers, but not enough good ones."
Coquillette said, worked in But make no mistake, he tandem with apprenticeships, stressed, these programs a practice he noted is return-
ing as many law schools move toward "externships" for third-year students.
are not for everyone. He has turned away nearly two doz-
en people who he didn't think had the motivation to take on
But there are obstacles. a readership. An added deterNone of the states help pro- rent is that Virginia strictly spective law readers locate a forbids employing, and paysupervising lawyer, and find- ing, apprentices. ing one willing to take on the Robert Galbraith took a responsibility of educating a leave from t h e U n i versity new lawyer can be difficult. at Buffalo Law School with Bar passage rates for law hopes of completing his edoffice students are also dis- ucation by clerking while mal. Last year only 17 passed working full time for a local — or 28 percent, compared nonprofit. He knocked on with 73 percent for students
a dozen doors, all with the
who attended schools approved by the American Bar
same answer: no. "It's tough to find people
Association.
who even know i t
"The ABA takes the posi-
tion that the most appropri-
ate process for becoming a lawyer should include obtaining a J.D. degree from a law school approved by the ABA and passing a bar examina-
e x i sts,"
Galbraith said, referring to the New York rule that permits law-office study after the
successfulcompletion of one year of law school. Galbraith
GggQS gg MON gg5'5ES'5
headed back to law school part time but didn't finish in
B a rr y C u r r i er, the five years mandated by managing director of accred- the New York Bar Examiners. itation and legal education for He now works for a watchdog the group. group, the Public Accounttion," said
Robert G l enn,
p r esident ability I n i tiative. "It's very
of the Virginia Board of Bar Examiners, was less circum-
spect. "It's a cruel hoax," he said of apprenticeships. "It's such a waste of time for some-
one to spend three years in this program but not have anything at the end." The lack of a J .D. can also be cause for concern to clients.
"I do have some clients w ho lookup on my wall and say, 'Where did you go to law school'?' and aren't too happy
stimulating and e ngaging work," he said, "but if an opportunity arises to clerk at a
law office in order to take the bar, I would consider it." Orsi and the apprentices in
co chapter of th e
firms out of reach. There are
Wednesday,August 6
GgUSE.
Open 9:00 a.m.—12:00 p.m.
with Googlc
10 NW Minnesota Ave Bend, OR 97701
TheOxfordHotel
N ational
Lawyers Guild. Perhaps most important, they are building
passedthe Virginia bar after areas of law. three years of reading law. Looking to the future, Orsi Unburdened by school loan hopes that her current studebt, he said, he has been able dents will take on apprento become "a country lawyer," tices of their own someday, taking on work like speeding and that law office study will tickets, divorce and wills. gain recognition as a viable For most, the lack of class
Space is limited, soRSVPtoday!
her off ice aretrying to spread the word, giving talks at law schools and seeking endorsement from professional groups like the San Francis-
an informal list of California with the answer," said Ivan lawyers willing to take on apFehrenbach, wh o r e c ently prentices or mentor in specific
rankings put clerkships with judges and plum gigs at big
Joinus in personandget a FREEwebsiteforyourbusiness.
•
•
© ®
lg PQRTLAND p
sco R ~E//
alternative.
"I hope," she said, "people will have a more creative outlook toward legal education."
Freewebsiteincludesdomainnameandhostingforoneyear.
+~ )~
A7
AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
TODAY'S READ: TOURISM VERSUS PRESERVATION
in os are onumen a e wi ou ruinin i By John M. Glionna «Los Angeles Times
MONU M ENT VALLEY, Ariz.— Harold Simpson lets loose a high-pitched wail that breaks the desert silence, an emotional unleashing that hearkens to his colorful past here: "Hooooo-whoooooo!" The whoop echoes off Rain God Mesa and two other red-rock behemoths that jut purposefully from the land. For Simpson, they're back- RV park, as well as plans by drops to a wild-at-heart boy- the tribal park service to grade hood in this Navajo-owned a treacherous stretch of a 17tribal park — a place that's mile rutted dirt road leading at once an international tour- here that now keeps most cars ist destination and a Native atbay. A merican park l aden w i t h They point to wild juniper spiritual significance. and blue sage choked off by wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times His cry reverberates into vehicle dust. V i sitors have Tourists take pictures on John Ford's Point beneath the Three Sisters in Monument Valley on the Utah/Arizona border. the distance. Then the quiet stolen pottery from historic returns.
sitesand scarred ancient rock
"That's the call my grand-
petroglyphs with "Bob was here" graffiti. "We can't watch people the food was ready, that it was time to come home," he says every second," said Stanley softly. "I can hear her calling Crank, a tribal park supervinow." sor. "It filters down to a respect Simpson appreciates the and deep sense of reverence quiet of this place but also sees for the land. We're trying to opportunity in its beauty. teach that." mother made to let us know
mations here — compared the Wind" and "Many Rocks Standing Together." flocked to the Grand Canyon. Simpson was raised by his That kind of exposure, every- grandparents, who ran sheep, one agrees, would kill this cattle and goats on a spread place. without electricity or running with the nearly 5 million who
"You want t o
s h are t h is water. Home was a hogan, a
place," he says. "But where do you draw the line?" Simpson, 47, owner of a NaNative American tribes naSimpson suggests there's vajo tour company, stands in tionwide face similar growing a middle way. He says the the center of an internecine pains as they promote tourism tourist invasion provides a tribal development controver- on sovereign lands. "They're livelihood for two dozen Nasy within a park whose time- realizing the need for bal- vajo-run tour companies. He less 1,000-foot-tall monoliths ance to keep people in place wants to see the road graded have become a symbol of the and traditions alive," said Ca- but says the park should allow untamed West. mille Ferguson, director of the fewer privatecars and require The Monument Valley ¹ American Indian Alaska Na- visitors to ride in tourist buses vajo Tribal Park has served tive Tourism Association. "It's to cut down on traffic. as the backdrop for 1950s knowing what the land can He runs Simpson's TrailJohn Ford westerns such as handle, perpetuating culture handler Tours, which brings "The Searchers" s t a r ring and not just raking in money." thousands of mostly foreign John Wayne; the culmination Simpson understands why visitors into the park on guidof Forrest Gump's exhaustive elders believe the area they ed cultural expeditions. On run; and music videos by Ma- call "The Talking Rocks" each, he explains how one reldonna and Michael Jackson. should remain untouched, that ative, whom he calls "Mr. Grey Navajo elders believe the re- growth could leave his child- Whiskers," helped designate mote 130-square-mile spread hood home overrun with tour- the tribal park in 1958. on the Arizona-Utah border ist shops, like Sedona. Carrying visitors on openis being exploited for tourism: Last year, 365,000 visitors air buses, he calls the ethereThey criticize a new Nava- paid the $20-per-vehicle fee al formations by their simple jo-owned hotel and adjacent to ruminate among the for- Navajo names, such as "Ear of
rounded structure made of logs plastered with adobe. W hen hi s
m o t her w e nt
off to work at a local drivein, he and his brothers and cousins explored the exotic land around them. "I know it
was every boy's fantasy, but we just knew it as our back-
yard," he said. "We were out in the wilderness, climbing rocks, herding sheep, running cattle." Years later, after college, Simpson moved to E urope,
living for more than a decade in Sweden and Holland. As
an albino with blue eyes and blond hair, he blended in easily and as years passed, drifted from his culture. But he also
saw how foreigners revered
reservation," she says. "One man asked, 'So when do you In 1996, he decided to return people mate?' I said, 'We do it and tell the tale of Monument just like you do.'" Valley through Navajo music, Simpson also feels the sting. f ood, ceremonies and l a n - Many tourists see him as a guage. When his grandfather cartoon — do you sleep in a first spoke to him in Navajo, teepee? — or ask how many he struggled to form respons- wives he has. His skin has es. He'd been gone too long. thickened. To the question of Now he introduces visitors how a blue-eyed blond could to the mystical shapes of his be Navajo, he quips, "I'm the boyhood; the formations that white sheep of the family." to him looked like sleeping But when the tourists leave dragons, bears, penguins and forthe day,the park becomes surfacing submarines. He ex- that magical desert the Dutch plains how this place existed t ravelers described to h i m long before John Wayne and years ago. On this day, the afForrest Gump. ternoon shadows creep across Visitors bring their tourist the landscape. Simpson sits on dollars, but also a fair amount a rock inside the Sun's Eye, a of ignorance and insensitivity. towering cavern with a ceiling Linda Jackson Rodriguez, hole that reveals the sky. who sells jewelry here, deNesting ravens caw as he scribes the daily insults she plays a wooden flute and Navajo park in heart of the U.S. desert — his desert.
endures from tourists who see Native Americans as props
chants at a spot he first discov-
in an old cowboys-and-Indians flick. She picks up strewn
es to listen to the wind, just
Native American spirituality. He listened as Dutch trav-
trash and feels that her temple
elers waxed about a magical
"People ask if I can leave the
has been violated.
ered as a child. Then he pauslike he's always done here. After a few moments, he speaks. "Now we're back to the quietness."
• ' hearing aids B Y TRICI A
LEAGJELD
Hearing Better Since 1955.
S
4
•
•
• •
OPENING } +~ = j/1
MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014 ~
~
/
}
5
541- 3 1 6-5064 708 SW 11'" Street Redmond, OR 97756
rlkw
O
hearingaidsbytricialeagjeld.com
BOOK YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY.
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
BRIEFING Man dies in fall at BenhamFalls A kayaker whowas believed to bescouting Benham Falls on the Deschutes River died Saturday after falling 40 to 50 feet from a cliff. He was identified as Daniel D. Lowry, 62, of Dolores, Colorado, according to a news release from the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Lowry fell into water approximately 2 feet deep along the Benham Falls day-use area. People who were at the area were unable to rescuehim safelybecause of his injuries, limited access to the baseof the cliff and proximity to the swift-moving whitewater, the release sald.
Deschutes County 911 was called shortly before 9 a.m.; sheriff's deputies, state troopers, medics from the Bend and Sunriver fire departments, and Deschutes County Search and Rescue all responded to the call. Bend medics were able to move Lowry to safer ground andbegan lifesaving efforts, but he died at the scene. Lowry was planning to kayakBenham Falls and probably was scouting the rapids in preparation, the sheriff's office said, adding that there was no indication of foul play.
REDMOND
Sout west an etsanot er oo Draft of SW Area neighdorhooduse plan
By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin
REDMOND — The third time might prove the charm as
the city of Redmond presents a newly revised Southwest Area Plan in a public hearing Monday, a plan with some of the more contentious parts
SWAPpudlic hearing
ickiup Ave.
F rmer m xeduse a a removed fr mplan
r
ew Ave. ct
d ft
es c ou i r h ster
Coyote Ave.
removed.
The hearing is before the
R dgeview High School
Redmond Urban Area Plan-
ning Commission, which earlier held two extensive public hearings on the plan.
IV
E O
presented to the commission and the public a draft plan they dubbed SWAP. The longterm planning document is an
back to our foundational and comprehensive plans and re-
prehensive plan by providing a framework for planning
~~ P oposed r undabouts
ally put that corner under the
lens and we agreed that at this time the MUN designation
Limited residential KEY Im] Mixed use W General residential R Public facilityR Other residential
effort to amend the city's comSource: City of Redmond
future growth of the area in Redmond's southwest corner
the siting of a mixed-use area
surrounding Ridgeview High
dential neighborhood. "We heard loud and clear how the public felt, so went
t,/
Four months ago, city staff
7 p.m. Monday Council Chambers, 777 SW Deschutes Ave.
School.
near Southwest Helmholtz Way and Wickiup Avenue that
Most of the plan elements received little comment, but
would have allowed dense residential and neighbor-
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
hood-friendly commercial, drew howls of protest from
was not appropriate," said
Heather Richards, community development director. The Helmholtz/Wickiup
area is on the periphery of the city limits right now, she added, and mixed-use neighborhood zones are meant to be sited in the middle of a neigh-
nearby residents who felt the
borhood, not on the edges
mixed-use designation was completely wrong for the resi-
where urban and rural meet. See Plan/B4
DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIRStRODEO
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON-
The Senate passeda $10.9 billion, shortterm highway funding bill Thursday. Thebill keeps highway projects funded through May 2015. The bill prevents further disruption to the nation's transportation proiects, many of which would have hadno funding at the endof September without congressional action. While the bill keeps highway projects solvent in the near term, it does not provide a long-term funding source, which is becoming necessary as the national gas tax of 18.4 cents per gallon is failing to replenish the Highway Trust Fund.Needingasimple majority to pass, the bill passed easily 81-13. Fifty-one Democrats and 30 Republicans voted yes; one Democrat and 12 Republicans voted against it. U.S. SENATEVOTE • Short-term highway funding bill: Jeff Meddey(D)................. Y Ron Wyden(D).................. Y
A Democrat-backed plan to provide $3.57 billion in support and aid to deal with the flood of children from Central America streaming over America's southern border failed to overcome a procedural hurdle Thursday. Thebill included $615 million in emergency wildfire funding and another $225 million for a rocket defense system for Israel. Needing 60 votes to pass, the measurefailed
— Bulletin staffreport Nore briefing, B4
in a 50-44 vote. All of
the yes votes werecast by Democrats, while 42 Republicans and two Democrats voted against the measure. U.S. SENATEVOTE • Funding to deal with migrant children, for wildfires and for a defense system for Israel:
'ftertd
I 'I
(
e
pallre-~
+ Jo
Jeff Meddey(D)................ Y Ron Wyden(D)................. Y
FIRE UPDATE Below are the fires reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. More info is online at: • bttp://inciweb.nwcg. gev/state/38 • bttp://centralerfire info.blegspet.cem • www.nwccweb.us/ information/ flremap.aspx 1. BinghamComplex • Acres: 452 • Containment: 50% 2. Logging Unit • Acres: 10,481 • Containment: 70% 3. Bridge 99 Complex • Acres: 5,699 • Containment: 95% 4. Black Rock • Acres: 35,731 • Containment: 95% 5. Sniption • Acres: 25,000 • Containment: 60% • Cause: Unknown 6. Haystack Complex • Acres: 1,740 • Containment: 80% 7. South Fork Complex • Acreage, containment numbers not available 8. Kitten Complex • Acres: 22,700 • Containment: 95% 9. China Cap • Acres: 195 • Containment: 10% 10. Hurricane Creek • Acres: 929 • Containment: 40%
Scott Hammers/The Bulletin
Miss Bend USA Jori Messner, center, and Miss Teen Bend Shelby Alvarez, left, are driven through the Deschutes County Fair
parade in Redmond onSaturday.
ara e eaturesjusta tte ito eve ing rom entr regon By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
REDMOND — Redmond
residents lined up along Sixth Street on Saturday
morning, taking in the annual Deschutes County Fair parade. Held the day before the close of the fair — parade organizer Brian Scheil said nobody is quite sure why — the event actually dates back to before the establish-
ment of the county or the first fair, to a 1906 parade held in conjunction with the
Oregon — cheerleaders, Floats and marchers cruise Cub Scouts, dogs seeking through the parade: adoption, rodeo queens and bendbulletln.cem/fairparade elected officials — including
O
Deschutes County Sheriff
city's now-defunct Redmond Larry Blanton and county Potato Festival. For years, Commissioner Alan Unger the parade would end at the on manure duty. "We'reused to cleaning fairgrounds, Scheil said, but it has remained a downtown event even as the fair moved
from the old fairgrounds, where Fred Meyer now sits, to its current location.
Saturday's procession featured a little of everything from around Central
He suspects there may be
some "parade fatigue," with the event coming less than a month after Redmond's
Fourth of July parade, but he thinks the parade can still be revived.
Camped out on a lawn chair on the northwest
up messes," the sheriff
corner of Sixth and Birch,
quipped. Scheil said the parade has struggled in recent years, with the number of floats and parade marchers dwindling to half of what
Nancy Weber said she's also seen the parade shrink in recent years, recalling how it once took as long as two
it was in the recent past.
hours to watch all the entrants pass by.
See Parade/B5
On Wednesday, the House passeda resolution in support of suing President Barack Obamafor allegedly overstepping his authority by using an executive order to postpone the implementation of a portion of the Affordable CareAct. The measure passedalong party lines, with 227 Republicans supporting it. One Republican, Rep. Walter Jones of North Carolina, voted with195 Democrats against the resolution.
U.S. HOUSE VOTE
• Resolution in support of suing President Barack Obama: Greg Walden(R)............... Y Earl Biumenauer (D)..........N SuzanneBonamioi (D) ......N Peter DeFazio(D)...............N Kurt Schrader (D)............. N —Andrew Clevengec The Bulletin
RanChnear Paulina the SC ene OfmOrning murder in 1914 Compiled by Don Hoiness
from archived copiesofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
is making a showing with rye this year, having in some 20
Both Dyer and the Johnson grain have been harvested
Saturday with visible proof of
acres. He, too, brought in a
with a binder, the first to be op-
the fertility of the soil in his
sheafofhisgrain tobeturned
erated in the Millican Valley.
over to the Commercial Club for exhibit in Portland.
Manmurdered at breakfast
YESTERDAY
Note: Unless otherwise noted, all fires listed were caused by lightning
Millicanhomesteaders
country, and oftheresultsof intelligent dry farming. The proof was in the shape of a big sheaf of rye produced in one yearafterbreaking ground on his homestead. In all he has had in this year about eight acres of rye which
H.F. Dyer, a prominent homesteader of the Millican
will run from 15 to 20 bushels to the acre.J.E. Johnson, a
family table. The tomatoes are
Niore fire news, B4
Valley, came in to town on
neighbor of Mr. Dyer's, also
ripen soon.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending
Aug. 2, 1914
First useof binder by
Rye is not all with Mr. Dyer, however, for he has corn,
beans and even tomatoes that are all going to bear this year, the first being almost ready to furnish their supplies to the still green but are expected to
Avery G. Scoggin, who has held the mail contract between Prineville and Paulina
for a number of years, was murdered at breakfast time Friday on his ranch near Paulina by Henry McDowell, one of his drivers. Scoggin was killed as he
sat at the breakfast table
talking over some business affairs with George Taylor. McDowell came into the room with a loaded Winchester. He accused Scoggin of making threats against his life, which were denied by Scoggin, according to Taylor. He ordered Scoggin out of the room into the yard and
upon Scoggin's failure to do as he was bid McDowell raised his gun and fired. SeeYesterday/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
E VENT TODAY DESCHUTESCOUNTYFAIR& RODEO:Carnival rides, games,
ENDA R Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
rodeo andmore; $12daily passes, $13-$22 seasonpasses, $7for
TUESDAY
children 6-12 and seniors 62 and older, free for children 5 and younger; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.j.mp/deschutescountyfair or 541-548-2711. JEWELRYANDMETALARTS SHOW:Annual show and sale with jewelry, gemstone cutters, sculptors and blacksmiths; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.cometalarts.com, cometalartsguildcegmail.com or 541-382-8436. CASCADESTHEATRICAL COMPANY'S SNEAKPEEK: Preview the upcoming season with readings; appetizers and drinks available; $10 suggested donation, reservations recommended; 1 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org, ticketingecascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. ROD PICOTT:TheAustin, Texas, folk
KNOW WWI: ASOLDIER RETURNS: Iraq War veteran Sean Davis will read from his memoir "The Wax Bullet War: Chronicles of a Soldier & Artist"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-312-1034. GREEN TEAM MOVIENIGHT: A screening of the award-winning documentary"TheHouse ILive In" about human rights and the war on drugs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. WILDLIFECONSERVATION & TOURISM INAFRICA: A GLOBAL CONVERSATION:Map Ives will speak on the importance of wildlife conservation and tourism in Africa; free; 6:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.naturalmigrations. com, infoIInaturalmigrations.com or 541-382-5174. "DRAGONBALLZ: BATTLEOF GODS":A feature-length anime film about a new power and the threat to humanity; $10; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
singer performs; $15; 7p.m.; House Concert, Sisters; lassenbutterfly© gmail.com or 541-410-4412.
MONDAY SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL FAIRE:Live and silent auctions and music; $100; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall,17600 Center Drive; www.sunrivermusic.org,
ticketscesunrivermusic.org or
541-593-9310. DELTAHALOS: Thesoul-folkband performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive,
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
SHAWN COLVIN:The awardwinning singer-songwriter performs, with John Craigie; $49$60 plus fees;7 p.m .,doorsopen at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor screening of"Cloudywith a Chance of Meatballs 2"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners
The Beerslayers and more; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. FAILURE MACHINE:The Reno, Nevada, soul band performs, with No Yield; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW
Frankli nandNW Oregonavenues; www.bendfarmersmarket.com. VOLUNTEERCONNECTBOARD FAIR:The annual event to explore volunteer leadership positions with 20 community organizations; free; 4-6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NEFifth St.; www. volunteerconnectnow.org, betsy©
volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977.
ALIVE AFTERFIVE: The soul band Leroy Bell and His Only Friends performs; free; 5-8:30 p.m.; Old Mill District, at the north end of Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. aliveafterfivebend.com.
Yesterday
about 10,000 modern planes, Chamberof Commereepresentand its industry is geared in a ed its 1964 pageant — acolorful Continued from B1 mannerthat is regarded as un- showina picturesquesetting. The murdered man never equaled abroad for mass proNot all animation was conmoved from his seat during duction of aircraft. fined to the broad river and the the incident. The impact of the In 1914Germany had a high flaming arch: rockets sprayed bullet was so great that the seas fleet of sufficient power the July sky withrain fire much head was almostentirely blown
to challenge Britain. Today the
from the body.
fleet, hamperedby its years of stagnation,is less than 35 per-
Sheriff Elkins, District Attorney Wirts, County Physi-
cent the strength of Britain's.
cian Rosenberg and Coroner In 1914Germany had huge Poindexter were notified by accumulatedstockof rawmatetelephone of the crime by the rials, gold and reserves. Today murderer himself who waited her industry, geared for racing at the place of the crime until pace production ona war time the authorities arrived. The
scale, has been starved of raw
coroner'sjury lodgeda charge ofmurder in the first degree againstMcDowell. Some believe that McDowell was infatuated with Scog-
materials,hampered bya shortage offoreign currency and fed
gin's wife. At the inquest Mrs.
Scoggin attempted to justify the act by stating that for the month prior to the crime, her
more and more on substitute or
secondgrade materials.
First women in Oregon had club
ern American civilization" Dr.
action, including dance hall girls and men faston the draw.
ors to 1,800,000. By the end of August the total is expected to
reachabout2,000,000. The big asset of the German
(
/
/ f
)
/
/
/
/
(/
/
)
•
•
it possible for the narrator to re-
countsome of the maritimehistory of a nation that now rules As the colorful first night fete drew to a dose, a beauti-
forcestoday is the air force, There was plenty of animaregarded as perhaps the most tion on the Mirror Pond of the potent in Europe.Germany has DeschuteslastnightastheBend
/
cannons poured their fire into opponents."SeaChanty" made
the waves.
Brogan)
of the National SpaceSociety, is madeup of private citizens
make surface bases on the
battled it out in the dark as
Henry Spalding.
Plenty of animationnoted on'64floats(By Phil F.
Even though the grant is small by NASA standards,it may add legitimacy to the sowho areinterestedin space. For ciety's efforts and therefore threeyears, the group has been lure other grants from private advocating a theory forward- corporations working in space ed by scientist Friedrich Horz development, according t o that huge lava tubes likethose Billings. in Central Oregon may exist The money will be used to on the moon. If they do, they accurately map the caves that would make ideal locations for the L-5 Societyis leasing from manned lunar bases. the city. Some mapping has The society has a long term been done already, but it's not lease with the city of Bend to detailed enough,Billings said. conduct experiments in caves Grant money also will b e on city-owned land. I n t h e used to measure roof strength past, theexperiments involved inthe caves. The L-5 Society, a chapter
"Civil Wa r" a nd " S ounds
phies of Marcus Whitman and
Greater Germany's mighty Christianity in the northwest, army tomorrow will celebrate, but helpedcast the die for proby special order of Adolf Hit- gressive communitiesof which ler, the 25th anniversary of the they dreamedbut were never outbreak of the World War. As to see."The work that has been supreme commander, Hitler done thus far in investigating ordered ceremonial paradesby the lives of these lesser known the armedforces "at which will pioneershas hardly begun. We be recalledthe significance of arestill too young apeople, perthe day on which the German haps, but realization of the impeople25years ago tookup the port oftheir problemswill come fight to defend their existence in time," thespeaker declared. against ahostile superiority of He urged conservation of forces." the old letters and relics that When Wilhelm II ordered the northwest has to offer, and general mobilization on Sun- pointedto their study as aposday Aug, 2,1914,and flung his sible solutionto more fully unarmies againstimperialRussia, derstanding the future. Germany had a standing army of lessthan 700,000. Today Hit50 YEARS AGO ler's ThirdReich has a standing army of 1,000,000, swollen by For the week ending reservists now with the col- Aug. 2, 1964
a lavacave inthe moon.
late what itwould be like livein
an era whenpeople of the south
of a Nation" presenteda real thriller. Here two ships of war
Nazis to observe war anniversary
onthe moon, Billings said.
"Negro Spirituals," symbolic of
an eye-witness to the tragedy, tion, which was "devoted to the although Mrs. Scoggin was founding of Christian homesin on the front porch. Mrs. Taylor the west"in the hope that they was in an adjoining room and might train their children and camein immediately after the husbands "inthe way that they tragedy and others were about shouldgo," said Dr. Drury, who the house andbarn. has unearthedmuch newmaterial in his research for biogra-
Oregon were the wives of thesetwo famed pioneers, who with their coming in 1836laid not only the groundwork for
this morning that the contract
Spectatorsliked this float. Next under the arch was
produced songsand music that stirredayoungnation.
Aug. 2, 1939
stantial evidence,there is no direct proof that lava tubes exist
program, to the caves to simu-
in Washington, D.C.,confirmed
Then came "American Out-
together to form the first wom-
The first white women in
Space Adtmrustmtion officials
of a locomotive slowly turned. "Gold Rush", a mining scene,
kill her and all then employed on the place.At the time of the homicide, Scoggin had no weapon about him larger than a pearl handled pen knife.McDowell had in his possession the only firearm on the place, which belonged to Scoggin,
For the week ending
bringing Oregon Museum of dergroundbasesin lavatubes. Scienceand Industries' Young National Aeronautics and But despite strong circum- Astronauts, a Boy Scout-like
a manned baseon the moon.
extremes and solar radiation
laws." This featured western
75 YEARS AGO
performs; 7 p.m.;McMenaminsOld
"Railroad Ballads" was next, with abundant action aswheels
northwest the "cradle of west-
en's clubwest of the divide, the Columbia Maternal Associa-
MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Live poprockmusicby Kayleb James 8 Split Atom, food vendors and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, SW15th Street and SW Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; www. redmondsummerconcerts.com or 541-923-5191. "DRAGONBALLZ: BATTLEOF GODS":A feature-length anime film abouta new power and the threat to humanity; $10; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8, IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. HUMAN OTTOMAN:The experimental world-fusion band
of a simulated lunar base on
drinking, had t hreatened to
the murdered man. Taylor was
541-447-6575.
arch, 'Mssissippi River Bal- Central Oregonlava caves. "We're very happy,"Billings lads" added its bit of action, as did "Alaskan Ballads," with said of the grant. "Until you gold seeker waving from a get your first NASA contract dog-drawn sled closeto white in this sort of thing, you're not mountains. On this barge was really real." a real totem pole from Alaska. Billings said temperature
was next.
Clifford Merrill Drury, biographer and historian,told University of Oregonsummer session studentsin an addressrecently. In 1838these women joined
moon less attractive than un-
crookcountyfairgrounds.comor
cygnets. First float under the
husband, becauseof excessive
crookcountyfairgrounds.comor
egonas possible simulators for
CROOK COUNTY FAIR: Featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 5-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.
had been awardedto the Oreto the amusement of the young- gon L-5Society. The money will stersgroup closeto the edges of beusedtom ap some caveseast the river, in Drake Park. of Bendand perform other tests. Queen and princesses proTom Billings, an L-5 Society vided part of the animation, member, said money also will as they waved from swan and allow early-stagedevelopment
The first six white women to cross the Rockies into Oregon did much toward making the
riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.
St.FrancisSchool,700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. CONNOISSEUR:The BayArea sludge-metal band performs, with
Michael Wilson / Submitted photo
WEDMESDAY
performances, livemusic, bull
541-447-6575. SUNRIVERART FAIRE:An art show with more than 65 booths featuring fine arts and crafts, THURSDAY entertainment and food; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a Oregon; free;10 a.m.-7 p.m.; The talent show, danceperformances, live Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone Drive; www.sunriverartfaire.com, and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 sunriverartfaire©yahoo.com or p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 877-269-2580. 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West 541-447-6575. Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; MUNCH 8 MUSIC:Featuring indiesistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. folk music by the Shook Twins, with JOHN BUTLERTRIO:The Australian Redwood Son; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake jam-rock bandperforms; $34; Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; www.munchandmusic.com. Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic JOHN HIATTANDTAJMAHAL: Club Drive; www.c3events.com or The veteran songwriters perform 541-385-3062. with their bands; SOLDOUT; 7 TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; Sunriver screening of "The Princess Bride"; Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation bring low-profile chair or blanket, no Center, 57250 Overlook Road; glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver www.sunriversharc.com or Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation 541-585-5000. Center, 57250 Overlook Road; NIGHT NURSE: The Portland 541-585-3333. extreme metal band performs, with SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL Death Agenda and more; free; 8 POPS CONCERT:The Festival p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third Orchestra performs with Storm St., Bend; 541-306-3017. Large from Pink Martini; $35-$45, $30 for seniors 65 and older, $10 for children18 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 FRIDAY NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www. sunrivermusic.org, tickets© FLASHBACK CRUZ: A classic car sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. show of vehicles from1979 and earlier, with live music and more; THE WARREN G. HARDINGS: The see website for detailed schedule; Seattle bluegrass band performs; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-480-5560. 541-323-1881.
Shawn Colvin is performing atTowerTheatre onTuesday. Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road;541-585-3333. MISS TESSANDTHETALKBACKS: The Brooklyn Americana band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, dance
ful float "Hawaii" entered the
river as dancers moved under palms in the shadow of an active volcano.
Final float was "World War Ballads" depictingthe familiar Iwo Jima flag-raisingscene. Hal Park and Ron Young are co-chairmen of this year's
hard-working pageant committee. Other committee members who have been on the job
for weeks,are Clarence Bells, Marion Cady, Richard Cannon, Dick Carlson, Bob Fowler, Vince Genna, Bill Hatch, Jr.,
ChuckJohnson,Dick Maudlin, Hugh McNair, Don Parrish, Gary Raper, Paul Reynolds, Tom Rutherford, Dick
•
S ar-
gent,Homer Smith and Wayne Thomson. Scores of o ther workershaveassisted.
25 YEARS AGO For the week ending
Aug. 2, 1989
NASA funds granted for studyofC.O.lava caves A Portland-based grouphas receiveda grant from NASA to study lavacaves in Central Or-
•
•
-
•
•
•
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON CAMPAIGN TRAIL
AROUND THE STATE
oc a scomin asrace or • • ena esea u ri e By Jonathan J. Cooper
worth of advertising time. blue-collar roots, saying his The group, a nonprofit orga- father's work as a millwright, PORTLAND — O r e gon's nization based in Virginia, homebuilder and m e chanic U.S. Senate race heats up this is backed by the Koch broth- provided enough income for week, when an expensive ad- ers, who have given millions the family to buy a home and vertising campaign hits the to conservative causes and send the children to college. airwaves. The Senate candi- earned the ire of the left. But those jobs are becoming It's anyone's guess what the too scarce, he said. dates pushed their messages in dueling press events. And ads will say, but they're likely In a conference call with economists took sharply dif- to find some way to boost the reporters, Wehby went after ferent views on potential mar- prospects of Republican Mon- President Barack O b ama's ijuana taxes. Here's a look at ica Wehby, a Portland doctor. health care law, which Merk"I think it speaks to the fact ley supports. She said the law some of the week's more interesting developments in Or- that this is a very winnable has failed to deliver on its goal egon politics: race, and other people across ofproviding affordable, accesthe country are seeing that," sible coverage for everyone. Koch adslooming Wehby said of the Kochs' deciMarijuana taxes For Oregonians who haven't sion to get involved. turned into politics just yet, it Economistshave released Dueling press events will soon be hard to avoid. vastly different estimates for An advertising blitz by a Merkley and Wehby pushed how much marijuana might be conservative group aligned their views of the campaign in worth to the state in tax revewith the Koch brothers begins competing press events Friday. nue if voters decide to legalize Wednesday. Merkley, who is beginning the drug this year. Democratic Sen. Jeff Merk- a five-week break from his The differences show just ley's campaign, which close- duties on Capitol Hill, called how much uncertainty there ly tracks ad spending on the a news conference to blast is about what a legal pot marrace, says Freedom Partners Wehby on taxes and jobs. ket might look like. Econohas reserved $3.6 million He emphasized his family's mists can only make their best The Associated Press
guesses based on data about illegal drug use and the very limited experiences in Colo-
rado and Washington, which were first to legalize the drug and are only now getting their operations off the ground. Portland firm E CONorthwest estimates that 200,000
Oregonians will use 966,000 ounces of legal weed. Add in the tourists, and the group
estimates nearly 1.4 million ounces of pot would be purchased in Oregon in the first year, producing $38.5 million in tax revenue. But state economists from
HOmeleSS Camp Stabding —Authorities arrested a 23-year-old man accused ofstabbing his older brother at ahomeless camp in Lane County. Thesheriff's office says JoshuaCalebKirk was bookedinto jail on an assault charge.He'saccused of stabbing his 27-year-old brother, JosephBrumback ofEugene,duringadisputeatahomelesscamp that's near arecycling facility in Glenwood. Thesheriff's office says paramedics found Brumbacksitting in front of a tire store Thursday. He was taken tothe hospital with a deeplaceration to the right side of his back. TheRegister-Guard reported that Brumbackwasstill in the hospital Saturdayandhis condition was stable.
Willamette River drowning — Authorities sayan 18-year-old man whoapparently drowned at ariverfront park in Portlandwas apoor swimmer whowasn't wearing a life jacket. Portland Fire and Rescue responded toSellwood Park, onthe EastFork of theWilamette River, late Fridayafternoon, when it wasreported that he was having trouble reaching shore. Bythe time rescuers arrived, he hadgone under. The man had reportedly beenswimming near aconstruction barge whenhe began having difficulty. Theman'sidentity has not beenreleased. BOdy armar arreSt —The FBIsays it has arrested a Portland State University student in his hometown ofBattle Ground,Washington, after school officials found bodyarmor in his locker. TheColumbian reports university staff openedthe locker after 39-year-old Christopher Rantila didn't pay rent. School safety officers saythey hadhadissues with the student andcontacted Portland police. School spokesman Scott Gallagher saysthecasewasturned over tothe FBIin Seattle.
the Legislative Revenue Of-
COrmOrant Cunundrum — TheU.S.Army Corpsof Engineers is
fice were far less optimistic.
holding public meetings andhasextended the comment period on a plan to protect endangeredsalmonandsteelhead in the Columbia River estuary by shooting thousands of double-crested cormorants. The birds live onEast SandIsland, andtheir numbers havegrown markedly, from about100 breeding pairs to nearly15,000 in afew decades. Annually, theyeat about11 million young fish, endangeredwild stocks and hatchery fish aswell. The DailyAstorian reports people at arecent open housewere perplexed by aplan that calls for killing large numbers of one species to protect another. Butthecorps saystheplan provides the most certainty, is most cost-effective and is least likely just to move the birds elsewhere.
They peg the revenue at just $16 million in the first year. Compared to ECONorthwest,
the state assumes more people will grow the drug at home, fewer will come from out of
state to buy it and fewer people will shift their buying from the black market to legal stores.
— From wire reports
PORTLAND
ideared Manarreste a terwa ing ri gewires PoIice:Fathe
in death of toddler
The Asaoaated Press PORTLAND — Authorities arrested a man who
The Associated Press
was tight-rope walking on
PORTLAND — Police in
Cannon Beach say a 13-year- results. old girl found seriously inNo suspects have been jured in a room at a coastal named, but investigators are
the cables of a Portland
bridge. P ortland p olice s a y 21-year-old Ben j amin
resort will survive.
looking for the mother of the
children — 40-year-old Jes-
charged with disorderl y conduct and c ri m i n al
At a news conference Saturday, Chief Jason Schermerhorn said the girl is recovering after surgery at a children's hospital in Portland
trespass.
and her condition is stable.
P ol i c e were called
The girl was found cut suspect. Friday morning in the same Multiple media reports room where her 2-year-old say the couple had recently sister was found dead. The separated.
L ovitz
Lovitz
wa s
to the Steel Bridge early
Saturday by people who thought he might be a jumper. Instead,
L o v it z was b r i dge's tw o
tallest towers. P olice blocked off t h e e ntire br idge u n ti l L o -
vitz came down. He was quickly arrested.
sica Smith of
G o ldendale,
Washington. The chief says the father has cooperated with detectives and been ruled out as a
Visit Central Oregon's
walking the w ires bet ween the
chief says the toddler was not cut and he's awaiting autopsy
— fc
Multnomah County Sheriff's Office via TheAssociated Press
A man walks on a tight-rope on the cables of the Steel Bridge in Portland on Saturday.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
Umatilla seeking amoratorium onstrip clubs "With this proposed morPENDLETON — The ad- of them," said Roxie Hinds, atorium, what we are hoping dition of a third strip club on who owns a store on Sixth to accomplish is to have a litSixth Street has Umatilla res- Street. " I think i t's a l i t t l e tle bit of time to research to idents and officials wonder- outrageous." see what we can do without ing how to prevent more. City planner Bill Searles having to worry about any The East Oregonian news- said Umatilla's zoning or- new adult businesses coming paper reports t ha t H o n ey dinancesare different from in before we can have someBunnz Hideout was the latest those in most cities and don't thing in place," he said. adult business in the city of specify what types of busiThe moratorium would about 7,000 people. It joined nesses can go downtown. be enacted through an ordiRiverside Exotic Dance Club The city is trying to imple- nance approved by the city and Night Moves Gentle- ment a 120-day moratorium, The Associated Press
them, let alone three or four
men's Club, and its presence
the maximum allowed, that
sparked the recent interest in regulating adult sex
would prevent new adult businesses from opening while the city researches long-term options, Searles said.
businesses.
"We don't need any of
HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: Q
s
•
• RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
0
council. It would narrowly define what businesses would
s~a CMSSIC
be preventedfrom opening, Searles said, and it wouldn't include restaurants with bars.
The council couldn't vote on the ordinance until its second meeting in September. "We know we can't just ban
L
COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com
them," Searles said. "So we're hoping that we can, to what-
••
ever extent, regulate them."
g )
Man whoshotdepug dealt 22-year sentence The Associated Press SALEM — A man who shot
and injured an Oregon sheriffs deputy during a chase through a snowy Christmas tree field in December pleaded guilty to multipl e charges and was sentencedto 22 years inprison.
es said they'd seen a man on
foot with guns. Buchholz eventually found the suspect and chased him
through the Christmas tree field. Edwards fellto the ground and said he needed help. Buchholz said he could help him, but
The S t atesman J o u rnal Edwards, believed to be armed, newspaper reports that Cody had to show him his hands.
Edwards asked for forgiveness Buchholzappliedemergency at Friday's sentencing and told aid to his own leg injury before Marion County Deputy Jim he was flown by helicopter to a Buchholz that he prays for Portland hospital. him often. Buchholz said he Edwards pleaded guilty to returned to work at the sheriff's
attempted murder with a fire-
office onlythis week. The incident began when Sil-
arm, first-degree assault with a firearm, felon in possession of
a firearm, unlawful possession stolen vehicle. The car was later of a short-barreled shotgun and
verton police started chasing a
found abandoned and witness-
unauthorized use of a vehide.
F IR/EPI TS ,
H ~A~IVIMOCK S , P O R C H S W I N I S Q&U<MS R E L L A +S
O ver 6 0 S e t s o n Disp la y
o wer o s e S CS
4Fc
3 11 SW Ce n t ur y D r . , B e n d • 5 4 1 - 3 8 9 - 6 2 3 4 • O p e n M o n - S a t 9 - 6 , S u n 1 0 - 5
•
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
WESTERN WILDFIRES
Emergencydeclared in California amidfires
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTIt ES
The Associated Press
James uJim e Kim Hermsen, of Redmond
John Charles Archer, of La Pine
Aug. 4, 1975 - July 31, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Public Viewing will be held Thursday, August 7, 2014 at 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM at Autumn Funerals, located at 485 NW Larch Avenue in Redmond. A Funeral Service will be held Friday, August 8, 2014 at 10:00 AM at Highland Baptist Church, located at 3100 SW Highland Avenue in Redmond, OR; immediately followed by a Graveside Service at Redmond Memorial
Mar. 9, 1934 - July 30, 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 B-B-Q has been held for family and close friends. Contributions may be made
Michael Hodgson
His son's college
Michael Joseph Hodgson passed away April 28, 2014. He was 69 years old.
Billy Dean Edwards, of La Pine Dec. 18, 1947 - July 29, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: The family will hold a Celebration of Life gathering at the La Pine American Legion Post on August 24 at 2pm. Contributionsmay be made to:
The Special Olympics
www.specialolympics.org 1-(800)-380-3071
Dewaine D. Smith, of Redmond Feb. 22, 1923 - July 31, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: The family has held a private memorial gathering. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Lois Marie Sweet, of Redmond Nov. 4, 1956 - July 31, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of a Life Lived will take place at a later date.
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. Theymaybe 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.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obiis©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
many a high-profile performer during his esteemed career as a
cumstances and magnitude
conditions are extreme, and
rock guitarist, died Wednesday at 71.
of the wildfires are beyond the control of any single local government and will require the combined forces of regions to combat. To
when you add dry lightning,
http://www.vfw.org/Contribute/
Jttne11, 1944- April 28, 2014
education fund at the funeral service.
Dick Wagner was recruited by Alice Cooper for the1975 hit album "Welcome to My Nightmare." Wagner, who went on to work with
The VFW The Doernbecher Children's Hospital Foundation 1-800-800-9583
He grew up i n C hicago
where he g r aduated fr om Lane Tech High School in 1962. Afer high school, he 'oined the U.S. Army where e worked as a clerk until he became ill and retired in 1970. H e then m oved t o P o r t land, OR where he met and married h i s w i f e of 47 years, Crystal. They moved to Estacada, OR where they l ived f o r 2 3 ye a r s , a n d raised their two sons, Joey and Ryan. He worked in the printing business running a press for m any y e ars. He then went t o s a les school w hich he l o ved an d t r u l y found h is call i n g . He worked for Blake, Moffitt & Towne printing, who eventually m e rged t o b e c ome U nisource. He w o n m a n y awards fo r h i s e x c e llent sales accomplishments. Mike was forced to retire at age 50 due to health issues. He and Crystal then m oved to Bend, w hich h e loved, and where he l ived until his death in April. He passed away at the hospital where he had many friends among the nurses and patients. He is survived by his wife, C rystal; s o ns , J o e y a n d R yan; g r andchildren, Z a chary and Mackenzee; sisters, Marge Rood and Marie Blanchard; and many nieces and nephews. A potluck and celebration of life will be held 1:00-5:00 p .m. Sunday, A u g ust 3 1 , 2014 at the Fall River Guard Station, Bend, OR.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around theworld:
Jay Maeder, 67: A columnist
Barrow Neurological Institute via PRNewsFoto
Dick Wagnerrocked alongsidethe likesof Alice Cooper,LouReed By Brian McCollum Detroit Free Press
D ETROIT — D i c k W a g-
ner, a guitarist renowned for his work with Alice Cooper,
1968 black comedy "Pretty Poison," divided critics but
became a cult hit. "Pretty Poison," starring Anthony Per-
kins and Tuesday Weld, had a script by Lorenzo Semple Jr. (best known for television's "Batman"), based on Stephen Geller's novel "She Let Him Continue," from 1966. Died July
5 in Santa Barbara, California. — From wire reports
Fin It AII
find exactly the right chord to match Wagner succumbed to respiratory failure at Scottsdale perfectly with what I Healthcare S he a M e d i cal was doing. I think that Center, where he had been
in intensive care for the past two weeks following a cardiac procedure. The guitarist f amously overcame a seriesof medical
issues over the past decade, retraining himself on guitar after a stroke paralyzed his
left arm. He re-emerged to begin recording, writing and performing gigs in 2011. "There was just a magic in the way we wrote together," Cooper wrote in a statement to the D etroit Free Press. "He was always able to find e xactly the r i ght c hord t o
match perfectly with what I was doing. I think that we always think our friends will
be around as long as we are, so to hear of Dick's passing comes as a sudden shock and an enormous loss for me, rock 'n' roll and to his family." Wagner was born in Iowa, moved with his family to Michigan as a child and later settled in Saginaw. He was a key figure in southeastern Michigan's emergent rock scene in the 1960s, a go-to guitarist who made his name with such bands as the Bossmen and the Frost.
we alwaysthink our
friends will be around
as long as we are, so to hear of Dick's passing comesas a sudden shock and an enormous loss for me, rock 'n' roll and to his family." — Alice Cooper maestro recognized by his peers and countless fans,"
Farner said. "He was my personal teacher who showed me the value of showmanship and the theatrical end of
live performance. He's put on quite a show right now, God rest his soul. Our prayers are with his children and family." Wagner lived in Arizona in his later years, but regularly made his way back to Michigan, including a June 29 show in Owosso, his final home state performance.
tional Forest, about 70 miles from where another blaze
fight a wildfire that started
in Oregon and crossed into California. The lightning-sparked Oregon Gulch fire has consumed nearly 33 square miles since it began Wednesday. It destroyed at least three homes and was threatening about 270 structures on both sides
Park earlier in the week.
One of the most dangerous California blazes was burn-
ing inModoc County near the community of Day, where about 150 homes were under
a mandatory evacuation order. It has burned nearly 20 square miles, and was only 20 percent contained.
nline
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bf
Bridge 99 Complex in theCamp Sherman area, continued to slowly creep downhill Saturday. Crews responded to several Hotshot crews wereworking on new fires across Central Oregon fire lines, with support from the Saturday asafternoon thunderair, but found the area's difficult storms — including quarter-size terrain to be achallenge, the hail in Bend —moved through dispatch center said. TheMonty the area. Campground on theDeschutes The largest of the newfires National Forest's Sisters Ranger as of Saturday evening wasa District was evacuated Friday; mid-afternoon brush fire south- the Perry South Campground is west of the Deschutes County under a pre-evacuation alert. fairgrounds in Redmond. It was The center also reported: quickly put out and contained .The Sniption Fire, 15 miles to 8 acres, according to a news north of Fossil, was 60 percent release from theCentral Oregon contained. It has burnedapproxInteragency Dispatch Center. imately 25,000 acres of private Gusty winds fanned theSouth landsandlandsmanagedbythe Fork Complex of fires Saturday BLM. afternoon, causing the Placedor TheHaystackComplexis Gulch Fire to mergewith the 80 percent contained at1,740 Murderer's CreekFire. Thelatter acres. The three fires are burning fire, which is the largest of the primarily on private land 3 miles two, jumped Murderer's Creek Northeast of Spray (Haystack and is actively burning land Fire), 3 miles northeast of Daymanaged by theBureau of Land ville (Throop Fire), and 7miles Management, east of the South northeast of Monument (Steet Fork of the JohnDayRiver. Fire). — Bulletin staff report The Castle Fire, part of the
Fire at fairgrounds quickly put out
He faced a slew of health
issues after his 2007 stroke and heart attack, including kidney failure, a coma and a head injury from a swimming pool fall. He entered the hospital earlier this m onth
for a procedure to open a coronary artery, but his recuperation was erratic. A fatal
lung inflammation ultimately developed. Wagner — who won acclaim and strong sales for his 2012 memoir "Not Only Women B l e ed, V i g n ettes
from the Heart of a Rock Musician" — remained prolific through the end, said manager and business partner Suzy
Plan
mountains," Richards said. "There's not a strong push
Continued from B1
to address it now, but I'd ex-
The southwest area, as defined in the plan, is a unique
pect it to be more of a concern as that area on the east
intersection of land uses, side of Forked Horn Butte Richards said, because it develops." It's Richard's understandcontains both dense traditional subdivisions and small ing the topic was discussed and large-lot rural parcels. in the 1990s, as the west side 'We have no planned fu- of Redmond's Dry Canyon ture for the land west of that
rim developed. Homes on the
right now," she said.
east side facing the mountains had previously had an
The SWAP, as other mas-
ter planning documents, will
u nobstructed view, but as
playing really, really well again after having been par-
homes opposite were built to guide land uses in a desig- and their trees grew, some east-side homes lost their nated area as it develops. The revised SWAP con- view. However, no changes tains small areas adjoining were made to city rules. the high school for mixed It may be worth revisiting use, dense R-5 and gener- the topic of views at some al R-5 residential areas on point, Richards said, if for no
alyzed, and all the different
three sides of t h e
things he'd been through," she said.
and suggestions for possible parks, trails and road realignments.
Michelson.
"He was very proud of his songwriting, and very proud that he was coming back and
"Dick was a very honest guy," Michelson said. "There
was a beautiful phrase he er level in his career. He was wrote last year — especially already the showman at that with the breathing problems point, but musically he had to he's had: 'Love is in the air. show that he really had it." Breathe deep.' He was just so Mark Farner, guitarist and full of love, so full of passion singer with fellow Michigan and kindness. He was such a band Grand Funk Railroad, kind person — loved meeting collaborated with W agner his fans. He'd sign for hours, last year on a song to benefit until we got thrown out of the St. Jude Children's Research clubs because they wanted Hospital in Memphis. to close. Dick just wanted to "Dick Wagner was not only be kindto people and make my lifelong friend, he was a them feel good." Wagner took Alice to anoth-
bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
The fires were burning as far south as the Sierra Na-
eral grant Saturday to cov- sparked evacuations in and er 75 percent of the cost to around Yosemite National
Arizona. He was 71.
He eventually was recruited by Cooper for the milestone 1975 album "Welcome er of the comic strip "Annie." to My Nightmare," cowriting Maeder wrote the "People" col- enduring songs such as "Only umn for The Herald inthe 1970s Women Bleed"and going on and '80s and the "Newsreel" to more A-list session work and "Lounge Lizard" columns with the likes of Reed, Peter for The News in the 1980s and Gabriel and Rod Stewart. '90s. Died'Iltesday in Houston. Rock lore has long held that L ouise Shivers, 84: A Wagner was a secret hired late-blooming author w hose hand on albums by several high-profile bands. It evenfirst novel, "Here to Get My Baby Out of Jail," a steamy tale tually emerged, for instance, of illicit love in rural North Car- that Wagner cu t t r a cks olina, was hailed as a South- on Aerosmith's "Get Your ern masterpiece. Shivers, who Wings" album. "He was just a humble grew up in the tobacco belt of eastern North Carolina, raised and talented guy, and I think a familyand worked as a sales that's why (record producclerk before trying her hand at er) Jack Douglas and those fiction. When she won a writ- guys loved him — he was ing contest in the late 1970s, the just this consummate pro," judge of the competition, novel- said Brian Pastoria, a Detroit ist Mary Gordon, showed Shiv- musician and studio operator ers' manuscript to an agent. who worked with Wagner in Died July 26 in Evans, Georgia. recent years. "I think D i ck Noel Black, 77: A director
"There wasjust a magic in the way we wrote together. He was a/waysable
that end, he secured a fed-
it's a recipe for disaster."
Lou Reed and others, died Wednesday in S cottsdale, to
and editor for The Daily News in New York City and The Miami Herald and the last writ-
whose first feature film, the
of the state border, authorities sald.
A freshly sparked wildfire California, some of which de- in Washington state burned stroyed homes, forced evac- down six to eight homes. uations and damaged infra- Dramatic scenes played out structure, prompted Gov. Jer- overnight as residents tried ry Brown todeclare a state of to keep the flames at bay, emergency on Saturday. Okanogan County Sheriff The move came as fires Frank Rogers said. in other West Coast states In California, the scope chewed through parched and intensity of the blazes forests, brush and terrain, was comparable to the fire destroying some homes and activity the state normally threatening many others. sees in September, California In California, dry lighting, Department of Forestry and high temperatures and se- Fire Protection spokesman vere drought conditions ex- Dennis Mathisen said. "This is unusual in terms acerbated the fire danger. Brown's emergency proc- of where we are in the fire lamation said that the cir- season," he said. "The fire
to:
Cemetery.
Contributions may bemade to:
ALTURAS, Calif. — More than a dozen wildfires in
not rezone land. It is meant
Another c o ncern
s chool other reason than to protect
views available from public vantage points, such as areas
along U.S. Highway 97 or the
c i t ed east side of town.
during the previous public hearings was about future
If approved by the Redmond City Council, the
d evelopment cutting o f f S WAP would a mend t h e views for existing homes. city's comprehensive plan Protection of views is not and serve as guidance for fuaddressed in any building ture development proposals codes or in Redmond's com- in the area. If amendments prehensive plan, Richards are suggested for SWAP said, but future development down the road, the city will may warrant it. "Viewshed protections are
institute another public pro-
cess to consider changes, used most often in coastal or Richards said. communities like ours with — Reporter: 541-548-2186, open space and things like ipugmire@bendbulletin.com
Arts & Entertainment Every Friday
MAGAZXME The ulletm
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN B 5
T HE
ES T UCLA FLOOD
Inrura vi a es, itte rotection orAas a Natives Repairsto By Sad Horwitz
the church for 11 hours after
economic opportunity and the enormous gaps in the delivery of any form of government service, particularly from the state of Alaska."
villagers called the Alaska
There are at least 75 remote
The Washington Post
KAKE, Alaska — Her body
lay in the back entryway of
burst pipe arenearly aomplete
Alaska Native villages with no was a 13-year-old nicknamed law enforcement,according to "Mack" who wore big red a report last fall by the biparglasses and loved to dance. tisan Indian Law and Order The native Tlingit girl had Commission, created by Conbeen beaten to death. gress to study ways to make No one knew who k i lled tribal communities safer. Of Mackenzie Howard that cold the nation's 566 federally recogFebruary night lastyear — and nized tribes, 229 are in Alaska, people were terrified that the most intiny villages withno ackiller was still in their midst. cess by roads. " Unfortunately, there a r e But in the remote community of Kake, only accessible by air places in rural Alaska that if or boat, there was no law en- a woman is raped or a child is forcement officer. That meant beaten, that victim might not no police to protect the com- getany help whatsoever," said munity, cordon off the crime Associate Attorney General scene, preserve the evidence Tony West, who recently visState Troopers for help. She
The Associated Press LOS A N G E LES C rews on S aturday f i n-
ished major repairs on a nearly century-old water main that burst and poured
20 million gallons of water onto the UCLA campus, ruining the new court at
Linda Davidson/The Washington Post
and launch an investigation.
ited Alaska. "It can take a day
The villagers had to wait for
and a half before responders show up to the scene of a crime or to a call for help. Imagine if in Kake, Mackenzie told her you were a victim of violence father, who is the village fire and you can't get help because chief, that she would meet him weather conditions don't allow at home. When Kip Howard you to get out of your village. arrived shortly afterward, she Where are you supposed to go? wasn't there and he sensed You have nowhere to go." that something was wrong. A spokeswoman for t h e Grabbing a handheld spotlight, Alaska State Troopers said that he started looking for her and delayedresponse time "has no called other villagers to help. relationship to the priority givAbout 11 p.m., the pastor's en to respond to remote Alas- wife called him. She had found kan villages." Mackenzie's undothed body "The overriding factor con- in the back of the Memorial sidered ... when establishing Presbyterian Church, directly case prior ity for a response, across the street from Mackenwhether on the road system or zie's house. "I opened up the church's off, is the nature of the crime," spokeswoman Megan Peters back door and there she was," said. "Crimes in ruralareas said Kip Howard, fighting back ... can take additional time to tears. The assailant "bashed respond to depending on logis- her head in with a rock bigger tical issues such as distance, than a basketball. And I just
state troopers in Juneau, 114
miles away, to get there. "They have the capability of flying at night now ... but still nobody came," said Joel Jackson, a local wood carver who helped gather villagers to guard Mackenzie's body and the crime scene that night."And that upset me greatly. When
there's any fishing violation or hunting violation, they're here in full force — over a dead an-
imal.To have one of our own laying there for (so long) was traumatic for everybody."
High crime, few cops With no police and few courts of their own, most Alas-
ka Native villages instead are forced to rely on Alaska State Troopers. But there is only
about one trooper per every million acres. Getting to rural
terrain and weather." In some remote villages in
Marla Howard looks at the church where her daughter, Mackenzie, was found dead last February.
... that's when the world just
changed for me." is often delayed by the great the Alaska bush, townspeople Joel Jackson, the local carvdistances to cover, the vagaries say they have to place a suspect er whose studio is next to the of the weather and — in the in a locked closet until troopers church, called the state troopminds of many Alaska Natives come. ers in Juneau. He gathered oth— the low priority placed on er villagers to help him cordon Mackenzie's death protecting local tribes. off the lawn outside the church, Rural Alaska has the worst On Feb. 5, 2013, villagers in guard the girl's body and procrime statistics in the nation's Kake gathered for a memorial tect the village while they Native American communities ceremony for a widely respect- waited for investigators. Thir— and the country. Alaska Na- ed elder. Scores of relatives ty-five years ago, Jackson was tive communities experience and friends from other towns the village's police chief. The the highest rates of family vio- descended on the tiny village village eventually shut down lence, suicide and alcohol abuse in Southeastern Alaska for the the one-person department bein the United States: a domestic Tlingit tradition of "potlatch," cause of a lack of funds. "There were probably 12 violence rate 10 times the na- an event with large offerings of tional average; physical assault food and other gifts. to 15 men," said Liz Medicine of women 12 times the nationMackenzie and her parents, Crow, president of the nonprofal average; and a suicide rate Marla and Clifton "Kip" How- it First Alaskans Institute who almost four times the national ard,spentthedaypreparingfor had come infrom Anchorage average. Rape in Alaska occurs the funeral. The Howards have for her uncle's potlatch. "And at the highest rate in the na- eight children from previous (Jackson) told them, 'If you're tion — three times the national marriages. Mackenzie was the going to help, go home and get average. one child theyhad together. your warm dothes on because These trends, according to A villager snapped a pho- you're going to be out here all Bruce Botelho, a former Alaska tograph as Mackenzie set out night. If you can't handle this, attorney general and a member with a boatload of flowers to don'tcome back.' They all of the Alaska Rural Justice and Grave Island, right across the came back." Law Enforcement Commis- water from Kake. Wearing her As daylight broke — and the sion, are "exacerbated, in part, signaturered-framed glasses, troopers were still not therebecause of the enormous geo- the junior high basketball play- people who had come in for graphical size of Alaska, the er flashed a big smile. It is one the potlatch began leaving the remoteness of these communi- of the last images of her alive. village. "There was a group of us ties, the skyrocketing costs of Later, as the village-wide transportation, the lack of any memorial dinner wound down all leaving in the morning on communities can take days and
famed Pauley Pavilion. Workers completed replacing the ruptured pipe junction on Sunset Boulevard, welded it and installed a pair of 36-inch but-
terfly valves that weigh two tons each, the Los Angeles the early ferry," said Medicine has not been publidy named Crow. "And there was kind of because he is a juvenile, was a 'What do we do?' moment. flown to a juvenile facility on 'Can we leave? Are we allowed an island more than 100 miles to leave?' There was no trooper away, where he is still detained. there to tell us what to do. So,
Department of Water and
we left."
agency said. The section will now need to be tested and slowly brought back up to its regular water pressure.
Power said in an update. The new section will be reinforced with
ing to protect the joint, the
VPSOs
"The fastest way to get law A fter th e m u r der, K a ke enforcement here is to shoot a was sent a village public safemoose," she added, reflecting ty officer known i n A l aska a widespread sentiment in the as a VPSO. Throughout rural village. Alaska, about 100 VPSOs are But Peters, the spokeswom-
c o ncrete
blocks and extra steel plat-
used as substitutes for police.
an for the Alaska State Troop- These officers, who have limers, said crimes against people ited training and authority, are always get first priority. paid by nonprofit regional corInthewakeof the murder, vil-
porations with state funds. But
Parade
lagers were angry. "People were scared," Jackson said. "They still hadn't figured out who did the crime. People were on edge, people had guns out, which I
they are not directly account-
Continued from B1
able to the community where
Weber, 50, of Redmond, said her father used to take
was unheard of in Kake.
have not been allowed to carry
best place along the route
A trooper arrived later that morning, followed several
firearms.
to collect candy tossed by parade participants, she
hours laterbyinvestigators who
ernor signed a bill that would allow VPSOs to carry firearms.
they work, instead reporting to Alaska State Troopers. Even though Alaska is one of don't blame them. It was pretty the highest gun-owning states intense." The murder of a child per capita, public safety officers
came from Anchorage, more than 1,000 miles from Kake. "I told the lead trooper, 'You need
her down to the parade every year starting in third grade. They always came to the same spot — the
Last month, the Alaska gov-
said — and so Weber has
continued to make a point of setting up at Sixth and Birch each year since her father passed away. "This is me and my dad's
But the gun training won't be-
to solve this and solve it quick,'
gin until January, and VPSOs aren't expectedtobe armedun-
because you could feel the an-
til the end of 2015.
ger in the town," Jackson said. At 11 a.m. the morning of
In most cases now, only one unarmed offi cer is responsiMackenzie's f u neral, s t a te ble for the safety of the village troopersmade an arrest after around the dock. When a collecting several key pieces of VPSO leaves for training or to
corner," Weber said,
evidence and executing search
and Antler.
warrmts, according to state
Jesse James Morris, 5, from Redmond, staked out his own candy zone at the
southwest corner of Sixth
patrol another village, the community is left with no backup.
Jesse said pulling in a good haul of candy starts with engaging with those tossing the candy. "Wave," he said. "Say hi."
"It's nerve-wracking when the village public safety officer The suspect was one of Ka- leaves the island," said Kake ke's own, the 14-year-old son of City Administrator Rudy Bean. villagers who were friends with "Everyone pretty much hopes the Howards. The boy, who that nothing serious happens." trooper Lt. Rex Leath, who oversaw the investigation.
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
Crime in Alaska Native communities Most Alaska Native villages rely on state troopers for law enforcement, but there is only about one trooper per every million acres. Travel to Alaska Native communities can take days and is often delayed by vast distances and the vagaries of the weather. Arctic Ocean
Po
N ort h
Of the nation's 566 federally recognized tribes, 229 of them are in Alaska, most in tiny villages with no access by roads.
Slope
ge ==== =: = ==:
o
Bering Sea
- ==,r==: — == -
Bro 0 kso
0 State trooper posts
- -- -
0
0 0
9• 0
'
0
One million acres is about the size of Maryland's Montgomery, Prince
'
Tanana,
0 0
,,' Police zones
0
Fairbanks I ~,
io
Ge o rge's, Howard and Anne Arundel
0
counties combined.
ng, 0
00
9g
o o
0
0
0
~
g
o
In May, two Alaska state ,o troopers were shot and killed in Tanana afterthey responded to a report of a man with a gun.
o q, o
,
'
~
(I Anc h o r a ge
Maryland at same Mass scale as Alaska
o
o
o
o
gto '
0 ja
0
*Note: Not all crimes are reported by detachment areas. There were 10 homicides, 619 assaults, 95 sexual assaults and 267 reports of sexual abuse of a minor in addition to those shown in the chart.
~ Juneau
k
Kake r
Frederick
o l3
C: :
Homicide
6
5 :
Assault Sexual assault
150 11
Sexual abuse of a minor 58
Source: 2012 Alaska State Troopers annual report, U.S. Census Bureau
633 ; '1,033 ; ' 10
129 :
11 i : 135
•
•
•
•
•
gP 4
Ij
Ketchikan Crime bytrooper detachment zone, 2012
•
•
•
D l l: : 2 68 2 :;
516
14
15
14 i:
14
Gene Thorp and Sari Horwitz/The Washington Post
R estaur an t g b L o u n g
61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend, OR 97702 Reservations 541.382.8769 accepted: 5-Close www.scanlonsrestauranLcom
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
'
o
i
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
HIGH 90' Mostly sunny
I f' I
99' in 1 9 17 28'in 1956
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.22"in 1984 Record M onth to date (normal) O.o ooo(0.03oo) Year to date (normal ) 5.02 (6.31 ) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 2"
51'
+P Yi+
Nice with brilliant sunshine
cify
•
Nysse • 8 9 / 2 • I.a pirte Ham ton C e Grove Oakridge • Burns Juntura 97/64 91/56 /58 • Fort Rock Riley 95/57 Cresce t • go/54 92/58 89/50 Bandon Roseburg • Ch ristmas alley Jordan V gey 66/54 Beaver Sgver 92/54 Frenchglen 93/62 92/62 Marsh Lake 93/61 89/51 Po 0 91/53 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 6N • 95/65 Chiloquin Gold „h 9 st M edfo d 'go/67 Rome ,1ot/66 66/ 96/65 Klamath • Ashl nd • FaNS • Lakeview McDermi Bro Ings 96/5 93/56 70/5 91/57 92/64 •
•
0'
2:15 p.m. 1 2 :24 a.m. 10:53 p.m. 1 1 :45 a.m.
UV INDEX TODAY
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i tv
city
City 66/57/0.00 70/54/pc 70/55/s L n Grande 93/ 57/0.00 94/58/I 9 3/56/s Portland 91/58/Tr 91/53/pc90/52/pc Ln Pine 86/47/0.00 89/53/n 85/52/s Prineviiie 66/55/0.00 70/55/pc 68/56/pc M edfcrd 98/6 7/0.00 101/66/s 96/68/pc Redmond 94/51/0.00 95/57/pc 86/53/pc N ewport 63/5 4/0.00 63/51/n 63/52/s Rnneburg 92/59/0.00 94/54/s 91/56/s No r th Bend 66 / 59/0.00 66/53/s 65/54/s Salem 91/55/0.00 93/56/pc 83/56/pc Ontario 96/63/0.00 98/68/pc 91/63/pc Sisters 91/45/0.00 91/57/pc80/51/pc Pendleton 96/68/Tr 99/66/s 99/66/s The Dalles
2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin
Baker City
~ S~ N 5
The highertheAccuWnniherxmmUVIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.
POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Moderate ~ Lo~w ~Lo~w
ercckings
eums
1950 91
76 0 217
64 12
FIRE INDEX High Veryghh~i Mode~rate High High
Source: USDA Forest Service
93/ 59/0.0094/55/s 92/54/s
NATIONAL WEATHER
~ os ~ f os ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 369 0 3 67% YESTERDAY 42'yo 8 contiguous states) Wickiup 84148 Crescent Lake 7 1 6 19 82% ational high: 114 Ochoco Reservoir 22452 51% at Death Valley,CA Prinevige 114495 77% National low: 18 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. atBodie State Park,CA 402 1540 141
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W 87/6 4/0.0090/62/s 89/60/s 92/ 6 0/0.0094/58/s 85/57/ n
92 / 61/0.00 93/62/n 90/62/n Eugene 90/59/0.00 93/59/s 92/58/s Klamnth Falls 90/56/0.00 93/53/s 91/52/n Lnkeview 9 4 / 72/0.00 99/65/s 97/67/s Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrflycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-fhundersfcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-trnce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday
Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577
Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie Deschutes R.below Wickiup Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls Little Deschutes near LaPine Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake Crooked R.above Prineville Res. Crooked R.below Prineville Res. Crooked R.nearTerrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W
~ f os
~ 20 8 ~ 30s ~40s ~ 50s
Hi/Lo/Prsc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 91/66/0.00 88/68/pc 9OnO/s 75/64/0.20 80/60/I 83/64/s
Abilene Akron Albany 81/67/Tr Albuquerque 79/61/1.03 Anchorage 69/57/0.00 Atlanta 84/67/0.00 Atlantic City 73/68/1.26 Austin 90/65/0.00 Baltimore 79/65/0.28 Billings 92/60/0.00 Birmingham 91n2/Tr Bismarck 88/58/0.00 Boise 99/72/0.00 Boston 72/62/0.03 Bridgeport, CT 72/65/0.20 Buffalo 82/65/1.41 Burlington, VT 84/64/0.04 Caribou, ME 81/58/0.12 Charleston, SC 80n5/Tr Charlotte 72/65/Tr Chattanooga 80/69/0.13 Cheyenne 80/52/0.00 Chicago 86/59/0.00 Cincinnati 83/64/Tr Cleveland 77/63/0.24 ColoradoSprings 77/51/0.00 Columbia, MO 88/59/0.00 Columbia, SC 76n2/0.48 Columbus,GA 86/69/0.01 Columbus,OH 77/68/0.59 Concord, NH 76/64/Tr Corpus Christi 88n5/0.74 Dallas 90/67/0.00 Dayton 80/63/0.20 Denver 84/53/0.00 Des Moines 87/61/0.00 Detroit 76/64/0.00 Duluth 83/54/0.00 El Paso 80/64/0.37 Fairbanks 66/57/0.31 Fargo 86/57/0.00 Flagstaff 76/49/Tr Grand Rapids 86/57/0.00 Greeneuy 83/58/0.00 Greensboro 71/62/Tr Harrisburg 79/66/0.00 Harffcrd, CT 75/67/0.05 Helena 85/64/0.00 Honolulu 90/78/0.25 Houston 82n1/0.00 Huntsville 90no/0.20 Indianapolis 82/63/Tr Jackson, MS 86/72/0.05 Jacksonville 91n3/0.60
OREGON EXTREMES Co 66 3 YESTERDAY High: 98' at Rome Low: 45' at Lakeview
~e cs ~7 09 ~ a gs ~ g gs ~ tOOs ~ffcs
83/65/I
77/69/I
efno/I
91/69/pc 81/65/I 93/63/pc 91/69/pc 86/61/pc 98/71/pc 72/62/c 77/66/c 78/62/I 81/61/I 79/57/c 85/74/I 83/65/I
89/66/pc 82/57/pc 83/64/pc 82/60/pc 78/59/pc 81/56/pc 87/64/s 87/72/I
een2/c
77/57/c
82/59/I
eeno/c
93/63
T
7ale
nder sny
7
69/50/I 71/48/I 83/61/pc 82/61/I 83/59/pc 77/56/I 82/65/I 84/66/pc 78/63/I 83/65/I 80/62/c 86/64/I
91/59/pc 89/62/pc
eone/pc 9One/s 89/73/pc een2/I
•
,
•
•
5.
o
I
I
I
I
~
f
'I
I
eon7/0.59
1
een2/I een7/s 73/61/I 66/47/c 84/64/I 62/41/s 97/78/s
94ne/s
76/53/I 90/76/pc
67/52/pc 65/46/pc 76/55/pc 72/44/s 91/82/pc
een7/s
79/64/s 65/46/s 68/57/pc 77/63/s 75/55/pc 90/63/s 83/77/r
•
•
I •
I
6•
m Lov
w
cu
noooonEooo moooCooo o
103/85/pc 82/62/s 77/59/I 82/64/I 84/67/pc 88/61/c 81/61/pc 86/68/pc 80/61/pc 91/63/s
eono/s
83/66/I 92/75/s 81/69/pc 74/61/pc 80/59/s 77/56/I 88/73/I 86/59/s 84/65/pc 96/68/s 87/66/s
eone/I eene/pc 89/68/s 86/71/I 91/68/pc 101/65/s 103/82/pc 109/86/s 74/56/I 81/65/pc 81/62/pc 75/53/I
9One/sh 93/79/I 84/76/I 71/60/I 82/58/I 74/55/pc 85/67/s 83/66/s 67/40/s 83/55/s 84/75/r 85/76/r 96/80/sh 88/78/I
87/68/pc 65/43/s 93/80/sh 87/76/s 89/79/pc 81/61/I 79/58/s 80/65/I 89/66/I
I •
I •
•
I o
o g
I g
•
g o o
'
o
g
'
r
' I
I
•
I
g
u
I
u
•
•
Four times n year, Redmond Magazine io published to highlight the businesses and individuals who work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.
commu ouGallery1otooo nomordclootersool<oho
WHEN TO LOOK POR IT: I I
eeno/I
DISCOVER EVERVTHII THISCHARMIIQTOWN HAS TOOFFERFROM ITS ~( HERITAGE TOTHEARTS,THERE'8 SOMETHINGFOREVERYONEINREDMOND
emoo o oo uml Fodnmoo Redmond slreelnmuu
I
86/66/pc
6 o
REDMOND MAGAZINE
I
92/75/I 102/75/pc
I
I
'
89/65/pc 89/69/I
••f•
og •
o
81/70/I
I
111/87/0.00 112/86/s 77/56/0.10 75/54/I Montreal 81/63/0.01 80/62/c Moscow 91/64/0.05 83/60/pc Nairobi 73/59/0.00 74/56/c Nassau 86/81/0.53 91/81/sh New Delhi 93/84/0.17 94/81/I Osaka 82/79/0.39 85/75/I Oslo 72/57/0.32 68/61/I Ottawa 82/59/0.00 81/57/c Paris 77/63/0.00 76/59/pc Ric de Janeiro 82/66/0.00 84/68/s Rome 84no/o.oo 82/67/I Santiago 63/43/0.00 60/38/pc Snn Paulo 80/60/0.00 82/62/n Snppcrc 88/67/0.00 87/74/c Seoul 95/82/0.26 85/78/r Shanghai 88/77/0.24 94/81/pc Singapore eene/o.oo 86n9/I Stockholm 81/55/0.08 85/67/I Sydney 57/45/0.00 65/44/s Taipei 97/81/0.00 94/80/I Tei Aviv eeno/o.oo 86n4/n Tokyo 91/79/0.00 90/80/pc Toronto 77/63/0.00 80/60/I Vancouver 78/63/0.00 77/58/s Vienna 84/63/0.00 83/65/I Warsaw 90/66/0.00 89/66/s
56/47/sh 108/77/s 88/78/I
I
I
g/
84/62/pc 86/62/s 92/64/s 92/67/s 87/65/s 89/65/s 87/68/c 85/64/pc 87/65/pc 89/66/s 83/62/pc 81/61/I 89/69/s 89/69/s 89n7/I 88/77/I 80/63/pc 79/61/I 86/66/pc 82/62/I 89/65/pc 90/65/s 87n4/I 89/74/I 77/67/c 82/70/I 80/67/c 84/69/I
Mecca Mexico City
94ne/s
o I o
85/65/Tr 85/55/Tr efnf/0.00
81/60/pc 82/60/I 84n3/I 91/76/I
79/56/0.01 87/67/Tr 91/67/0.00 92/77/0.03 74/64/0.41 76/66/0.67 74/70/1.21 80/69/I OklahomaCity 89/65/0.00 89/65/s Omaha 88/62/0.00 88/65/s Orlando 94ne/o'.oo 92//5/I Palm Springs 91/89/0.03 92n9/I Puorin 86/60/Tr 86/65/s Philadelphia 77/68/0.35 81/68/I Phoenix 102/83/0.00 99/84/I Pittsburgh 80/65/0.02 78/60/I Portland, ME 76/64/0.00 73/59/c Providence 72/68/0.07 75/63/c Raleigh 70/64/0.08 80/68/I Rapid City 88/61/0.00 87/59/pc Reno 99/62/0.00 91/65/pc Richmond 76/64/1.02 83/68/I Rochester, NY 83/63/0.08 77/61/I Sacramento 94/63/0.00 92/64/pc Sf. Louis 87/63/0.00 87/68/s Snit Lake City 94/67/0.00 92/66/I San Antonio 92/72/0.00 92/74/pc Snn Diego 78no/o.o7 83n1/I Snn Francisco 69/59/0.00 74/60/pc Snn Jose 75/60/0.00 81/59/s Santa re 74/58/0.26 76/55/I Savannah 89/75/0.02 87n3/I Seattle 85/60/0.02 84/59/s Sioux Falls 82/57/Tr 84/62/pc Spokane 94/67/0.00 94/67/s Springfield, Mo 90/63/Tr 87/65/s Tampa 92/78/0.21 91n7/I Tucson 88/73/0.01 93/75/I Tulsa 89/64/0.00 89/66/s Washington, DC 84/68/0.13 81/68/I Wichita 90/65/0.00 89/66/s Yakimn 97/61/Tr 99/63/s Yuma 90/83/0.41 100/81/I
95/73/pc 93/73/pc eeno/s 91/70/s 82/60/pc 83/63/s 87/62/pc 85/62/pc 86/66/s 87/67/I 83/62/pc 84/63/I 76/55/I 71/50/pc 83/67/c 86/67/pc 72/55/pc 74/57/sh 83/58/pc 82/61/pc
Amsterdam Athens
81/53/0.00 98/83/0.00 84/62/0.09 90/59/0.06 88/70/0.02 90/65/0.00
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
o nntc
aui
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 73/47/0.00 69/53/pc 64/51/r 88/63/0.00 88/68/s 91/69/I
Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
88/69/I 84/63/pc 85/65/s
71/57/pc
eiuiwge
I hlpne 77 2
Bismarck Ss/Sf
Yesterday Today Monday
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln
92/69/s 86/68/I 89/64/c 91/68/c 84/64/I 88/65/c 77/64/I 81/68/I 80/63/pc 83/62/t 79/57/I 87n4/I 83/66/pc 89/65/I 80/57/c 84/61/I 84/63/s 81/63/pc 80/57/pc 88/65/s
81/61/0.12 73/57/pc 90n5/0.00 93/76/s • 98f/1 uk Auckland 62/59/0.40 59/44/r Buffalo H 8 npld dd Baghdad 115/86/0.00 112/79/s P Clfv Bangkok eone/o.o4 91/79/I ' v ~ P ilndelPhin Precipitation: 2.30" 8 , od d>v • 8 2 seijing 95n6/0.05 een7/I heyenne Dnn Mn' nn ' • 8 Beirut 92n6/0.00 85/76/pc atWildwood, NJ n n c Iscc Salt Lake itv 0 h 'Cnl mhun 74/SO Berlin 84/67/0.00 83/67/I ~ + < Denver Lnn V nn 1/88 Bogota 64/52/0.12 64/47/c yy. 87/82 84/73 Knnnn clfy sf. ou Budapest 88/64/0.01 86/65/I Buenos Ai r es 74/59/0.02 67/44/r • nnhvil 83/65 Lnn An Cnbc Snn Lucns 95/78/0.00 97/78/s 89/8 7/68 Q+++ • L' Cairo 95n7/0'.00 92/75/s ' \ Anchorng Albuque ue k l nhumn c • 87 5 • Afl Calgary 79/59/0.00 77/52/pc 67/5 8 9 n Oi P h oenix 79IS2 Cnncun 90n3/0.00 90/74/pc Sir inghn 1 • Dnlln El Pnn Dublin 59/55/2.00 65/47/pc se/ro 7 Edinburgh 61/51/0.81 66/51/sh 'J u Geneva 77/63/0.24 74/57/pc x C hun rlnnuih < Hurnre Houston • ~V 74/45/0.00 74/41/s o Hong Kong 93/83/0.32 92/82/pc Iun tnrrey % 0 .'cv. I Istanbul 86/79/0.18 87/75/s MIPrw 9iur Jerusalem 85/69/0.00 80/63/s eV.www: s WQ v •, d d d d Johannesburg 67/44/0.00 66/42/s 4 '+ '+ '+ v v ' o o Limn 67/59/Tr 68/56/pc Lisbon 73/64/0.06 77/61/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 75/63/0.08 75/55/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 82/68/0.00 86/60/s Manila 88/77/0.47 85/77/r
•
Pleasant with sunshine
City
82/63/I 67/55/sh 68/58/sh 86/69/pc 86/68/c
89/66/pc 83/63/s 91/67/I 88/72/I
Queb
o
I
80/63/I 79/62/c
89/66/pc 82/62/s 88/69/pc 89/72/I
cnlgn 77/52
86' 49'
o
•
THE PLANETS T he Planets R i se Set Mercury 5:24 a.m. 8: 1 8 p.m. Venus 4:05 a.m. 7: 1 7 p.m. Mars 1:18 p.m. 1 1:33 p.m. Jupiter 5:17 a.m. 8 : 0 6 p.m.
Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras ~ Sisters ~ Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist
51'
Yesterday Today Monday
•
Aug 3 Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 25
5 NI~ B
' '
TRAVEL WEATHER
•
Last d
10 a.m. Noon
86'
Mostly sunny
A full day of sunshine
•
MOONPHASES
Saturn Uranus
'r~p
•
Today Mon. 5:55 a.m. 5: 5 6 a.m. 8:27 p.m. 8: 2 6 p.m. 1:3 8 p.m. 2:4 1 p.m. none 1 2 :08 a.m. Fu l l l n
64
TH U RSDAY
0
87
•
SUN ANDMOON
First
56'
0
WEDNESDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Yesterday Normal Record
Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset
87
TUESDAY
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST:partly sunny ria / and hot today with Umatiga Seasid Hood 99/62 spotty afternoonand 66/55 RiVer Rufus • ermiston evening mountain Cannon /66 Ifngton tot/63 Meac am Loshne Portland thunderstorms. Mostly 64/55 64 • 95 9 cloudy tonight. dlet On90/5 • he Oag • 93/sg Tdlamo • CENTRAL:Partly andy n 99/65 74/53 Mc innvig Heppner „ , . • Grande sunny andhot today • Condon 6/56 94 58 with spotty afternoon Lincoln Union 82/ andeveningmountain 67/54 Sale pray Graniten thunders torms.Patchy 93/5 • 7/65 a 'Baker C Newpo 89/55 clouds tonight. • 95/60 0/53 63/51 • Mitch g 91/53 C a m p S e r a n R 6 d WEST:Plenty of 9 2j5 7 n 0 rV 8 I 6 uu Yach • John sunshine today; an 64/54 93/55 • Prineville Day 4/55 tario isolated afternoonand 94/58 • Pa lina 93 / 6 1 68 evening thunderstorm Floren e • Eugene • Be d Srothers 91 57 Valen across theCascades. 67/54 Su iVern 90/56 99/69
TEMPERATURE 84 49'
LOW
Mainly clear
ALMANAC Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 90 61'
MONDAY
u o
PUBUSHINQFOUR EDITIONS 4 YHLR • Wednesday, August 27 • Wednesday, November 12
SISTERS MAGAZINE WELCOME TO THECENTRALOREGONTOWN OFSISTERS SISTERSMAGAZINEHONORS THEUNIQUENESSQFTHISMQUNTAIITOWN
zfon Cnmmumifv Oufunnoh woo Fno o cI
Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businesses that make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlight Sisters' events which draw thousands to the area.
WHEN TO LOOK FOR IT: PUBllSHINGFIVEEDITIONSAYEAR • Friday, August 22 (Folk Festival) • Friday, November14 (A Cowboy Christmas)
u %ssalnm
o ooo A
o Ao o~y ~ o o m o looun o
xvwuoolnmoou
*nouoouononolo I 44c ow
oo o' Vooooow
Foouvofmon
hlsswm
v
sEPT 6,7 &n
Ar,
o.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-6 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Auditionsavailadle for YouthChoir Youth singers canaudition for membership in this year's Youth Choir of Central Oregon. The organization has openings in its Debut Choir, for singers in grades 5 through 8, and Premiere Choir, for singers in grades 8 through 12. To schedule an audition, or for more information, call the YCCO office, 541-385-0470, or
2 j
visit www.ycco.org. YCCO is acommunity choir that provides instruction and opportunity to talented Central Oregon vocalists in Deschutes, Jefferson and Crook counties. In addition to its Debut and
Premiere choirs, YCCO offers a nonauditioned program, the Singers School, for children in grades one through four. The choir is in its 25th year.
A The lakeside
Giveaway event helps the needy
resort district of Kelowna, British
The12th annual Central Oregon Giveaway will take place from 8 a.m. to noon Aug.16 in Bend and LaPine. The locations for the event are at two Churches of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, at 2555 NW Shevlin Park Roadin Bend, andat 52680 DayRoad in La Pine. The Giveaway provides clothing and household goods to community members in need, free of charge.The event is entirely organized by volunteers and supported by donations. Other local groups, such as Bend First Presbyterian Church, TempleBeth Tikvah, Band ofBrothers, Band of Sisters and Ya-Ya Sisterhood are helping with the event. Donations will be accepted before the event on Aug. 14and 15between noon and 8p.m. at the two locations. To contact, visit www.cogga.net.
behind a stilloperating sawmill
Cardon monoxide safety session The OregonOffice of State Fire Marshal offers a free, two-hour presentation on carbon monoxide safety from 10 a.m. to12 p.m. Aug. 7atthe Bend FireDepartment North Station and Training Center, 63377 Jamison St. Topics include carbon monoxide sources in and around the house, symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning, Oregon statutes and rules covering alarms and more. Thepresentation is meant for citizens, fire service or community partners. To register to attend the event, go online to: j.mp/copresentation. For more information, contact Larry Medina at 541 322-6308. — From staff reports
Well shot! Reader photos
• Keep sending your summer photos for the next special version of Well shot! to run in the Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletln.com/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Columbia, rises on the shores of Oksnagan Lake in this view from Knox Mountain Park. The long but narrow lake
is surrounded by vineyards, orchards and small cities. Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
NORTHWEST TRAVEL Next week: The towns
of LinnCounty
,
'
;
:
Canafja's Okanagan Valley
:t';ea!f I
Vernon
I(pt(/g' $' "Rhapsody," a sculpture by Okanagan artist R. Dow Reid, is a local landmark on the east side of Kelowna's Waterfront Park. Representing a trio of leaping, intertwined dolphins, it stands at the corner of the Kelowna Cultural District, a 6-square-bfock neighborhood just north of downtown.
BRITISH LUMBIA
Kefowfra
Area detail
I
A Penticton vineyard flows down a hillside toward Okanagan Lake. There are about
Okanagan Lake
110 wineries in the Okanagan region, producing a wide range of wines —including Canada's renowned ice wines — that are not widely available in U.S. markets.
,Ben
mmerland I
~I~
By John Gottberg AndersoneFor The Bulletin
Penticton
KELOWNA, British Columbia-
grotesque sea serpent haunts an ancient glacial lake on B.C. Highway 97, a single long day's drive north of Central Oregon. If you don't believe me, ask a Canadian.
scribed the creature as 40 to 50 feet long, waters.
(CANADA)
Oliver
the north to Penticton in the south, and
This monster is known as Ogopogo, with a serpentine body that displayed its depth ranges to 760 feet. A couple of and its legend is as much a part of life on multiple humps as it plied the lake's deep sizable islands — many alleged sightings Okanagan Lake as water sports and or-
BRITISH COLUMBIA
21st-century tourism industry. Ogopogo term also used to describe Bigfoot and has been around for a while. the Loch Ness Monster) would have plenTwo centuries ago, native Salish tribes ty of places to hide. Although Okanawarned white settlers about N'Ha-a-it- gan Lake is nowhere more than 3 miles kl ("lake demon") or Naitaka. They de- wide, it is 84 miles long from Vernon in
have taken place near Rattlesnake Island
oyoos WASHINGTON
chards and wine. It's not a story that has Now, there's no solid proof that Ogop- — offer additional refuge. been created for the convenience of the ogo actually exists. But the cryptid (a SeeOkanagan/C4
(U.s.)
Miles 0
10
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
"Surrounded by orchards and vineyards, a center for year-round outdoor recreation with a burgeoning cultural scene, friendly Kelowna is worth a visit in any season, whether or not you see its serpent."
Not bored with gamesfor this Meetup group By Mac McLean The Bulletin
Taking a break from her studies to work an internship in Central Oregon, University of California, Santa Barbara
graduate student Mary-Sophia Motlow found herself alone in
"There are new people who move to Bend every week. We usually get two people at each meeting who say, 'I just moved to Bend, and l don't know anybody.'" — PaulAdams, who founded the Bend Board Games Meetup Group
Bend on a Saturday night with
no one to call. She decided to solve this problem by logging on to Meetup.com — a social networking website where more than 100 clubs and groups in Central
and harvest resources."There was probably ayear (in college) where weplayed it all the time." But instead of playing Settlers of Catan, Motlow joined
two other people for some light conversation and a few slices of pizza when she sat down to play Ticket to Ride, another Europe-
an-designed board game where Oregon can post information about their meetings and events
— to look for people who shared her interest, particularly when it comes to playing board games
such as Settlers of Catan. "That's one of my favorite
games," she said, referringto a game players settle a land, build roads, trade with one another
people build railroads that connect cities, at the Bend Board
Games Meetup Group's latest strategy game night, on July 26. SeeBoard games/C6
If yougo What:Bend Board Games Meetup Group When:7-11 p.m. Saturdays Where:Pappy's Pizzeria, 20265 Meyer Drive, Bend Contact:www. meetup.com/ bendgames
C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
M IQESTON'
ts + ~L 7
For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnl,777swChandlerdve v Bendor by emai l i n g m ilestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must besubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
BIRTHDAY
i ia ivi eon ewe i n aise
Peterson Harry Peterson, of Bend, will celebrate his 90th birth-
day with a family celebration today in Prineville. Mr. Peterson was born Aug. 3, 1924, in Bend. He married I rene Hollenbeck. H e h a s
three children, Garry (and Karen), of Prineville, Sharon (and Jim) Schaedler, of Prineville, and Ernie, of Pros-
pect;four grandchildren; and Harry Peterson seven great-grandchildren. Mr. Peterson worked for gon Hunter's Association, and Bend-Portland Tru c king, he enjoys camping, hunting, TransWestern Trucking and fishing, square dancing and System 99 and retired in 1979. spending time with family. He is a veteran of World War II and a life member of the Ore-
He has lived in Central Ore-
gon for 83 years.
ANNIVERSARIES
lltustration by James C. Best Jr. / New York Times News Service
By Nick Bilton
I
New York Times News Service
sWts
W elcome to
s
y our f i r st
Wedding 2.0. Here comes the groom.
Oh, look, there's the bride; doesn't she look lovely'? The sound of an organ begins to
"Right now there is the unplugged wedding versus the totally plugged wedding. l think that having an unplugged ceremony, but not having an unplugged reception, seems to be the juicy middle."
fill the room. All standard
v erton School District and
is a member of the National
Darold and Teresa (Clem- Association o f E l e mentary ens) Brower, of Beaverton, School Principals. They are celebrated their 25th wedding both graduates of Mountain anniversary with a trip to the View High School in Bend. Oregon Coast. The couple's wedding was The couple were married a family affair. The bride's Aug. 5, 1989, in Monmouth.
mom made all of the dresses
They have three children, and the ringbearer's pillow, Joel,MaKaylee and Jacob, of and an aunt was in charge Beaverton. of the flowers. They plan to M r. Brower works f o r return to the Oregon Coast Cascade Microtech and is a where they celebrated their member of the Rocky Moun- honeymoon. t ain El k F o undation. M r s. They lived in Central OreBrower works for th e Bea- gon for 12 years.
"Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to join
ing my first hashtag wed-
this man and this woman in
ding, I was invited to a more
matrimony," the priest, rabbi or minister says. "The bride and groom have asked you to use the same hashtag on photos shared to Instagram,
traditional ceremony (yes, wedding season is in full swing), where the bride sent
Twitter and Facebook."
I've experienced varia-
A few months after attend-
out a flinty note to all the
guests days before the event. "Please do not post anything online," she
w r ote,
tions of this at several recent weddings. Other times,
noting that cellphones were strictly prohibited. "You are,
hashtags are written in the wedding program, put on table arrangements or whispered down the aisle.
however, welcome to make
The rest of the evening
watercolors or use court-reporter sketches," the bride added jokingly, obviously trying not to sound too fussy. That event, sans cell-
becomes a digital free-forall: square oversaturated phones, was quite beautiful. photos of the cake posted to During the ceremony, people Instagram; overheard mo- clapped (with both hands) as ments from guests crumpled the bride floated down the into 140-character balls on aisle. Guests listened atten7tftritter; and photos of the
happy couple — taken from every angle imaginable, including selfies — shared on Facebook. A t r adition b arely u n -
changed since your grandmother's grandmother was married has now been put
through the social media washing machine. And wedding planners, photographers,brides and off iciators are trying to figure out what it all means.
Rosemary H a ttenbach, an event and wedding planner in San Francisco, said:
"There are two different camps with these digital weddings. Some people inherently detest that kind of experience and want to keep it old-school, pure and inti-
Find Your Dream Home
in Real Estate • • •
The B u lletin
"I've started to take client's
in their suite at the Canary Hotel in Santa Barbara. Wells looked over at her husband
and excitedly said, "Let's see if we can find any pictures of the wedding online." (Pillow Talk 2.0, perhaps.) They grabbed their laptops and cellphones and began searching. To their surprise, the couple found a hashtag, ¹tramwells, that guests had
organized and used throughout the night.
"We were able to find all of these amazing pictures a nd videos online, all
un-
der one hashtag," Wells said. "We saw pictures the photographer couldn't have captured: gorgeous photos taken from a completely different perspective."
don't want to w al k d o wn
Keith and Barbara (Braid) Cordes Hawaii, and Leslie (and Donald) Seaton, of Bend; and one Keith and Barbara (Braid) granddaughter. Cordes, of Bend, celebrated Mr. Cordes worked as an their 50th wedding anniver- FBI special agentfor24 years sary with a family trip to Walt and retired in 1996. He played Disney World. in the 1960 Rose Bowl for the The couple were married University of Washington. He July 10, 1964, at Los A ltos also assisted on the UnabombC ongregational Church i n er case as part of his work Long Beach, California. The with the FBI. M rs. Cordes wedding ceremony was 20 worked as the vice president of minutes late because the loans for Long Beach Schools preacher was listening to Federal Credit Union and reSandy Koufax pitching for tired in 2004. the Dodgers. The couple have They have lived in Central two children, John, of Maui, Oregon for 10 years.
plugged wedding versus the bigger problems. Jose Villa, a totally plugged wedding," wedding photographer in Sol- said Cassandra Santor, a vang, California, said frames Los Angeles-based wedding that were once filled with smil- planner. She suggests a coming guests are now a scene of promise: "I think that having people's heads peering down an unplugged ceremony, but at their phones. not having an unplugged re"It's no longer just take a ception, seems to be the juicy picture and put your camera middle." away, as it used to be when Portia Wells, a designer in guests had film cameras," he Los Angeles who was married said. "Now it's take a picture, this year, and her now-huscrop it, pick a filter, share it on band Mark Trammell did this Instagram, then spend the rest almost by accident. After a of the night checking to see long debate, the couple decidhow many likes it has." ed to politely ask people not And it's not just guests who to use their cellphones during go all in on wedding photog- the ceremony but didn't set raphy. The bride and groom any rules for the dinner and are often the worst offenders, reception. snapping their own photos to The morning after the wedshare online. ding, the newlyweds woke up
phones away, and I keep them dinner, people did this very in my pocket until the end of strange thing: They actually the night," Villa said. spoke to one another. Using For some couples, the cost their mouths. Not via text of a wedding photographer, m essage oremoji. which can range from $6,000 But while the analog wed- to $15,000, can be too high, ding was beautiful, I kept so they choose social mefinding men hiding in the dia photos instead. But that bathroom checking their leaves Aunt Gertrude and the email or World Cup scores. rest of the guests with a lot of Toward the end of the night, responsibility. I bumped into a group of One maid of honor, who women trying to hide be- asked not to be identified so as hind the tent while they took not offend her best friend, was a group selfie. (One wom- recently tasked with promotan proudly told me she had ing a hashtag among guests smuggled her smartphone in but took it upon herself to subher bra.) vert a possible disaster. "It's an awful lot of presThe ban on gadgets is understandable. Brides who sure," the maid of honor said. "So rather than spend the choose a d evice-free ceremony have toldme they tively to the sermon. And at
mate. Then there are others the aisle and see their loved that embrace it all and look ones peering back at them at social media as an oppor- through screens. tunity to get more photos of For photographers, guests the wedding." with cellphones cause even
Cordes
a wedding photographer as the couple's gift." So what's a bride (or groom) to do'? To hashtag or not to "Right now there is the un-
better.
Brower
the bridesmaids pitched in for
— Cassandra Santor, wedding planner hashtag, that is the question.
fare, right? But wait, it gets Darold and Teresa (Clemens) Brower
whole night trying to capture that perfect moment, and feeling terrible if we missed it, all
er llrtjanla[aemeltae BEND OREGON ubh
b&
TM
The Ultimate in Skin Care
Thislsan untouchedphoto tdSherryatage 73. (OwnerofSher-Rayi
Summer Cold Sores L Fever Blisters?
MI LESTONE G UI
INES
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District The Bend Trolley
Sher-Ray HAS THE FASTEST ACTING REMEDY
Formwla 002
Bend Wedding& Formal Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events Ida's Cupcake Cafe
Heal-Clear 98
24
5ML (Goesa longway)
$7998 20ML(Super sizefor families) It Works 4 TimesFaster than other Brands It's Organic 8 Safe - Readour Testimonials Sher-Ray.comWehave DR's, RN's6 Pharmacists choosingour Femula 002 Call for a FREEProduct I Consultation Appointment
The Bulletin
~
4
satteuts s
seML re
Amazing organic skin care fromthe AmazonRain Forest SHER-RAY.COM Buy online or by phone 541-389-2228 Also available at: OregonBody r Bath (Downtown) r Autry's 4 SeasonsFlorist, GreenwoodAve, Bend. Visit our retail shoppeat198838th St. (Redbuilding at Tumalo Mall, off Hwy20) open M-w-F 10-4pm
Lake Creek Lodge M.Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School Northwest Medi Spa Salon JS Danke Socailly Yours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
ANOTHER CULTURAL SHIFT
oaS? OWa ou a oe? By Lois Smith Brady New York Times News Service
This month, when E l len Epstein arrived at the Devil's
Thumb Ranch in Tabernash, Colorado, for the wedding of her friends Lauren Meisels and Bradley Melshenker, she, like the other guests, found a
ee awe
Many pot enthusiasts think of alcohol as an old-fashioned, old-school toxin whose overuse can inflame family tensions and cause people to say horrible things, especially at weddings. In comparison, marijuana, they contend, is more like a tonic that calms people down and makes them like one another more rather than less — perfect for a wedding.
or a jar of locally made honey, the canvas bag contained a rolled joint, a lighter and lip balm infused with mango butter and cannabis, along with this note: "We wanted to show
ple's relationship from the bein Manhattan, and Melshenker, who is from Maryland, met in 2007, when they were both
living in Los Angeles. On their first date, they smoked a joint
together, and Meisels, who worked at United Talent Agency at the time, told Melshenker
you some of the things we love she had been searching for a the best." boyfriend who smoked pot. "She was like, 'I've been goShe knew then that the wedding of her fellow Boulder, ing out partying every night Colorado, residents would be just a little different from the
and I need a pothead to slow me down, to c ook d i nners
ones she had attended in the past. The Meisels and Melshenker nuptials looked as if their inspi-
and watch movies instead of this Hollywood night life,'"
ration had come not from the
er to Boulder and opened the
Melshenkerremembered. Five
years ago, they moved togeth-
pages of Martha Stewart Wed- Greenest Green, a marijuana dings but from High Times. dispensary and cultivation All of the floral arrangements,
center, which they r ecently
including the bride's bouquet, sold. "Our whole life for the last contained a variety of white flowers mixed with marijuana five years has been cannabuds and leaves. Melshenk- bis, cannabis, cannabis," said er and his groomsmen wore Melshenker, who with Meisels b outonnieres crafted out o f
now operates Green Life Con-
twine andmarijuanabuds, and sulting, an advisory firm for Melshenker's three dogs wore those who want to start marcollars made of cannabis buds, ijuana-based businesses, and eucalyptus leaves and pink 710 Labs, which manufactures ribbons. concentrates like hash oiL Before going into dinner, the Many pot enthusiasts think guests were given a baby mar- of alcohol as an old-fashijuana plant in a ceramic pot ioned, old-school toxin whose with their name and table as- overuse can inflame family signment written on a card in tensions and cause people to green ink, in the kind of stylish say horrible things, especially script you might find on a con- at weddings. In comparison, tainer of artisanal goat cheese. marijuana, they contend, is The tables were named after more like a tonic that calms different strains of marijuana, peopledown and makes them like Blue Dream, Sour Diesel likeone another more rather and Skywalker (the groom's than less — perfect for a wedfavorite strain). Epstein, who ding, they say. was seated at Skywalker, said Some of those who have atthat everyone at her t able, tended weddings where joints, where the ages ranged from bongs, vaporizers, e-pens or 40 to 70, passed around a de- hookahs are passed around vice similar to an electronic also say it heightens the comcigarette — except that it con-
tained hash oil instead of nic-
munity-building mood that is inherent at a wedding. At Get
otine. "It didn't feel weird or bizarre," she said. "It kind of
t h e c loset now," "Marijuana intoxication is full
said Kelli Bielema of Shindig Events in Seattle. "I did a w eddingrecently where they had a little box, like a trinket
box, and it had a bunch of joints in it. They just passed it around, and said, 'Here, enjoy yourself.'"
'I need a pothead' The choiceto make pot an integral if not central part of
their wedding was almost a no-brainer forM elshenker,32, and Meisels, 34; they also had
an open bar. Cannabis had been a major part of the cou-
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 3 2 9 7 6 5 8 4 1
8 7 6 1
41 65 72 83
3 4 1 9
2 8 5 4
9 1 8 2
6 2 9 5
5 9 3 7
I
7 3 4 > 6 I
5 946 3 7 1 8 2
I
4 38 2 9 6 7 1 5 I 2 5 7 8 1 4 3 6 9 ;9 16 5 7 3 4 2 8 !
of positive emotion. People feel love and connection. Every single person cried at the wedding."
SOLUTIOIVTG TODAV'8 Utl CROSSWORD P U T T S
AN S A HU E R NU
D E B A R I H A R D A M B H E A E S T M A H
S A N E S T
T U S T E U T R S N E S
A R B W Y G L S I A T E L D T I A R N 0 K R T S A S O N A N F F E O R I R O N E T S E T N D I M A G
G R A V E L
L I R E
E B A B M E E D S M P I R S A S D A A B R I S A A S
A S S 0 A T A U A N D P E S D E L S E R E N T S P R O O T 8 A C A S T A B L M E I S K I R T O O N L L 0 W F O N O O A P I N I M A L 0 B I T E A L A X R A B B I T R U T E R T
A T A N I V A C E T R A E A R I N G F D O E S L L S E S P R H E R U R P I G O I G H T L A A G R F A R M G E S M A T I T A T C E U E S T
cRosswoRD IsONc6
Answer: FORGET O P P OS E P R IMER N ATIVE CRI S I S INJU R E The bread company hoped its new dough recipe would result in-
RisiNG PROFITS JUMBLE IS ON C6
g
a vibe of, 'Are you in the cool kids club or not?'"
'I just don't see CEOs getting stoned' Penni Ervin, a weddingplanner in Crested Butte, Colorado,
was aghast when asked if she was working on any weddings in which pot was involved. "We're talking about highly professional people, and I just don't see CEOs getting stoned," she said. "It's a family event with Grandma and Grandpa,"
adding, "and you don't want them to get shocked."
could bring out the carefree, bubbly side of even the most
juana-based businesses, ultimately decided not to include
a strain that will make them a
' II
R I N G L E A D E R
A S I M 0 V
S T R O B E
H 0 O P E R
M S E C
S I S I
U C L A
A P 0 S T L E S
T O R T E
A B E T S
L O S E S
iaau Ian. Y/IS, Yr
s
Enjoy foods like sizzling, crispy BACON and still
lOSZE W iElllllI.
e 7
Our newest, most indulgent menus ever are packed with more of the foods you crave, while still giving you INCREDIBLE RESULTS!
Before Jennifer Beck, 27,
and Chase Beck,24, were married May 3, also at the Devil's menu, as it stands now." Thumb Ranch, theybriefl y Even die-hard marijuana discussed serving THC-inenthusiasts say the high from fused cupcakes in addition to edibles can be incredibly pow- traditional ones. The couple, erful and long-lasting. Julie who founded Cannabase.io, a
1
ZQ5LK X
crowd, she said, while others
the special cupcakes, in part bit more euphoric." because it was springtime, It is hard to predict if pot the season when the rivers are will become more or less popraging with snowmelt and the ular at weddings in the future. bearsare coming out ofhiber- Mark Buddemeyer, a Colorado nation — not the ideal moment budtender whose nickname for anyone to be stoned in the is actually Bud, expressed mountains. doubts that marijuana would H owever, Beck h a d n o ever become widelyacceptqualms about sharing some able at weddings. "We've got to get to the point weed — a strain called Space New YorkTimes News Service/Submitted photo Cheese, to be exact — with his where smoking is classier This boutonniere made from twine and marijuana was worn by groomsmen after the ceremo- than drinking," he said. the groom and groomsmen at a wedding in Colorado, one of two ny at a private cabin he rented Others wonder if it's realstates where recreational use of pot was recently legalized. nearby. "The Space Cheese ly necessary for a bride and itself lent a giggly buzz to ev- groom to heighten, lighten, eryone while we rehashed the deepen or in any way alter the Areeventcenters Dooley, of Julie & Kate Baked day's events," he said. experience of getting married. considered'public'spaces? Goods in Denver, makes graToday, there are "bud- Isn't promising to spend the The rules and regulations nola that contains THC, the tenders" (think sommeliers, rest of your life with someone about marijuana — particular- psychoactive ingredient in only they work with cannabis enough of a high? The Becks ly regarding where it is legal to marijuana, and d escribes instead of wine) in every dis- made a pact not to get stoned use and where it is not — are the experience of ingesting a pensary, to help couples who (or tipsy) before their ceremostill being written and con- pot-infused edible this way: are so inclined find the ideal ny. "It does change your enstantly changing. It is legal to "It's not like wine or a joint you strains for their weddings. Bec ergy," Jennifer Beck said. "It imbibe on private property but might pass around for a fun Koop just opened a business, does change your ability to ennot in public; however, there is party atmosphere. When you Buds and Blossoms in Alma, gage. For the wedding, you've endless debate about what con- eat an edible, you are commit- Colorado, to advise those who got to be there." stitutes private versus public. ted for four hours, and mine want to i n clude marijuana One thing that can be said Heather Dwight, who runs can last six to 12 hours. It's a in their centerpieces, dinner about weed weddings is they Calluna Events in Boulder long experience." salads, bouquets and bouton- are likely to generate less and organized the MelshenAlso, most edibles, which nieres (or "bud-tonnieres," as waste. While many centerpiecker-Meisels wedding, said it include caramels, lollipops she calls them). es, boutonnieres or bouquets was difficult to find a place and chocolates, look l i ke When it comes to marijua- are typically thrown out, ones that would permit a joint bar or regular treats, which makes na, she is like a skier bombing made out of marijuana buds hookah lounge. Even the own- them especially tempting for down a steepslope, farmore will probably not be discarded. ers of "private" spaces, such as children. At a wedding where adventurous than c a utious. For the wedding at Get lofts or large houses, balked. It a tray of pot brownies was For instance,during a recent High Getaways, Osborn made was possible to openly serve served a few weeks ago, the conversation, she suggested the bride's bouquet, which inmarijuana at the Get High Get- hired planner, Kerri Butler of placing a tincture containing cluded several buds of SAGE aways wedding because BRBs A Touch of Bliss in Denver, flavored (like peppermint or Zeta. After th e w edding, are considered private proper- said that the space's bartend- vanilla) THC-infused liquid Dyke said, the newly marty and Dyke was open to it. ers checked the IDs of guests next to the wedding cake, for ried couple hung the bouquet Many of the most popular before handing out the brown- guests who might want to add in a closet at home to dry it places to hold weddings in Col- ies (which had been baked by a few droplets. "Like putting out, and intend to smoke it on orado, such as the Denver Bo- the mother of the bride). syrup on your pancakes," she their wedding anniversary tanic Gardens, the Denver MuJake Rosenbarger of Kim 5 exclaimed. next year. This practice could seum of Nature and Science, Jake's Cakes in Boulder said Koop believes brides and be a new way to relive the day. and the top of Aspen Moun- he would not make a cannabis grooms should choose their As Dyke put it, "You catch the tain, forbid marijuana, citing cake if asked. Marijuana ruins wedding weed as carefully same buzz you had on your the law against consumption the flavor, he said, and it can as they select their music or wedding day." in public. Tourists complain even ruin a wedding. "It can that marijuana is simple to buy divide a room as much as pull in Colorado (dispensaries are it together," he said. "It creates
SUDOKU IS ON C6
SOLUTION To TODAY'S JUMBLE
shy people get up and actually enjoy dancing in front of a
"If there are two conflicting families who are not too happy about the wedding," she said, "you might want to find
Denver Internet company that connects customers to mari-
High Getaways, a bed-andbreakfast in Denver, smoking becomes a new cocktail." pot is "not only permitted but With the sale of marijuana encouraged," said Dale Dyke, almost easier to find than Starfor recreational use now legal who runs the place with his bucks cafes), but there are very in Colorado and Washington wife, Chastity Osborn. In few places where it is clearstate, pot and its various par- March, Dyke and Osborn host- ly legal to consume it. So, for aphernalia are becoming visi- ed awedding and reception at now, Dwight said, the easiest ble at weddings in those states their inn featuring joints rolled place to have a weed wedding — as table favors for guests from various strains of mariis in your own backyard. like miniature vaporizers or juana, including Critical Mass, group activities like a hookah W idow Kush and Skunk I . Wedding edibles lounge. (The bride and groom said Because they are smokeless, Brides and grooms, even they love smoking marijuana cakes and pies with cannabis ones who say they don't par- but did not want to be inter- baked in are a hard-to-detect t ake often but w ant t o b e viewed about it.) way of consuming pot in pub"Everybody was blazing the lic. It is also illegal to do so. In hospitable, are giving guests choicesthat are much diff er- whole time," said Dyke, who Washington state, Alison Draient from the standard mer- believes cannabis is a much sin, a baker who creates what lot or chardonnay. Now, the more romantic substance she calls "medibles" — because choice could be Tangerine than alcohol because it rep- she intends them for mediciHaze or Grape Ape. resents exploration, rebellion, nal use — said, "A restaurant Marijuana use at weddings openness and togetherness. cannot offer medibles on their is "out of
clothes. Certain strains help
ferocious Bridezillas.
gift bag waiting for her in her ginning. Meisels, who grew up hotel room. But rather than a guide to activities in the area
ins
goahead, l8 lt THE BODY OF YOUR DREAMS is a Phone call away !
AND YQUR LIFE ENJ Q Y MQUTHwATERING,
Find It All
Online bendbulletin.com
8.
The results will a maze y o u !
SATISFYING FOODS YOU LOVE!
Want MQRE? Call TODAY! Bend
54g 225 49$8
mr~mouc.
'Rasulhnottypical. OnMatlbolic MonP, mostdiants can axpedtolosa1-2lbs. parweek. PS
RESEARCH CENTER we100rcosssrraausrs
U B M S P S D
T E T R A
0
(gP ~
0
8/3/1 4 Aspen Lakes Golf Course Hom e 01 1
One Acre
The main livingis 3000 SF that includes the master, 1100 SF upstairs offersa 2 bedroom guest suite. Custom kitchen, 10' island with seating plusspacefor an 8' dining table, professional grade appliances, walkthru pantry with sink &. 2nd refrigerator. Formal dining room. Large office with 2 work stations 6 custom cabinets. Earth friendly PV solar system. Golf courseHOA includes pool, hot tub, clubhouse, exercise room,tennis & sport court. MLS¹201305684
$1,095,000 • Po n d erosa Properties Carol Daeis, Broker • 541.588.9Z17
212~NE Division St Bend, OR-97701 I (541) 382-4171 641 NW FirAve R nd, CIR97756 l~ 1 ) 548-7707 •
I
•
I
0
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C5
I
Trestles constructed for the Kettle Valley Railway100 years ago, through mile-wide Myra Canyon, now A bicyclist crosses a reconstructed wooden trestle in Myra-Bellevue Provincial Park. Myra Canyon support a popular bicycle route. Destroyed by fire in 2003, the elaborate trestles were rebuilt within Bicycle Rental and Tours provides two-wheelers that allow visitors to travel 15 miles on a mostly level five years and now offer one of Kelowna's most popular visitor attractions. bicycling trail that crosses reconstructed trestles and passes through tunnels.
From previous page Cipes' four sons followed him into the wine business. On our recent visit, CEO Ezra
Cipes led us into the winery's iconic structure — a replica
of Egypt's Great Pyramid, aligned to true north. All Summerhill wines are aged in this pyramid for a full month. "We have a twenty year ex-
periment proving the effect of sacred geometry of liquids," Stephen Cipes explains on his website, and "a twenty year
track record of international gold medals. My goal from the beginning was and is to make the finest wine in the world, especially sparkling wines. The French tradition of put-
fNI
ting sparkling wines in a dark cool place for thirty days for
; ..'tP@
the cuvee and dosage to 'mar-
ry' was my original inspira-
tion to achieve this goal."
Myra Canyon Pegg's house is about a mile uphill from Summerhill. Another mile beyond, high in rugged hills that are in constant danger of devastating
forest and range fires, is Myra-Bellevue Provincial Park.
Exactly 100 years ago, the Kettle Valley Railway was built through these Okanagan Highlands, linking Penticton, at the south end of Okanagan The town of Osoyoos wraps itself around both sides of 12-mile-long Osoyoos Lake, 2 miles north of theAmerican border. Warm and shallow, the lake is popular with VanLake, with the gold and silver couver families who drive four hours to trade cold ocean currents for freshwater sports. mines of the West Kootenay
region to the east. Working at about 4,000-feet elevation, engineers hung their railway on a seriesof20 wooden trestles, taking seven miles of track to cross steep, mile-wide Myra Canyon.
historic sternwheeler beached on the lake shore. Musical re-
vues are staged on the lawn outside the vessel in summer.
Highway 97 follows the river through a series of small
After trains ceased to run on these tracks in 1972, the
trestles fell into disrepair. Twenty years passed before a volunteer group undertook restoration, building boardwalks and guardrails atop the trestles, developing a trail system between them. It all went up in smoke, literally, in
~
~iw
1
".4+tt@~ ." ' .r c ' I ' " '
a 20,000-acre fire destroyed not only 200 homes on the outskirts of Kelowna but also
lakes to the international fron-
and-breakfast inns, a lavender farm and, of course, the
tier about 40 miles south of
wineries.
I spent the early hours of my last morning in Canada sitting highway, which runs through beside Okanagan Lake, gazOliver to Osoyoos. Among the ing at the rippling waters and largest is the Burrowing Owl searching for Ogopogo. Alas, Estate Winery, lodged in a pa- I was not destined to discover latial hillside chateau north of the sea serpent. But that doesn't Osoyoos Lake. Across the val- mean Ogopogo isn't there. ley, Inniskillin offers daily tours — Reporter:janderson@ of its riesling ice wine-making bendbulletin.com operation.
Osoyoos, 6 miles from Oroville, Washington, is a grow-
14 of the 18 surviving wooden The Naramata Heritage Inn & Spa was built in1908, as a destination for steamboats that carried freight
ing town of 5,000 that sprawls
and passengers the length of Okanagan Lake. Restored and reopened in 2001, the12-room hotel five years with disaster-relief preserves the original architecture and luxurious furnishings. funding, the Myra Canyon trail system reopened in 2008. Today it is one of the leading an unnervingexperience. It's aplenty as we drove the 45 1912 steam locomotive that tourist attractions in Kelowna. made more so when transit- minutes south from Kelow- today runs a popular tourist We hadn't brought bicycles ing tunnels, cut through hard na to Penticton, across the route. From here, we rolled with us, but owner Ben Vos of rock, and when glancing to- floating bridge and down the through lakeside fruit orMyra Canyon Bicycle Rent- ward Okanagan Lake in the southwestern shore of Okana- chards to Penticton. al and Tours fitted us with distance, where Ogopogo gan Lake. In all,there are 110 A bustling provincial centwo-wheelers. We completed could make an appearance at wine producers within the ter with 32,000 citizens, Pentour self-guided morning tour anytime. Okanagan region, a majority icton is l ocated where the of the trestle-top rail trail, a U ltimately, though, w e in the West Kelowna area; in Okanagan River pours from mostly level, 15-mile round- found the ride exhilarating, theSouth Okanagan, between its namesake lake into Skaha t rip ride, in j u st over t w o a bit of soft adventure to exPenticton and the U.S. border; Lake, and eventually to the hours. tend our time between winery and around Naramata, a ham- Columbia River in WashingRiding across a wooden visits. let on the lake's southeastern ton state. A promenade follows trestle, which may be a quarshore. Okanagan Beach for 0.8 of a ter-mile long and 1,000 feet South Okanagan W e paused for l u nch a t mile from Penticton Lakeside from top to bottom, can be And there were w ineries Summerland, known for its Resort to the S.S. Sicamous, a
on both sides of 12-mile-long
Expenses fortwo Gas, Bend to Kelowna, 1,070 miles (round-tripj at $4 per gallon: $171.20 Meals en route: $60 Lodging (2 nights with breakfast), Best Western Plus Kelowna: $299.98* Dinner, Waterfront Restaurant: $120*
Myra Canyon BikeRentals:$78* Lunch, Summerhill Pyramid
at a Christian retreat center. There are artists' studios, bed-
Penticton. At least three dozen wineries are located along the
the late summer of 2003, when
Myra Canyon trestles. Reconstructed over the next
seum and general store, a pair of lakeside parks and a tranquil outdoor labyrinth
Ifyou go INFORMATION Thompson OkanaganTourism Associa tion.2280LeckieRoad, Kelowna, British Columbia; 250-860-5999, www.totabc.com
Tourism Kelowna.1626Richter St., Suite 214,Kelowna,British Columbia; 250-861-1515,800-6634345, www.tourismkelowna.com
LODGING Winery: $38 Best Western Plus KelownaHotel Dinner at friends' home: $0 and Suites. 2402 Highway 97N., Kelowna, British Columbia; 250Lunch, Local Lounge 8 Grille: 860-1212, 888-392-9002, www. $35* Lodging, Naramata Heritage Inn bestwesternkelownahotel.com. * Rates from $150(Canadian). 8 Spa: $108 Dinner, Cobblestone WineBar: Delta GrandOkanaganResort. * 1310 WaterSt., Kelowna, British $75 Columbia; 250-763-4500, 888TOTAL (U.S.dollars): $926.05 890-3222, www.deltahotels.com. *Note: Canadian expenses converted to U.S. dollars at a rate of $1 CDN = $0.92 US Rates from $259(Canadianj.
Naramata Heritage Inn 8 Spa. 3625 First St., Naramata, British Columbia; 250-496-6808, 866-617-1188, www.naramata inn.com. Rates from $78(Canadian). Cobblestone WineBar: Lunch and dinner; moderate. Spirit Ridge Vineyard Resort & Spa.1200 Rancher CreekRoad, Osoyoos, British Columbia; 250-495-5445, 877-313-9463,
www.spiritridge.ca. Rates from $129 (Canadian).
*
DINING Local Lounge &Grille. 12817 Lakeshore Drive, Summerland, British Columbia; 250-494-
8855, www.thelocalgroup.ca. Dinner only. Moderate. Sonora RoomRestaurant. Burrowing Owl Estate, 500 Burrowing Owl Place, Oliver, British Columbia; 250-498-0620, www.burrowingowlwine.ca
Summerhill Pyramid Winery. 4870 Chute LakeRoad, Kelowna, British Columbia; 250-7648000, www.summerhill.bc.ca. Lunch and dinner. Moderate. Waterfront Restaurant & Wine Bar. 1180Sunset Drive, Kelowna, British Columbia; 250-979-1222,
www.waterfrontrestaurant.ca. Diner only. Moderate toexpensive. ATTRACTIONS OkanaganHeritageMuseum. 470 QueenswayAve., Kelowna, British Columbia; 250-763-2417, www.kelownamuseums.ca Myra Canyon BikeRentals. 1327 Parkinson Road,Kelowna, British Columbia; 250-878-8763,
www.myracanyonrental.com
Osoyoos Lake. It has become popular with Vancouver fam-
ilies who drive four hours to Canada's warmest freshwater
www.AgateBeachwotel.eom hivate, vintage,oceanfront getaway ewport, O~R
1- o~o~-7ss-s674
Aratf Beachmotfl
lake: Its average depth is 45 feet, and its water has an average summer temperatureof 75
degrees. The Nk'Mip (pronounced IN-ka-meep)band of the Osoyoos tribe has developed an impressive resort here. The Spirit Ridge Vineyard Resort 8 Spa is the centerpiece of a complex that includes the Sonora Desert Spa, the Pas-
sa Tempo Restaurant, a golf course, a conference center and an RV park. The Nk'Mip Desert Cultural Centre offers films and artifact exhibits, a
CARIBBEAN CRUISE - Mlaml Fl, November 15-22, 2015 Great Mnup Cay (Bahamas),
ocho Rlosa~ c a), George Town (Grand cayman), cozumel (Mexlco) All indusive pk s. w/$2,400valueper stateroom! SOOK BY AUGUST 29THto recelve
thls $600 savlngsu Air, pre-night, transfers,taxes, $200shoreexcursion credit per guest, 20 photos, ultimate dining pkg., ultimatebeveragepks., gratuities associ ated w/package,service charges. Inside cabinsstarting at $2,638 PPDO. Outside cabinsstarting at $2,738PPDO
system of nature trails and
RKNO
several interpretive programs. But I have long had a soft
SEPf ? 10 I $229 PPDO
spot for Naramata, 8 miles
north of Penticton. The village of 800 boasts equal elements of hip sophistication and raw
hippiedom. We spent the last night of our Canada trip here in the
classic Naramata Heritage Inn & Spa. Built in 1908, it was once a destination for
paddle-wheel steamers that carried freight and passengers the length of Okanagan Lake. Restored and reopened in 2001 as the Heritage Inn, the 12-room hotel preserves the
original architecture and luxurious furnishings. A fine-dining restaurant, a casual wine bar and a fullservice spa bring it into the 21st century. A stroll around Narama-
ta leads past the local mu-
nine minos, cashrebates, food credits. Approx $70 incashrebates/ foodcredits.
I 7-DAY PANAMACANAL CRUISE SEmjjlBER 2S-OCTOBER11 staNns at $2,399PPD0. Indudes air,taxes, translm, $50 onboarduedit per cabin.
BRANSON, MO CHRISTMAS CKLKBRATION
NOV 12 18 I $2,299 PPDO
Favorite annual event! Stay at theLodgeofthe Ozarkslocated at76Country MusicBlvd.Incredibleentertainment:BuckTrent, Gay Cooper,MelTilis, lhePresleys, Brett Family andso ~ much more! Seeourwebsite for full details.
LEAVENWORTH AT CHRISTMAS TIME
DKC 14 f6 I ~499PPDO Always a favodte to get us in theholidayspirit! Agreat time,andbeautiful placeto celebrate Christmas!Lotsof surprises! ]OinUs! sI
t
I I
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
SU D O K U
Completegri the d so
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
FR ~
TH AT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L Hoyt and Jeff Knursk
to form six ordinary words.
maaetwine ae many
m
GROTEF
9 76 8 4 2 6 81 67 9 39 25 4 82! 29 7 I 6 9 6 734 DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
~Er ~ Et ~
Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,
BewareSouthernsnowwhen planning atrip husband and I go Q •• toMyNew Orleans once a year. For the first time, we're
considering driving. Is this a daft idea in early January'? Where's a good place to stop overnight?
Cggt e TrbnneCnmemAgency, uo Ali Ridm nemnnd.
VIETNA J~D~ c.
road history and the Tennessee
We're going to London passport cards for Q •• The our children (ages 7 and Q • • for our 10th anniversary
expire in January. Is it easy A• ing a lot of snow the past to13)renew for minors, or will we • The South has been hav-
OSPEPO
few winters. Still, I think I'd SIRSIC
have to go through the entire
chance it. Depending on your route, you could overnight in
PEMIRR
THE BREAP COMPANY HOPEP ITSNEW POUGH RECIPE WOULP RESULT Iq-
JIRENU
Now arrange the circled letlers
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWERIN THE CIRCLES BELOW
ment recommends passports
Riverwalk. You could stay at for all traveling Americans, the Delta Queen, a floating ho- plus you can suddenly fly with tel docked at Coolidge Park. them to Paris for the weekend.
in October. Where should we
stay?
A
• One of the posher hotels
process all over again'? • might getyou away from • You'll have to do it all the kids: the Goring, Savoy, Atlanta or i n C h attanooga, • over again — accompa- Lanesborough, C l a ridge's, Tennessee. Chattanooga might ny them to the renewal facility Chesterfield Mayfair, etc. A be a bit more manageable. and apply in person, because few of those are in the Mayfair There are some good museums they're under 16. You might area, which is very 'Itrbe-con— e.g., the Hunter Museum of also consider gettingpassports venient. Or, rent a nice flat. American Art — caverns, rail- for your kids; the State Depart- — Washington Post travel writers
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
Sunday, August 3, 2014
made it difficult for them to
last summer and wasn't at all surprised it's been attracting
Tribune ContentAgency
heart, he should lead the ace and then a low diamond. If diamonds break 3-2 or if East has K-lo-x-x, South is
Continued from C1 "There are new people who move to Bend every week," ed the board games group
By FRANK STEWART
nine tricks. After South wins the first
ting them know the date night was coming up, he said, which
said Paul Adams, who found-
Engineering a game "I think Cy was an engineer," a club player remarked to me. Cy the Cynic's former occupation, if he had one, is the subject of speculation at my club. Cy won't talk about it. "You mean he drove a train?" I asked. "No, a projectengineer. I heard him talking about the six phases of a project. He listed them in order: enthusiasm, disillusionment, panic, search for the guilty, punishment of the innocent, and praise for the nonparticipants." That sounds just like Cy, but judging from his dummy play, I doubt that h e c o u l d e n g ineer anything. Cy is the world's worst at plungingahead before he has a plan. Cy was declarer at today's 3NT, and West led a heart. The Cynic won with the king and led the jack of clubs. East took his ace immediately to return a heart to dummy's ace, and Cy then cashed the king of clubs. When West discarded, Cy took the queen of clubs and tried for his ninth trick by finessing with the queen of diamonds. Alas, West produced the king, and Cy wound up down two. Could you find a sure line of play to make 3NT? A careful sequence of play assures
Board games
cO
sure of four diamonds, three spades and two hearts. As the cards lie, West must play low on the second diamond, and d ummy's jack w i ns. W i t h t w o diamond tricks in the bag, South l eads a club. He i s sme of t w o diamonds, two hearts, two clubs and three spades. South dealer N-S vulnerable
CO
Cgy s
people who are new to town Ct5
CLr CCr
Ccr
E ct5
4I73
CD) CLr
QA8 0 J82 4KQ6542
LJ
EAST
CCr
Ch
4 J1085 9 J 953 03
0 K1074
+7
CLr
a5
4A1093
C3
can meet one another, Adams said, that wasn't exactly what he had in mind when he set
up its first meeting in August 2013.
"(My wife and I) wanted to have a date night and we wanted to make sure it happened," Adams said, explaining that he and his wife, Mary — the Meetup group's co-founderwere having problems sticking to the plans they made. So like Motlow, they logged on to the Meetup.com website and created an event where
they would get together at a local restaurant and spend a quiet Saturday night playing
SOUTH 4b AKQ6 QK7
CCr s
0AQ965 4JS South 10 24 3 NT
But while he's perfectly con-
tent the board games group has become a place where
co
9 Q10642
moved to Bend, and I don't
know anybody.'" Ccr
NORTH
WEST 4942
newcomers to its meetings. "We usually get two people at each meeting who say, 'I just
ctg
We s t North Pass 24 Pass 34 All P a ss
a few of their favorite board
games. Although this may seem an extreme step to take, Ad-
E ast Pass Pass
CLr CLr
CD
ams said, he and his wife felt like putting their plans on the website's calender commit-
ted them to showing up. They also got regular e-mails let-
Opening lead — 9 4
they like as adults.
"Some of the games we liked as kids don't really hold forget about their plans. up when we're older," he said, But using Meetup.com to set explaining that some of the up a date also had some un- most popular board games reintended consequences; their quire people to come up with a quiet game night turned into strategy and plan their moves something else when 15 other several steps in advance. people showed up to play. Another deve l o pment "We expected thatnobody that's led to board games' rewould actually come to this surgence in popularity is the event because who wants to creation of what Adams calls play board games on a Sat- "community or team games" urday night?" he joked. The that create an environment Bend Board Games Meetup where teams of players, rather Group now boasts 161 active than individual players, have members. to come together and join othAdams said the group has er teams ofplayers or solve grown so quickly over the past challenges that the game and year that he's had to change its rules present them. its venue twice before finally Adams said this style of settling on the back room at game is usually one of the most Pappy's Pizzeria in southeast popular athis events because "peopleare working together Bend. He said about 40 people reg- and they don't have to worry ularly show up, including four about losing by a large amount so determinedthey braved the or getting crushed if they don't aftermath of the Feb. 7 snow- know howthegame isplayed. " storm which blanketed Forcing people to work as Central Oregon with almost 2 a team also forces them to infeet of snow — so they could teract with each other, have a spend an evening playing card conversation and maybe split games like Dominion, Sen- a pizza once it's time to put tinels of the Multiverse and away the game. "This is really just a chance Love Letter. Adams said that like Ticket to Ride (which has for people to hang out,n Adsoldmore than 750,000 copies) ams said, adding that the real and Settlers of Catan (more purpose of his Meetup group than 15 million copies), these istocreate a placewhere peocard games have seen a huge ple can meet eachother and burst in popularity over the make friends. "The board past decade because they are games are just an excuse for marketed toward people who us to get together." played board games as chil— Reporter: 541-617-7616, dren but can't really find a title
mmclean@bendbulletin.com
(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD ted by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWIS nKIDDIELITn By
AMYJOHNSON ACROSS I BSIiiltgZOO
attraction e It'soften seenin sheets II Spreadsheet figures I5 Foolhardy
19 TWA
competitor 20 Cowboy's rope 2I Baylor,forone: Abbr. 22 Analogywords 23 TolstoyIale of child's play? 2e Robert De 27 Giga- x1,000 28 SI. Laurent of fashion 29 Upper-Imd muscle 30 HIIsongof I950 32 GEI cozy 34 Like Death Valley 35 Studsite 3e Carson Isle of well-behaved classroomclock watchers? 40 Certainschool team activity
83 Apollo landers, 118 neymPhonyIn briefly Black"SIal. 119 "The 84 Grannies ee samoancapital GondolIers" 87 Gets bride ee Orwell Iale of Beanie Baby DOWN breeding? I Forgoesthe 95 Oregon coastal gimme cIIII 2 Like Dracula's 9e Latenotice? visage 97 Berlin School 3 Tiny republic formerly called psychological theory Pleasant Island I02 Excitable cell 4 Yankeslsgend, 103 Billionaire bank familiarly founder Andy 5 Wall SI. trader 104 Latintrio e FIshtank member flooring 10e WindIIIEPII 7 Old Bologna 107 ParIBIan' s "to bread bee 8 WIImote inserts Ioe Updike Iale of 9 Stop: Abbr. slt idle cereal 10 Most moumful mascot? 11 One WIIh a I I2 Employee IDs SSCORd I I3 Actor Morales 12 Med sch. II4 What awhite subject flag maymean 13 Pokergametell, I 15 Complete maybe IIe d rive 14 BSIIIng figures I 17 "Father of the 15 Mastermind Ie "TheRobotsof American Dawn" author Cartoon" I
2
3
4
6
5
7
8
17 DIsco light 5e Tattooparlor 18 "SesameStreet" supplies storeowner 57 PABA part 24 PoetEIInor 58 Tsxarkana-bom 25 Cop's qualiy '90s candidate 3I Lab greetings eI JUIIS's"NCIIIng Hill" co-star 33 PrimemelldIan e2 eII I may butt In
sIII.
34 Source of brown
es phoenixsuburb e5 "Take it!" response,In a jazz club ee Cityonthe Rhein e7 LSIYia'smost populous city 70 Rapidly 42 POOIOna shrinking pedestal ecosystem 43 "The Aviator" 71 Didn't beat Oscarnominee 72 Rice style 47 Skunk River city 73 JIm Morrison's 48 Highway alma mater breaker? 75 The Devil's 49 Came down label? 5I Last Supper 7e Tomof"The attendees Dukes of 52 PC processing Hazzarfr' unit 77 Straight man 53 "Absolutely, 78 Basedecision amigo!" maker 55 Races with 79 Undergrad sulkIes IIsgs. IUr
35 Carbon compounds 37 Receded 38 NoggIns 39 Hardly a doer 40 Code word 4I Timeline chapter
9
to
tt
12 t s
14
81 Notagreai
chance II Hendrix hairdo ee Commentfiom one rushing in e7 ActressScacchi 88 Condo dIYs. ee Having themost marbles 90 SUb-Saharan menace 91 Reversals 92 evou Can't get OUIthisway" 93 Building beam 94 Shooting marbles 98 Dessertcart goodie 99 Drives the getawaycar for 100 Blows, perhaps IOI Aquarium swimmer 103Predisposition 104 Be Up against 105 Mickey and Minnie I09 Pres.Mandela's land IIO Winter outburst? 111 "Shame on e you!
15 1 6
20
I7
18
S
• S m
m
•
' •
)
m
m
m
•
I
I I •
• •
•
j
I l • m
+m
S
a
ls
II
22
44 Kick
45 double take 23
4e Botanical coating 27 47 "Fernando" band 48 Matchesatthe s2 pokertable 50 Hooverand Mossyrock 54 Dickens Iale of 40 4 1 mathwoes? 58 Drinkthat lost
the secondpart of IIs nameIn
Ieef
30 st
28
es Evade
e7 1921scI-fiplay ee Biol. Crchem. e9 Artichoke
4 2 43 47
48 49
55 56
54
buffet, say 74 These,in JuareZ 75 PalahnIUk Iale Of a rOWdy
slumber party society? 80 HalfafIsh 8I Welles ofeWar of theWorlds" 82 "Return of the JedI" dancer
See the latest products and materials - all in one place! Bring your photos and plans and get your questions answered by our Design Professionals.
45
46
50 5 1
5 2 53
57
FREE Design Workshops: 11am - Making a Splash in the Bath
1: 3 0pm Kitchens for Entertaining
60 62 63
65 66
69
72 75
74
78 79
83
82
86
84 85
8 9 90
73
76 77
80
91
95 102
87
92 93
94
96
97
103
Meet Local Exhibitors!
68
67
70
Sefylllgs
7I Earthhasone 72 Overdo the
Come Meet Neil Kelly Designers!
37 38
59 Mended,in a
way eo Israel's Iron Lady 6I Warmovie staples e2 Diplomatic rep. e4 Nods, say
26
25
88
• Wine Tasting • Door Prizes 98 99
104 105
I O OI 0 1
106
tgs 109
I12
I13
I14
tts
I16
117
I18
tfg
110
Xwordeditor@SOI.COm
+Q gjg
sponsored bv: The lenl Ra li O Gmuy
o"soyedbv: • ComPlimentary Lunch sp
I07
CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
Cascade Garage Door, Dappled Earth, Deschutes Plumbing, Gary's Vacuflo, Great Northern Windows, Home Heating and Cooling, Imagine Stoneworks, Integrity Floors, Johnson Brothers Appliance, Neil Kelly Client Booth, Neil Kelly Home Performance/ Solar, N'Hance Revolu50nary Wood Renewal, Rodda Paint, SOS Alarm, Statements Tile, Sunset Outdoor Living, The Fixture Gallery
©2014 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.
p
RSVP at neilkellg.com/events and Enter to Win 4 Hours of Handgman Services!
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
WEIRD FASHION
C7
WEIRD PASSION
an tries to twist is wa toa mazewor remr By John Keilman Chicago Tribune
Picture mazes are normally the stuff of elemen-
tary school worksheets or kiddie menus, but in the hands of Matthew Hauss-
ler, they become serious art — and potentially a Guinness World Record.
Ulf.
Using a 3-foot-wide roll of paper, Haussler, 29, has drawn 13 feet of a Chica-
'n
go-inspired picture maze he expects to approach 100 Photos by Jeff Wheeler/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune/MCT
Allie Causin, posing on the shore of Lake of the Isles in Minneapolis in the mermaid tail purchased from Bryn and Abby Roberts, models tails at mermaid festivals. Yes, there are such things.
it sisters' e, mere mortas ecome mermai s
feet this fall.
T hat would put h i m ahead of Joe Wos, a Pittsburgh cartoonist who holds
what appears to be the unofficial record for the largest hand-drawn maze, at
Heathercharles/Chicago Tribune/MCT
4-by-34 feet.
Matthew Haussler, with the help of daughter Quinnie, puts away his hand-drawn maze at home in Hanover Park, Illinois. Haussler
But Haussler, who lives
in the Chicago suburb of Hanover Park, says the possible record would be
is hoping to create the world's largest hand-drawn maze —no mistakes, or Wite-out, allowed.
just a side benefit to an art
"I would love to keep going as long as l can. We've got a longway
form he has grown to love.
"It's really meditative,"
By Katie Humphrey
he said. "I can spend hours just zoning in."
(Minneapolis) Star Tribune
Once upon a time, the mer-
He started off
ing her fins for feet. Every day in the real world, twin sisters Abby and Bryn
Roberts fulfill the fantasies of peoplewho want to become
tell what it is'?'" he said.
"They'd say, 'It's the Colosseum.' I said, 'OK, it works,'
wanderer or sea-weary sailor.
Forget the sequins and spandex you'd see in high The Roberts twins of St. Paul, Minnesota — Abby, left, and Brynschool plays. Mermaid wan- make fleshlike mermaid costumes for a living. nabes plunk down big money enough for swimming, they to swim with the fishes? build them around a monofin The "mer" community world- (a big flipper with foot pockets wide — yes, there is such a used by swimmers and scuba thing — is smitten with the tails divers) that is camouflaged by designed by this landlocked the fluke. The painting comes duo. Adults who perform at last. Renaissance festivals, aquariWord got out about their ums and children's parties are tails, mostly through the onplacing orders faster than the line forums on MerNetwork. sisters' fledgling Finfolk Pro- com (of course, mermaids surf
Unusual hobby'? Sure. But a few staresorsarcastic com-
and attracted the attention of Minnesota toy manu-
ments don't stop Causin from
facturer MindWare, which will publish two books of
pulling on her tail for a swim at Cedar Lake or a local pool, with or w i thout other mer-
maids. (In case you were wondering, a group of mermaids is called a "pod.") "There's just this freedom," she said. "It's very much a way of dancing in the water."
"We do lookat each other almost every day and say, 'We make mermaid tails for a living'?'" Bryn Roberts said.
a Facebook page (now with more than 15,000 followers)
Because the mer-world is fanciful, the Roberts sisters
and used Kickstarter to pay for
are protective of their clients,
additional molds. They trav-
especially the mermen. "People's first reaction is,
eled to Hawaii to shoot promo-
sisters dived into a thriving tional pictures and videos. The but hidden mermaid culture, next thing the Roberts sisters connected by s ocial m edia knew, they were shipping tails and celebrated in pop culture. overseas — Australia, SingaIt's part Disney, part "Splash," pore, Iceland, France. "The c ommunity is b i g part ancient myth — brought to life in shows and conven- enough that there is demand, tions around the world with but small enough that word names such as MerFest and spreads quickly," Bryn said. MerPalooza. By fall 2013, they had both "We've always had this fas- quit school and their other
chee Springs in Florida, a mermaid Mecca of sorts. "There's something just mesmerizing about a pretty girl in a mermaid tail." But it's not all girls in tails. There are mermen, too,the
world record-holder
Haussler's mazes this year.
d ocumentation to make h i s
world record official. Once that's done, he plans to do another project on an even
grander scale. His friendly rivalry with H aussler comes second t o
Unlike some maze-makheading north through Grant Park toward Buckingham
ers, Haussler incorporates
his passageways into a larger image. His
Wos, the Pittsburgh artist,
said he is still working on the
Fountain. l a t est a m b i tious From there, the maze will
project begins with a view head west into the Loop, looking west from Chica- though Haussler isn't s ure go's Shedd Aquarium, a where it will end. "I would love to keep goperspective that will move clockwise to capture the ing as long as I can," he said, nearby Adler Planetarium noting that his roll of paper and Field Museum before is 1,000 feet long. "We've
the idea of turning mazes into something worthy of a museum.
"Mazes and l a byrinths have been around for thousands of years," he said. aYou
still see them in churches, in tiles on the floor. They're exercises in
c o ntemplation.
We're trying to restore that idea (that) they can be an art form."
'That's different and w eird
and I don't like it,' " Abby said. But children don't seem to share those reservations.
When the sisters occasionally don tails, they see it over
and over: A girl or boy, usually about 4 years old, hands plant-
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
ed defiantly on hips, turns to
a parent and says, "See? I told you mermaids were real."
•
'
•
• • Cl assifieds www.bendbuttetin.com
This spring, Weeki Wachee called. The kitschy tourist attraction, now a Florida state park t hat a t t racts 275,000
people a year, has been home to mermaid shows since 1947. They were wondering: Would F infolk
P r o ductions s e n d
some tailsfor performers to
move around on land: roll or
h ave to look a t works of art."
um a ea .cori ratuatioris.
wear in the annual mermaid calendar?
"They have some beautiful, beautiful tails that they lent us," said Athanson. "When
these tails came in, you just t hem like
But true appreciation comes from diving in. "The way you move through took a lot of sweat, molding goop and Google. It's not as if the water is so fluid," said Althere's an instruction manual lie Causin, of Coon Rapids, Minnesota, who performs as for this sort of thing. But when the M i nnesota Lyrique the Mermaid wearing how to make their first tail
Renaissance Festival put out a call for tails in 2012, the sisters took a stab at it. They drew on their experience as Renais-
a Finfolk Productions tail. She also models tails for the com-
for costuming, theater make-
naissance festivals as a fairy
Overwhelmed? Thrilled? Anxious? Whatever emotions you're feeling or queStiOnS youhaVeabOutthe neW life grOWinginSide of you, We are here to helP. At the neW
pany at mermaid festivals. Causin is a dancer and fell
sance Festival performers, into "mermaiding" when a channeling their enthusiasm friend who performs in Re-
St. CharlesCenter for Women's Health Wenot Only PrOVidethe Very
up and prosthetics. Abby con- needed mermaids for a photo ceds she dragged the more shoot for a children's book. skeptical Bryn into the project. "I don't know how we did it,"
— Joe Wos, of Pittsburgh, the current (unofficial) maze
H aussler keeps notes t o
remind himself of the route; because he works almost exclusively in ink, creating a dead end would sink his world-record ambitions (using anything like Wite-Out to correct an error is considered cheating among serious maze makers). "Right now, I'm in a really tough spot because if I close off by accident one of the paths I have, then I've closed the whole thing off," he said.
jobs to make mermaid tails full time.
sisters said. Becoming a mermaid isn't particularly glamorous. Donning the second skin calls for awkward wriggling and yanking. Once the tail is on, there are just two ways to be carried by a"mertender." For the sisters, figuring out
He soon added landscapes, portraitsandsports posted some work online
the Internet). The sisters set up
tions manager for Weeki Wa-
They're exercises in contemplation. We're trying to restore that idea (that) they can be an art form."
form."
the surface.
ductions can make them.
John Athanson, public rela-
in tiles on the floor.
so Itried a few more and really developed the art
scenes to his portfolio. He end. To make the tails sturdy
Who would pay this much
cination with mermaids," said
"Mazesand labyrinths have been around for thousands of years. Youstill see them in churches,
seum into a labyrinth. "I started showing it to people, asking, 'Can you
studio they work their magic, crafting fleshlike silicone mermaid tails in a rainbow of colors that could fool any beach
By accident, the 22-year-old
— Matthew Haussler, who lives outside Chicago
turning the Roman Colos-
mermaids. From a St. Paul, Minnesota,
for these lifelike custom fins, which start at $2,500.
until I hit Wisconsin."
s e ver-
al years ago doodling geometric mazes during breaks from his bank job, then decided to go in a more ambitious direction,
maid Ariel dreamed of ditch-
got a long way until I hit Wisconsin." One challenge is m aking sure the path remains unbroken.
best in preconceptionthrough postpartum Care, WealSOhelP eduCate momS-to-be thrOugh
"That's when we first dis-
covered it was a thing," Causin
Bryn said. After seven weeks experimenting in Bryn's garage, they had five lifelike tails. "They came back with these tails, and I was just stunned,"
sald. Mermaid myths have been
said Carr Hagerman, artistic director at the Minnesota Renaissance Festival. They've since perfected the
Weeki Wachee, says he sees
pregnancy,childbirth education andbreastfeeding classes. To SChedule anaPPOintment, giVe USa Call at 541-526-6635.
around for hundreds of years, captured most famously in the fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen. Athanson, of interest spike every time a
mermaid surfaces in pop culture: Disney's "The Little Mermaid," the 30th anniversary of
process: Each tail is made to measure and takes at least a "Splash" and a 2012 documenweek to complete. They mold tarylike science fiction prosilicon for the body, fins and gram on the Discovery Chanfluke — the large fin at the nel have all kept mermaids at
St. Charles Center for
Women's Health
NEW LOCATION I340 NW 5th St.in Redmond
StCharlesHealthCare.org/womenshealth SQ
CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
NeW 'ppid'pr Q/ p' tp et
No 'Bang'tlll theftget morebucks?
a owout intro uction TV SPOTLIGHT v
By Patrick Kevin Day Los Angeles Times
Summer is
t r aditionally
movie blockbuster time, but to
celebrate the beginning of Peter Capaldi's run as the star of CBS via The Associated Press
is breaking out of the normal TV experience and onto the movies' turf.
Helberg star in "The Big Bang Theory" on CBS.
The feature-length premiere episode of the new season,
Production on anewseason of "The Big BangTheory" is being delayed because of acontract dispute with its top actors. The Warner Brothers Television studio, which makestelevision's most popular comedy,said Wednesday's scheduled first day of workafter the summerhiatus waspostponed. Therewas noword on when "TheBigBangTheory" team will be backatwork. The CBSseries is heading into its eighth season, and thestudio is trying to hammer out newdeals with actors Jim Parsons, Johnny Galecki, KaleyCuoco, Simon Helberg and Kunal Nayyar. Contract disputes aren't unusual at popular, long-running TV series, and CBSEntertainment Chairman Nina Tassler seemed to take it in stride whenasked about the negotiations two weeks ago. "I just love being able to answer these questions year after year, primarily because wehavesuccessful shows," she said. "Andwhen youhavesuccessfulshows,youhaverenegotiations. We're feeling very confident that everything will work out. These deals manage to get donesomehow miraculously year after year." CBS had noadditional comment on the negotiations. Fan of the show? Don't worry — it's considered far too early for such a dispute to affect the timing of a show's season premiere. "The Big BangTheory" opens its new season Sept. 22. The show is moving temporarily to Mondays for the beginning of the new season with CBSairing NFL football games on Thursdays for the first half of the season. — The Associated Press
Bsr
II
"Deep Breath," will debut on
I
I
BBC America on Aug. 23. But it will also get a special theatrical screening at midnight B I C that night in 12 cities. (The s list of cities will be announced Tuesday.) BBC America/The Associated Press In case a midnight screen- Peter Capaldi, the Doctor, stars with Jenna Coleman on "Doctor Who," which airs on BBC America. ing is too late for humansbecause what's a late night to
a master of time and space'? — there will be follow-up eve- " Doctor W ho : A f t e r W h o ning screenings Aug. 25 at Live." 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. These The channel is also planscreenings will take place in ning to air a series of spe550 theaters around the coun- cials in the days before the try, including in Oregon. The premiere, including "Doctor list of these screenings can be found online at www.fathom
Who: The Ultimate Compan-
Hardwick and a live postshow,
T he events come on t h e
heels of a world tour, in which
Capaldi, Jenna Coleman and executive p r oducer
cities on five continents over
12 days. (Moffat will not be at all of the events). Capaldi and Coleman will be in New York City on Aug. 14.
art and Dan Starkey.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and /MAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. i
with my OB and have started mak-
ing myself "baby-ready." Friends and most of our family are happy we're trying problem is my parents seem less than enthused. One night
to our family. I know he'll be a great dad. I wish my mother would realize this, too.
comment was hurtful, I think you should let her
adult and a married woman. You should not need anyone's "enthu-
know so she can clarify — if she even remembers saying it."
— "NoOffense" in Ohio Dear "No Offense":You are an
siasm" beyond yours and your husband's to bring a
DPPR ABBY
lastweek, my mom, dad, Pete and I
"Because your mother's
child into this world. Y ou stated t h at
your mother w as
they were registered in the Facebook invitation (which I thought was truly insensitive). cohol-addled individPeople arrived for the engage-
"sloshed" when she made the remark. Al-
uals often make inappropriate com-
ment party with gifts. I did not take
were enjoying some local entertain- ments. Who knows what she meant ment and drinks together. Mom got when she said it? It may be she was a tad sloshed and told me she wishes thinking about the pain your brothmy older brother and his wife had a er and sister-in-law are experiencchild first, "no offense to me." They ingbecause of their infertility issue. have been trying for years and have Because your mother's comment gone to fertility clinics but due to was hurtful, I think you should let the cost decided to stop trying until her know so she can clarify — if my sister-in-law earns her degree. I she even remembers saying it. And have talked to her about our plans, if she doesn't, suggest she cut back and she was happy for us. on her drinkingbecause memoAbby, I can't stop thinking about ry lapses can be a symptom of a what my mom said. I fear bringing drinking problem. it up with her because she may not Dear Abby: My friend "Merle" remember she said anything. Is has a daughter who got engaged, it wrong for me to hold onto this? and Merlethrew an engagement Pete and I are financially and emo- party for her and the husband-totionally ready for a happy addition be. The couple announced where
one. I figured I'd wait until the wedding, which is a year away. I also thought, "What if they change their minds and don't get married?" Was I wrong not to take a gift?
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
AUG. 3, 2014:This yearyou begin a new12-year luck cycle. The first year, which is your most fortunate, is when you will attract new people and opportunities. If you are single and ready to settle down, you could meet Mr. or Ms. Right, but you will have to sort through quite a few suitors first. Enjoy the process. If you are attached, you are Btsfs shoutthe kind unusually intense. of dayyou'Ilhave You sPendalotof ** * * * D ynamic your time at home ** * * Positive deep in reflection.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
difference of opinion to carve its way into what could be a fun day. You like being with this crowd, whether you're at a baseball game or at the beach. Tonight: Start thinking "tomorrow."
CANCER (June21-July 22)
** * * Defer to a loved one who has a set of plans in his or her mind for a fun What you mightchoose prob*** Average Do n't close your happening. ably would not please this person, as he ** So-so sweetie outand cause a rift. Share or she has certain expectations. Tonight: * Difficult your thoughts with Make it an early night. him or her, and LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * You might want to rethink a you will get powerful feedback. Laughter helps you relax. SCORPIO is interesting, decision regarding your personal life. but possessive. You might not like revealing the private aspects of your life, especially in a circle ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * You will need to make time for a ofacquaintances.Dow hateveryou need to do in order to feel comfortable. Tonight: partner, best friend and/or close family Have along-overdue chat. member. Clearly, you are working on a different plane. Even your jovial nature VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) seems to irritate this person. You can't ** * * You might say too much and turn yourself inside out for this person. realize it only when it is too late. Try to Tonight: Add some spice to the night. be more reserved, and you will be less likely to make a faux pas. A loved one or TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * A loved one finally will come child could be throwing a tantrum just out of the doldrums. You could see more to get more attention. Tonight: Hang of an effort from this person to drop his out. or her strong defenses. You can start LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) relaxing. Dodge a controlling individ** * You suddenly will be aware of the ual, rather than get caught up in this costs of a domestic situation. You might person's mess! Tonight: Say"yes" to a want to get the situation under control, suggestion. but it is unlikely you will succeed. The GEMINI (May 21-June 20) other party involved knows how to ma** * * Get together with some pals. nipulate well. The trick will be not to get Don't allow a misunderstanding or a involved. Tonight: Order in.
I guess I just don't understand the
current etiquette. — Stumped in South Carolina
DearStumped: You accepted the invitation, didn't you? Because you
did, you should have given the couple a gift. You did not have to take
one to the party, but you should send something within a short time. (Suggestion: A nice picture frame to hold their engagement photo.) — Write toDear Abbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
** * * You might want to handle a difficult situation on your own. A misunderstanding is likely to emerge, no matter whatyou do. Can you give this matter a timeout? If not, try to take a step back. Go where your friends are. Tonight: Stay out of complications.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You might feel as if you have to socialize. Make it OK to create anti-social plans, and dowhatyou want.Expecta little flak when you turn down a friend's invitation. Know that you don't need to explain as muchasyou thinkyoudo.Tonight: Get some extra R and R.
GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * Even if you don't thinkyou'll have plans, you will. Invitations come in from friends to join them in a fun happening, which could be a barbecue or a softball game. You and your friends tend to enjoy getting far away from the daily grind. Tonight: Only where the action is.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * You could be full of energy, andyou mightwantto have aheavy discussion with someone you respect. Not everyone can debate an issue without taking it personally. You might want to tread carefully. Tonight: Get a head start on tomorrow.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Make calls in the morning to loved ones at a distance or to those you rarely speak to. Before you know it, you will have new vacation plans to get together. Use your intuition when dealing with a difficult friend or associate. Tonight: The less said the better. © King Features Syndicate
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) I:05, 3:45, 7:25, 10:05 • AMERICA(PG-13) 6:45, 9:30 • AND SO ITGOES(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 6:55, 9:20 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES (PG-13)3:15,6:15 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES 3-D (PG-13)11:20 a.m., 9:1 0 • GETONUP(PG-13)11am.,210,630,940 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13) I2:30,3:30,3:55, 7, 9:45, 10:15 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-0 (PG-13)f,7:30 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY IMAX3-0 (PG-13)Noon, 3, 6:30, 9:15 • HERCULES (PG-13) 2, 9:50 • HERCULES 3-0 (PG-13) 11:35a.m., 7:15 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2(PG) 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:05 • LUCY(R)ff:30a.m.,1:30,1:50,4:10,5,6:40,7:55,9, 10:10 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:30, 4:55 • AMOST WANTED MAN (R)11:15a.m.,3:05,6,9:05 • PLANES:FIREIII RESCUE(PG) 1:20, 3:40, 7:1 0 • PLANES:FIRE8 RESCUE3-0 (PG)11:05a.m. • THEPURGE:ANARCHY(R)I:I0,3:50,7:45,10:15 • SEXTAPE(R)7:35,10 • TRANSFORMERS:AGEOFEXTINCTION (PG-13) l1:55 a.m.,4:20,8 • WISH I WAS HERE(R) 9:25 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — After Principal Skinner (voice of Harry Shearer) gives the students a clean slate and promises thebest-behavedamong them can nde in a submanne. Bart (voice of Nancy Cartwright), giddy at the prospect, resolves to become the perfect student, hoping that even his worst past mishaps will be forgiven, in "Yellow Subterfuge." Meanwhile, Lisa (voice of Yeardley Smith) suggests to Krusty the Clown (voice of Dan Castellaneta) that he sell off foreign rights to his past episodes to help himself out of a serious financial crisis.
S teven
Moffat will appear in seven
ion" on Aug. 16, "The Real events.com/event/doctor-who History of Science Fiction: -deep-breath-premiere/more Time" and "Doctor Who: The Moffat wrote the premiere -info/theater-locations. Ultimate Time Lord" on Aug. episode, which is set in VicFor people living in the rest 18. torian England and will also of the country, the episode will A marathon of fan-favorite feature returning companion be preceded by a live preshow episodes will air the day after Clara,played by Coleman, by ubiquitous superfan Chris the premiere, on Aug. 24. Neve Mclntosh, Catrin Stew-
Remark hurtShOPeful matheI-ta-be Dear Abby:My husband, "Pete," and I are at a point in our lives where we're ready to start a family. We have already started trying. W e both have collegedegrees,jobs and own ourhome. Ihave talked
8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Wipeout" — A theme of some earlier installments resurfaces in "Hotties vs. Nerds 4.0." It's easy to tell the nature of the competitors on the obstacle course this time, some more notable for brains than beauty—though beauty also has its place here. Co-host Jill Wagner has plenty of fun with the interviews, as she always does in such cases. And if she does, just imagine the mirth that hosts John Anderson and John
Henson engagein.
"Doctor Who," BBC America
KunalNayyar,Johnny Galecki,Jim Parsons and Simon
TV TODAY • More TI/listingsinside Sports
9 p.m. on 6, "Unforgettable"
— Carrie (PoppyMontgomery) decides to conduct an "off the books" investigation to clear Al's (Dylan Walsh) name with Internal Affairs after he becomes the prime suspect in the murder of a parolee he helped put in jail, in the new episode "Stray Bullet." Jane Curtin and Dallas Roberts star. 9 p.m.on10, "Family Guy"Peter (voice of Seth MacFarlane) is elated when his buddy and former neighbor Cleveland Brown (voice of Mike Henry) moves back to Quahog, but their reunion is over almost before it begins when their wives, Lois and Donna (Alex Borstein, Sanaa Lathan) get into a huge fight over parenting and forbid the boys to spend time with each other in "He's Bla-ack!." 9 p.m. on TLC, "LongIsland Medium" —Brassy, biggerthan-life medium and mom Theresa Caputo returns for another season of helping ordinary folks
get closure bypassingalong messagesfromtheir dearly departed. The premiere finds Caputo surprising visitors to Las Vegas with spontaneous readings as she bumps into them, and viewers this season will get their own chance for a live reading by Caputo in their homes. © Zap2it
2 Locationsin Bend Main Center 2150NE StudioRd,Suite10
NWX 2863 NorthwestCrossingDr,suiteio
541-389-9252 sylvan©bendbroadband.com
r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 11:30 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13) 6 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 9 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-I3)2 • After 7p m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • LIFE ITSELF (R) 4:30 • OBVIOUSCHILD(R) 7:15 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)Noon,12:45, 2:45, 3:30, 5:30, 6:15, 8:15, 9 • HERCULES (PG-13) Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 • LUCY(R) 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 330, 530, 730, 930
I
I '
I
716 SW11th St. Redmond 641.923.4732
~~~coolsculpting LE F F E L CE N T E R 0 COS
C,
S
Don't s etrtefor anyone brrt a p lcutir surgeonfor
coolsrulprrng
www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CHEF(R) 7 • GETON UP(PG-13) 1:45,4:30, 7:15 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)2:15,4:45,7:30 • LIFE ITSELF(R) 2, 4:30 • LUCY(R) 3:30, 5:30, 7:45 • r
Madras Cinema 5, 11 01 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES (PG-13)1:10,4, 6:50 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)4:15,7 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-0 (PG-13)f:30 • HERCULES (PG-13) 12:10, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • LUCY(R) 1, 3, 5:10, 7:20 • PLANES:FIRE8 RESCUE(PG) 12:45, 2:50, 5, 7:05 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • GUARDIANSOFTHEGALAXY(PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • HERCULES (Upstairs — PG-13) 1:15,4:15, 7:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GOIMagazine
•
/T/T)aubg Maudy is a WdfilDERFUL adult cat looking for a great place to call home. She was surrendered to the shelter while she was nursing three adorable kittens. She loves attention and would makean idealcompanion for someone looking for a nice quiet cat. If you think you would be able to give Maudy a perfect forever home, come down to HSCO and adopt her today! HUMANC SOClf TVOF CENrRIILOREGON/SKII 61170 S.C.27th St. BEND (541) 381 3537
Scoreboard, D2 N FL, D4 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D5 MLB, D3 MLS, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
CASCADE LAKES RELAY
WCL BASEBALL Elks snap5-game losing streak
After morethan 216milesand 21 hours, awin and arecord for this
Bend used a four-run second inning to defeat Medford 6-3 and snap a five-gameWest Coast League losing streak Saturday. Jo Carroll scored on an error, ZachClose doubled in two runs, and Grant Newton singled homeone as the Elks (27-20) took a 4-2leadatVinceGenna Stadium. The Elks scored an unearned run in the sixth, and Dalton Blackwell singled home arun in the eighth. Kevin Hamann(1-2) picked up his first win in five starts this season, scattering five hits and allowing two runs in 5 'f innings. Kevin Sheets pitched two innings for his ninth save. The Rogues (23-24) scored twice in the second to take theearly lead, andTuckerCampbell singled home arun in the seventh. Campbell led Medford with two RBls. The Elks are four games behind Corvallis for the South Division lead, but they lead Wenatchee bytwo games for the wild-card spot.
LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL
Bend North
rebounds to crush
Wyoming By Landon Negri For The Bulletin
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — If Bend North could have
spent every waking moment since Fridaymorning's loss to Washington hitting, you get the feelingthey would have done it. It didn't matter that
Saturday's second pool playgame started an
hour late
and featured
Ne Xt uP
a Southern Calrfornra
Bend North vs. Eagie River (Ai k)Knk Wbnn:11a.m Monday Online:ESPN3
in August. This team
wasn't going to tolerate
another loss — or another weak hitting
performance. Bend scored a whopping 14 times in the middle two innings
— Bulletin staffiepoit
Saturdaynight, includinga mammoth three-runhome run by Evan Scalley, and responded from losing its opener with a 15-0, mercy-rule, four-inning victory over Cody, Wyoming, in
NFL
the Little League Northwest Re-
gional at Al Houghton Stadium See Little League/D5
Inside • Bend North schedule and pool play standings,DS
Jones among seven inducted Seattle Seahawks great Walter Jones headlines this year's Pro Football Hall of Fame class, while punter RayGuyfinally break a barrier,D4
GOLF: OREGON STROKE PLAY CHAMPIONSHIP 'C M"
Bend senior
Y
Thomas doing work with Chiefs
unknown no longer
Former OregonDuck De'Anthony Thomas is filling whatever role the Kansas City Chiefs ask of him and is impressing during camp,D4
Falcons rely on dackfield Beavs With Steven Jackson injured, another former Oregon State running back, Jacquizz Rodgers
Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
TOP: Sole Brothers captain, Jason Adams, center, is supported by teammates at the finish line during the Cascade Lakes Relay in Bend's Riverbend Park on Saturday. ABOVE: Adams celebrates with teammate Nenl Richards at the finish line. Team Sole Brothers won in a record time of 21 hours, 48 minutes, 33.03 seconds.
REDMOND — Don Orwinded a lot."
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
By Emily Oller
22:38.03. Mario Mendoza,28, ofBend, kicked off the race for the 12-man
Howk, 33, Jason Adams, 35, Tim
out on the Cascade Lakes Relay on Friday with a modest goal of best-
Sole Brothers teamby setting a course record in the time trial:
aged 6:04 per mile on the 216.6-
ing last year's time of 22 hours, 38
Mendoza blazedthrough the 7.36-
minutes and 3 seconds. That goal ended up being a bit easier than
mile trail in 33:54.7, averaging 4:36 per mile.
Ducks, Beavers open practice Monday is the first day of preseason practice for Oregon andOregon State. Here is howto follow the first day:
OREGON
The Bulletin
Bend-based Sole Brothers set
expected.
The Sole Brothers finished Saturday morning with a time
mile course from Diamond Lake Resort to Bend.
Adams has captained the Sole
to do well," Mendoza said. "We got
has always been in contention, but last year marked the team's first wnl.
of 21:48:33.03 — destroying the
course record they set last year by
It was on a small paved trail that
OREGON STATE
NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION
It's not just Oregon that is flush with money: Donors and universities have beenbusy getting cash for newer, bigger and better facilities for their teams andfans, D6
Badley, 29, Ryan Bak, 32, Austin Baillie, 31, and Mendoza — aver-
Brothers since the Cascade Lakes Relay started in 2008. The team
Practice begins Mondayandis not open to the public.
Facilities arms race in Pac-12
The Sole Brothers — made up of Ryan Wilson, 21, James Southam, 36,Jared Bassett,24,Bradley
"On the time trial leg, I wanted about a 4-minute lead after that. But it was harder than I thought.
Where: Tommy Prothro Football Complex When:10:20 a.m. to 1 p.m. Mondaythrough Saturday. Admission: Free to the public
By Zack Hall The Bulletin
• Bend-based teamwins race,demolishing their old recordset last year bymorethan 22 minutes
filling in,D4
• Don Orrell takes 2-stroke leadinto today's final round
SeeRelay/D6
more photos on The Bulletin's website: bnnti
bulletin. cnm/spnrts
rell was something of an unknown in Oregon golf beforethe62nd Oregon Men's Stroke Play
Championship. Then he grabbed the lead in the tourna-
ment's Senior Division.
more results: results. authentic timing. cnm/
Orrell
The 63-yearold Bend mortgage banker followed an opening-round 3-under-par 69 Friday with a 72 at Juniper Golf Course to head into today's final round
with a two-stroke lead. Along the way he has introduced himself to the state's
best senior amateurs, many of whom have played against each other for years in state-
wide tournaments.
Injury fuels concernover international competition • Team USA,Pacersstar PaulGeorge likely to missseasonafter fracturing leg By Andrew Keh New York Times News Service
The severity of Paul George's injury — the sight of his right leg bent grotesquely — has sent a jolt through the NBA. USA Basketball issued a statement overnight Friday
indicating that George, an Indiana Pacers forward par-
ery might take but that he was very likely to miss the upcoming season. It was a devastating setback ticipating in a national team forGeorge,24,oneofthe training camp in Las Vegas, league's brightest young stars. had undergone successful And it created a new flash surgerytorepairafractureof point in the discussion about the bones in his lower right leg the value of NBA players' parsuffered in a scrimmage. ticipating in offseason internaLarry Bird, president of tional basketball competition. basketball operations for the Players generally like to Pacers, said Saturday that it represent their country, but was premature to speculate many will opt out if their on how long George's recovcontract status in the NBA
becomes uncertain. Coaches extol the virtues of learning and improving in international settings. The league appreciates the global exposure of its players, though it gets few tangible benefits. Team owners worry that their players, whom they have invested big money in, will be hurt. "There's so many angles to consider," said Jon Barry, a
former player who is an analyst at ESPN.
SeeGeorge/D4
SeeOrrell /D5
62ndOregon Men'sStrokePlay Championship Where:Juniper Golf Course, Redmond Format: 54 holes of stroke play When:Final round today Tnn times:Senior Division tees off at 7:30 a.m. Open Division leaders at12:20 p.m. Admission: Free for spectators
D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER Emirates Cup,Arsenal vs. Monaco NWSL, Houston at Portland GOLF PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational PGA Tour,WGCBridgestone Invitational Champions Tour,3M Championship PGA Tour, BarracudaChampionship
Times TV/Radio 8:15 a.m. ESPN2 7 p.m. E SPN2
WCL 9 a.m. 1 1 a.m. noon 4 p.m.
Golf CB S Golf Golf
AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Pocono 400 IndyCar Racing, HondaIndy 200 NHRA, Northwest Nationals
10 a.m. E S PN noon N B CSN 4 p.m. E SPN2
BASEBALL
MLB, Seattle at Baltimore MLB, L.A. Angels atTampaBay MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Boston
10:30 a.m. Root 1 0:30 a.m. T B S
5 p.m.
E S PN
TENNIS
ATP, U.S.OpenSeries, Citi Open noon E S P N2 WTA, U.S.OpenSeries, Bank of the West Classic 2 p.m. E SPN2 FOOTBALL
NFL Preseason, Buffalo vs. NewYork
5 p.m.
NBC
MONDAY BASEBALL
MLB, SanFrancisco at N.Y.Mets MLB, Detroit at N.Y. Yankees
Intermediate World Series, final: TeamsTBD
BASEBALL
9a.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m.
MLB E S PN E SPN2
BASKETBALL
High School, Adidas Nations 4 p.m. E SPNU High School, Adidas Nations 6 p.m. E SPNU SOCCER International Champions Cup,Final: TeamsTBD 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL MarinerS put Hart OR DL —Seattle Mariners designated hitter Corey Hart is back onthe disabled list, this time with a bruised right knee. Hart was placed onthe 15-day DLSaturday at the sametime Seattle activated left-hander JamesPaxton from the 60-day DL. Hart hurt his kneeearlier in the weekagainst Cleveland but played against the Orioles on Friday night. He's batting .203 with five homers in 58 games this year. Paxton returns after spending time onthe DLwith a strained muscle in his left side following anappearance onApril 8. He is 2-0 in two starts this season. Tomake room onthe 40-man roster, right-hander BlakeBeavanwas outrighted to Triple-A Tacoma.
GoldSChmidt haS fraCtured left hand, gOeS OnDL—The Arizona Diamondbacks' dismal seasongot worse Saturday with the news that All-Star first basemanPaulGoldschmidt has afractured left hand. Goldschmidt, runner-up in National LeagueMVPvoting last season, was hurt when he was hit by a pitch from Ernesto Frieri in the ninth inning of Friday night's 9-4 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Diamondbacks haveplaced Goldschmidt on the15-day DLand there was no word on howlong he is expected to besidelined.
FOOTBALL 49erS' DOISey tearS left diCepS muSCle — A pel'son wlth knowledge of the injury says SanFrancisco 49ers nose tackle Glenn Dorsey has torn his left biceps muscle and will undergo surgery. It's unclear how long he might be sidelined. Dorsey left Friday's practice with the injury. The source said Saturday that Dorsey had torn his biceps and would need anoperation, speaking on condition of anonymity because the teamhad not announced anything about Dorsey's condition. More tests and details are expected post-surgery. The Niners had aday off from training camp Saturday. Fellow defensive lineman RayMcDonald played last season with a biceps tear.
CYCLING Valverde redounds with SanSebastian win —Alejandro Valverde reboundedfrom missing the podium atthe Tour deFrance by winning the SanSebastian Classic on Saturday in Spain. TheMovistar rider neutralized alate attack by rival Joaquim Rodriguez before breaking away on adownhill stretch with just over three kilometers (about two miles) to go while arriving to the Basquecoastal city. Valverde had time to raise both fists in victory as hefinished the 219-kilometer mountainous trek in 5 hours, 31 minutes, 16seconds.
SOCCER ReCOrd CrOWd SeeS Man United tOPReal Madrid 3-1Manchester United thrilled a record crowd with a brilliant opening goal — andevenCristiano Ronaldo's unexpected entrance proved futile for Real Madrid. Ashley Youngscored twice in the first half, and United beat Madrid 3-1 onSaturday in front of109,318 fans at Michigan Stadium. It was the largest crowd to see asoccer game inthe United States, breaking the mark of101,799 set at the RoseBowl for the1984 Olympic final.
TENNIS CanadianS Set to meet in Citi OPen final —Settlng upthe first all-Canadian final on the men's tennis tour, 13th-seededVasek Pospisil edged sixth-seeded Richard Gasquet of France6-7 (5), 6-3, 7-5 on Saturday night at the Citi Open inWashington, where hewill face Milos Raonic for the title. In his first career final today, Pospisil will meet second-seededRaonic, whoadvanced earlier by beating Donald Young of the United States 6-4, 7-5. In the women's final, two-time major champion Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia will face Kurumi Nara of Japan. Kuznetsova beatEkaterina Makarova 6-3, 6-2, while Nara cameback after dropping the first eight games to defeat Marina Erakovic 0-6, 6-4, 6-4.
Serena tOPSPetkOVic in Stanfard SemiS —SerenaWilliams reached her fourth final of the season bytaking the last eight games to beat AndreaPetkovic 7-5, 6-0 on Saturday in the Bankof the West Classic in Stanford, California. The top-ranked Williams is 3-0 in finals so far in 2014, winning titles at Brisbane, Miami and Rome. Against the ninth-ranked Petkovic, Williams wasted four break points in the final game of the first set before eventually converting her fifth. In today's final at the hard-court tournament, Williams will face third-seededAngelique Kerber, a4-6, 7-6 (4), 6-2 winner over Varvara Lepchenko. Petkovic was trying to become the ninth player — and first since 2010 — tobeat both Venusand SerenaWilliams in one tournament. Petkovic eliminated Venus onFriday. — From wire reports
WESTCOAST LEAGUE
All TimesPDT
Easl Division W L Y akima Valey Pippins 29 1 8 W enatchee AppleSox 25 22 W alla WallaSweets 2 3 24 Kelowna Falcons 14 32 SouthDivision W
Pcf GB
.617 .532 3'/x .489 6 .304 14'/x
L
Pcf GB CorvallisKnights 31 16 .660 BendElks 27 20 .574 4 MedfordRogues 23 24 .489 8 K lamath Falls Gems 12 3 5 .255 19
Wesl Division W L Bellingham Bell s 32 14 V ictoria Harbourcats 22 25 C owlitz BlackBears 2 2 25 KitsapBlueJackets 2 0 25
Pcf GB .696 .468 tgr/x
.460 11 ,444 t 1'/x
Saturday'sGames Bend 6, Medford3 WallaWalla8, Kitsap3 Corvallis 5,KlamathFalls 2 YakimaValey 9, Kelowna4 Cowlitz 7,Wenatchee4 Victoria 6,Bellingham5 Today'sGames Bellingham atVictoria,1:05 p.m. WallaWallaatKitsap,3:05p.m. Kelowna atYakimaValley, 5:05p.m. Corvallis atKlamath Falls, 5:05p.m. Medfor datBend,5:05p.m. Cowlitz atWenatchee, 6:05p.m. Saturday'sSummary
Elks 6, Rogues 3 Medford G20 G00100 — 3 7 3 Bend G04 ggf gfX — 6 6 2 Bennett, Snider,(6), Dilda (5), Shelton(8) and Teel. Hama nn, Pratt (6), Sheets(8) andBlackwel. W— Ham ann. L— Bennett. 28— Medford; Teel; Bend:Close.
CharlSchwartzel ZachJohnson Seung-YulNoh FabrizioZanotti Matt Jones Bill Haas Jimmy Walker JamieDonaldson Matt Kuchar ErnieEls MiguelA.Jimene z KevinNa Francesco Molinari
Brendon deJonge AngelCabrera WebbSimpson DavidHowel VictorDubuisson TigerWoods BubbaWatson GrahamDeLaet RusselHenl l ey Steven Bowditch LeeWestwood Brendon Todd Phil Mickelson JordanSpieth Chris Kirk StephenGallacher Matt Every LukeDonald Thongchai Jaidee Tim Clark ScottStallings LouisDosthuizen lan Poulter JonasBlixt BrianHarman JasonDufner MartinKaym er JoostLuiten GonzaloFdez-Castano RichardSterne DaisukeMaruyama SteveStricker AlexanderLevy PabloLarrazabal Mikkollonen DavidLynn Yoshitaka Takeya TanoGoya KevinStreelman
65-69-73 —207 70-70-68—208 69-69-70—208 70-71-68—209 70-70-69—209 71-69-69—209 69-70-70—209 68-70-71—209 71-66-72 —209 71-69-70—210 69-69-72—210 71-73-66—210 67-70-73—210 72-69-70—211 73-68-70—211 72-69-70—211 69-71-71—211 72-70-69—211 68-71-72—211 69-70-73—212 67-69-76—212 72-70-71—213 69-71-73—213 72-71-70—213 74-70-69—213 71-73-69—213 71-70-73—214 69-73-72—214 74-71-69—214 74-68-73—215 73-70-72—215 70-74-71—215 72-73-70—215 72-75-68—215 75-73-67—215 73-73-70—216 75-72-69—216 72-70-75—217 70-74-73—217 77-68-72—217 73-73-71—217 79-71-67—217 75-70-73—218 73-73-73—219 74-73-72—219 72-71-77—220 71-74-77—222 75-74-73—222 76-72-75—223 74-75-74—223 76-77-71—224 78-71-78—227
GOLF
PGA Tour
Local
BarracudaChampionship Saturday Af MontreuxGolfandCountry Club Reno,Nev. Purse: $3million Yardage:7,472; Par 72 ThrrdRound Note:Underthemodified Stablefordformat, playersreceive8 points for doubleeagle, 5for eagle, 2forbirdie, 0 for par,minus-1 for bogey andminus-3 for double bogey or worse. 16-7-12—35 GeoffDgilvy 7-11-14—32 JasonAllred 18-8-6—32 NickWatney 9-11-10—30 BrendanSteele 4-5-19—28 JohnMallinger 8-7-13—28 LeeJanzen 9-7-12—28 DayidLingmerth 8-3-16—27 MichaelPutnam 7-6-13—26 JonathanByrd 9-6-11—26 Justin Hicks 3-13-10—26 GregChalmers 12-7-7—26 JohnHuh BryceMolder 10-10-6—26 11-1-13—25 DougLaBele II 11-5-9 — 25 RodPam pling 9-1-14—24 Joe Duran t 9-9-6—24 HudsonSwafford TommyGainey 11-10-3—24 -2-10-15—23 BriceGarne t MartinLaird 13+ 4)-t4 — 23 RickyBarnes 5-6-12—23 3-9-11—23 Billy Mayfair 10-4-9—23 RobertStreb Arjun Atwal 7-10-6—23 Morgan Hoff mann 6-3-13—22 PatrickRodgers 11-0-11—22 KyleStanley 5-11-6—22 Johnson Wagner 10-8-4—22 WoodyAustin 11-8-3—22 Tim Wilkinson 16-5-1—22 12-10-0—22 WesRoach 5-4-12—21 J.J. Henry tt-(-t)-11—21 GeorgeCoetzee 1-9-11—21 SteveFlesch 6-5-10 — 21 JamieLovemark 7-13-0—20 Jeff Overton 5-3-11—19 TroyMatteson 13-(-t)-7 — 19 ChadCampbel 5-8-6—19 RetiefGoosen 8-9-2—19 MarkWilson 10-7-2—19 PadraigHarrington 6-3-9—18 OliverGoss 10-1-7—18 MiguelAngelCarballo 7-5-6—18 BenCurtis 7-7-4 — 18 AndresRomero 11-4-3—18 Eric Axley 2-6-9 — 17 D.J. Trahan 6-5-6—17 MarcTurnesa t2-(-t)-6—17 KevinChapel 10-2-5—17 Jim Herm an 3-5-8—16 JohnMerrick 11-0-5—16 DerekErnst 6-5-5—16 CharlieBeljan 10-2-4—16 Tim Petrovic 11-2-3 — 16 KevinLucas -1-9-7—15 Len Mattiace 4-8-3—15 Tim Herron 12-2-1—15 JohnRollins 11-4-0 — 15 DannyLee D.H. Lee 11-5+1) — 15 AndrewLoupe 8-0-6—14 TrevorImmelman 7-1-6—14 KevinTw ay 8-1-5—14 ChadCollins 7-4-3—14 MikeWeir 4-10-0—14 NicholasThompson 10-5+1) —14 5-1 t-(-2)—14 KentJones 7-2-4—13 CameronBeckman Ryuji Imada 4-5-4—13 I0-5+2) — ThorbjornOlesen 13 RorySabbatini F3)-13-2 —12 6-3-2 — 11 BronsonLa'Cassie 8-3-0 — 11 Chris Smith 4-9+2) — BrianStuard 11
OREGONMEN'SSTROKE PLAY CHAMPIONSHIP 54-HoleStrokePlay
Aug. 1-3 SecondRound af JuniperGolfCours 7,186 yards,par72 OpenDivision 68-68—136 ConnerKumpula, Albany 70-68—138 RayRichards,Tualatin 73-67—140 BrentGrant,Honolulu, Hawaii 71-70—141 Zachary Foushee, West Linn 73-68—141 AdamRuben, LakeOswego 72-70—142 DylanWu,Medford 73-6M142 Justin KadinCorval , lis 71-71—142 TaylorSchmidt, Boise, Idaho a. 70-73—143 Hayden Christensen, BrushPrairie, W 72-72 — 144 JoelJohnson,Portland 71-73 — 144 KevinMurphy,RogueRiver AustinLandis,Gladstone 70-75—145 Nigel Lett,Bea verton 74-71—145 74-71—145 Justin Wiles,Klamath Falls BrettJohnson,Vancouver,Wash. 72-73—145 TaylorGarbutt,Bend 73-72—145 ConnerBarr,Beaverton 74-72—146 ChrisTedesco, Corvallis 72-74—146 C.J. Sitton,WestLinn 73-74—147 JesseHeinly, Bend 79-68—147 JaredLambert, Redmond 75-72—147 JakeRyan, Portland 75-72—147 Matt Hartley,Vancouver, Wash. 76-72—148 DavidPatterson,Vancouver,Wash. 72-76—148 DylanCramer,Bend 75-73—148 RyanPickthorn,Damascus 75-73—148 BrettWolved,Wilsonvile 73-75—148 AlistairDocherty,Vancouver, Wash. 78-70—148 SulmanRaza, Eugene 71-77—148 SeanCollopy,LakeOswego 73-76—149 TyeGabriel, Portland 73-76—149 HunterWescott, Portland 76-73—149 ConnorTallman, LakeOswego 73-76—149 TylerNelson,Portland 73-76—149 JackPennington,Eugene 76-73—149 KyleLuttrell, Corvallis 75-75—150 EdwardAbellar, Vancouver,Wash. 76-74—150 Nicho lasHuff ,Vancouver,Wash. 74-76—150 John-MichaelPilot,Vancouver, Wash. 74-76—150 73-77—150 MaxCarter,LakeOswego NicklausBaines,Portland 75-75—150 TravisJohnsen,Wilsonvile 78-73—151 Alec FourieTi , gard 78-73—151 80-71—151 JasonWood, Portland 78-73—151 Keegan Brasch,Sherwood 76-76—152 MontanaFrame, Reedsport 75-77—152 TaylorSmith,Vancouver,Wash. 77-75—152 HarrisonMoir, Portland 75-78—153 BrentPollock,Eugene 77-76—153 RyanDecastilhos, Bend 73-80—153 Will Street,Medford 74-79—153 TreyPflug, Portland 76-77—153 TylerCarlson,Clarkston,Wash. Localswhomissedthe cut 78-76—154 Alex Fitch,Portland 80-77—157 JasonBenson,Redmond 83-78—161 MaxwelHi l glin, Bend AndyRodby,Redmond 83-79—162 SamNielsen,Bend 81-83—164 Master-40 72-77 — 149 ScottCarver,Portland CodyPinkston,Eugene 71-79—150 ScottHval,Portland 73-77—150 CharlieRice,Bend 76-75—151 Jeff Ward,Bend 73-78—151 PaulScott,Tualatin 75-79—154 TomGreller, Newberg 78-77—155 79-76—155 TerryParesi,OregonCity 81-77—158 JasonPigot,Redmond Locals whomissedthecut None SeniorDivision(6,803 yards) DonDrrell, Bend 69-72—141 DennyTaylor, Gladstone 74-69—143 PatO'Donn el, HappyValley 73-71—144 Chris Hudson, Portland 72-73—145 TomPrevost, McMinnvile 74-72—146 ByronPatton,Tigard 72-75—147 MichaelKloenne,West Linn 72-75—147 TimO'Neal,Vancouver,Wash. 75-73—148 RandyMahar, Portland 75-73—148 MarkBowler,Portland 74-74—148 MikeGleason, Camas,Wash. 75-75—150 RonHop,Dayton 77-74—151 Alex Foster,Beaverton 74-77—151 TomZupan,Portland 76-76—152 CareyWatson, Sunriver 75-77—152 TomCarlsen,Bend 73-80—153 RobMatson,Wenatchee,Wash. 80-74—154 ScottAlford,Camas,Wash. 79-76—155 Brian Little,Portland 78-77—155 Localswhomissedthe cut TomStumpfig, Bend 77-83—160 JamiePunt,Bend 82-80—162 SteinSwenson,Bend 84-81—165 Kell yPaxton,Redmond 101-89—190 Michae lJackson,Redmond NS Fullresults:www.oga. erg.
WGC BridgestoneInvitational
Saturday At FiresloneCountry Club, SouthCourse Akron,Ohio Purse: S9 million Yardage:7,4gg;Par70 Third Round 68-61-67 —196 SergioGarcia 69-64-66—199 RoryMcllroy 64-69-68—201 MarcLeishman 69-68-65—202 AdamScot 68-67-67 —202 Keegan Bradley 65-67-70—202 JustinRose 68-68-68—204 BrandtSnedeker 69-69-67—205 J.B. Holmse 71-66-68—205 HenrikStenson 70-71-65—206 HidekiMatsuyama 69-69-68—206 HarrisEnglish 65-73-68—206 RyanMoore 70-68-68—206 GaryWoodland ThomasBjorn 69-68-6M206 Jim Furyk 69-68-69—206 PatrickReed 67-68-71 —206 67-67-72 —206 RickieFowler KevinStadler 71-70-66—207 GraemeMcDowell 71-70-66—207 JohnSenden 74-66-67—207 Branden Grace 69-71-67 —207 HunterMahan 71-65-71 —207
Champions Tour SM Champion ship
Saturday
At TPC TwinCities Blaine,Minn. Purse:$1.75 millioII Yardage:7,114; Par 72 SecondRound KennyPerry 65-63—128 MarcoDawson 63-66—129 GaryHallberg 66-65—131 GeneSauers 66-65—131 BernhardLanger 64-67—131 Jeff Magge rt 64-67—131 JohnCook 69-63—132 Vijay Singh 64-68—132 Kirk Triplett 67-66—133 DougGarwood 66-67—133 DavidFrost 69-65—134 ScottDunlap 69-65—134 HaleIrwin 68-66—134 Jeff Sluman 67-67—134 MikeGoodes 66-68—134 Bart Bryant 69-66—135 ChienSoonLu 69-66—135 SteveElkington 68-67—135 RodSpittle 68-67—135 PaulGoydos 67-68—135 RoccoMediate 64-71—135 MarkCalcavecchia 72-64—136 70-66—136 Bill Glasson 69-67—136 TomPerniceJr. KevinSutherland 69-67—136 69-67—136 MarkO'Meara 68-68—136 BobGilder 68-68—136 PeterSenior 73-64—137 ScottHoch 69-68—137 BlaineMccallister 69-68—137 JoeySindelar 71-67—138 JohnRiegger 71-67—138 BradFaxon 68-70—138 DuffyWaldorf 67-71—138 ScottVerplank 66-72—138 BobbyWadkins 71-68—139 Jay Haa s Hal Sutton 71-68—139 70-69—139 Olin Browne StevePate 69-70—139 JoseCoceres 69-70—139 DanaQuigley 68-71—139 TomByrum 72-68—140 SteveLowery 72-68—140
JohnHarris Tommy Armour ffl FredFunk WesShort, Jr. RussCochran JoelEdwards Bob Niger TomLehman StanUtley Billy Andrade Nick Price BobTwa y Jim Gallagher, Jr. MarkBrooks RickFehr MorrisHatalsky Colin Montgom erie TomKite LarryNelson WayneLevi Willie Wood DonBerry Chip Beck LarryMize Jim Rutledge Jeff Hart CoreyPavin EstebanToledo Gil Morgan MikeReid John Inman AndyBean DanForsman TomPurtzer MarkWiebe CraigStadler BradBryant
71-69—140 71-69—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 68-72—140 74-67—141 74-67—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 71-70—141 71-70—141 71-70—141 73-69 —142 73-69—142 72-70—142 70-72—142 70-72—142 71-72—143 71-72—143 70-73—143 73-71—144 74-70—144 73-71—144 72-73—145 71-74—145 76-70—146 74-72—146 73-73—146 77-70—147 74-73—147 72-75—147 74-75—149 75-75—150 74-76—150 81-71 — 152 70-85—155
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE
Preseason Schedule All TimesPDT Today'sGame
N.Y.Giantsvs. BuffaloatCanton,5 p.m.
Thursday'sGames
IndianapolisatN.Y.Jets, 4p.m. NewEnglandatWashington,4:30p.m. San Francrsco atBaltimore, 4.30 p.m. Cincinnatiat KansasCity,5 p.m. SeattleatDenver, 6p.m. Dallas atSanDiego, 7p.m. Friday'sGames Miami atAtlanta 4 p.m. Buffaloat Carolina, 4:30p.m. TampaBayatJacksonville,4:30p.m. Philadelphiaat Chicago, 5p.m. OaklandatMinnesota, 5p.m. NewOrleansatSt. Louis,5p.m.
Saturday'sGames Cleveland atDetroit, 4:30p.m. PittsburghatN.Y.Giants, 4:30p.m. GreenBayat Tennessee,5p.m. Houston at Arizona,5:30p.m.
TENNIS Professional
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT
EaslernConference
W L T P ts GF GA S porting KansasCity 11 5 6 3 9 32 20 D.c. 1 1 5 4 3 7 32 20 TorontoFC 8 7 5 29 29 28 NewYork 6 6 1 0 2 8 35 33 Columbus 6 7 9 27 26 28 NewEngland 8 12 2 26 29 35 Philadelphia 5 8 9 24 34 36 Chicago 3 5 1 3 2 2 28 34 Houston 5 11 4 1 9 22 40 Montreal 3 13 5 1 4 21 39
WeslernConference W L T P ts GF GA
Seattle RealSaltLake 9 Los Angele s 9 FC Dallas Colorado Vancouver Portland
3 8 35 28 36 33 27 33 32 17 30 34 31 30 31 28 6 4 1 1 2 9 31 29 6 7 9 27 36 38 SanJose 6 8 5 23 23 20 ChivasUSA 6 9 5 23 21 33 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. 12 6 2
4 4 8 7 8 8
9 6 6 6
Saturday'sGames
Los Angele3, s Portland1 TorontoFC2, Montreal0 NewYork2, NewEngland1 Chicago1,Columbus1,tie RealSaltLake1,Colorado0 SanJose1,Seatle FC0
Today'sGames
D.C.Unitedat Houston, 5p.m. FC DallasatChivasUSA,7 p.m.
WednesdayrsGame
BayernMunichatMLSAII-Stars, 6:30p.m. Saturday,Aug.9 Montrealat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Toront oFCatColumbus,4:30p.m. ColoradoatFCDallas, 6 p.m. D.c. Unitedat RealSalt Lake,7p.m. ChrvasUSAat Portland,7:30p.m. Sunday,Aug.10 SportingKansasCity atVancouver,5 p.m. NewYorkatChicago,5 p.m. HoustonatSeatle FC,7:30p.m.
NWSL NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE All TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames
Washington2,Chicago1 SeattleFC1,FcKansasCity1
Today'sGames
Houstonat Portland,2p.m. WesternNe wYorkat Boston,3:30p.m.
Wednesday'sGames BostonatFcKansasCity,5 p.m. HoustonatSeatle FC,7p.m. Saturday,Aug.9 FCKansasCityatChicago,5p.m. SkyBlueFCatHouston,6p.m. Washingtonat Seattle Fc, 7 p.m. Sunday,Aug.10 Portlandat Boston, 3:30p.m.
WTABankofthe West Classic Saturday Af TheTaubeFamily Tennis Center Stanford,Calif. Purse:$710,000(Premier) BASKETBALL Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles WNBA Semifinals SerenaWiliams(t), United States, def. Andrea WOMEN'SNATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Petkovic(8),Germany, 7-5,6-0. All TimesPDT AngeliqueKerber(3), Germany, def. VarvaraLepchenko, UnitedStates, 4-6, 7-6(4), 6-2. EasternConference W L Pct GB Citi Open Atlanta 17 9 . 6 54 Saturday Washington 13 14 . 481 4'/r At WilliamH.G. FitzGeraldTennisCenter Indiana 1 3 15 .464 5 Washington NewYork 1 1 15 .423 6 Purse:Men,$1.4 million(WT500); Women, Chicago 11 16 .407 tp/x $260,ggg (Intl.) Connecticut 1 1 17 .393 7 Surlace:Hard-Outdoor WeslernConference Singles W L Pct GB x-Phoenix Men 23 4 . 8 52 x-Minnesota 22 6 . 7 86 1'/r Guarlerlinals Vasek Pospisil (13), Canada, def. SantiagoGiraldo SanAntonio 13 15 .464 tg'/r Los Angeles 12 15 .444 11 (10), Colombia,6-7(4),6-3,6-4. Semifinals Tulsa 1 0 19 .345 14 Seattle 9 2 0 . 310 15 MilosRaonic(2), Canada,def. DonaldYoung,Unitx-clinched playoffspot ed States, 6-4, 7-5. VasekPospisil(13), Canada,def. RichardGasquet Saturday'sGames (6), France,6-7(5),6-3,7-5. Minnes ota84,Tul sa75 Women Phoenrx79, Indrana69 Semifinals Today'sGames KurumiNara,Japan,def. MarinaErakovic, New NewYorkatAtlanta, noon Zealand,0-6,6-4,6-4. C onnecti c ut at Los Angeles, 12:30p.m. SvetlanaKuznetsova(6),Russia,def. EkaterinaMaWashingtonat Chicago, 3p.m. karova(2),Russia, 6-3,6-2. SanAntonioat Seattle, 6 p.m. Tuesday'G sames MOTOR SPORTS ChicagoatConnecticut,4 p.m. MinnesotaatIndiana, 4p.m. NewYorkatWashington, 4 p.m. NASCAR Atlantaat Phoenix, 7p.m. SprintCup Tulsa atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. GoBowli ng.com 400Lineup After Fridayqualifying; racetoday At Pocono Raceway DEALS LongPond,Pa. Lap length:2.5 miles Transactions (Car num berinparentheses) BASEBALL 1. (42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet,183.438. AmericanLeague 2. (22)JoeyLogano, Ford,183.408. B OSTON RE D S DX — Activated RHPJoeKelly. 3. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,182.7. OptionedRHPAnthony Ranaudo to Pawtucket (IL). 4. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,182.66. Place dC DavidRossonthe15-dayDL RecalledC 5. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,182.611. DanButler fromPawtucket. 6. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,182.09. CLEVELAND INDIANS— RecalledLHPTJ.House 7. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,182.02. from Columbus (IL). DptionedRHPAustin Adamsto 8. (t) JamiM ecMurray, Chevrolet,182.017. Columbus. 9. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,181.741. LOS ANG E L E S ANGELS— Activated LHPC.J. 10. lt0) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet,181.646. Wilsonfromthe15-day DL DptionedDFJ.B. Shuck 11.3) AustinDilon,Chevrolet,181.605. to SalLake t (PCL). 12.(5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet,181.28. SEATTLE MARINERS— PlacedDHCoreyHarton 13. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,181.159. t h e15-day DL.ActivatedLHPJames Paxton fromthe 14. 15) ClintBowyer, Toyota,181.156. 60-dayDL.Sent RHPBlakeBeavanoutright to Tacoma 15. 55) Brian Vickers, Toyota,180.85. 16. 14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,180.716. (PCL). NationalLeague 17. 48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,180.502. ARIZONADIAMDNDBACKS — Placed 1B Paul 18. (20)MattKenseth Toyota 180274 Goldschmi d on t the15-day DL.Recalled DFAlfredo 19. (78IMartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,180.133. MartefromReno(PCL). 20.47AJ Allmendinger,Chevrolet,179.986. LDSANGELES DODGERS— PlacedLHPPaulMa21.(31 JRyanNewman, Chevrolet,179.878. holm onthe15-dayDLRecaled LHPPacoRodriguez 22. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet,179.412. fromAlbuquerque(PCL). 23. 17) Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford,179.304. SANFRANCISCOGIANTS—Activated 18Bran24. 13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 179.069. don Belfrom t the7-dayconcussionlist. OptionedINF 25. 16)GregBiffle, Ford,179.169. Jarett Parkerto Fresno(PCL). 26. 99)CarlEdwards,Ford, 178.998. FOOTBALL 27.(9) Marcos Ambrose,Ford, 178.916. NationalFootballLeague 28.(43I AricAlmirola,Ford,178.912. ARIZONA CARDINALS — Claimed LB Trevardo 29.27PaulMenard,Chevrolet, 178.862. Williamsoffwaivers fromHouston. ReleasedCBTodd 30.(38 David Gililand, Ford,178.049. J Washi n gton. 31. (98)JoshWise,Chevrolet,177.704. JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS — Signed WR Kenny 32. 40) Landon Cassil, Chevrolet,177.676. Shaw, DTDavid Carter andLBJoshHull. Waived/ 33. 26) ColW e hitt, Toyota,177.56. i n jured DT Jordan Miler, LB JohnLotulelei andWR 34. 32)TravisKvapil, Ford,177.399. DamianCopeland. 35. 36)ReedSorenson, Chevrolet,177.354. MIAMIDOLPHINS—SignedCSamsonSatele. 36. (23)AlexBowman,Toyota,176.502. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Released WR Cole 37. (83)RyanTruex,Toyota,Owner Points. Stanford. 38.7) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, Owner Points. HOCKEY 39.(34)DavidRagan, Ford, Owner Points. NationalHockeyLeague 40. (37)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet, Owner Points. ANAHEIM DUCKS—SignedLWPatrick Maroon 41. (66)JoeNemechek, Toyota, Owner Points. to a three-yearcontract extension.SignedLWNick 42.33) AlexKennedy, Chevrolet, OwnerPoints. Ritchie. 43.(93)JohnnySauter,Toyota,Owner Points. MONTR EALCANADIENS—Agreed totermswith DP.K.Subbanonaneight-year contract. IndyCar TAMPABAYLIGHTNING— SignedGBenBishop to a two-year contract extension HondaIndy200at Mid-OhioLineup COLLEG E After Saturday qualifying; racetoday CARTH AGE — Named Seth Weidmann men's At Mid-OhioSportsCarCourse swimmingcoach. Lexington,Ohio PRESB YTERIAN— Promoted Britne Stubbsto Lap length:2.268miles softballcoach. (Car number inparentheses) WINTHRO P—Signedmen's basketball coachPat 1. (1 t)SebastienBourdais, Dallara-chevrolet,96.586. Kelse yandwomen'sbasketballcoachKevinCookto 2. (67)JosefNewgarden,Dallara-Honda,95.996. two-year contract extensions. 3. (I 0)TonyKanaan, Dallara-chevrolet, 95.6. 4. (34)CarlosMunoz,Dalara-Honda,95.284. 5. (28RyanHunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda,95.134. FISH COUNT 6. (12 ) WillPower,Dallara-chevrolet, 94.335. 7. (15)GrahamRahal, Dalara-Honda, 87.103. Upstream daily movement of adult chinook, jack 8. (I 9)JustinWilson, Dallara-Honda,87.037. chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCo9. (77)SimonPagenaud, Dallara-Honda,86.884. lumbiaRiverdams last updated onFriday. 10. (18)CarlosHuertas,Dalara-Honda,86.787. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd 11. (2)JuanPabloMontoya,Dallara-chevrolet, 85.828. B onneville 22 6 44 1, 86 9 8 9 2 12.20) MikeConway, Dallara-chevrolet, 85.729. The Dalles 534 1 6 7 2 , 024 1,058 13.I7) MikhaiAl l eshm,Dallara-Honda,81.717. J ohn Day 46 1 19 4 1 , 155 6 2 4 14.17) Seba stianSaavedra, Dallara-chevrolet,82.048. M cNary 3 0 5 96 1, 0 7 6 5 4 1 15.I3) HelioCastroneyes,Dallara-chevrolet,81.394. Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chi16. (25)MarcoAndretti, Dallara-Honda,81.421. nook, jackchinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat 17. (27)JamesHinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda,80.071. selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedonFriday. 18.98) JackHawksworth, Dallara-Honda,81.223. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 19.(8) Ryan Briscoe,Dallara-chevrolet. Bonneville 298,431 51,707 106,803 54,127 20. (83)CharlieKimball, Dallara-chevrolet, 80.593. The Dalles 238,479 40,218 55,621 30,511 21. (14)TakumaSato, Dalara-Honda. John Day 207,625 36,096 34,455 17,563 22. (9)ScottDixon,Dalara-chevrolet. McNary 192,123 31,962 27,433 13,919
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Wit Jac sonan Ro gers,Facons ac ie asBeaver ee competition for snaps. urday. "You've got to practice like Rodgers, also from Oregon State, you'reready to play in a game and FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. — Ste- leading rusher who played at Ore- and Freeman are splitting work when your time comes, you've got to ven Jackson's latest hamstring injury gon State, missed four games with w ith the starters while Smith i s prove what you've got." is giving Jacquizz Rodgers, Devonta a left hamstring injury and finished working with the second and third Over the past three years, the FalFreeman andAntone Smith achance his first year as a Falcon with 543 teams. cons used the 5-foot-6, 188-pound to fill the void at running back for the yards rushing and 3.5 per carryThere's no immediate timetable Rodgers as a change-of-pace opAtlanta Falcons. the lowest numbers of his 10-season for Jackson's return, but Rodgers tion to veteran power backs such as It's a tough assignment consider- tenure. says the team is prepared to move Jackson and Michael Turner. ing how far the run game has fallFor the past several days, Jackson on regardless. Rodgers will have the first chance "In this league, you've got to al- to claim the starting job until Jacken, dropping from 17th in 2011 to has been nursing a right hamstring 29th in 2012 to worst in the NFL last injury, putting his three backups in ways be ready," Rodgers said Sat- son is ready to return, but coach By George Henry
season.
The Associated Press
Jackson, the NFL's active career
Mike Smith likes the punch that
Freeman, who last season helped Florida State
w i n t h e n a t i onal
championship, brings to the offense. Coming off a 4-12 season, the Falcons can't return to respectability with a one-dimensional offense
that last season averaged 20.1 run attempts per game, lowest in the league, while leading the NFC and ranking second overall with 42.2 pass attempts.
Former Duck Thomas making noise with Chiefs By Dave Skretta
yards worth of passes during his three-year career, even ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — The t hough he missed time his
The Associated Press
diminutive dude wearing the
j u n i or season with an ankle
No. 1 jersey took the swing i n jury. He also led the nation pass near the far sideline. in ya r ds per carry as a sophHe made the first defend-
o m o re, and proved to be an
er miss, turned up field and effectivepuntreturner. made a couple more miss ,
So wh e n M c C luster par-
and then wound his way all l a yed his big year on special the way to the end zone. teams into a big contract with
lIIE
I t was just l i k e De'Anthony Thom-
Ill~llII
Tennessee,
as used to do in col- W8 I'6 flOt lege for Oregon. gOjflg $O Now he's doing rt ~llm® ~l78
Ifoi imoiIQ
in the NFL. T he
qu ick , th'll Ole bOOk mult i - t a l e n t e d g g l l j m b u g runnlng back was David Richard/The Associated Press
undervalued. "This is a rite of passage," he said. "The position needs
d epth chart in h i s
to be represented. Guy's induction will open a lot of eyes." How soon another punter
first camp, and has tries to model himbeen lining up at a variety of self after LeBron Jamespositions in a variety of sets "He's a great team player," he in coach Andy Reid's offense. said — but never gravitated And those zigzagging, an- toward basketball growing kle-breaking runs like that u p , even on the playgrounds one earlier this week? Well, of south-centralLosAngeles. they're a big reason why In fa c t, his first love was thousands of fans have al- t r ack and field because he ready become fans of him. like d the individual nature of "I feel like I'm doing some- the sport. thing right, yo u k n ow?" But he was playing around Thomas said after spending w ith f riends when he was nearly half an hour signing about 5 years old when a autographs."Just competing, coach drove by and asked having fun. Coming to prac- whether he had ever played
Punters revel as their Godfather isinducted By Ken Belson
2014 Hall of Fameclass
D errick Brooks L B 1995-2008 Buccaneers 1973-86 Ray Guy p Raiders a couple of months after Ray Guy was chosen as the first Claude Humphrey D E 1968 -74, 1976-81 Falcons, Eagles pure punter to enter the Pro Walter Jones OT 1997-2008 Seahawks Football Hall of Fame, Bryan A ndre Reed WR 1985-2 0 0 0 Bills, Redskins Barker and Greg Coleman, 1993-2007 Giants two fellow punters, decided Michael Strahan DE 1991-2004 Aeneas Williams DB Cardinals, Rams they had to do something to commemorate the moment. S o they reached out t o returner. But he was also a ers,so there islessturnover. "We're a unique fraternievery punter they knew, en- model of consistency, avercouraging them to go to Can- aging more than 40 yards a ty," said Barker, who played ton to cheer on Guy when he kick in all but one of his sea- 16 years, primarily with the entered the Hall on Saturday sons. Only three of his 1,049 Jacksonvill e Jaguars, before with Derrick Brooks, Claude punts were blocked, and he retiring after the 2005 seaHumphrey, W alter J o nes, led the league in punting son. "There aren't 18 new Andre Reed,Michael Strah- three times. He went to sev- p unters coming i n t o t h e an and Aeneas Williams. en Pro Bowls and won three league every year. You truly The result was one of the Super Bowl rings. He was have to earn it." most unusual gatherings in named to the Pro Football John M a d den, wh o NFL alumni history: 18 punt- Hall of Fame all-1970s team. coached Guy and introduced "The good Lord gave me him a t t h e e n s hrinement ers whose careers spanned nearly five decades. the ability to do that," Guy ceremony Saturday, recogOver chicken wings and said of his hang time. "But I nized that field position was beer at Thorpe's Market Av- wasn't punting for myself; I critical and that pinning an enue Grill in downtown Can- was punting for the other 10 opponent deep in its territory ton, the punters swapped guys on the field." would give his team an edge. "When we got Ray Guy, stories, compared notes on Punters and kickers have hang times and coffin cor- long felt u n derappreciat- fourth down wasn't as bad ners, and listened as Guy, a ed. (Jan Stenerud remains as it used to be," Madden said natural Southern storyteller the only place-kicker in the before Guy's enshrinement. who played his entire 14- HalL) They are sometimes "He broke through into the year career with the Oakthe butt of jokes because Hall of Fame and opens that land Raiders, held court. of their slight builds, infre- road for other punters." "He put us on the map," quent appearances on t h e Jeff Feagles, who punted Coleman said of G uy, the field and lack of flash. But for 22 years, the last seven first punter to be selected in what they lack in muscle with the New York Giants, the first round of the draft. and size, they make up for in said the game was more so" There weren't to o m a n y flexibility, balance and grace phisticated now, which made punters who had a five-sec- under pressure. punting more valuable. He ond hang time in the league." They also have to hold said the best punters were Guy was known for his on to jobs that do not of- not the ones who kicked the ability to keep the ball aloft, ten open. There are only 32 ball the farthest, but those giving teammates time to spots, and punters tend to who were the most accurate. get in position to tackle the play longer than other play- That skill, he said, has been CANTON, Ohio — In May,
will be inducted into the Hall is unclear, so the punters
who gathered to celebrate with Guy intend to stick to-
gether. They wore dark blue Hall of Fame golf shirts with a silver No. 8, Guy's number with the Raiders. They all
signed footballs that they would take home and share
with others. Loosely called Punters United, the group plans to get together in April to play golf and fish after Guy's annual punting camp.
tournament that begins this month
in Spain and whose winner automatically qualifies for the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.
"Nothing has given me more satisfaction or been more meaningful than having 'USA' on my shirt," said P.J. Carlesimo, who has coached four
lo o ked back. Heb e cameastarinthePop
They hope to invite current
draft
w a s s o m ething h e
War n e r leagues in Southern
punters, too. In another corner of the
couldn't control: His size.
C alifornia. And by the time
He's listed at 5 f eet 9, 174
h e a r r ived in Eugene, Thom-
restaurant Saturday, Hall of
pounds, which makes him a s was already known for shorter than every position h i s speed and silky smooth player but wide receiver moves. Weston Dressler and lighter No w , he's trying to get up to than anybody else in training speed with the Chiefs. "We're not going to throw camp.
Fame guard Joe DeLamielleure admired the punters. He recalled that at the Pro
Bowl in New Orleans in 1976, he met Al Davis, owner of the Raiders. D avis told hi m t h a t h e
debated whether to p i ck D eLamielleure or Guy i n the first round in 1973. De-
Lamielleure, who made his name blocking for O.J. Simpson, was flattered, but he countered. " Mr. Davis, yo u
are a
smart man," DeLamielleure said he told Davis. "I've nev-
er seen a right guard win a game, butI've seen Ray Guy w in them. You m ade t h e
right choice."
stood how an owner spending tens of millions of dollars on a player might be wary of seeing him play competiHe noted, as have others, that no tive games away from the team. other major injury had been suffered One such owner is Mark Cuban by a player in a USA Basketball set- of the Dallas Mavericks, a longtime ting since the first Dream Team was critic of how the league approaches formed in 1992. international competitions. The subSeveral officials with NBA teams ject of altering the system — includsaid Saturday that George's injury, ing instituting an age limit for NBA suffered when he leapt to contest players in the Olympics or having a fast-break layup and struck the the league host its own global combase of a backboard stanchion, was petition — gathered steam during the a freak incident, though it was un- 2012 Games inLondon, but Cuban games,charity events and personal training sessions many players took part in during the summer.
clear whether the stanchion had been
Thomas said he
f ootball.
B ut unlike Pro Bowl punt
said Saturday that discussions had
Tho m a s
nev e r
t h e w h ole b ook a t hi m ,"
returner Dexter McCluster, Chiefs offensive coordinator who filled a similar role with D oug Pederson said, "but use the Chiefs before departing
h i s skill set, use his talent and
in free agency, Thomas rel- let him go play football." ishes contact. Already, he's proven pretty Despite his smallish stat-
g o o d at that.
"You get nervous when ure, it takes a bit more than a stiff breeze to knock him y o u've got him in the game," from his feet — assuming, of l inebacker Derrick Johnson course, that some poor guy is said. "I had the running back able to track him down and put a solid hit on him. today man-to-man and you "It's all about heart," he look up and it's number one said. "Just competing an d i n t h e b a ckfield, that's not having confidence." a running back to me, so There certainly was n o i t ' s one of those things that disputing th e p r o duction y ou've got to be onyour toes. Thomas had with the Ducks.
A n d in this offense he's doing
He ran for nearly 2,000 yards great. He's going to help us and caught more than 1,200
t h i s y ear."
tional tournaments when they were ment. "This is an extremely unfortufree agents, or were about to be, out nate injury that occurred on a highly of fear that they would be injured. visible stage, but could also have ocThat, he said, was the smart financial curred anytime, anywhere." decision.
Bird said that it was inappropriate
Cuban said the only parties left financially vulnerable in such situa-
to speculate on the future of the Pacers' roster and that the focus should tions were the league and its clubs. be on George's health and recovery. "We are so stupid that we are will- But it was obvious that it would reping to commit what amounts to more resent a blow to a team that is among than a billion dollars in salaries to
the elite in the Eastern Conference.
help the Olympics line their pockets George, a two-time All-Star, averso we can pretend that the Olympic aged 21.7 points, 6.8 rebounds, 3.5 Games are about national pride," Cu-
ban said. properly positioned. not developed in any substantial way. On Saturday, Bird expressed Carlesimo said players who went Barry said the NBA, from a marCuban said the Olympics made strong support for the national team. "We still support USA Basketball through a national team training keting standpoint, had more to lose significant revenue from NBA playcamp often improved. He said the than to gain from the Olympics be- ers. He pointed out that players in and believe in the NBA's goals of camp setting was more controlled cause fans expected the national all sports, not just basketball, often exposing our game, our teams and and thus safer than the pickup team to dominate. He said he under- declined to participate in interna- players worldwide," he said in a stateNBA teams and worked with the national program since the 1980s.
'
The biggest knock o n Thomas coming out of the
— Former NFL punter Jeff Feagles
ContInued from D1 The U.S. team is preparing for the FIBA World Cup, formerly called the World Championship, a 28-team
"
tice ready to work."
"The position needs to be represented. Guy's induction will opena lot of eyes."
George
use h Skill
sas City Chiefs in SB t, USB tllS the fourth round tg l g gt B gg /gt of May's draft, and l . life. He wants to be l ™g P @ goo d . He has a dealready the former Ducks s t a ndout fO OhbBII. gree of pride. And I has been making think the coaching . ." '" 31 other teams look staff we have, that " '" " do e s nothing but foolish for passing Doug Pederson refine his skills to on him. onDe'Anthony t ak e i t t o a n other quick Thomas level." ly moved up the
Hall of Fame inductee Ray Guy, left, uncovers his bronze bust with presenter John Madden durIng the Pro Football Hall of Fame EnshrInement Ceremony on Saturday. Guy Is the fIrst punter inducted.
New York Times News Service
taken by the Kan-
t he
Chiefs jumped at the opportunity to plug in Thomas as a rep l acement. "He t ruly e n j oys pl a y ing t h e game , " Chiefs general manager John Dorsey said. "I'm sure i t ' s a d ream he ' s chased all his
assists and 1.9 steals per game last
season. One longtime NBA agent, who asked for anonymity while discussing a player he did not represent, said, "Paul is so important to the Pacers that I am not sure they can make
up for his loss in any way."
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D5
GOLF ROUNDUP
In British Open reversal, Mcllroy
chasingGarcia ~1
The Associated Press AKRON, Ohio — Sergio
nicely as of right now," Gar-
Garcia was in the trees left
excited about it. We're definitely going to play hard. It will be nice to see if I can do the same thinghe didto me a couple of weeks ago. So we'll see."
of the 18th fairway, looking through a gap in the branches to find a way out. Ahead
of him was Rory McIlroy, giving his 35-foot birdie putt a little body English before it fell for birdie. Garcia never lost com-
b'y ,,e
cia said. "I think we're both
This time, it's McIlroy who has to chase.
"My goal today was to try and get in the final group," vitational on Saturday, even McIlroy said. "Sergio didn't after a storm delay of just quite have that luxury of over three hours. He start- seeing what I was doing on ed with a three-shot lead, the last. It will be nice to stretched it to six shots at one play alongside him tomorpoint and closed with three row and at least keep an eye good pars for a 3-under 67, on what's going on. Try to three shots ahead of McIlroy. apply a bit of pressure when The Spaniard just lost a I can, but just really looking small measure of comfort. forward to getting in there M cIlroy, coming off a and having another chance mand of the Bridgestone In-
wire-to-wire win in the Brit-
to wi n
a t o u r nament so
ish Open, might be the last soon after what happened at player anyone wants to see Hoylake." right behind. Also on Saturday: "I've got to keep doing Ogilvy leads in Reno: the same thing, make sure RENO, Nev. — Geoff Ogilvy that I have good confidence got up-and-down for birdie in myself, that I play nicely, from a greenside bunker on and then see what happens," the par-5 closing hole to take Garcia said. "If Rory comes a three-stroke lead in t h e out, or whoever is behind us Barracuda Championship. comes out, and get crazy like Ogilvy, the Australian who
+P '. Photos by Eric Reed/For the Bulletin
Bend North's Evan Scalley is congratulated by teammates for his home run hit against Cody, Wyoming, during the Northwestern Regional tournament in San Bernardino, California, on Saturday. North won15-0.
Littl League Continued from 01 "We needed it," Bend North
manager Dan Ruhl said. "We needed it bad. (Cody) gave us a few runs early on. It was
enough time for our bats to get started. And it was nice to see the bats come alive
W
Friday:Washington10, Bend North 2 Saturday:Bend North vs. Wyoming, 7 p.m. Today:Nogame Monday:Bend North vs. Alaska, 11 a.m. Tuesday: Bend Northvs.Montana,8:30a.m. • After pool play ends Wednesday, the top four teams in the sixteam tournament field will advance to Thursday's semifinal round. Thursday:No. 2 seedvs. No. 3 seed, 2 p.m.; No. 1 seed vs. No. 4 seed, 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug.9:Championshipgame,1p.m.
— finally." Really, the bats from Bend (10-1 overall, 1-1 tournament) were alive all day. Ruhl took his team out for an early morning prac"All day, we were hitting tice and had his players take some additional batting prac- the ball crazy," Scalley said. "We were just ready to come tice prior to Saturday's night game, which was played un- out." der a light, yet steady rain Said Ruhl: "Everyone was that cooled off the 100-plus smoking the balL" degree temperatures from And boy, did it carry over. Friday. B end N ort h r a c ked u p Ruhl, his staff and his team 14 hits and took advantage saw a gigantic difference in of four errors by Wyoming batting practice. (8-3, 0-1). Logan Wehrman,
batting out of the No. 9 spot, went 2 for 3 with three RBIs,
B .B. Logan drove in t w o runs, Owen Aylward drove in two runs in his pinch-hit at-
bat and Jackson Murphy had two hits. But the biggest hit of them
all came in the second inning, when Scalley slammed a 3-1 offering over the right-center field seats, and past the outfield EZ-Ups, to cap a sev-
Washington 1 Alaska 1 Montana 1 Oregon (Bend) 1 Wyoming 0 Idaho
0
L RA
0
2
0 0
4 7
1
10
1 2
15 19
Saturday's Games Alaska 6, Idaho 4 Oregon15, Wyoming 0 Today's Games Washington vs.Montana,8:30a.m. Wyoming vs. Alaska, 4:30 p.m. Note: Thetop four teams after pool play advance to thesemifinals. Saturday'sSummary
Bend North15, Cody (Iyo.) 0 (4 inningmercyrule)
077 't - 'te 14 0 000 0 — 0 2 4
BendNorlh Wyoming Tobias,Ruhl(3)andF.Lovejoy. Hays, Harris (3), Bronnenberg (4) andWilliams.W- Tobias. L- Hays. 2B-A.Loveioy,Wehman.HR-Scalley.
too, getting two bunts down w e n t and moving runners over early in the game. "We're going to need that "I just got the right pitch," Scalley said. "It was a little kind of ball to win this tourinside — and I thought I just nament," said Ruhl, who said had to pull the ball and get it his team was 1 for its previin the air." ous 15 in getting bunts down S tarter He n r y Tob i a s before Dylan Ruhl and Flynn s truck out three in tw o i n Lovejoy both did it in the secnings for the win. Gone were ond inning. some of the mental breakBend will get today off bedowns and v i sible frustra- fore facing Eagle River (Alastions from Bend's 10-2 loss to ka) Knik Little League at 11 Edmonds (Wash.) Pacific on a.m. Monday. Friday morning. Safe to say, the Bend North " We wanted t o s tay f o - players will spend their off cused," Tobias said, "and just day in a far happier frame of worry about getting it done mind. "We feel way better now," tonight." Bend showed v ersatility, Scalley said.
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
I(eselowski wins at lowa;now on to Pennsylvania The Associated Press
urday's Truck race, was set to
NEWTON, Iowa — If this was Brad Keselowski's final
cruise to an easy win when third time at the track. He J ames B u e scher's c r a s h won the inaugural race five
trip to Iowa Speedway, he made it a memorable one.
Keselowski won for t he
erased his lead less than 10 years ago and topped Horlaps from the finish. nish last season. K eselowski held o f f t h e But Keselowski went high Also on Saturday: charging Michael McDowell to overtake McDowell and Dillon wins truck race: on Saturday night to win the held on for hi s 30th series LONG POND, Pa. — Austin NASCAR Nationwide race at victory. Dillon pulled away on the fi"He had me there for a nal restart to win the Truck the short track. The only Sprint Cup driv- minute. Somehow I slipped Series race at Pocono Raceer commuting from Pocono back by him. I'm really not way, his first victory of the in Pennsylvania, Keselows- even sure how that worked season. Dillon eluded Clint ki led 146 of 250 laps for his out," said Keselowski, who Bowyer and the rest of the third Nationwide victory of mentioned after the race that field on the final restart of a the season and second in two the seat for the No. 22 car in caution-filled end to the race. starts. Iowa will likely be given to a Bourdais gets Indy pole: Trevor Bayne was t h i rd, Penske developmental driver L EXINGTON, Ohio — S e followed by Sam Hornish Jr. in the future. "These wins, bastien Bourdais got through they're not easy to come by." and Ty Dillon. rainy conditions in IndyCar K eselowski, who ran t h e Points leader Chase Elliott qualifying at Mid-Ohio Sports No. 22 car so Ryan Blaney finished eighth. He leads Re- Car Course and earned his could stay in Pocono for Sat- gan Smith by two points. second pole position of the
s eason. For
B o u r dais, o f
KVSH Racing, it is his 33rd career IndyCar pole, tying him for seventh on the career list with Dario Franchitti. The veteran from France won from the pole this season in the first race at Toronto.
Ten drivers have won poles through 15 races this year. John Force qualifies No. 1 in Funny Car: KENT, Wash. — John Force raced to his
150th No. I qualifying position in Funny Car in the NHRA Northwest Nationals.
The 65-year-old Force had a pass of 4.057 seconds at 307.86
mph in his Ford Mustang Funny Car on the final run of the day at for his fourth No. I of the season and sixth at Pacific
Raceways.
had seven birdies and two bogeys in a 12-point round
with a career-best 61 on Fri-
day, was at 14-under 196. McIlroy birdied his last
at Montreux to push his to-
tal to 35. He's making his first appearance in the event since 2002 after failing to
qualify for the World Golf
second Championship-Bridgestone straight day for a 66, and he Invitational. Nick W atney,
en-run outburst. R uhl estimated i t about 280-290 feet.
Bend North's Jackson Murphy reacts being hit by a pitch (at his calf) during Saturday's gameagainst Cody,Wyoming.
won the 2006 U.S. Open,
it is. But hopefully, I'll be able to play well again and be all the way up there tomorrow." Garcia, who seized control
two holes for th e
Pool playstandings
Iletttt uorh scttettttte
I did on Friday, then it is what
got his wish — a spot in the final group. Today is set up as a replay of The Open — only with the
the leader after each of the
roles reversed.
Allred. Watney scored six points, and Allred had 14.
McIlroy had a six-shot lead going into the final round at Hoylake. Garcia,
first two rounds in a modified Stableford system, was
tied for second with Jason Perry eagles for lead: BLAINE, Minn. — Kenny
playing in the group ahead, Perry eagled the last hole made a spirited run at McIlroy and got within two shots
a fter waiting out a
t hun-
derstorm to take a one-shot
late in the round until he
lead after the second round faltered and Boy W o nder of the Champions Tour's 3M
pulled away. Championship. Perry shot a "Obviously, Rory is play- 9-under 63 to reach 16-under ing great, and we get along 128 at TPC Twin Cities.
Orrell
terfinals of the Oregon Se-
Continued from 01 "I played good yesterday (Friday)," said Orrell in the comfort of Juniper's club-
played last year at Brasada Canyons Golf Club in Powell
house just
nior Amateur when it was
m i nutes after
completing a hazy morning round. "It felt good to finally play like this." Albany's Conner Kumpula, who plays college golf at Oregon State, holds the 36-
Butte. And he has fared well
in some smaller local events. An avid skier who grew up in Eugene, Orrell does have animpressive amateur golf resume. But most of his success came in Colorado,
where he spent much of his adult life.
hole lead in the tournament's There he was a fixture in top division after shooting statewide amateur events, his second consecutive 4-un- and in Colorado he qualder 68. He holds a two-stroke ified in past U.S. Public lead over Ray Richards, of Links and U.S. Mid-Amateur Tualatin, in the top division championships. of the Stroke Play ChamBut he rarely played when pionship. Justin Kadin, a he first moved to Oregon 24-year-old caddie from while he battled a balky Bend, sits in a tie for sixth back. "I have a lot of tournament placeat2 under afterhe fired a second-round 69. experience," said Orrell, who Scott Carver, of Portland, is both friendly and chatty. leads the Master-40 Division at 5 over.
Orrell, who moved to Bend from Utah six years ago, has grabbed plenty of attention, too. Playing the senior tees
"It's not like I j ust started
playing tournaments. "I'm starting to get my game back. But you know what? I'm 63 years old, so I
don't have any ambition to do any more than just come set at 6,803 yards — near- outand compete and play." ly 400 yards shorter than Now he has a chance to t he t o u r nament's O p e n make a permanent mark in Division, which is l i ttered Oregon golf by winning the with the state's top young Senior Division of one of amateur golfers — Orrell's the state's most prestigious first-round 69 was the sec- events. ond-lowest score in any diOrrell will have to beat a vision on the Stroke Play's deep field, including Taylor, first day. who said it does not bother For many in the 158-player him to chase a golfer who he field, all but 22 of whom live
does not know.
"Instead of playing the outside Central Oregon, it was the first time they have people, you've got to play seen Orrell's name. the golf course and shoot the "He is a new guy to most best you can," Taylor said. of us," said Denny Taylor, a Orrell's strategy for to62-year-old from Gladstone day's final round is not who trails Orrell by two complicated. "Don't choke," he said strokes after a second-round 69. "Every once in a while in with a laugh while holding the Oregon Golf Association, his hands around his neck. you see somebody who you "It is as simple as that. "I just hope I keep playing are not familiar with." Orrell does not t ravel the same as I am playing much to play in OGA events, now. I will just go out there but he has made it a point and play the best I can, and to play in the tournaments what happens, happens." close to home.
He advanced to the quar-
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall®bendbulletin.com.
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
I ll l i l
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
Portland readies for All-Star spotlight
•
By Steven Dubois The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Even on
balmy summer nights, a green Portland Timbers scarf
is a ubiquitous accessory in a place known as Soccer City USA. But fans aren't just in it
for the fashion. It's common to see them sleeping outside
Providence Park the night before a match. After kickoff, the atmosphere in the al-
ways-sold out stadium is loud and intense as fans sing and chant for the full 90 minutes. Visitors a n d te l evision
viewers in 150 countries will get a look at Portland's
enthusiasm for the sport at Wednesday's Major League Soccer All-Star Game. The
The Associated Press file photo
Southern California opened the John McKay Center at a cost of $70 million in 2012, just one of a number of facilities upgrades done at Pac-12 schools.
•
•
•
contest pits the American professional league's best players against German powerhouse Bayern Munich, which includes six players who played for the World Cup-winning country. "People throughout the U.S. and Canada have certainly witnessed the incredible passion and atmosphere thatexists in Providence Park
for a Timbers game. It does
Threepullout of All-StarGame Los Angeles Galaxy forward Robbie Keane anddefenderOmar Gonzalez, as well asSeattle Sounders defender Chad Marshall, have pulled out of the Major League Soccer All-Star game against Bayern Munich. The trio will be replaced by D.C. United defenders Bobby Boswell andSean Franklin, as well as Philadelphia Union midfielders Maurice Edu, Portland Timbers and MLSAllStar coach CalebPorter announced Saturday. The All-Star match is set for Wednesday night at Providence Park.
•
,
and t hose are also being tied in with all-star
week. The
MLS AllStar Game cold w~ K ids
are
free Bayern Munich playing concert s ecutive vice president of com- When:6:30p™ t 0 big munications. "Our television Wednesday cling events a re on tap partners, they love to have Ttf:ESPN2 games on their networks and s everfrom Portland because when al food-cart operators will people turn on the television compete at the MLS Grilled and see that crowd, see (Ium- Cheese Throwdown. "What's more P o r tland berjack mascot) Timber Joey cutting that log, it's compel- than that, right?" Timbers ling television," owner Merritt Paulson said of Though the all-star game the sandwich contest. is the major draw, the league Paulson bought the Timhas turned the entire week bers when they played at a into a celebration of soccer. level below Major League Portland's downtown square Soccer. The crowds were enhas addedamini-soccerfield. thusiastic at the time, but the The square is serving as the excitement jumped exponenhub for many activities, in- tially when the club joined cluding a free viewing party MLS for the 2011 season. for those who couldn't get Within Portland, there's a not go unnoticed," said Dan Courtemanche,the MLS' ex-
• Bigger and better is the mantra to drawbig-namerecruits and big-moneydonors By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
"The commitment to football is at an all-time
It has been a year since Oregon opened the doors to its
high in the Pac-12. From the facility upgrades, to the talent and everything else you've got going on in the league, the Pac-12is probably better than it's ever been. And it's not going backwards."
Hatfield-Dowlin Complex for
an eye-opening media tour through the posh Duck pad. Oregon, which is picked to finish first in the Pac-12 this
season, can still boast about
— Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez
athletic facilities that are sec-
ond to none. "Oregon changes it out like Porta-Potties," Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez said. "It's a
sion and received unprece-
dented support from universi- that you don't really realize is ty leaders. there. "With this, it kind of opens Donors gave Colorado's athletic department $7.4 million that ceiling up and lets you in 2010 when the Buffs were climb to a level you want to get
challenge to stay up with it." This year some of the programs at the bottom of the standings have cut ribbons or still in the Big 12. Last year broken ground on major proj- supporters, many of whom ects designed to make the com- live on the West Coast, conpetition for recruits and con-
built, there's kind of a ceiling
tributed $22 million.
Pac-12mediapoll First-place votes in parentheses, with teams' 2013 conference records. NORTH -2 232 Ore on 37 7-2 192 Stanford (2) -4 42 ashin ton Oregon State 4-5 125 ashin ton St. -5 8 0 -6 4 1 California SOUTH U SC (1)
6-3 18 1
to." Washington State unveiled its new $61 million football
A rizona
4-5 11 9
facility this summer. Mike Leach signed a five-year con-
Colorado
"Now we're in people's back ference championships more fierce in the years to come. yards on an annual basis," tract before the 2012 season Colorado, which is 4-23 in said Kurt Gulbrand, Colora- that averaged $2.2 million per the Pac-12 since joining the do's assistant vice chancellor year and has already been conference in 2011, started for athletic development. "Be- extended through the 2018 construction on an $142 mil- fore the move to the Pac-12 we season. "If we're going to compete lion upgrade to Folsom Field in wouldn't play in front of 9,000 May. The 173,000-square-foot Buffs (fans). Now we're see- for championships, it's going addition will include an indoor ing them at Cal and USC and to be done right here," Washfootball practice facility coach Arizona." ington State athletic director Gary Barnett was lobbying Colorado's basketball proBill Moos, who used to hold the athletic department for in gram explodedonto the na- the same position at Oregon, 2001 when the Buffaloes won tional scene with the construc- said during the media tour of the Big 12. tion of a new facility at the the Cougars' new digs in June. "The fact that we're mov- Coors Events Center, coupled "We did the same stuff at ing forward and moving for- with the hiring of Tad Boyle Oregon, same blueprint. Parward aggressively allows us during the transition to the ents fall in love with (Washto believe we can compete for Pac-12. ington State) because it's and win championships," ColGeorge is hoping the mod- clean, it's safe, there are no orado athletic director Rick ernization of the football facil- freeways or drive-by shootGeorge said. "We believe this ities will lead to the rebirth of a ings. Well, if we could recruit will elevate recruiting and program that won the national t he parents we'd be i n t h e impact some of the recruits in championship in 1990 under Rose Bowl every year, but the the decision-making process. Bill McCartney. prospect is going, 'Boy, this "I definitely see the facil- locker room isn't as nice as It also helps us to provide a world-class experience for all ity helping us to get where Stanford's, this weight room is of our student-athletes." we want to be," second-year nothing like Cal's.' "Now we take a back seat to George and his staff have Colorado coach Mike Macraised about one third of the Intyre said. " I think if t h e nobody." money for the stadium expan- facility wouldn't have been Arizona opened the $72.3
tickets. Tenzin Samkhar, 21, wore
braces soccer because its resa Bayern Munich jersey while idents like to be different or checking out the square long to be European. Friday. He has a ticket for
Wednesday's match. "I'm like super excited," he said. "It's a big team in Europe; they just recently won almost everything. It's crazy that they're coming here." Portland
-7
82
1-8
43
perception that the city em-
w o u l dn't be
"I think
t h ere's a l i t tle
counterculture element here. You know, the whole 'Keep
Portland Weird' thing," Paulson said. "But look, soccer's flourishing in Kansas City, and nobody's going to accuse Kansas City of being Europe-
Portland without bicycles, an orcounterculture.The fact indie rock and food carts, is the sport's taking off."
million Lowell-Stevens Foot-
ball Facility and Utah opened the $32 million Spence and Cleone Eccles Football Center
in 2013. USC opened the $70 million John McKay Center in 2012. Washington spent $250 million renovating Husky Sta-
dium and adding new facilities, and California spent $150 million refurbishing Memorial Stadium. "The commitment to foot-
ball is at an all-time high in the Pac-12," Rodriguez said. "From the facility upgrades, to the talent and everything else you've got going on in the league, the Pac-12 is probably better than it's ever been. And
it's not going backwards. "It's forcing all of us as coaches to make sure we're pressing the envelope to keep our program up. That's the way it is at the U of A, we've got brand-new facilities. But
everybody's got new stuff." Jae C. Hong /The Associated Press
Los Angeles' Dan Gargan, right, and Portland's Rodney Wallace
Relay
"Everything went really 24:05:56.04. smoothly," Douglass said. "We ran w e l l," C h ilders "We were really surprised Continued from D1 "I've been able to enjoy says. "One of our guys got that (Sole Brothers) beat the this year's race a lot more," injured on his first leg, so record by that much because Adams said. "I was getting we had to do a l i ttle bit of they felt like they ran as fast married the n ext w eekend reshuffling. But, we perse- as they could ever go last after the race last year. So it vered, powered through and year. But we're really excited was show up, win and leave. we were almost as fast as we when a local team wins." And this year, I get to soak it were hoping." L ord o f t h e R u n , f r o m in more." The CLR is composed of 37 Portland's Jesuit High, won The beginning stages of stages, beginning at Diamond the high school division and the time trial was the last Lake Resort and winding also set a course record at time Sole Brothers were chal- its way through 8,110 feet of 14:52:10.4. Jesuit senior and lenged by other teams as it elevation gain, 9,686 feet of captain of t h e C L R t e am, bested the second place co- decent and ending at River- 17-year-old David Sealand, ed team, We Got the Runs bend Park. Each runner ran said that midway through from Corvallis, by nearly two between 18 and 24 miles. The the run Summit High took a hours. We Got the Runs was walking and high school di- 20-minute lead. "One of our runners went first in the mixed division. visions completed a 132-mile We Got t h e R un s t e am course. the wrong way, so we had to captain Tyler Childers, 33, of Race director Carrie Dou- run three extra miles," SealCorvallis, said the race began glass said the event was at and said. "They got 20 minon a low note after teammate capacity with 20 0 t eams utes ahead. On our ninth leg Nate Smith dropped out due and approximately 2,400 they were 15 minutes ahead. to an injury. But the team re- competitors. By the end of our 12th leg organized and finished in
jump for a header during the first half Saturday in Carson, Calithey were only 5
m i n utes
fornis. The Timbers lost 3-1.
ahead and on the next leg we finally passed them." Summit finished the race in
15:17:50.8, nearly 25 minutes behind Jesuit. Douglass said this year's event raised around $45,000 for local charities. Sole Brothers member Bak,
of Portland, said his team's goal was to beat last year's time, but realized toward the
end of the race that would be done handidly. "You never know what the
competition is going to be until you get there," Bak said. "So we felt that we needed to
at least take the course record down by 15 to 20 minutes, and we'd be in the thick of it to win. But as it turned out we won it by a lot." — Reporter:541-383-0375, eollerlbendbulletin.com
TimberSgiVe LIP3 Straight
goals in loss toGalaxy The Associated Press scoring when Diego Valeri CARSON, Calif. — Robbie converted a free kick into the Keane scored twice to help upper right corner from just the Los Angeles Galaxy beat outside the box in the 14th the Portland Timbers 3-1 on minute. Saturday. Los Angeles nearly tied it Keane broke a tie in the in the 29th minute, but Gya73rd minute, beating defend- si Zardes' header hit the bar ers to the back post to head squarely. home Landon Donovan's The Galaxy (9-4-6) drew left-footed service. even in first-half stoppage Keane converted a penalty shot in the 85th minute to seal the victory. It was his 12th goal of the season, moving him to fourth in MLS.
The Timbers opened the
time as Zardes didn't miss
his next chance, heading Robbie Rogers' left-footed
cross past goalkeeper Donovan Ricketts. Portland fell to 6-7-9.
July 2014Weekly Hotline • For Store Locations visit www.NaturalGrocers.com
PrOteCtYOurSelf AgainSt the«"c h~rl1I~~l s:~~P
Offers valid through 08/9/14 while supplies last
N ATURA L S R O C S R S
Reduce your exposures, enhance your body's defenses
w
S UPPORT YOU R B O D Y 'S NATU R A L DE T O X IFICATION PRO C E S S
The liver is yourbody's primary chemical-processing factory, and much of its detoxification
e live in a chemical soup, made up of some 80,000 chemicals, most of which did not exist 70 years ago. Many of them end up in our food, our water, our homes, the air we breathe, and ultimately, our bodies.
ability relies on what biologists refer to as the P450 enzyme pathways, which are separated by function into phase 1 and phase 2 enzymes. Phase 1 enzymes break down toxins made by the body (byproducts of metabolism) and hazardous chemicals (pesticides, pollutants) that have enteredthe body. Think of the phase 1 enzymes as the body's HAZMAT crew. The results of phase 1 processing are highly toxic. Phase 2 enzymes prepare these hazardous compounds for excretion — quite literally, the body's waste stream.
New homes and furniturerelease formaldehyde, a recognized carcinogen, &om carpeting,
vinyl flooring, and particleboard. Electronics, cars, and mattresses are treated with chemical fire retardants. In many parts of the country, homes and soil must be treated for insect pests, such as termites — more chemicals that we breathe in. And if your house is well-insulated, airborne chemicals stay inside unless you keep the windows open. You're no safer in the car or at the oKce, where you're exposed to still more synthetic chemicals. The quantities may be relative, but their effects add up, and some people are the proverbial "canaries in the coal mine."
It is relatively easy to boost the efficiency ofboth the phase 1 andphase 2 enzymes through diet and supplements. Phase 1 enzymes depend on the B v i tamins, glutathione, and antioxidants, including milk thistle. Meanwhile, the phase 2 enzymes depend on amino acids, particularly L-glutamine, L-glycine, L-taurine, and L-cysteine. Oarlic, cruciferous vegetables, and other sulfur-containing antioxidants are also important for the phase 2 enzymes. From a dietary standpoint, eating ample amounts of organic vegetables and quality protein are critical.
All too many of these individual chemicals are known hormone disrupters, carcinogens, and mutagens (chemicals that can alter DN A) . Especially worrisome, few of t h ese chemicals have ever been tested to determine their combined effects. But we do have clues to the potential dangers of these chemicals. In one recent study, researchers found that the combination of supposedly safe levels of arsenic (found in many groundwater supplies) and estrogen doubled the risk of creating cancer cells. Another study found a strong relationship between pesticide exposure, folic acid deficiency, and the risk of Parkinson disease. Still other research has linked a variety of toxic substances, such as pesticides and chemical cleaning compounds, to autism and other types of brain disorders in children.
Glutathione Prccursors. Glutathione, the potent antioxidant made by the body, plays crucial roles in both the phase 1 and 2 enzyme processes. Large numbers of &ee radicals are generated during phase 1 activities, and glutathione is the most important antioxidant for neutralizing these &ee radicals.
'Ioo' o Q
Organic Grape Tomatoes Pint
oa
Natural Grocers Produce Departmen
O.
n 0
USDA
Q
Both alpha lipoic acid and NAC serve as its precursors. Both supplements contain sulfur, which is essential for glutathione production. NAC also contains L-cysteine, and NAC is preferred over pure L-cysteine supplements. These nutrients have many collateral benefits:
It's plenty scary. While there's no way to completely escape these chemicals, we do have two options.One, we can work to reduce our exposure to them. Two, we can enhance our bodies' innate ability to break down, or detox, many of these chemicals.
S
alpha lipoic acid also helps regulate blood sugar and insulin levels and NAC can help fight infections. Some drugs, such as acetaminophen (Tylenol) can deplete glutathione levels. Try:500-600 mg of NAC or 100-300 mg of alpha lipoic acid daily.
MINI M I Z E Y OUR T O XI C EX POSURES Organic Foods. One of the most important ways you can minimize chemical exposure is to eat organic food whenever possible. Organically grown produce is free of pesticides, fumigants, and fungicides, whereas conventional produce can be contaminated with a number of diAerent pesticides residues and other chemicals. For example, a test of one sample of conventional strawberries found 13 different pesticides, plus fumigants and fungicides.
Antioxidants. Because large amounts of destructive &ee radicals (also known as oxidants) are produced during phase 1 activities, antioxidants become paramount. Although a diet rich in vegetables and fruits is important, supplementation may be advantageous. Silymarin, the antioxidant extract of the herb milk thistle may be particularly helpful, tpven its long track record as an aid to liver function. Try: A multi-antioxidant supplement, perhaps with extra vitamin C (effervescent or buffered forms of vitamin C might be preferred alter chemical exposures). In addition, consider 100-300 mg daily of silymarin.
Personal Hygiene Products. Many hand soaps, body washes, and toothpastes contain triclosan, an antibacterial compound that appears to disrupt hormone levels and ultimately contaminate the environment. Most conventional lotions and creams contain endocrinedisrupting phthalates to help lubricate and to increase penetration. Perhaps most worrisome are the number ofbaby care products that contain phthalates. Conventional antiperspirants and deodorants often contain parabens, propylene glycol, and other compounds you really don't want applied to your body. Choose natural body care products that are &ee of these chemical ingredients; this is especially important when choosing body care products for babies and small children.
B-Complex Vitamins. This family of vitamins plays important roles in detoxification. First, all of the B complex is involved in energy production, and detox is an energyintensive biochemical process. In addition, several of the B vitamins — particularly B6, B12, and folic acid — are involved in a chemical process called methylation, which is very active during phase 2 detox activities. Try: A high-potency B-complex supplement.
0 • o
tl
a0
OQ
So Delicious®
oxide and titanium dioxide are tried and true sunscreens — they literally block the sun's rays &om the skin. Bonus points if the sunscreen contains antioxidants such as vitamin E, green tea, or sea buckthorn for added skin protection. And there's usually no need to get the highest SPF~ P F 1 5 b l o cks about 94 percent of UVB ra ys, while SPF 30 blocks 97 percent of UVB rays.
Vitamin C. Buflered vitamin C appears to reduce some of the damage caused by toxins. In a study of 55 people who had been exposed to toxic chemicals, researchers found that buflered vitamin C restored normal immune function in the majority of them. Try: 5001,000 mg daily.
Cleaning Products. Many conventional household cleaning products release volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which can cause respiratory problems and headaches, according to the American Lung Association. Natural products clean toilets, showers and tubs, and countertops just as well and are much gentler on our bodie~ d th e environment.
Unfortunately, it's virtually impossible to avoid exposure to chemical toxins in our environment. However, it is possible to reduce our exposures, particularly in our own homes. Additionally, eating a diet consisting largely of organic foods and taking certain supplements can enhance our bodies' ability to break down these hazardous chemicals, minimizing their harmful eflects. g
Nature's Way®
Dairy Free Coconut Milk Frozen Dessert Pints
Standardized Tumeric Extract
450mg 60tab
Amino Acids. Several nonessential (but important) amino acids are needed for a process called conjugation, which helps bind toxins for elimination during phase 2 processes. Eating adequate protein provides these amino acids, but supplementation can be helpful because it provides '&ee" (unbound) amino acids. You don't need every one of the amino acids in the supplement because the body can make many of them. Of the amino acids, L-glycine is the most important for phase 2 detox processes. Try: A multi-amino acid supplement.
Sunscrcens. The array of sunscreens in pharmacies can boggle the mincL Most of them contain an alphabet soup of synthetic chemicals, many of which are known endocrine disruptors and others that cause oxidative damage, but there are safer options. Look for a mineral-based product that provides protection &om both UVA and UVB radiation. Zinc
Q
COCONUT MILK
hrmMc iP. COCONUT MIN
•
•
I
Colorado Sunrise Fruit Mix
Carlson Super DHAGems 60 Sg
Visionary Kitchen:
Nature's Way Valerian Root 180 cap
Super DHAGems 180 sg
Natural Grocers Bulk Department
A Cookbook For Eye Health
Saw Palmetto 180 cap
By Sandra Yottng, OD (The COokbOOk MarketPlaCe; 1Stedition, 2013) The VisionaV Kitchen cookbook 0%% 10WglyCemiC reCiPeS that are * -."" "" - " " packed with nutrients that feed the eyes, including lutein, the omega3s, vitamins A, C, and E, and zinc. Personalize your diet using easyto-use charts lisbng food sources of ~S AND R A N ~O eye nutrients.Visionary Kitchen also discumes the roles that exercise, lifestyle, and proper UV-light protection play in long term eye health. The eyes are metabolically active and have unique nutritional needs... feed them withVisionary Kitchen! KITPHEK
tr
Valerian
• ''
• ''
I
PalmcS
We bag and sell only the freshest natural and ol'ganlc
bulk foods availab~le.
I
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end 08/9/14
Am 's'
NOW ® COQ10 50m ~ w/ Vitamin E •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
emo
•
CoQ10 100 mg
150sg
100sg
Gluten FreeRice MaC 8,Cheegeor Mac 5 Chmse D iry FreeCheeze Entree 9 OZ. Original
80Z -90Z
Sunday Brunch The PaleoWay Sunday, August foth; fpm "„;;„,"';,"„,"„„,„, Bend, OR
50 sig H &d j~ ' ASl, l
M" ~
*v;
100 mg ' ~
H&N M ~ M ~ Cllf
NO Softgels
0 Soltgels
and Natural Grocers Nutritional Health Coach
Ip
'1
R o'ER
'Ihis periodical is intended to present information we feel is valuable to our customers. Articles are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner For advice.'Ihe articles appearing in Health Hotline' are either original articles written for our use by doctors and experts in the field of nutrition, or are reprinted by permission from reputable sources. Articles may be excerpted due to this newsleuer's editorial space limitations. If you would like to be added or removed from the Health Hotllne Mailing List or hsvc s change of address, please call 303-986-4600 or online at naturalgrocers.com/subscribe. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and offers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.
Grow your career! Great employment opportunities in our stores, corporate ofBce, and distributi'en centerp,Appliy,ftoday~at~ , naturalgrOCerS.COmj lObS
•
•
See store for addiTionalvarieties af Macil Cheese onsale
[pCogjoC a' SR CoK
wFor store NATURAL GRSGERs locations near you, visit NaturalGrocers.com ORSP0803
2 g~ •
Once Again Nut Butter®
•
I'I IOfl
Boulder Canyon Natural Foods'
R.W. Knudsen®
5.25 oz.- 6.5 oz. Natural Potato Chips
32 oz. Organic JustTart 32 oz. Organic Just Cherry Juice Cranberry Juice
16 oz. Organic 16 o z . Organic Sunflower Seed Tahini Butter USOA
0
lllsv
•g $ l •
lll
l
© Jack Challem
•
gag • I a
•$ l s
I• •
•
I
•
• •
'. o~
Ih
I
Ilstia I'
' ,i)
Pr TARTCHEirmr
JF d.
Eating Habits Can Often Be as Im portant as Nutrition Itself I
The quality o f t h e f o od s yo u eat are o f p a r amount importance, but so are your eating habits, according
•
• •
•
I
See Sore forAddiTionalVarieties onSale
t o two r e c ent stu d i e s
Frank Scheer, PhD, of Brigham and Women's Hospital, along with researchers from the University of Mur cia, Spain, studied 420 overweight and obese men and women whose average age was 42 years The subjects consumed about 1,400 calories daily, which is about half of what the typical American consumes. But the timing of their principal meal strongly influenced their ability t o l o se w e i ght. A b out h al f th e subjects ate their main meal early and half ate it late O ver 20 weeks, dieters who ate before 3p.m lost an average of 22 pounds, while those eating aAer 3 p m l o s t an average of only 17 pounds.
Pacific Foods®
Amy & Brian'
13.6 oz. Organic Refried or Baked Beans
17.5 oz. Coconut Juices
J~
Montebello ®
12 75 oz Organic
1 lb. Organic Pastas
Ready to Serve Hummus
•—•I Wo ~
I'
sv"
l
l ls
USDA
ifrrt //
oaoANIO
'. ra Itof
gg
I
'jry ~organic
~organic v
ksd Beans
urar
s'
crassrc " " Huglmusu, 'V,'>~
I
))g<
'
'
' :
A 'S ahu'/ IMO
I'
ls
elSsvnssvs
alcsllmssal
lf
ocoAAN
Ima
In the other study, X a v ier A l l i r ot, PhD , o f t h e Paul Bocuse Institute, and hi s c o l leagues com p ared the effect of a single breakfast with the same amount of food eaten in portions throughout the morning
svossAsvvno ol lvonvcscLLo WMWL P
I
e •
•
IsvnucsTlsov (sao
T he subjects were 20 healthy young men of n o r m al weight. On some mornings, the men received a breakfast of 674 calories. On other mornings, they received the same number of calories, but it was given in four por tions, each one hour apart from the other
San-I' 10 oz. Asian Cooking Sauces
Unfiltered Raw Honey a"
Melatonin 3 mg 180cap
Cinnamon
Raw Honey
16 oz.
Blossom Raw Honey 16 oz.
r
Creamy
Organic Raw Honey
or Orange
r
T hen the subjects were allowed to eat from a l u n c h bufFet. Men wh o had eaten several smaller portions were far less hungry at lunchtime.
NOW ®
Honey Gardens' 9 oz.
a • LLISAN J
Kcrcloaccsl Gslaulcvlvl, GdmezAbctua9AlbUveueapleadjm11, ol al. Taamg oremd lalslmplsdtcis wslghl loss n cavsasss.ro/svaalioaoidouluai o/Ohavi/y, 2011R doi 10103I/ijo2012229. Aailov X, gaulais 1 gcysscl K, OI al. An isocalolic iamusss orsaeng episodes ia the molaiag coaaibuics Io decreasesaslll iaiaha at tuach in lsaa msa.Physiology ood Behavior, 2013I doi 10.101d/j.physbsh.2013.D1.009.
RAW NDNIS
ORGANIC Mwncnlv
• vvls/1 Rt
Omega-3 and Omega-6 Affect Telomeres
.•
3 mg
RAWNDNEE
Telomeres are the protective tips of chromosomes, and shorter telomeres have been linked to a greater risk of age-related diseases and death. Researchers from the Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus, provided 106 subjects with one of three supplements to be taken daily for four months. Some of the subjects received 2,500 mg of omega-3s or1,250 mg of omega3 s. A th ir d g r oup r e ceived pl acebos containing th e proportion of fats found in the typical American diet. In people taking om ega-3 supplements, the relative proportion ofomega-6s decreased, and their telomeres increased in length
I •
• •
Gaia Herbs' Thyroid Support
New Chapter'
60cap
Jarrow Formulas'
Perfect Prenatal 192 tab
Rhodiola Rosea 60 veg
Methyl Folate
400mcg 60veg
Il
sr
OREGON
Ms
Gresham
A
Bend
ayroid fURctioa'
supportse hegtthy respoasetostress'
avaslslslmuvansvvssm maw fvlusl • sul vcu
mwsmllalaamvvallnvr unamSlas ussoslna
Qourhar RERDD
Ettae~~
" ggI~& SEClsleAv\
•
• I •
NERSI
Clackamas
•
3
I= ~
Kiscoh-Glassl SK. Blain,Behavior, ond tmmaniiy, 2013;2RI10-24.
• HighQagtrtr tso Capsules
5
him™®lI
perfectprenatal'.=. parract rfataaaa ' ' NULTIVITAMiN
a
ssalvvnassuasaacaaasal' • aINldaa casaomplr Iloaaes caslLusllsllll ONacsm
I •
• •
503-659-0100
503-465-0130 •
Salem
N
5416170200 •
•
•
•
•
I•
$ •
••
• 1
r••
Corvallls e
NWsmsAN g
W A S H IN G T O N
IANSFDRDDRSE
d
NWSsuumaAvv
I
541-758-0200
Red Yeast Rice Extended Release 30 tab
•
Medford
Beaverton .
I©%
«»,
•s
•
[
541-245%100 ••l
SWSlcsdusy Sl
503-520-9100
Acure ®
Acidophilus Pearls
8 oz. Shampoo orConditioner
90 cap ACIIRE
•a
.
•
•
L
A'
120 sg
Magnesium Complex 100 cap
•
WW
~D
I O
Coconut Oil
•
Enzymatic 'Iherapy
360-694-1300 SWCanyonRoad
N
Nature's Way ®
Nature's Plus'
Vancouver
e
I
• I •
•
e
503-588-1600
•
I
•
Individual atore hours vary, pteaae contact the atore nearest you for exact timea.
r
Pl a aa yha Saslgy guppt~
~rttn YEAgf' CE
«Dtda/ta»
IURE Exraa vnlelN
M
IBEONI
~
emr
Os
Nsgnesium Qmylex
I
•
tosll
a
•
I
Ou r
G O a l is t o provide our customers with the highest quality
all natural products available at the very best prices — every day. Keep in mind that our EDAP - Every Day Affordable Price almost never reflect a suggested retail, but are at a lower markup. Advertised specials reflect arIritional savings.
lgn pr
• I
•
•
a
•
•
•
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end 08/9/14
• I
•
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
Big payoff from youth sports business
Revenue gains prompt new hires
By Diane Mastrull
By Joyce Rosenberg
The Philadel phia rnquirer
The Associated Press
Jeff Long could torture
NEW YORK — The
long-awaited surge in hiring at small businesses appears to be underway.
himself with"what ifs." Especially: What if that
financial backer had come through with the $250,000 Longneeded to sustainhis ticket-outsourcingbusiness
Owners who resisted
hiring after the recession are taking on workers to keep up with rising demand for products and services. Companies began stepping up their hiring pace in the spring. Faulkner Hyundai in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, is adding seven people to its staff of 92 because new
for college sports events
until critical mass was achieved? But after that potential
investorbailed, a fortuitous thing happened to Long. A neighbor convinced him to come watch his son play forin ahigh schoollacrosse playoff game. Long couldn't believe
N .™s ~4P.-.==-~.".
cars are selling at their
what he saw that day in
suburban Philadelphia in spring2008: about 3,000 spectators, and nary a spon-
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Employees move containers of bottled water through the Earth2o facility in Culver on Thursday.
sor or vendor.
fastest rate in eight years. The market for used cars is also strong. "Managersare actually getting involved in selling cars because we don't
"I said, 'There's money
have enough salespeople," says Paul Selvaggi, president of the dealership and service center.
to bemade here,' "recalled
Long, who was director of corporate partnerships for the Philadelphia Eagles
Faulkner has hired a
until fall2008 and, before that, assistant commissioner for the Atlantic Ten
sales manager, its first new employeesince the
Conference, in charge of sponsorships. "I said to my neighbor, 'I'm going to own
Up next: salespeople, workers to service cars and employees who develop new sources of revenue.
third quarter of last year.
this event next year.'"
He would do much more than that, steering his Pat-
Small businesses held
tison Sports Group away from the ticketbusiness and into organizing, hosting and marketing youth sports events across the country.
off hiring until they had enough business to justify taking more risks. As recently as March, an American Express survey
Based in a renovated
found 76 percent of own-
carriage house, the firmhas seven employees and nearly $1 million in revenue from two financially separate endeavors. is the for-profit venture, which this year will include
ers planned to hire only when their revenue rose. The ripple effect from growth in construction and consumer spending are feeding the increase, says Susan Woodward, an economist who helps soft-
nine lacrosse tournaments
ware maker Intuit compile
in five states involving more
its hiring surveys.
The Victory Event Series
than 43,000participants,
induding athletes and spectators. Healthy Kids Running Series is a nonprofit program. Started in fa112009
Pampering is back By Rachael Reese The Bulletin CULVER-
he owners of bottled water company Earth2o are joining together with the owners of Bend
with 150 runners, Healthy Kids will involve about 7,000runners in 61 towns in 20 states this fall, with local
organizers — businesses, communitygroups and individuals — operating the five-weekprograms like franchises, thoughthere is
Liliana Aranda's busi-
restaurant Zydeco Kitchen & Cocktails to create a new distillery in Culver that will draw The distillery called FTB, which stands for Farm To Bottle, will be housed in the original Earth2o plant, currently the company's employee fitness center that also houses inventory, said Steve Emery,CEO and co-owner ofEarth2o.
handle alone, he said. Pro-
ceedsfromregistration fees and sponsorships are split between his organization
and race coordinators.
"We're now at a critical mass point to be attractive
to national partners," he said, citing New Balance among them. Giant Food Stores sponsored races in 19 locations in Pennsylvania and Virginia in the spring, said the company's marketing manager, Serena Corrigan. SeeSports/E2
The plant was originally built in the 1920s to process
potatoes, which willbe the main ingredient in the distillery's spirits. And the distill-
erywill use water from Opal Springs, the same source for Earth2o bottled water, to
produce its vodka, gin and bourbon, he said. "Most of the distilleries in
Oregon, they're not making their own spirit," he said. "They're buying it. (FTB) will be high capacity, and our focus is on making the finest
quality product we can, and it's all going to be made, distilled, everything done right here in Culver." A new brewery, Luelling Orchard Brewing Co., that
son County, where 2012 gross manager for Economic Develfarm sales reached $74.3 opment for Central Oregon, million, while Crook and wrote in an email."We also Deschutes counties reported grow several varieties of $47.7 million and $26.1 milgrains, and, of course, potalion, respectively, according toes, not only for spuds on
plans to make beer in Madras
to Oregon State University
the dinner table, but also for
using locally-grown ingredients, was announced last
data. "Jefferson County is
month. And several Jefferson
known worldwide for our
a quality vodka that will now be producedfrom localfield crops by FTB Distillery."
County farmers plan on maltingthe barley and wheat they grow, calling their business
crops, growing 85percent oftheworld'scarrotseed,as well as many other specialty seeds, mint leaf for tea and several other crops," Janet
Mecca Grade Estate Malt.
Agriculture drives economic development in Jeffer-
Brown, Jefferson County
ments in homes or offices
in the San Francisco area. Her business has done
on Jefferson County crops and its spring water.
no franchise fee.
Demand grewtoo much for Long and his staff to
ness began picking up in March. Her 4-year-old company, Faces By Liliana, gives facials, massages and other spa treat-
Believe it or not, Emery said, bottled water is an agri-
cultural product. It's regulatedbythe Oregon Department of Agriculture. SeeDistillery/E2
well since its start, but
she never needed to hire. When clients held spa parties for their friends,
she looked for freelancers to help. In early spring, Aranda suddenly started getting more appointments. She attributes the bump in
business to people splurging again after the recession and its aftermath.
The size of Aranda's spa parties was larger than in the past — 11 to 14 people compared to six to eight. Revenue is up 20 percent
so far this year. The increase in business made hiring three part-time employees who she could always rely on a necessity. See Revenue/E5
Reactions and ideasemerge from Clean Power Planproposal By Joseph Ditzler
sessionsattracted hundreds or
The Bulletin
thousands.
Hearings in four cities around the country last week drew the first public reaction
to the proposed Clean Power Plan released by the U.S. En-
assigns each state a goal of reduced carbon dioxide emissions based on the strategies
mentaladvocates agreed
this report said they were still
those states already use to
reviewing the proposal released June 2 and sizing up its implications.
reduce emissions, and other factors, including the mix of
on for coal-fueled power to help them reach their goals.
the rule is set up. It's very complicated," said Margi Hoffman, energy policy ad-
plants. Oregon is strong in improving energy efficiency at the consumer level, so its goal
Sources interviewed for
about half of that goal, said
However, producer states like Wyoming, where coal is mined and burned to produce electricity for other states, Oregonincluded, have higher
Individual states have until
Uri Papish, interim director
emission-reduction targets.
2016 to prepare their plans; multi-state plans have until
Meeting them may mean
ton, California, Utah and Idaho. SeePower/E5
that Oregon will likely have to work with states it relies
one coal-fired power plant, the Portland General Electric plant in Boardman, scheduled to shutdown in 2020, achieves
viser for Gov. John Kitzhaber.
does not take that factor into account as much as the poten-
together. Utilities, which work across state lines, will likely
ington, D.C., to sound off on
alignment with different agen-
the proposed 15-year plan to reducetheamount ofcarbon
cies and stakeholders and
tial in closing its one coal-fired plant, for example.
face greater pressure to phase out aging coal plants in favor of natural gas-fired plants. For Oregon, the proposed
of the air qualityprogram at the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. The EPA calculated that the power generated by Boardman could instead come from gas-fired power plants, he said. Improving energy efficiencies through programs like those offered through Energy Trust of Oregon,andramping up
plan sets a 48 percent reduc-
alternative sources like wind
tion of carbon emissions over 2005 levels. Closing the state's
and solar could get Oregon to the final goaL
vironmental Protection Agen-
cy in June. Mine workers, politicians, environmentalists and citizens turned up in Atlanta,
"It's really interesting how
Denver, Pittsburgh and Wash- "Right now, we're trying to get
fuels that power its generation
"Thus, each state's goal
dioxide emitted by 30 percent
the EPA to make sure we're interpreting the rule to make
by burning fossil fuels, par-
sure it says the same thing we
reflects its unique conditions," according to the plan execu-
ticularly coal. In Denver and Pittsburgh, rallies outside the
think it says."
tive summary.
The Clean Power Plan
Consumer and environ-
2018. The EPA gave each state wide latitude to devise its plan,
and encouraged states to work
working with the states that
receive that coal-generated electricity to somehow offset Wyoming's emissions. Plants in Wyoming and other states that are owned by PacifiCorp generate power for nearly 600,000customers in Oregon; the utility also operates in four other states: Washing-
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
B USINESS TUESDAY What's Brewing? Bend's Town Hall:State House of Representatives District 54 candidates Craig Wilhelm and Dr. Knute Buehler will share their views on the economy, the state budget, education, healthcare, land-use issues, and answer questions; RSVP online; $15 Bend Chamber members, $20 nonmembers, plus $5 at the door; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive; 541-323-1881
END A R
or www.bendchamber.org.
WEDMESDAY Oregon Get Your Business
Online: Congressman Greg Walden and experts from Google host this event to help smallbusiness owners create their own websites; register online; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541382-8436 or www.gybo.com/
oregon. Business Start-Up Workshop:
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvtv.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
Two-hour session covers all thebasicsteps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290.
THURSDAY
p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend;541306-0864.
Aug. 11 Online Marketing with Facedook:Two-day class Aug. 11 and 13; learn how to effectively use Facebook to market and advertise your small to medium
Ruby Ridbon Dream Big Tour: business; must have aFacebook Meet the women bringing this California-based social commerce account; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; fashioncompany to Bendandsee Central Oregon Community its new Fall Collection of women's College, 2600 NW College Way, apparel; call to RSVP; free; 6 Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.
cocc.edu/community-learning. Basic Portrait Retouching with Photoshop:Two-day class on Aug. 11 and Aug. 18 covering techniques for retouching portraits with focus on complexion retouching, enhancing composition with cropping and lighting adjustments, color correction and enhancement, and prepping and exporting files for print; must have basic Photoshop experience; $129; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW
College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/communitylearning.
2, $224,900 • Awbrey Woods USALimited Partnership to Pahlisch Homes Inc., Awbrey Woods, Phase1, Lots 7-8, $200,000 • Peter and Sandra J. Brown to Russell E. andCheryllyn C. Hamm, Squaw CreekCanyonRecreational Estates, Lot11, Block 7, $370,000 • PL Redmond USALimited Partnership to Pahlisch Homes Inc., Parkland, Lots 66, 68-69, 78, $160,000 • lan M. and Kathrine J. Hartman to Duane R.andSusan V. Dippon, Jefferson MeadowCondominium, Unit 5, $200,000 • Sharon L. Kimberling, trustee of the Sharon L. Kimberling Trust, to Zachariah D. andHolly J. Nordby, Bend View Addition, Lot 9, Block14, $249,900 • Laurie A. RayandMark E. Doyle to Glen S. andJanet F. Stone, Shevlin Ridge Phase 3, Lot 36, $579,000 • Kenneth C. and Doris L. Betuel to John W. andKaren A.MacKenzie, Harris Estates, Phase1, Lots 7-8, Block 2, $400,000 • Carol L. Woodstock, trustee of the Carol L. Woodstock Trust, and Jeff Katz, to Carol T. Lilley, Knoll Heights, Lot 3, Block1, $347,000 • Stone Bridge HomesNWLLCto Elizabeth and Richard W.Hendrix, Hidden Hills, Phase1, Lot11, $328,340 • Christopher and Carrie Carney to
Edward J. Kula, River CanyonEstates No. 4, Lot 297, $359,000 • Allen Trust Company, trustee of the Thelma Warren Trustfor Aleta Warren, to Otto G. andLois T. Powell, Alpine Village 2 at Mountain High, Lots14-15, $440,000 • Bradford B. Mitchell to Kristin D. Edwards, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 15, $273,000 • Collin T. Edwards-Hill to Shakti Investments LLC, Pines at Pilot Butte, Phase5, Lot50 $168000 • Douglas J. and Audrey L. Weathers, trustees of the Weathers Living Trust, to Robert G. andSandra I. Pospisil, Eagle Crest 2, Phase1, Lot 50, $335,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Leonard and Jessica Pelagio, Obsidian Ridge, Phases1-2, Lot 40, $180,377 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Carol and David Doyle, Badger Forest, Phase1, Lot 36, $215,000 • John and Elizabeth B. Negrau to Benjamin L. and Roberta J. Steward, Heights ofBend,Phase5,Lot88, $414,000 • Roger J. Lee andKristen K. Warner to Lisa M. Maruna, Partition Plat 2006-26, Parcel1, $174,000 •LawrenceG.and LindaD.Rygalski to Gary L. and Doris A. Rose, Ridgeat Eagle Crest 27, Lot129, $330,000 • Randy L. Mahaneyto Jaimie M. Jensen and PeteNye,Woodriver Village, Lots16-17, Block6, $185,000
Aug. 21 Business Start-Up Workshop: Two-hour session covers all the basicsteps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541383-7290.
DEEDS DeschutesCounty •HaydenHomes LLCto Kenneth G. Harris and Marylea Martin-Harris, Aspen Rim, Lot154, $446,675 • Gregg A. Jensen to Steven R. Peebles, Plateau Estates, Lot3, Block 4, $276,000 • Laura Richardson to Jennifer Redding, CascadeVista PUD, Lot17, $209,900 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Ross J. Emerickand Amelia C. Dole, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot11, $194,000 • Stormi K. Bettiga, trustee of the Stormi Bettiga Revocable Living Trust, to Carolyn Pitts McCall, trustee of the Charles P.Pitts Sr. Family Trust, for the benefit of Corbin P. Pitts, Aspen Rim No. 2, Lot160, $270,000 • Floyd E. and LadeanaM. Bonny to Jason A. and Brandie J. Culp, JacobsenSecond Addition,Lot5, Block 6, $280,000 • SFI Cascade Highlands LLC to Steve and Vida Barham,Tetherow, Phase3, Lot 144, $359,100 • Scott A. Coe to Charles R. and Jerry W. Briggs, Ridgepointe, Lot 3, $205,000 • Hawk Owl Investments LLC to T. Dean and Patricia Hansen, Ridge at Eagle Crest 23, Lot 28, $476,000 • Matthew J. and Kimberley J. Hockin to Charlotte L. Bell, Badger Crossing, Phases1-2, Lot19, $283,000 • Bella Villa Homes Corporation to PKM Properties LLC toCaldera
Springs, Phase 3, Lot 8, $460,000 • PKM Properties LLC to Bella Villa Homes Corporation, Caldera Springs, Phase 2, Lots 256, 262, 267, 268, $460,000 • Michael A. and Alice F.Goeman to Edward and Laura Sadowski, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase 7,Lot1, Block10, $725,000 •James W. and PaulineE.Audrain to Nicole D. Ciomek, Township15, Range 13, Section 19, $285,000 • Mary Lou Malchow, trustee of the Mary Lou Malchow Trust, to Jennifer A. Faircloth, Elkhorn Estates, Phases 9-10, Lot122, $300,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Bruce B. and Katharine J. Fry, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot10, $194,000 • Jan B. and Patricia G. Vandenberg to Andy D. andNancy K. Bryant, Highlands at BrokenTop, Phase1, Lot 20, $1,900,000 • Michael W. and Suzanne M. McCandless, trustees of the McCandless Family Trust of 2001, to Brian W. andStephanie L. Wilson, Fairway Crest Village 2, Lot 7, Block 10, $359,000 • Terri M. Christensen Wright, trustee of the Terri M. Christensen Wright Revocable Living Trust, and Corry F. Wright, to Kevin P.and Courtney A. Riding, Township15, Range12, Section12-13, $295,000 • Dunlap Fine HomesInc. to Robert W. and Linda D. Rock, Vista Meadows, Phase 3, Lot 73, $296,600
• Stephanie B. Maier to William D. Forsyth, trustee of the WDF Living Trust, Laurel Springs, Lot16, $235,000 • Christopher E. andChristy R. Perret to Gary L. andKelly C. Moore, Highlandsat Broken Top, Phase3, Lot 42, $550,000 • David J. and Joanne A. Logan to Daniel and Dusty Stenkamp, Rimrock West Estates - Replat, Lot 30, Block 2, $250,000 • Daniel and Dusty J. Stenkamp to David and Joanne Logan,OakHills, Lot 3, $169,000 • Dennis F. Rosch to Morgan W. Parker and Jennifer Carignan-Parker, Choctaw Village, Lot16, Block4, Township17, Range12, Section 21, $301,200 • Angela G. Jordan to Chris and Andrea M. Gilliam, Tanglewood, Lot 30, Block10, $257,000 • Kathryn Mansberger to Patricia G. Vandenberg, trustee of the Patricia G. Vandenberg Living Trust, Broken Top, Phase 2E, Lot172, $795,000 • James and Patricia Zurbriggen, trustees of the JamesandPatricia Zurbriggen1997 Living Trust, to Michael J. and Kathleen D. Abbadessa, Deer Park 4, Lot 29, Block 22, $550,000 • Robert and Julia Scott to William D. and Aniceta M. Kelley, Township16, Range11, Section 25, $655,000 • Edwin J. Cook, trustee of the Virgil and Phyllis Nordyke Trust, to Connie Briese, Glenwood Acres, First
Addition, Lot1, Block 3, $149,000 • Jim L. Traughber to Cynthia M. Wagner, TheGreens at Redmond, Phase 3C, Lot 278, $259,000 • Stephen P. Greer, trustee of the Russell Greer and Lois M. Greer Revocable Living Trust to Tumalo Road LLC,Township17, Range12, Section 6, $425,000 • Bryant Enterprises LLC to High Desert Land Holdings LLC,Township 17, Range12, Section 21, $350,000 • Jerry M. and Jacqueline M. Volf to Ronald R. andCeritha N. Willeford, Ridge at Eagle Crest 27, Lot 62, $542,500 • Danny J. Bolstad, trustee of the Danny J. Bolstad Trust, and Cathy W. Bolstad, trustee of the Cathy W. Bolstad Revocable Trust, to Jerry M. and Jacqueline M. Volf, Ridge at Eagle Crest15, Lot 25, $300,000 • John P. and Victoria L. Audette, trustees of the John P.and Victoria L. Audette Joint Trust, to Robert P. and Eileen L. Krause, NorthWest Crossing, Phases 2-3, Lot 65, $414,500 • Kerry C. and Barbara R. Bott to Clifford T. and Dorothy H. Jensen, River Meadows, Lot 22, Block 3, $409,000 • Carrie L. Green and Timothy C. Scarborough to Laura L. Beebe, Sixth Addition to Woodland Park Homesites, Lot 8, Block 7, $150,000 • H. Jordan and Shannon L. Smith to Jessica H. Swartz and Paul D. Shorey, Tamarack Park, Lot 7, Block
Sports
lion, according to Plano Convention and Visitors Bureau. Pattison will add the Cowboy
Continued from E1 But it's the lacrosse tournaments that have the real earn-
Cupin Plano in November.
ing potential and are the cornerstone of Pattison Sports
a couple of reasons: One is business vitality within our
Group, saidLong.
community — the impact of
As he vowed at that 2008 lacrosse championship, Pat-
peopletraveling here, staying in our hotels,eating in our
tison S ports Group would
restaurants," Voss said. "Pla-
organize the Inter-Ac Invitational lacrosse tournament the next year. It attracted such
no is kind of getting a name out there for doing those
high-profile sponsorsas Toyo-
and Pattison is a big part of
ta and the Air Force, plus local
it."
businesses, paying $500 to $5,000for visibility at anevent with high-incomeaudiences. "When we were bringing those kind of sponsors into
The challenge now for Pattisonis keepingahead of new competitors — and keeping costsin check amid rising facilities fees. "In a perfect world, I'd love
"We do these things for
events and doing them well,
Akira Suwa l Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service
Jeff Long, founder and president of Pattison Sports Group, organizes, hosts and markets youth sports events across the country.
the lacrosse space, that was
opening people'seyes," Long
to see us own our own facili-
t o urna- food concessions.The goal is ments wereasking for help in to make attending a tournasaid. Soon, o ther
securing sponsors. "That's when
ment the best experience it w e s ai d ,
attitude."
That's becausethe returns can be tremendous, said Ed
ty," Long said. "Then you can control your destiny." In the meantime, Pattison
will explore growth by ex'Why are we doing this for evNo disrespect to booster for the city of Plano, Texas. panding into other sportserybody else?Why don't we clubs and other volunteers, Pattison's Victory Event Se- basketball, for starters. do this for ourselves'?'" said Scott El y , P a t tison's ries included the Texas Draw As for thatticket business'? "I'm glad it didn't work In addition to lining up vice president of operations, lacrosse tournament there sponsors, Pattison S ports but "in youth sports, people in June the last three years, out," Long said, "but I often Group now also handles reg- are willing to pay for a ser- which had an economic im- think back and think what it istration, merchandising and vice that's professional in pact just in 2014of $3.4 mil- could have been."
Distillery Contlnued from E1 Emery and his business partner acquired Earth2o in
2005. Sincethen, the company has grown five-fold, and millions of dollars — he would not be more specific
canbe.
Voss, athletic superintendent
— have been invested to in-
crease production and make the bottling plant more environmentally friendly. "Waste: There's an environmental issue to it, and it's also cash," he said. "So, if
mo.
we can invest and eliminate waste, then we improve our profitability and reduce our carbon footprint." In the past three years,
Bundle everything your business needs.
the company has invested in
five new molding machines, two that make tube-like pre-
PHONE, INTERNET 5 VIDEO
Photos by Ryan Brennecke l The Bulletin
forms out of, roughly, BB- Top photo: Bottles made from sized pieces of 100 percent recycled plastic move down post-consumer recycled ma- a conveyor to be filled with terial, and three that use air
pressure to blowthe preforms
water at Earth2o in Culver on Thursday. Above: Bottle
preforms made from recycled These allow the company plastic are fed into a machine to produce its own bottles at Earth2o and blown into new into bottles.
at the Culver facility out of
water bottles.
tles," Emery said. "Then we
and distribution outside the
were buying preforms. And now everything is vertically
region. She expects the addi-
all-recycled material. "First, we were buying bot-
add more family-wagejobs. The company also finished Emery said the goal is to installing a racking system begin construction on the disin June. It allows the plant tillery building next month. to hold three times as many He hopes to start producing bottles of water. It can now spirits by year's end, but said house 1,600 pallets, equiva- that will depend on gaining lent toa five-day supply at the approval from the federal Alplant. cohol and Tobacco Tax and Brown o f ED C O s ai d TradeBureau and the Oregon Earth2o,which currently em- Liquor Control Commission. ploys about75, adds jobs each — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbutfetin.com
en d broadband Business
tion of the FTB Distillery will
integrated in house."
year andincreases local sales
~b
•
• •
• r • • e
•
•
• ig g
i •
OFFER DETAILS & VIDEO:Offer valid through September 30, 2014 for new service with a minimum oneyear term. Monthly cost is $99 for all three services, excluding any applicable fees and taxes or one time charges such as installation or modem purchase. Unbundled discounts also available. First month's payment due by installation date.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN E 3
How4 1 s ene item o ersan em o ees By Sarah Max
ning software company based
rest ofthe workforce. Specifi-
New Yorh Times News Service
in Eugene. Yet when it comes
cally, the average contribution of the highly paid group can-
Soon after Sabina Gault
got her public relations firm up and running in 2008, she asked for a show of hands from employees interested in having a company 401(k) plan. The consensus'? "Nobody wanted it," said Gault, whose firm, Konnect Public
to recruiting and retaining employees over the long term,
not be more than 2 percentage
"not having a retirement plan
you can't not have them."
What's more, a company-sponsored plan is a l so
', ff 'f Jf f, ff fi ' ff Jf. f' i '' f I( f( fi f(!'; ' f(aLJ( fi ' i ' I(.JQ (,i
t he most effective way f or
"
Relations, based in Los Ange- small-businessowners to save les, had just a few employees for their own retirements, said at the time.
Leon LaBrecque, chief strat-
Two years later, with eight people on her payroll, she
egist and founder of LJPR, a
raised the question a second
Troy, Michigan. Owners can contribute to individual re-
time. Again, the response was lukewarm. So she waited. Finally, in 2013, she made an executive decision about the 401(k): "I said, 'We're going to do it no matter what, even if
it's just a few of us.'"
points higher than the average for rank-and-file employees. If the average employee contributes 5 percent of salary to the plan, for example, the average for the highest-paid employees cannot exceed 7 percent. Nevertheless, to avoid the
is a glaring hole," she said. "It's like restrooms in the office;
administrative inconvenience
of complying with this rule, many companies choose so-calledsafe harbor plans. These plans do require an employer contribution — most
wealth management firm in tirement accounts or to a Roth IRA, but the contribution limit
common is a dollar-for-dollar
match, up to 4 percent — but they give all employees carte
for these plans is just $5,500 a year ($6,500 for anyone 50 and
blanche to contribute as much
as they want to the plan, up to
older). That is one-third the
maximum allowed for a 401(k) While the share of small plan. SEP IRAs, while popubusinesses offering 401(k) lar among the self-employed J. Emilio Flores/The New York Times plans has picked up since and very small businesses, Sabina Gault, center, discusses her public relations firm's 401(k) plan with employees in Los Angeles. 2008 — when just 10 percent are generally not a good bet Aside from the cost of operating a 401(k), workers' lack of interest is often cited as a reason employoffered the benefit — 401(k) for growing companies; they ers have been reluctant to embrace the group benefits plans. plans are still the exception at can becostly,and they require
the standard limits. The standard advice is that
small companies. Just 1 in 4
LaBrecque, who uses a safe
owners to contribute the same
it," she said. "We work with ment options and services a planner who does an infor-
firms with 50 or fewer employ- percentageto employee plans ees has such a plan in place, that they contribute to their according to Capital One's own plans.
will want to balance investwith costs paid by the com-
m ational meeting w it h
ShareBuilder 401k.
pany and fees paid by the employee. Many providers charge amanagement feeto employers or employees — on top of fixed administrative fees. Employers should be wary if fees creep above 1 percent of employee assets. (Additional management fees are charged by the mutual funds or other exchange-traded funds used in 401(k) plans.) One exception,according
company every quarter and
Employers point to a lack Shopping around of interest among employees Fortunately, setting up a coupled with the costs of set- 401(k) plan is considerably ting up and administering the easier and cheaper than it plans. That is one reason Gault was just a decade ago. Setup waited as long as she did. and administrative costs vary "It didn't make sense to pay from one provider to the next for something people wouldn't — and increase if the plan ofuse," she said, noting that most fers more customized investof her employees are in their ment options, hands-on advice early 20s. Had they been a and other bells and whistles. little older, she said, it might Many 401(k) providers, includhave been more of a priority. ing ShareBuilder 401k, offer basic plans that start around Lack ofinterest $1,000 a year. And there are Retirement plans typically tax incentives. Companies take a back seat to salary, ben- with fewer than 100 employ-
to Parsons: It may be worth
paying more to bring in a financial adviser to help select investment options and to give employees hands-on investefits like health insurance and ees can claim up to $500 in tax ment advice. "Our thinking is, if you take other more immediate perks, credits to offset administrative said Sabrina Parsons, chief ex- costsforeach ofthe firstthree the time to set up a plan, you ecutive of Palo Alto Software, years of a first-time plan. want to make sure employees a 55-employeebusiness planOwners shopping for a plan are getting the most out of
the
most companies that can afford to match probably should. Agenerous retirementpackage can bean assetfor recruiting and retaining employees, said
fee of $4 a month.
harborplan for his employees.
Matching
"I always emphasize that this is part of their compensa-
For s o m e em p loyers, tion package," he said. "When though, administrative fees employees look at it that way, are just the beginning of the they're more likely to take full expense. The bigger concern advantage of that match." for many small businesses is Small businesses that are the cost of matching benefits. not quite ready to make that "The biggest misconception commitment, however, can is that employers have to do a start with the traditional plan. "You can always switch over match," said Neil Smith, executive vice president at Ascen- to a safe harbor plan once you sus, one of the nation's largest have more consistent revenue independent record keepers coming in the door," he added. and administrators for retireFor now, Gault is stickment plans. "A match is com- ing with a traditional plan pletely optional in a traditional — though she does offer emplan." ployeesa 10 percent match on Why the confusion? A pro- contributions of up to 5 pervision in the Employee Re- cent of their salary. The perk tirement Income Security Act has proved to be more popular prohibits companies from than she expected. Today, she allowing the highest-paid em- said, roughly half of her 30 ployees to contribute dispro- employees use the plan to save portionately more than the for their retirement years.
also meets with employees
individually." Having worked in the financial services industry for much of hi s career, Darius
Mirshahzadeh, president of Endeavor America Loan Ser-
vices, was particularly aware of fees when it came time to set up a 401(k) for his I-yearold business. The plan, which will be available to employees beginning in August, is administered by the Online
401k, a 15-year-old company with more than 7,000 small
businesses on its platform. Its most popular option, the Express(k), charges employers with 50 or fewer employees about $1,200 for the year; employees pay an additional flat
T enew i ont e oc incomicsisarea By Blake Hennon
after a promising pilot based er publishers that show print on the comic was produced in and digital revenues growing 2011 but not picked up. together. The company last year The company also is reachlaunched an e n tertainment ing out to children in stores unit to develop TV shows, and such as Target and Toys R it has about 10 projects in var- Us with its Micro Comic Fun ious stages. IDW Entertain- Packs for titles such as "My ment hopes to begin selling Little Pony" and "Transformthe projects in fall and winter. ers" that include sticker sheets "Instead of going to a studio and the like. and saying, 'Will you option So, what might IDW look our material?' we're going to like in 15 years? go to a studio and saying, 'Do Its CEO hopes it remains a you want to buy this show?'" diverse publisher, that it has Adams said. had some TV shows on the air,
Los Angeles Times
Ted Adams never set out to
be acomic book kingmaker. He started hi s c ompany,
Idea 5 Design Works, as a San Diego graphic design firm in 1999. The company evolved into a publisher of its own books, and now is one of the top four comic book publishers in the world. IDW sold
more than 1 million graphic novels last year, and it com-
petes against superhero stalwarts Marvel and DC, both at least five times its age.
I
Q
So at the annual Comic-Con I nternational,
I DW h eaded i nt o
l
C o m - and that it has new ventures to
ic-Con's Eisner Awards cere- pursue.
h o sted l a s t
mony with nine nominations,
weekend in San Diego, Adams was in high demand. He talked about his vision during
"I'm hopeful that we'll have
including a combined five for continued to take lots of risks," its Library of American Com- Adams said. (j,~ '
several panel presentations as
ics and Artist's Editions archi-
val lines. But the company is also pushing into the future.
:.
IDW pushesinto new areas such as movies and television.
Salkowitz credits IDW with
"My approach with our pub-
expanding the comics market hshing business has always Don Bartletti/Los Angeles Times beyond comic shops, including been to be as diverse as possi- Ted Adams, CEO and publisher of IDW Publishing, holds a hardbound volume of graphic novels in the with its early and continuing ble," said Adams, who as chief company's headquarters in San Diego. IDW is one of the world's largest publishers of comic books digital efforts. executive and publisher over- and graphic novels. Digital ventures are bringsees IDW's monthly comics, ing people who rediscover art books, Eisner Award-win-
comics on iPads and smart-
ning archival lines and the L i ttle Pony' issues while their new tabletop games and tele- parents browse the graphic vision divisions. novel shelf," Salkowitz said. IDW has published orig- "That's astonishing — and brilinal horror hits "30 Days of l i ant. Young girls are not an Night" and "Locke & Key." audience that's been served by But, it also has crossed over an American comics publisher into more mainstream brands in decades. In terms of playsuch as "The X-Files" ing catch-up — at and "My Little Pony" — and saw a "Trans-
"My
formers" character I P~ created in its books featured in this sum- With Our mer's b l o ckbusterpU y l jSQjrlg film. The titles have rl helped propel t he company for the last /7BS BIWBP'S 15 years, and IDW g g g f l gp g g will have two booths at the convention to
~ " showcase its varied POSSible."
ventures old and new.
Industry observers
conllcs. "It sounds very trite to say it
this way, but the one that real— I'm not sure ly feels transformative to the most other compa- company is when we started doing 'Transformers,'" said nies would know where to start." Chris Ryall, IDW Publishing's IDW 's pub- chief creative officer and edlishing s u ccess itor in chief, who joined the is nothing that it company in 2004 and helped coul d have antici- land the license the next year. "People were going: Wait a pate d a t thestart. IDW didn't pub- second, who is this little comlish its first book, pany in San Diego that was an art volume by suddenly awarded this giant A shley W o o d , licensed property?" Ryall said, least on this front
— Ted Adams, untii 2001 It g ot CEO and Publisher a space at that
noting that IDW wo n f r an-
chise creator Hasbro's bidding is year's Comic-Con process over larger and older es'gn +orks to sell "Uno Fan- publishers. most interesting beta," and the expec ause they ar e r e He has helped lead the comlentlessly focused on rience helpedpush pany to produce 60 to 70 titles expanding the comics market the company into comics. a month compared with about in ways that most publishers ID W ' s arrival was heralded10 a month just a decade ago. aren't," said Rob Salkowitz, b y a n eye-opening original It also licenses franchises such author of "Comic-Con and the vampire story and a licensed as "Teenage Mutant Ninja Business of Pop Culture" and forensicphenomenon. Turtles," "Godzilla" and "Star a teacher of digital strategy St e ve Niles and Ben Tem-Trek." at the University of Washing- plesmith's 2002 bloodsuckWhat Ryall calls "the flagton's Communication Leader- e r s -in-Alaska s h ocker "30 ship" of IDW's originals in ship graduate program. Days of Night" (Iater a film) recent years is Joe Hill and "Every weekend, my local and a 2003 "CSI" series had Gabriel Rodriguez's Eisner comic store is crowded with q uality that "propelled (IDW) Award-winning "Locke & little girls picking up their 'My f rom 'another interesting pub- Key," which concluded this have noticed. " To me, ID W
TOUCHMARK
SINCE 19SO lisher' to one of the leading year. The tale of a family beset phones back into comic book independent comics compa- by a mysterious evil has in part stores, Adams said, citing annies," Salkowitz said. inspired a move into develop- ecdotal evidence and financial •J The metamorphosis into a ing television series in-house statements from IDW and othmajor independent player was complete when IDW began "Transformers" publishing |ln old-fashioned affordable County fair with something i'Uil for everyone!
•
•
The Bulletin '
=
L7
//
Onceyou'vePaidfor general admission, comeenjoy games,contests, shows, a(fdmore! Andit's all FREE!
F arm Yard Fu n All Day Farm Fun! Water Pumping Stations, Bessie's Milking Parlor, Pete's Potato Place (dig 8 plant
I
llk '
potatoes), FarmAnimal
g+
Puzzles 8 Corn Play Bin.
I/f~,
ieC
PENNII • PIIDOUCT5
8 01 4 D e a c h . u Ce e C o u n t p I
D
f
'~
P
e7uly 80~ T EROU OE
August 8 ~ ' •
•
•
.
.
•
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Revenue
Power
Continued from E1
Continued from E1
The comment period for the Clean Air Plan put out by the U.S.Environmental Protection Agency ends Oct.16. Commentsareaccepted online or by mail, fax and email. • By email: A-and-RDocket©epa.gov. Include docket ID No.EPA-HQOAR-2013-0602 in the subject line of the message
triguing parts is what you can do between states,"
The recovery in South Florida's real estate market and
said Bob Jenks, executive director of t h e C i tizens'
economy has allowed Tadd Schwartz's public relations firm to step up its hiring. Schwartz Media Strategies usually hired one or two employees annually the past six years, but in the last three months, he's added three full-
Utility Board of Oregon. "If you read it (the plan), a lot of it is like interstate
trading, like RGGI," the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative t h a t i n v o lves n ine N o r theastern a n d Mid-Atlantic states. RGGI
time staffers and two interns,
putting his payroll at 17. That's Eric Risberg /The Associated Press up from 12 staffers a year ago. Liliana Aranda, owner of Faces Schwartz has b een c on- by Liliana, does a peppermint fident enough to hire before neck and scalp treat to Dr. sealing a deal with new clients. Austin Davis at his chiropractic He wants to have enough peo- office in San Francisco. ple on staff to hit the ground running when a contract is signed. marketing tasks. "We've waited perhaps a bit "We want to position our firm so we're not only able to too long. Business is up sub-
and invest the proceeds in energy efficiency and renewable energy, according to its website. Wyoming, for example, t h a t O r e g on
position where we don't have scrambling," Barrett says.
ural Resources Defense
Barrett expected his reve-
says. nue to grow 40 percent in 2014, Schwartz Media's revenue but sales of Grill Grate are alis up about 16 percent so far ready up 55 percent from this in 2014. If Schwartz lands two time last year. or threemore big accounts,he says he will start recruiting Fewer holdouts again. When Microsoft Corp. ended support for its Windows Order flood XP operating system, forcing Publicity t h e la s t fe w businesses and people to find months about Brad Barrett's
alternatives, Marcus Network-
product Grill Grate sent orders for the backyard grill accessory soaring. Barrett, who was cautious while building his 7-year-old company, had six employees including himself and his wife. He expected that to be enough. But orders flooded in faster than expected, and over the Independence Day weekend,
ing was able to hire four people. The end of XP support on April 8 gave the technology seller and consultancy a boost
the Barretts had to fill orders
ments that need to be done," says Marcus, whose company has 18 employees in Tempe, Arizona, and five in Woodland Hills, California.
themselves for their product, which creates a raised grilling surface for backyard grills. "We were inside the entire weekend. We shipped 500 packages the Monday after July 4," he says.
goal is about four times the amount of carbon di-
another to gas i n
according to EPA data. " Their r eductions ar e
Lakeside 2. It also has two
more than our total emis-
the works. However, its
hard to see how they do that (reduce emissions)
fault the utility for not taking
without closing some coal
plan toreduce carbon emissions when PacifiCorp laid
regulation but the certainty that new regulations will oc-
know."
need to replace PCs and serv-
ers using XP. "We've only made a small
Eind Your Dream Home In Real Estate • • •
utility-sized solar plants in
into account the impending out its plan in 2013.
u t i l i ties w i l l
egon Public Utility Commission in July declined to acknowledge PacifiCorp
ljI,
investments at two coal-
fired power plants and instructed the utility to "ex-
plore options" in its next long-range plan, due next year, for how it plans to address the Clean Power
Find It All
%IW ILSONSofRehnond
According t o P a cifiCorp spokesman Bob Gravely, the utility plans
Adjustable Beds
Sutte 2302200 square feet of Class A professional offices. Beautiful finishes, spacious offices, conference rooms, Breakroom, reception area, high ceilings, elevator. $0.95per foot + NNN
541-548-2066
Sultel40 1292 squarefeet of Retail Space Street level, very busy intersection Off streetparking $0.75 per foot + NNN
Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker
541-389-4212 5 4 1-585-2446
IIXf TREss
541-3S9-0006
www.evergreeninhome.com
dan@colmcommercial.com
Gallery-Bend
5413826447i2090NEWytt C t i S i t 101 Bend QR97701 I bendurology.com
I~I U
541-330-5084
m lo
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY
T ICKER
FamilyDollar FDO TwitterInc TWTR Linkedln Corp LNKD Pharmacyclics PCYC Bunge Ltd BG ASMLHolding Nv ASML Edwards Life sci EW T-MobileUS Inc T MUS Regeneron Pharm RE G N Marathon petroleum Mpo Expedia Inc EXPE ExpressScripts ESRX Hospira Inc HSP TeslaMotorslnc TSLA Kohls Corp Kss
FRIDAY C LOS E
75.8 5
15. 1 9
25.0
15A
44.1 3 2 0 1 .7 8 1 1 6 .9 1
59 .7 24. 3 4 12. 0 9
15.e 13 . 7 11 . 5
6.8 16.2 24.0
6.2
80.80 92 . 30 91.97
6. 3 8 7.33 6.97
e.e e.e e.2
33. 4 2 324 .3 1 83.5 7 84 . 4 6 70. 1 7 54.6 4 23 3 .2 7 53.56
2.23 21. 2 2 4.9 9 4.79 3.82 2.92 9.70 22 .0
Z1
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
-3.5
4A 0.3 4.2 3.3 2.7 1.1 4.1 1.8 1.2
70 e. 4 e.o 5.e 5.e 4.3 4 .3
TICKER
10.4 GFI Group Inc 0.0 Tekmira Pharm -11.4 Zeltiq Aesthetics 10.9 LivePerson Inc 5.3 Amedisys Inc 5.5 PGT Inc 26.4 Journal Comm 36.6 RubiconProject 17.1 Ducommun lnc 16.1 Pantry Inc (The) 69.8 Intervest Bancsh 6.3 Ameresco Inc 36.3 Green Dot corp 66.3 Astronics Corp 3.9 Libbey Inc
FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
LAST FRI. CHG 1925.15 -5.52 9210.08 -197.40 6679.18 -50.ea 24532.43 -224.42 4202.78 -43.36 15523.11 -97.66
4.46
1.46
4e.7
3 3.5
14.26
3.97
ZLTQ
20.13
4.47
a e.e 2e.e
2 2 . 6 134.6 3 2.0 235.1
LPSN
12.19
2.44
25.0
16.2
27.5
AMED
19.49
3.61
22.7
16.8
61.3
9.29
1.69
22.2
3.2
Aires M erval 8326.92 +138.93 +1.70% X X -7.4 Buenos
PGTI
18.3
JRN
10.50
1.91
22.2
13.6
RUBI
11.92
1.89
1e.e
-6.7
Dco
27.45
4.21
1e.1
2.4
PTRY
18.41
2.80
179
5.9
/AFRICA 43.9 EUROPE
IBCA
9.40
1.34
AMRC
7 .59
t.e e
GDOT
19.70
2.79
ATRO LBY
59.75
8.37
1 e.e 1e.e 1e.e 1e.a
26.17
3.59
15.9
1 9 .4 8.5 Amsterdam 5.6 -17.7 Brussels Madrid 1.9 -22.7 Zurich 0.9 83.5 Milan -4.1 5.e Johannesburg Stockholm
-e2.9
-58.7
-5.1e -az1 -3.94 -ae.4 -10.80 -34.e
-46.0
398.56 -5.73 3060.49 -38.25 1073.52 -1 9.30 8410.27 -87.11 20362.41 -208.39 5091 7.78 -478.29 -1 8.43 1361.44
-14.2
1.9 GalectinTherap
GALT
5.69
6 3.65
-8.62
-11.9
-11.8
HZNP
8.74
78. 4 e 107.4 1 105.48 19.8 8 111. 5 6 54.00 61.5 3
-10.25
-11.e
-11.4
e.e Horizonpharma -0.4 Acelnx Pharma
ACRX
6.89
-13.44
-11.1
-11.0
15.1 eHealth Inc
EHTH
20.25
-11.32
-9.7
-10.8
4.31
-1.85
-30.0
-36.9
-9.7
-11.0
71.7 Town SportsIntl Hdg 3z0 HillInternational
CLUB
-2.14
HIL
4.17
-1.61
-2z9
-33.9
-3.02 2073.10 SingaporeStraits Times 3344.42 -29.64 -40.3 Sydney All Ordinaries 554 7.60 -75.50 -3z7 Taipei Taiex 9266.51 -49.34 -59.7 Shanghai Composite 2 1 85.30 -1 6.26 53.2
-11.50
-9.3
-11.6
17.e vocera commun
VCRA
9.15
-3.09
-25.2
-34.2
-13.2
-5.40
-9.1
-7.3
-25.1
-16.7
134.2
-7.8
pxLW CAS
-2.09
-9.0
68.2 Pixelworks Inc 8.5 Castle AM
6.23
-6.08
8.26
-2.58
-23.e
-29.9
-51.4
87.5 3
-8.22
-e.e
-11.4
11.4 svc source Intl
SREV
3.39
-1.01
-23.0
-40.0
-58.5
-9.63
-40.1
-46.3
3.2
237.7
Red Iobster Is trying to stay fresh In a crowded sea of family-style chain restaurants. Darden Restaurants this week completedits sale of the struggling chain to investmentfirm Golden Gate Capital. Now, KimLopdrup, Red Lobster's new CEO, is making changesto try to stem yearslong salesdeclines at the chain that recentlychanged Its sloganto "Sea Food Differently." Amongthe changes, Lopdrup Is getting rid of some of the steep dlscounts that cheapened the image of its food, although popular promotions like "Endless Shrimp" and "Crabfest" are staying. He's also having the menu itemsstack on plates in a vertical style, as Is the style at fine-dining establishments. AndLopdrup said he
plans to reverse the declslon In late 2012 to expand non-seafood options to up toa quarter of the menu and bring the figure back downto around 10 to 15 percent by November. After serving as RedLobster's president from 2004to 2011 before moving on to otherareas of Darden's business, Lopdrupis familiar with the challenges the chaln faces.
Red Lobster' s sales have been decllnIng for years and recent attemptsto flx that haven't worked. What do you have In store for the chain? I thlnk Red Lobster Is actually starting froma position of strength. We're now gettingbackto the basics of being not just the biggest seafood restaurant,but the best.
j
I 42% I 23% -1.77% -1.02% -1.01%
V
4
+54. 46%
i
2 95% +8.53% +11.70%
L
0 80% +467'/ +6.08% +2.53% i16.56%
-0.93%
+1 0.08%
-1.34%
+2.14%
ASIA
-12.7
Outlook: Offers insighton his turnaroundplans
T
-0.63%
43s e6.11 +168.42 +0.38% v 18.8 Mexico city eolsa sao Paolo Bovespa 5 5 9 02.87 + 7 3.4e + 0 . 13% T 0.0 -0.75% V Toronto s&P/TSX 1 521 5.26 -115.48 21.1
-9.80
Who he Is: CEOof RedLobster
0 910/
-1.02% T
YTD +4.15% 3 58% -1 P4% +5.26% -2.17% -4.72%
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
67.18
Red Lobster's
FRI. CHG WK MO ttTR -0.29% -2.10% -0 76%
TKMR
Note:Stocks classified by marketcapitalization, the product of thecurrent stock priceandtotal shares outstanding. Rangesare $100 milion to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8bilion Ilarge).
Kim Lopdrup
s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
GFIG
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Eaton Corp plc ETN Pentair plc PNR Eastman Chem E MN L-3Communications LLL H elmerich & Payne HP Corning Inc G LW R ockwell Automation RO K Energy Transfer Eqty ETE Murphy oil corp M UR Vertex Pharm V RTX
Globalmarkets
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
I
bendbulletin.com
Plan.
EVERGREEN
:-
Online
I
In-Home Care Servlces
TheB u l letin
c r i tics st ill
reliance on coal. The Or-
dent in the amount of replace-
Care for loved ones. Comfort for all.
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Angus Duncan, chairman also change. PacifiCorp of the Oregon Global Warmis already under pressure ing Commission and past from regulators, consum- president of the Bonneville er groups and environ- Environmental F o undation, mentalists to reduce its s cape fo r
will last for severalmoreyears. Thousands of companies still
in Marcus' 29 percent revenue surge this year. Small business Barrett is now looking for clients are hiring workers who two workers for the Carters- need computers. And compaville, Georgia, company — one nies that delayed replacing XP to help fill orders, and the other systems because of cash flow to handle administrative and problemshave more money.
2 018. In
June, it brought into service oxide as the Oregon goal, its third new gas-fired plant,
owner Eric Marcus expects
The economy is also a factor
"There will be some chal-
cur, PacifiCorp has analyzed differentcarbon cost scenar-
on retiring two coal plants next year and converting
plants." The regulatory land-
EPA goals, he wrote. Jenks, the consumer advocate, said that energy efficienciesmay counterupward pressure on rates. lenges but not much effect on rates," he said. "How the cost of Wyoming or Utah complying, how that will flow through PacifiCorp, I don't
"Given the lack of certainty around the specifics of future
Council. Coincidentally, the Wyoming emissions
sions," Jenks said. "It's
will work with each state to find the least-cost route to the
email.
For more information, visit the EPA website: http://j.mp/1lgSPvQ.
the amount of coal-fired
gests a short-term rise in the
price of electricity. PacifiCorp
for 2013, Gravely wrote in an
20460
Gravely, of PacifiCorp, said the EPA's own analysis sug-
its coal plants, much as it has up until now," he said. However, PacifiCorp did not know specifics about the EPA emissions goals while long-range plan, called the Integrated Resource Plan,
0602, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW.,Washington, DC
Finally, the impact of the Clean Power Plan on utility bills is hard to fathom.
tions on behalf of each one of
the utility wa s r evising its
Docket ID No. OAR-2013-
produces about four times electricity
recoup from ratepayers the money it invests to keep coalfired plants operating. "I would expect PacifiCorp to be fighting rear-guard ac-
• Mail:Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center (EPA/DC), Mailcode 28221T,Attention
their emission allowances
to say no to the right client," he
stantially and the six of us are
it next seeks PUC approval to
• Fax: 202-566-9744
is a cap-and-trade system, in which states auction
produces, according to a 2014 report by the Nat-
service our clients, but be in a
said imposing the Clean Pow- ios and assumptions in its er Plan will mean PacifiCorp IRPs for many years, includwill have a tougher sell when ing the 2013 IRP," he wrote.
How tocomment
" One of th e m ost i n -
A region recovers
E5
seoulcomposite
0.1 5% 0.88% T
+3.07% +5.59% 3 63% +7.61% +3.28%
1.34% V 053% V 0 74%
Quotable
"In an ideal world, wewould've done this at the depth of thefinancial crisis, in the recession." — A.G. Lafley,CEO of Procter & Gamble, during a conference call with analysts as the company announced plans to shed more than half lts brands aroundthe globe
What do you thlnk was the problem? Thebranddidlose focusonwhatmade RedLobstersuccessful. This brandis about greatseafood. People cometo Red Lobsterfor better seafood than they can get atother restaurants. Unfortunately, there was apedod that the brand triedto introducea number of non-seafood items. It was 10to 15 percent when I was presldent.But It gotto up to 25 percent of themenu.
What changes are being madeto the food itself? Interestingly,Red Lobster was already buyingtop speclflcation ingredients. But we have anopportunity to improve what we'redoingin how we handle, prepare and plate theseafood. Recently, we made changesin how we plate our fresh
flsh. It's a muchmore contemporary appearance. How so? Thefood isarranged in a way that's more like you'd see at a fine diningrestaurant. Theseafood Is the star. What other types of changes are In store? We arebreaking upwith deep discounting. I think it was a mistake. You'renot goingto see any of these low- priced specials that we'renot proudof. There was apromotion for 30 shrimp for $11.99. That certainly wasn't a dish you would've been excited abouteating. Interviewed by Candice Choi. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Indexclosing and weekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, AugUst1, 2014
+
16,493.37
NASDaa ~ 4,352.64
>< >2
S&P500
1,925.15+
5 3 19
M
I,114.86 +
-29.86
WILSHIRE5000 + 20,346.01
-561.16
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
UNDAY D
R
Engine-quitting
s omewa a or a e
mysteriesexplored
By Lawrence Ulnch New York Times News Service
As compact and midsize luxury models have steadily
By Brad Bergholdt
inflated in size and price, the
McClatcky-B.ibune News Service
carmakers have noticed the gaping hole at the truly small, $ 30,000-to-$40,000 end o f their showrooms.
Q
• A friend has 2004 distinguish between cause and • Chevy T r a ilblazer effect. You are correct that the V-6 with 129,000 miles. It fuel injectors may be shut off runs great except when as a result of the fault. Watchidling for a minute or so (at ing the injector pulse width a light), the engine quits. It PID just as the engine quits
If.,
On the crossover side, BMW has filled that hole with the
gyiiij--;-
petite Xl, to sell alongside Xs
restarts and is OK. There
I
numbered 3, 4, 5, 6 and soon, 7. Withthat tick-tack-toeboard
complete, the new 2 Series coupe
a r r i ves.
REVIEW A n d with all respect to BMW, my imaginary billboard would Courtesy BMW of North America via The New York Times honestly cite the 2 Series mis- The badgereads M, butthe model is the M235i with its fierce 320-horsepower turbocharged in-line 6. sion statement: "Because you can'tafford a 3 Series."
Seriously,some fans do crave a smaller, lighter BMW, closer in spirit — if not in reality — to the primitive 2002 model that first appeared here in 1968. In 2014, that car is the
2 Series,a replacement for the 1 Series, a scrunched ball of fun that, for all its charm,
seemed a bit of an outlier in the BMW lineup.
Compared with the 1 models, the handsome 2 Series inherits more of the family
2014 BNW N235i
placent interior design. from a standard engine stopLoaded up, even this 2 SeBase price:$44,959 start system. ries could blast past $50,000. As tested:$46,575 And in automatic models, Out-the-doorat $46,575, my Qpe:2-door, 4-passenger BMW says, a coasting mode M235i still lacked a slew of coupe disengages the powertrain optional luxury features, inat speeds from 30 to 100 mph cluding a navigation system, Engine:x320 horsepower, 3.0-liter BMWTwinPower when a driver lifts off the gas. high-end audio and a backup Fuel economy with the auto- camera. Turbo inline 6-cylinder rearmatic transmission is 23 mpg For the M235i, BMW cites wheel drive in town and 35mpg on the a conservative yet still-blisMileage:22 mpg city, highway for the 228i, with the tering4.8-second sprintfrom 33 mpg highway M235i nearly as frugal at 22/33 0-60 mph, abetted by the mpg (though the six-speed near-perfect eight-speed aumanual drops to 19/28). tomatic transmission. Even in many larger BMWs. The Yawning air inlets up front the 228i automatic manages 2015 228i starts at $33,050 — a suggest the M235i's high- the trick in 5.4 seconds. And significant $8,375 less than the speed mission. Bonus interior bless BMW for keeping the Efficiency gets another boost
genes, with less stubby proportions and more interior luxury and technology. And man, is it a blast to drive, especially the M235i version 428i coupe with the same en- bits include front sport seats, with its fierce 320-horsepower gine — and $11,000 less than an M leather multifunction turbocharged in-line 6. That's the M235i. For either version, steering wheel, a red-dial inactually20 more horses than throw in $ 1,800 for x D rive strument cluster and unfortuthe more expensive 435i, the AWD. nately, BMW's dowdy Aluminext rung up on BMW's coupe At 175.9 inches, the new num Hexagon interior trim. ladder. coupeisnearly 3 incheslonger This being BMW, it's posThe wallet-pressing issue than the 1 Series. A slightly sible to take the good stuff for is that the 2015 M235i, which lower roofline and some sub- granted: The chassis, brakes, comes laden with p erfor- tle body sculpturing help em- seats and stirring handling; mance-boosting gear, costs phasize the car's length. Front sophisticated powertrains that $44,050 to start — just $2,900 headroom and rear legroom are virtually unmatched in less than the prettier, roomier are up 0.8 inch. their one-two punch of power 435i. Channels in the apron along and fuel efficiency. But with In other words, it's a BMW, the front of the car direct air that goodness a given, your not a bargain. That role falls to the 228i, amply and effi-
cientlymoved by 240 horses from the 2-liter turbo 4 found
at the wheel arches — BMW
ence of when the engine quits, and one would not be able to
attention wanders to BMW's
calls the feature Air Curtains sore spots: stingy standard — to improve aerodynamics features,greedily priced opand reduce fuel consumption. tions and increasingly com-
m anual-transmission
fa i t h ,
offering its six-speed stick on either version (though not with xDrive). Girded with M gear, a reardrive layout and 52:48 weight distribution, the M235i presses major performance advantages over competitors that are based on front-drive chassis. Even so, the best intersec-
tion of price-and-performance may be the 228i with a $2,200 Track Handling Package. It includes an M Adaptive Suspension, sticky 18-inch Michelin Pilot Super Sport tires on alloy
wheels, Variable Sport Steering and M Sport brakes.
would confirm this.
are no codes showing at If the scan tool movie shows the Chevy dealer with the all monitored data to be norright diagnostic equipment. mal up to the stall-out, it'll be A half dozen different me- necessary to take physical chanics can't figure it out. measurements of non-moniIt's easy to simulate — they tored circuits like powers and just can't find the problem. grounds to the powertrain Could it be an engine sen- control module and perhaps sor sending or not sending a much closer look at all pera signal to the engine com- tinent circuits. A check of the puter which then shuts off powertrain management wirfuel? ing diagrams allows the tech — JimFitch to make a shopping list of per• There are dozens of haps a dozen or more suspect • possible causes for circuits and t h eir t e rminal this problem. Since the fault location within the busy PCM comes and goes, it's very connectors. Inserting a sharp, likely electrical in nature slender T-pin into/beside the rather t han m e chanical. appropriate PCM connector Checking for diagnostic terminal allows a connection trouble codes is always a point for a digital storage osgood first step, but unfortu- cilloscope or graphing multinatelythere are many faults meter. These tools plot voltage that can't be recognized and other values over time, by the on board diagnostic allowing even incredibly brief system because they occur events to be displayed, perhaps too briefly or are in circuits several of them at a time. It's odd the fault occurs only that aren't monitored. The best bang for the at idle and at no other time. A buck is for the service tech flaky connection or compoto set their scan tool up to nent often triggers due to heat, take a movie of relevant vibration, or engine movement PIDs (parameter IDs, sen- within its mounts, and idle is sor and other readings) and a pretty gentle and consistent hit the trigger the instant condition. the Trailblazer's engine It might sound kind of odd, quits. Replaying the be- but I love performing this fore/during/after movie se- kind of diagnosis! The chalquence may show an irreg- lenge of assembling a game ular value from a sensor, plan and sneaking up on, then output command, or sys- trouncing a tricky problem is tem an instant before en- a lot more fun than removing gine RPM crashes to zero. a transmission, doing mind An example of how this numbing maintenance work, wouldn't work might be a or wrestling a heater core out flaky crankshaft position from beneath a difficult instrusensor — it's our best refer- ment panel.
A
Ip~ 4
~4r + S]Nc%
See store for details.
See store for details.
" Includes select Tempur-pedic, Stressless 8r Beautyrest Black Closeout Niodels. Excludes select Tempur-pedic, Stressless &Beautyrest Black Models
I I'
0 Cmon 4
Wilson's Olive Garden
s
•I I
l
'
' i
I
InstantCredit! Applyonlineat: www.wilsonsofredm ond.net
Gallery-Bend
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
SUNDAY READER
JOHN COSTA
GENETIC MODIFICATION
Submit election letters early
A
s we enter what is sure to be a doozy ofan election sea-
son, it's good to clarify The Bulletin's guidelines for letters to the editor and guest columns.
A reader recently challenged the appropriateness of an In My View guest column written by Republican senatorial candidate Monica Wehby. In a letter to the editor published July 25, Bill Welch of Bend wrote,
"Wow. Sincewhen does a campaign ad qualify as an op-ed. "Monica Wehby's July 17 in My View entry is not an opinion piece — it is pure negative campaign rhetoric."
"If The Bulletin is going to allow its op-ed section to become a free space for campaign ads," Welch concluded, "it should at least be fair and invite both sides to participate. Otherwise, In My View becomes a
vehicle for cheap shots and self-promotion rather than a forum to dis-
cuss issues." The columnby Wehby thatgave
•
s
offense to Welch is a predictable at-
Photo and illustration from Thinkstock
tackon her opponent,U.S.Sen.Jeff Merkley. By the standards of political rhet-
oric, it's tame, criticizing Merkley for supporting Obamacare, for supporting policies that, she argues, harm job creation and for being — surprise, surprise — a liberal Democrat, which I'm sure the senator would
proudly plead to. The question that Welch raises is whether we should block elected
leaders and their opponents from publishing their views in guest columns in The Bulletin.
My response is, why should we'? W hy should elected leadersor their opponents be disqualified from writing columns for The Bulletin, assuming they follow the rules about frequency, length, taste and factual
accuracy? Should we disqualify them just during an election year, or should we block the columns we regularly get from elected leaders when they are not in the heat of a campaign?
Doesn't that put the challenger — in this case Wehby — at a disad-
vantage when Merkley has had six years of constant representation in the newspaper to expound upon his views? The bottom line is that we are being fair, that elected leaders-
like Merkley — have an ongoing
By Amy Harmon •New York Times News Service
invitation to present their views in
guest columns just like anyone else, assuming their columns are unique to us and they follow the rules.
CLEWISTON, Fla. -
American politics seems perpetual,
everything they had into fighting the disease they call citrus greening. dreaded came while he was To slowthe spread of thebacteriumthat driving. "It's here" was all his causes the scourge, they chopped down grove manager needed to say to hundreds of thousands of infected trees forcehim overto thesideoftheroad. and sprayed an expanding array of pestiThe disease that sours oranges and cides on the winged insect that carries it. leaves them half green, already ravag- But the contagion could not be contained. ing citrus crops across the world, had They scoured Central F l orida's reachedthe state'sstoried groves.Kress, half-million acres of emerald groves and
letter writers need to be aware that
the president of Southern Gardens Cit-
the intensity of campaigning picks up after Memorial Day.
rus, in charge of 2.5 million orange trees find a naturally immune tree that could and a factory that squeezes juice for serve as a new progenitor for a crop that
With that, so do the number of political letters and guest columns
Tropicana and Florida's Natural, sat in
One benefit to their columns is
that their bylines are on them. They can't claim that a reporter misquoted them in a story they didn't like.
And everything they say is then open tochallenge by ourreporters. Although the election season in
we receive. We try our best to publish every letter and guest column we receive
in the order we receive them, assuming they conform to a few rules. (See the policy box on the editorial
he call Ricke Kress and every
In all of citrus, but perhaps not in all
other citrus grower in Florida
of nature. With a precipitous decline in Florida's harvest predicted within the decade, the only chance left to save it,
Kress believed, was one his industry and others had long avoided for fear of consumer rejection. They would have to al-
ter the orange's DNA — with a gene from a different species. Oranges are not the only crop that
might benefit from genetically engineeredresistance to diseases for which
sent search parties around the world to
standard treatments have proved elu-
has thrived in the state since its arrival,
silence for several long moments. it is said, with Ponce de Leon. But such a "OK," he said finally on that fall day in tree did not exist. "In all of cultivated citrus, there is no 2005. "Let's make a plan." In the years that followed, he and the evidence of immunity," the plant pa8,000 other Florida growers who supply thologist heading a National Research most of the nation's orange juice poured Council task force on the disease said.
sive. And advocates of the technology say it could also help provide food for a fast-growing population on a warming planet by endowing crops with more nutrients, or the ability to thrive in drought, or to resist pests.
SeeOranges/F5
page) They have to be factually accu-
rate, in good taste and conform to our word-length and frequency rules. We must also be able to verify the author.
We give great latitude to the opinions expressed by the writers, assuming that they are somewhere inside the broad spectrum of po-
Where crops are threatened Only in the last decadehas citrus greening spread to the world's top orange-producing countries, the United States andBrazil.
litical opinion. Whether they are
letters or guest columns, they have to be unique to The Bulletin.
CALIFORNIA
0
2012
o
Orangesproduceti in 2011, in millions of tons.
, .
o c)oo
-~
~
Keep in mind that voters receive
mail-in ballots weeks before Election Day, so earlier submissions can have greater impact. In any case, we love to get letters and columns, which are a critical ingredient in an election. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcostaibendbulletin.com.
.0 *
0
Production numbers for the United States and Brazil are shown hy state. All others are shown by country.
' -o - O Late1800s INDIA
1960s
0
Areas knownto be infected by citrus greening, with selected years of first observation.
2009
YEMEN — c
'0' g q 1985 .
a
All of this argues for writers to get
their submissions to us as early as possible.
2005
o ro,
oo 0
o
FL ORIDA
IRAN
0
.o~
INDONESIA
1940s
0
0'
0
BRAZIL
2004
SOUTH AFRICA
1937
Sources: U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, academic papers
New York Times News Service
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
an esae's rues orsmo e
rreI svht-~ c & Q 4 SQG4' ~
HUMAN &Hl&LP&
lmost every summer the smoky air from wildfires
~
~
1<
cO
lingers over Central Oregon. No matter how many
r I< • a
fire crews are deployed or how quickly they respond, the fires and smoke com The cruelest twist is that the very rules the state has in place to keep smoke away from Bend and Redmond could make it worse. The state' s smoke management plan declares that there should be no "smoke intrusions" in Bend and Redmond because of their denser populations. So when the Forest Serviceisdoing a prescribed burn to reduce the chance of a devastating wildfire, it designs the burn as best it can. The aim is for the main smoke plume to be vented up, out and away. That was the plan this past spring. The Forest Service spent years coming up with a thinning/ burning operation west of Bend in the area around Phil's Trail. There's no doubt it's needed. The 22,000-acre area has been in awful condition, right in Bend's backyard. A Forest Service analysis says it's a "hazardous fuels" condition that put the project area near the city of Bend "at risk of stand-replacing wildfire, such as occurred in 1990 with the Awbrey Hall stand-replacing fire." The Forest Service did a prescribed burn on 275 acres this spring on part of the project. It all went well during the day. Overnight, the fire smoldered. Smoke was picked up by air quality monitors in Bend. Nick Yonker, the smoke management meteorology manager with the Oregon Department of
Forestry,and others arrived to investigate.The ODF manages smoke from prescribed burns for the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality. Yonker told u s t hat p eople sometimes "lie" about the fuels on the ground as a way of getting permission to burn larger areas. He said he wasn't talking about the Deschutes National Forest. But later he said that the Forest Service reported less fuel on the ground than he and others calculated was there — about half. "They were not reporting the duff." He declared the next burns would have to be much smaller, about 40 to 50 acres. He said it
might be possible to go bigger, to 100 acres. At that rate, with the limited number of days suitable for prescribed burns inthe spring and fall, the needed work is not at all likely to get done. The zero-tolerance smoke policy means the areas that need the treatment the most won't get it. Last week, the Deschutes County Commission approved a letter to the state asking it to modify its smoke rules. The right fire at the right place and time is good for the forest. There will be smoke. And that can be an irritant or much more serious to some people. But that smoke is much less serious than a wildfire right next to Bend.
T e imitso experta vice Vivek Wadhwa
Government experts usually have
market share. No chance. It's a $500
Special to The Washington Post
an agenda. Business experts are typically old-timers trying to protect their jobs. Academics specialize in digging deep into fields that most people would consider arcane or obscure. They gain tenure by writing academic papers and being extremely knowledgeable in a narrow area. They often remain in the same fieldfor decades and can't see the
subsidized item." The iPhone cur-
H
i story is l i ttered with t h e
failed predictions of experts. Yet governments hire highpaid consultants to advise on policy; businesses use them to vet research and development projects; and ven-
T
he federal Food and Drug Administration should have new rules regarding irrigation wateron Eastern Oregon onion crops by the end of summer, says Andrew Malcolm, spokesman for U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River. That's good news. Even better, Walden's office believes the new rules will be far more palatable than the ones proposed last year. Those rules, issued as part of the Food Modernization Safety Act of 2010, focused on the amount of E. coli bacteria in water that comes into direct contact with a crop either before or after harvest. In the case of onions grown in Eastern Oregon, Washington and Idaho, crops generally are either flood or drip irrigated, meaning water comes into direct contact with the bulbs below ground. Farmers have said little if any of the surface water in the region meets the standard set in the proposed rules. They would have been
required to undertake an expensive testing program — $40 per test, with tests done weekly. Water that failed could no longer be used. More important, they argued, there's no evidence of E. coli ever contaminating a bulb onion crop. They noted that bulb onions are cured in the field after harvest, and that curing effectively takes care of any contamination that might occur during irrigation season. Researchers based in Ontario, meanwhile, expect studies conducted this summer to bear out the results of similar ones done last year. Those studies showed that even if contaminated water were applied to onions, and even if E. coli were present when the onions were dugfrom the ground, itwas gone by the time they were picked
up and packaged for shipping. No one wants the FDA to slack off on food safety. At the same time, rules that protect against a nonexistent problem make no sense.
in the United States. Silicon Valley's most respected
venture capitalists can't see even the near future. Mary Meeker, of Kleiner Perkins Caufield 8z Byers,
ture capitalists have them make investment decisions. Experts excel in looking backward, protecting their turf and saying what their cli- forest for the trees. ents want to hear. Their short-term Technology is, today, moving fast-
produces a yearly report, Internet
predictions are sometimes right,
of mobile technologies. It did not even mention WhatsApp, which Facebook acquired for $19 billion
er than ever. Advances that took decades, sometime centuries, such
but they are almost always wrong in forecasting the more-distant as the development of telephones, future. airplanes and the first computers, Experts are the greatest inhibi- now happen in years. Witness how tors of innovation — the ones who smartphones and social media have shouldn't be listened to. Entrepre- come out of nowhere in the past sevneur Peter Diamandis, founder and en years and changed the way we chairman of X P r ize Foundation, interact and communicate. We are says it best: "An expert is someone always connected to one another who can tell you exactly how it can't and to our employers. Computing be done." power is advancing at exponential Look at some of the most famous rates and causing acceleration in historical examples: fields such as artificial intelligence, • "The telephone has too many robotics, 3D printing, sensors and shortcomings to be seriously consid- medicine. ered as a means of communication. When advancing technologies The device is inherently of no value converge, they lead to artificial into us." — a Western Union internal telligence-based apps that analyze memo from 1876. data from medical sensors, with the "Heavier than air flying ma- potential to disrupt the medical inchines are impossible." — Lord Kel- dustry. Smartphones apps such as vin (William Thomson), president of Uber and Airbnb arealready threatRoyal Society of London in 1895. ening transportation and lodging. • "There is no reason for any indi- Amazon.com has made bookstores viduals to have a computer in their disappear, and Apple has changed home." — Ken Olsen, president, the music industry. Which experts chairman and founder of DEC in ever predicted these disruptions'? 1977. The experts are becoming more The problem with experts is that wrong — and irrelevant — than they think they know it all; ignore ever. •
Goodnews inFDA's revised rules ononions
rently has 42 percent market share
data that don't fit their points of view; and extrapolate from the past
More currentexamples:
• In the early 1980s, McKinsey on a linear basis. If some disruptive 8z Company created a forecast for technology hasn't come along in the AT8zT of how many cellular phones past, the assumption is that it won't would be in use in the world in happen in the future. What's worse 2000. It estimated this number to is that experts often try to block be 900,000. The actual number was technologies that might upend their greater than 100 million. • In J une 2007, then-Microsoft roles. After all, if things change too fast, they will no longer be experts. CEO Steve Ballmer told USA Today You see these specialists in gov-
there was "no chance that the iP-
ernment, business and academia. hone is going to get any significant
Trends, which is the tech industry's
bible. Its May 2013 report analyzed the leading players in social media and made predictions on the future
in February. This was the largest
acquisition in history of a venture-backed company and was not
on Meeker's radar. As an academic expert in advancing technologies, I may lack the credibility to write this article.
When entrepreneurscome to me for advice, I tell them, as I am telling you, to take it for what it's worth. No
one can accurately predict the future ofbusiness any more, because
too much is happening too fast. At best, you can gain an understanding of the overall trends and the types
of opportunities and obstacles that lie ahead. You can look backward to understand what problems have
already been solved, how others overcame hurdles, and what types of businessstrategies worked best.
You can learn what questions to ask. You can realize yourself when
your idea is either just plain silly or impractical. I tell entrepreneurs that if they r eally believe in t h eir g u t t h a t
they have a world-changing idea, then they should pursue it. They shouldn't let anyone stop them — no
one really knows more than they do. As Diamandis also says, "The day before something is a breakthrough, it's a crazy idea." — Vivek Wadhwais a fellow at Rock Center for Corporate Governance at StanfordUniversity,directorofResearch at Duke University and distinguished scholar at Singularity and Emory universities.
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 OfThe Bulletin. WrIters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit 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: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View
P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Ugly stereotypes about Israelis and Palestinians persist By Jill Jacobs Special To The Washington Post
NEW YORK-
heart jumped when I saw the poster at the entrance to the Muslim community center in Central Java, Indonesia, in 2009. I didn't need to speak Indonesian to
M y
understand the photo of dead and injured Gazan children. Still, I asked for a translation. Uneasily, our group's translator explained that the poster reported the amount of money the community group had raised in relief funds after Operation Cast Lead, just a few months before, and prayed for
that day, so I enjoyed a brief respite as ples to live securely and peacefully. I debated how and whether to address To myshock,theaudience applaudthe poster with these members of Mu- ed. Afterward, many of those present hammadiyah, one of the largest Mus- told me that they had never before lim organizations in Indonesia. In the thought about who might live in Israend, I had little choice. "I have a ques- el. That they had never thought a two-
ly at the moment when fear for our
tion for the rabbi," began one attendee
state solution to be possible. That they
during a Q&A session: "Why do Jews kill Muslim children'?" Heart pounding, I stood up. I spoke of my pain at the loss of life among Gazan civilians, tragically including
had believed that Jews wanted only to kill Muslims. And they crossed out
sans, and — even more frighteningly Jews and Muslims fasting for peace — violent protests in Europe, Israel, together; religious leaders who have the occupied Palestinian territories reached across the divide. and even the United States. Strident Such empathy will not bring about voices ignore or deny the painful nar- a peace agreement tomorrow. Nor rative of the other. even a cease-fire. But radical empaThe pro-Palestinian side places all thy does force us to see the humanity blame on Israel and the occupation, of the other, to reject hate speech and dismisses or justifies rocket attacks violence, and ultimately to demand on major Israeli cities, and allows a political solution that protects the criticism of Israel to slide into ugly human rights of Palestinians and anti-Semitism. Israelis. On the pro-Israel side, too, many — Rabbi Jill Jacobsis theexecutive respond callously to the soaring numdirector of T'ruah, which mobilizes 1,800
so many children. And then I took a
the final line of the poster. This incident did not transform Israeli-Palestinian or J ewish-Muslim relations. It did not drastically shift
deep breath. "I noticed the poster in the perception of Jews in Indonesia. the entranceway," I began. I praised I did learn, though, that a little empathe group for raising money for hu- thy goes a long way. Hearing my own the health and safety of all Muslimsmanitarian relief. But, I continued, concern about the death of Muslims, "When you call for an end to the Zi- the group could be open to imagining and for an end to"the Zionist entity." I had come to Indonesia with a dele- onist entity, I want you to know that the suffering of Jews. gation of U.S. faith leaders, organized you're talking about my family and Duringthe current war between by Legacy International and spon- my friends and my people." I spoke Israel and Hamas, we desperately sored by the State Department, to of my own commitments to Israel, of need radical empathy. By this, I mean speak at universities and community the significance of Israel to the Jewish opening ourselves to the pain of the centers about religious pluralism in people, and of my firm belief that a other exactly at the moment when we America. It wasn't my turn to present
two-state solution will allowbothpeo-
are terrified of this other, and exact-
lives and for our loved ones pushes us
Muslims. We have seen a few examples of
radical empathy: the families of the Today, we suffer through increas- kidnapped and murdered Israeli and ingly vitriolic language from both Palestinian teens consoling one anlllward.
pro-Israel and pro-Palestinian parti-
bers of Palestinian casualties or even
deny the veracity of these reports, place sole blame on Hamas for the deaths of civilians, and take Hamas'
actions as permission to demonize all
other in their houses of mourning;
rabbis, cantors and their communities to protect human rights in NorthAmerica, Israel and the occupied Palestinian territori es.He rmost recent book is "Where Justice Dwells."
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
a ma an e
val groups share one thing in com-
he Obama administration of-
T
ten denies any responsibility for the current global chaos or
claims that it erupted spontaneously.
Yet most ofthe messwas caused by, or made worse by, growing U.S. indifference and paralysis. Over the last five and a half years, America has had lots of clear choices, but the administration usually
took the path of least short-term trouble, which has ensured longterm hardship.
There was no need to "reset" the relatively mild punishments that the George W. Bush administration had
accorded Vladimir Putin's Russia for invading Georgia in 2008. By unilaterally normalizing relations with Russia and trashing Bush, Barack Obama and then-Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton only green-lighted further Russian aggression, which has spread to Crimea and Ukraine.
There was no need for Obama, almost immediately upon assuming office, to distance the U.S. from Isra-
el by criticizing Israel's policies and warming to its enemies, such as authoritarian Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Erdogan and Hamas. Any time Israel's enemies have glimpsed growing distance in the U.S.-Israeli friendship, they have sought only to pry it still wider. We see just that with terrorists in Gaza
who launch hundreds of missiles into Israel on the expectation that the U.S. will broker a favorable deal
roa no a e n
VICTORDAVIS
mon: a distrust of the U.S.
parently has assumed that calm, not conflict, is the natural order of
W e could have made a choice in things. The world supposedly can Iraq to negotiate a bit more with the run on autopilot without much guidNouri al-Maliki government, leave ance from its only superpower. behind a few thousand token peaceIf conflict does arise, the U.S. that finds both sides equally at fault. keepers and thereby preserve the counts on sermonizing without the Sanctions had crippled Iran to the calm achieved by the surge. Instead, need toback up tough and often point that it soon would have grown the administration pulled out U.S. provocative rhetoric with any action. desperate to meet U.S. demands to soldiers to ensure that a withdraw- When occasional decisions must be stop its nuclear enrichment. Instead, al would be an effective re-election made, the U.S. usually chooses the Obama eased trade restrictions just talking point. The result of that void easiest way out: withdrawals, conas they were coming to fruition. is the present bloodletting and veri- cessions and appeasement. Iran is now on its way to acquiring table destruction of Iraq. Behind these assumptions also lie a bomb, while supplying missiles to The U.S. once had choices in Syr- the administration's grave doubts Hamas and Hezbollah. ia.We could have loudly condemned that the U.S. has in the past played We had an option in Libya to let the Bashar al-Assad government a positive role in postwar affairs, or the tottering but reforming Muam- and immediately armed the most that in the present and future Amermar Gadhafi government fend for pro-Western of the anti-Assad reb- ica can claim the moral authorityitself. Or we could have taken out els. Or we could have just stayed or has the resources — to confront Gadhafi and then sent in peace- quiet and stayed out of the mess. aggressors. keepers to ensure a transition to or- Instead, we chose the third — and In 2017, Obama may well leave dered government.But the Obama worst — o ption: loudly t hreaten office claiming to have reduced our administration did neither. Instead, Assad while doing nothing. Both a military while avoiding conflict the U.S. participated in a multina- bloody dictatorship and its bloody ji- during his tenure. But will he also tion bombing campaign and all but hadist enemies share a general con- be able to assure us that China, Iran guaranteed that a failed state would tempt for a perceived weak America. and Russia are less threatening; that be left on Europe's doorstep. Now There were choices on our own the Middle East, the Pacific and the we have just closed our embassy in border as well. Obama could have former Sovietrepublics are less exTripoli and fled the country entirely. advised Central American govern- plosive; that our own border is more There were once viable choices in ments that our southern border was secure— and thatAmerica issafer? Egypt. Instead, the administration dosed to any who would cross illeTo paraphrase the poet Robert managed to alienate the old Hos- gally, while attempting to remedy the Frost: Two roads diverged in the ni Mubarak regime, alienate the violence in those countries. Instead, world, and we always tookthe one of elected Muslim Brotherhood (which the administration openedthe border, least resistance — and that has now immediately tried to subvert the de- welcomed in thousands without scru- made all the difference. mocracy) and alienate the military tiny, and has all but destroyed federal — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and junta that stepped in to stop the Is- immigration law. The result is chaos. historian at the Hoover Institution and lamization of Egypt. All of these riThe Obama administration apStanford University.
HANSON
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN
Order vs. dlSOf'deI ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar-
t
've been arguing that the big di-
vide in the world these days is
between the world of order and a growing world of disorder. If you're keeping score at home, the world of disorder justadded another country: Libya. America quietly folded up its embassy in Libya last week and left, leaving behind a tribaVmilitia war of all against all. Not good. There will be more of this. It's not
easy being a country anymore. There is no more Cold War to prop up, arm and finance frail states. More import-
ant, the combined pressures of the market (globalization and the speed w ith which i nvestment can fl ow
into countries doing the right things and out of those doing bad things), Moore's Law (the steady rise in computing power that makes every good job today require more education) and Mother Nature (climate change, biodiversity loss, erosion and population growth) have all passed certain tipping points. Together, the market, Mother Nature and Moore's Law are stressing out developed countries
and helping to blow up weak ones. For me, the movie line that perfectly captures this moment was uttered by the leader of the Somali
Teachers shouldn't learn only on the job
pirates who hijacked a cargo ship in "Captain Phillips," starring Tom
By Joe Nocera
the Somali hijacker, saying to him: "There's got to be something other than being a fisherman or kidnapping people." To which the hijacker replies, "Maybe in America, Irish. Maybe in America." It has been instructive to see all
Hanks. The pirate nicknames the
Boston-bred Phillips "Irish." In a critical scene, Hanks tries to reason with
New York Times News Service
t entered ' some kind of golden age m starting to wonder if we've
of books about education. First
came Paul Tough's book, "How
I
II
/
Children Succeed," about the im-
portance of developing noncognitive skills in students. It was published in September 2012. Then c ame "The Smartest Kids in the World,"
by Amanda Ripley, which tackled the question of what other countries
were getting right in the classroom that America was getting wrong. Her book came out just about a year
ago. And now comes Elizabeth Green's "Building a Better Teacher: How
Teaching Works (and How to Teach professionals and should be treated It to Everyone)," which will be pub- accordingly," Green writes. In both lished next week, and which was schemes,the teachers are basically excerpted in The New York Times left alone in the classroom to figure Magazine last weekend. The first two books made the New Y ork
it out on their own.
that Green's book will, too. It cer-
er stands in front of a class on the
In America, that's how it's always Times best-seller list. My guess is been done. An inexperienced teach-
tainly ought to. first day on the job and stumbles Over the past few decades — with his or her way to eventual success. the rise of the charter school movement and No Child Left Behind-
Even in the best-case scenario, stu-
reformers and teachers unions have been fighting over how to improve student performance in the classroom. The reformers' solution, notes
rookieteachers who are learning on the job. In the worst-case scenario,
Green, is accountability. The unions'
dents are being shortchanged by a mediocre (or worse) teacher never figures out what's required to bring learning alive. Green's book is about a more re-
solution is autonomy. "Where accountability proponents call for ex- cent effort, spearheaded by a small tensive student testing and frequent handful of teaching revolutionaries, on-the-job evaluations, autonomy to improve the teaching of teaching. supporters say that teachers are The common belief , held even by
many people in the profession, that teachers. But the University of Michthe best teachers are "natural-born" igan under Ball is one place that is is wrong, she writes. The common trying to reverse that trend, not just characteristic of her main charac- at Michigan but across the country. ters is that they have broken down Ball is pushing the idea that teachers teaching into certain key skills, should be prepared to teach — that which can be taught. they should have the tools and the "You don't need to be a genius," skills — when they walk into that Green told me recently. "You have to classroom on the first day on the job. know how to manage a discussion. That is rarely the case right now. "We need to shift teaching to be You have to know which problems are the ones most likely to get the like other fields where you have to lessons across. You have to under- demonstrate proficiency before you stand how students make mistakes get a license," Ball told me not long — how they think — so you can ago. "People who cut hair and fly respond to that." Are these skills airplanes get training that teachers easier for some people than others? don't get." Of course they are. But they can be One thing that Ball and Green taught, even to people who don't in- both stress is the importance of stinctively know how to do these scale. I've also come to see the ability things. to scalesuccessfulprograms as the One of Green's central characters biggest issue facing public educais a woman named Deborah Loe- tion. It is great that there are charter wenberg Ball, who began her ca- schools that give a small percentage reer as an elementary school teach- of public schoolchildren a chance er and is now the dean of the Uni- for a good education — and a good versity of Michigan's School of Ed- life. And it's all well and good that ucation. "Watching Deborah teach Michigan graduates maybe 100 or so is like listening to chamber music," teachers a year who genuinely know Green quotes an admirer. But she how to teach by the time they get out didn't start out that way. She strug- of school. gled as a young teacher, and, as But these small-scale successes she became a better teacher, she won't ultimately matter much unless began to codify, in her own mind they areembraced by the country at first, the practices that made her at large. You can't teach every kid successful. And she asked herself, in a charter school. And schools "Why hadn't she learned any of this of education need to change their before?" priorities. Learning on the job just Green has a chapter about why shouldn't cut it anymore. schools of education value things — Joe Nocera is a columnist other than the actual teaching of for The New York Times.
thesepressures up close here in Mad-
agascar, one ofthepoorestcountries in the world. The globalization of illicit trade has left Madagascar ex-
posed to Chinese merchants working with corrupt officials here to illegally import everything from valuable rosewood timber to rare tortoises. Some global textile manufacturers set up factories then quit when the
politics turned too unstable. Mandatory education here is only through age 15, and it's in the local Malagasy language. That makes it hard to compete in aworld where some devel-
oped countries are teaching computer coding in first grade. And then there'sMother Nature:
The population of Madagascar is exploding, and the forests and soils are eroding. The soil for agriculture here is iron-rich, nutrient-poor and
often very soft. Because 90 percent of Madagascar's forests have been
chopped down for slash-and-burn agriculture, timber, firewood and charcoal over the past century, most
hillsides have no trees to hold the soil when it rains. Flying along the northwest coast, you can't miss the
scale of the problem. You see a giant redplume oferoded red soilbleeding into the Betsiboka River, bleeding
into Mahajanga Bay, bleeding into the Indian Ocean. The mess is so big that astronauts take pictures of it
'Comprehensiveness' now a legislative affliction By Jay Ambrose McClatchy-Tribune News Service
O
bamacare appears to be headed for still another Supreme
Court visit, and one reason is
clear. It suffers from comprehensive-
ness, a legislative affliction viewed by many as remedy and fervently
Then, after the passing of legislation few members of Congresshad time or inclination to read ... there are boulders hurtling at you, your neighbor, everyone in sight — the inescapableavalanche of unintended consequences.
and we've seen confusion and court involvement. Now comes another
court ruling that could ultimately mean no one will get an insurance subsidy in the 34 states that set up no
exchanges themselves, simply relying on the federal government to do the job. There's been lots of righteous
nancial institutions i n r e sponse to the 2008 financial crisis. It itself is a crisis, as Peter Wallison of the American Enterprise Insti-
from space. "The more you erode, the more people you have with less soil under their feet to grow things," said Russ Mittermeier, the president of Conservation International, who's been
working in Madagascar to help preserve its environment since 1984
tute makes clear in a Wall Street
and has been showing me around. "When I first came here in 1984, the
Journal piece.He says the act has
population was 9 or 10 million. It is
lessened economic growth through an immensely fattened regulatory sought whether the subject is health state beating up unproductively on care, financial institutions, immiindignation about that ruling, but the financial industry. It is so poorgration or you name it. the careful analyses of some make ly written that bewildered, deadThis is no small thing, this a persuasive case that, in order to line-missing bureaucrats have only comprehensiveness. get the states to set up their own ex- finished translating its verbiage It fills hearts with unrealized exchanges, the law does prevent their into slightly more than half the repectations, launches thousand of residents from receiving subsidies quired new rules, he shows. When pages worth of bad laws and can time or inclination to read and that if they turn to federal exchanges we get the whole package, run for easily diminish the national future. may have been barely understand- instead. Even if those analyses are the woods. How might this phenomenon be able anyway, we get the massive, right, some argue it would still be The next comprehensive travesty more fully described? Let's call it the suppressive, regulatory addenda of permissible for judges to junk this some have in mind is immigration presumptuous goal of being hurried- the bureaucrats. Before too much part of the law, which would be reform. If done prudently, one limly exhaustive. We see it when our longer, there are boulders hurtling equivalent in principle to junking ited, well-considered, easily reviewleaders try to do just about every- at you, your neighbor, everyone in Congress. We may see if the Su- able step a time, reform could lead thing they think needs being done sight — the inescapable avalanche of preme Courtdoes or does not like to a virtual end of illegal entry, ecoon a major matter through a solitary unintended consequences. the idea. In the meantime, the sub- nomic blessings as we profit from measure, aiming, in one fell swoop, Obamacare is guilty of all the sidies will stay in effect and we can more emphasis on attracting those to solve every related puzzle from A above and more. President Barack ponder how comprehensiveness most likely to thrive and less hardto Z. They generally let little get in Obama admitted he was wrong in bred befuddlement enough that ship all around. Done the Obama the way, often not the Constitution saying you could keep your insur- Congress may well have enacted way, the Democratic way, the evand certainly not common sense ance policy if you liked, but the addi- clauses unaware they were even erything-at -once way some Repubadvising that no group of politicians tional truth is that this country won't there, which hardly makes them nil. licans also endorse, we could risk and experts has knowledge enough keep much of anything in the health Now, for another legislative ex- far-reaching harm. to pull this off, just vanity enough to care worldas itwas. We've already periment demonstrating how devH ow a b o u t qui t t in g suc h try. seen some of the hurt that can ensue astating comprehensiveness can nonsense? Then, after the passing of legisla- along with some positives that could be, consider the 2,300-page 2010 — Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist tion few members of Congress had have been more simply achieved, Dodd-Frank act reregulating fifor McClatchy-Tribune News Service.
now approaching 23 million." When countries have rapidly growing populations and rapidly diminishing natural capital, the leadership required to match the scale of the problems they face is nothing less than herculean.
Nothing he does will be more important than preserving what is left
of Madagascar'spristine beaches, forests and plant and animal species (particularly its Iemurs), among the most rare and diverse in the world. Parks and reserves have been set asideby thegovernment — and even with the destruction there's still a ton
to see — but they will be sustainable only if they are supported by ecotourist lodges and guides who are drawn from local communities and incentivized to protect their natural
capital. But that takes a government able to expand protected areas, build proper roads (rural roads here have more potholes than pavement), crack down on illegal logging and provide credit to rural communities. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended July 27.
HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "A Perfect Life" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 2. "Tom Clancy: Support and Defend" by MarkGreaney (Putnam) 3. "The Heist" by Daniel Silva (Harper) 4. "The Book of Life" by Deborah Harkness (Viking) 5. "Invisible" by JamesPatterson and David Ellis (Little, Brown) 6. "Act of War" by BradThor (Atria) 7. "Top Secret Twenty-One" by Janet Evanovich (Bantam) 8. "Mr. Mercedes" by Stephen King (Scribner) 9."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 10. "The Silkworm" by Robert Galbraith (LB/Mulholland) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "America" by Dinesh D'Souza (Regnery) 2. "One Nation" by BenCarson (Penguin/Sentinel) 3. "Blood Feud" byEdward Klein (Regnery) 4. "Hard Choices" by Hillary Rodham Clinton (Simon & Schuster) 5. "Everything I Needto Know I Learned from aLittle Golden Book" by Diane Muldrow (Random/Golden Books) 6. "The Mockingbird Next Door" by Marja Mills (Penguin) 7. "David andGoliath" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown) 8. "Instinct" by T.D.Jakes (FaithWords) 9. "Think Like aFreak" by Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner (William Morrow) 10. "The Family of Jesus" by Karen Kingsbury (Howard Books) — McCiatchy-Tilbune News Service
George W. Bush writes book about his father By Hillel Italie The Associated Press
NEW Y OR K
—
His
paintings made news worldwide, but former President
George W. Bush, it turns out, has been working on another, highly personal project since leaving the
e o: tories' eein wi e min: is an incisive oo oo a ou rea in at inese cu ture approach the barrage of ob-
By Dwight Garner
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
stacles thrown their way with
New York Times News Service
226 pgs. $25)
A lain de Botton book, Peter
By Michiko Kakutani
dogged perseverance, cynical fatalism or Machiavellian caginess. Ambitious business-
New York Times News Service
men, eager to maximize their
"We're just humble work-
capitalist profits, turn out
ers, and we can't defeat phys- to be not that different from ical laws," a character named cunning party members who Zhou says in the central story would cavalierly sell out a in Jack Livings' stunning de- friend or relative to save their but collection. own skins during the Cultural It's September 1976, imRevolution. In "Mountain of Swords, mediately after the death of Chairman Mao, and Zhou, a Sea of Fire," a reporter surglass expert, has been put in vived the government crackcharge of overseeing the con- down after the T iananmen struction of a gigantic crys- Square protests by telling his tal sarcophagus for the dead "inquisitors whatever they leader. He's told by the vice w anted to k n ow." H e f i g mayor of Beijing that the goal ured they would "get what is to be achieved "within 10 they want" either way and months": It's a task, Zhou tries he might as well preserve his to explain, that is physicalowncareer. In "An Event at ly impossible, the equivalent of transHorizon Trading forming "a pile of Company," a stock flour into a baked
loaf ofbread" in two minutes.
The vice mayor is
market trader attempts to keep all
his options open, trying not to take
insistent that there
sides in a n
be no delays, and Zhou resigns himself to the hopeless
dispute that p i ts
task. He knows it's
fruitless to argue: "The Party outranked physical laws, scientific fact, logic. This knowledge was as essential to those in the room as the marrow in their bones. The Party was their water,
o ff ice
one faction that has embraced tradition-
al Hanfu c ulture against another that
is promoting Mao nostalgia with old-style red star liberation caps. And in "The Heir,"
a Uighur gangster uses fearandvengeance — to controlhis neighbors, while employing a combination of subservience and bribery with the security
their food, their thoughts." In this story ("The Crystal Sarcophagus") and the oth- police, themselves known for er tales in "The Dog," Livings their "enterprising use of tordemonstrates his virtuosity as ture as a public relations tool." a storyteller, his ability to immerse us instantly in the lives A breakthrough of his characters,to conjure As for the volume's centerthe daily reality of the very dif- piece, "The Crystal Sarcophferent worlds they inhabit. He agus," it draws a portrait of takes readersfrom the era of Zhou as a kind, purposeful Mao's Cultural Revolution to man, who copes with advertoday's Beijing, where deriva- sity by dedicating himself to tive traders vie to rack up huge his work, accepting what he profits ,from remote provinces thinks is an i mpossible aswhere bus drivers tear around signment not only because the mountains convinced that he's given no choice, but al"speed gave you a survival because he's a consummate advantage" in a head-on colli- professional, devoted to his sion, to the streets of the capi- craft. Zhou and his team tal, where the "swarms of bicy- work around the clock in the clists" are so thick it's difficult sweltering factory, trying one to cross the street. method after another, suck-
A keen observer Livings — an editor at Time
nally, there is some tiny, incremental progress and then
said in a statement issued by
Crown. "I loved writing the story of his life, and I hope others enjoy reading it." According to Crown, the book will cover the elder Bush's entire life and his
influence on his son, from George W.'s "childhood in West Texas tohis earlycampaign trips with his father, and from his decision to go
as an outsider, observing the exotic customs and traditions
his relationship with his be-
a magnetic hold over people's loved wife, separating them thinking and expectations. for months at a time, and now, Some of the storieshere
with the Mao crystal coffin
termpresidency."
assignment, taking him away from her hospital bedside, as emotional undertow. But all she lies dying of cancer. bristle with p r i ckly d etails This story and "Donate!" and barbed observations that (depicting a wealthy facto-
The book will be "heartfelt, intimate, and illuminat-
make them stick in the reader's mind.
into politics to his own two-
ing," Crown publisher Maya Mavjee said in a statement.
"As the only father and son to each have served
are funny and satiric. Others are more somber with a dark
Livings has one character d escribe the dead M a o -
W. Bush's extraordinary life
resting in a temporary clear acrylic coffin while his crystal sarcophagus is being builtas looking "like a catfish in a tank." A jaded journalist gives a seemingly routine assignment "about as much thought as he would have the purchase of an umbrella during a downpour." The characters in these stories — which combine steelyeyed realism with the narrative propulsion of old-fash-
of service to country and
ioned fables — are survivors
as President of the United
States since John and John Quincy Adams, George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush occupy a unique position in history," Mavjee said. "George W. Bush brings to vivid life his unique perspective of t h e p ersonal qualities and principles that
have animatedGeorge H.
of her lashes," he writes, "but
what is truly being communicated to us is a rhythm. The rhythm, in t u rn, con-
veys a young man's elation at walking alongside a young woman."
You read this and you think: Yes. The best critics and phi-
losophers slide, necessarily, to and fro on the scale from butterfly to pedant. To his
do we see when
hazard."
we read? (Other than words on a
This book's midpoint, in fact, is
credit, Mendelsohn keeps his tone light while thinking deliberately about fundamental things. He moves from a remembered family trip along a river, for example, to a sense
page.) What do we picture in our
about where you realize that Men-
that, as he writes, "Words are effective not because of what
minds?" Mendelsund looks at
delsund does several things well. He has a wide range of reference, taking
they carry in them, but for their latent potential to unlock
these questions from a thousand
angles, zooming core samples from in and out as if surthe work of Joyce, veilling them with Dickens, Nabokov and Woolf, Google Earth. among others, and he quotes Because the author is also wr th care. This line from Olt he associate art director of iver Sacks sums up some of A lfred A. Knopf, "What We
t l u's book's subject matter:
See When We Read" is heav- 'One does not see with the ily and often whimsically il- e yes; one sees with the mind." lustrated. This would-be TED While many of the book's t alk includes a PowerPoint i llustrations seem extranep resentation, one that's red- ous, merely visual distraction,
the accumulated experience
of the reader." He adds, "We are already flooded by river water, and
only need the author to tap this reservoir." "What We See When We
Read" is the sort of epistemological exercise that, at its best, calls all sorts of associ-
ations to mind. It summons a mental flood. The words it conjured for me were Wal-
lace Stevens', from "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackdrawing tables and graphic s pired. We are given a sketch bird," his indelible poem about design software and clunky o f Anna Karenina, for ex- perspecti ves.Stevens wrote: eyeglasses. ample, produced from police I do not know which to I'd like to be able to report composite-sketch software, prefer, that cracking and unpack- b ased on descriptions from The beauty of inflections ing this exquisite package th e text. The author instrucOr the beauty of innuendos, is a thoroughgoing joy. But t ively maps the locations in The blackbird whistling "What We See When W e W oolf's "To the Lighthouse." Or just after. Read" is so self-consciously H e plots the squiggly shapes A gifted designer, Mencharming that the senses fre- o f famous narratives ("Titus delsund is more alert than quently rebel. A ndronicus," "Tristan and most to inflection and innuM endelsund too o f te n Isolde") on a graph. endos. He's the man, after all, speaks to us as if he is feedMendelsund is an adept who designed the dust jacket ing nuts to fragile woodland m emoirist; the personal ma- for Stieg Larsson's "The Girl creatures. ("Here's a thought t erial in this book resonates. With the Dragon Tattoo." experiment: P i cture y o u r He notes that we can read His humbleness is another mother. Now picture your novels quickly, as if driving of this book's good qualities. favorite literary character.") th rough them, or slowly, as "I am a visual person (so I am We are told many things we if walking, and have distinct told)," he says. "I am a book already know. The book has e xperiences. About this he designer, and my livelihood few weird or wild hairs. It's a n otes, "The best book for me: depends not only on my vit idy little biosphere, one that I drive though it quickly but sual acuity in general, but on r uns on tweeness of its own am forcedtostop on occasion, my ability to recognize the excreting. t o pull over and marvel." visual cues and prompts in The book poked me awake He can be a canny close texts. But when it comes to on Page 203, however, and r eader. He prints a few de- imagining characters, daffobegan to keep me awake. s criptive sentences of a cou- dils, lighthouses, or fog: I am P age 203 is where Men- p le walking together from as blind as the next person." olent of X-Acto knives and
t w o dozen or so are very in-
a smidgen more, until, at last,
with an assist from another of a foreign land, than as a division, there is — amazingly sort of Chekhovian observer, — a breakthrough. attuned to the absurdities and Livings' narration of these ironies of his characters' lives; developments is engrossing, in their entrapment by family, part because he gives us such tradition, party politics and a visceral understanding of government b u r eaucracy;the towering shadow that Mao and their struggles to clear for cast over China in 1976. More themselves some small mea- important, he makes Zhou's sure of personal space and daily existence completely freedom. Together, his tales immediate and real, providopen a prismatic window on ing glimpses into this decent, China, showing us how part of long-suffering man's life, and the country is rushing to em- the ways in which Communist brace the 21st century, even as Party politics have affected its history continues to exert
about the shape of this character's hair, and the thickness
and failing again and again and again, week after week, month after month, until fi-
undergraduate — writes less
Like a TED talk or a lesser o f course, the sort that all film adaptations of novels commit. Mendelsund's "What We See H e observes, in what's not an When We Read" is friendly o riginal thought but a vital and shyly philosophical, filled o ne: "One should watch a film with news you can almost a daptation of a favorite book use. 0nly after considering, very I t explores a simple but carefully, the fact that the c onfounding question, one c asting of the film may very t he author wrests from the- w ell become the permanent orists, literary and othercasting of the book wise, and presents i n o n e' s m i n d . this way: "What This is a very real
"It is helpful that we are told
ing in the dust and fumes,
China and studied there as an
Crown published the younger Bush's million-selling memoir, "Decision Points." "George HW. Bush is a great servant, statesman, and father," George W. Bush
ley in the title role of the 2012 film of "Anna Karenina" and declares: "This — th e picture to the left — is a form of robbery." He means mental robbery,
or would-be survivors, who
Inc., who taught English in
released Nov. 11. In 2010,
by Peter Mendelsund (Vin-
"The Dog: Stories" by Jack Livings
ly completed a biography of his father, former President George HW. Bush. Crown Publishers told The Associated Press on currently untitled, will be
delsund prints a photograph Wharton's "House of Mirth," of the actress Keira Knight- and mentally X-rays them.
tageBooks, 419 pages, $16.95)
White House: He has quiet-
Wednesday that the book,
"What We See WhenWe Read: A Phenomenology"
ry owner's existential crisis,
in the wake of a devastating earthquake) demonstrate Livings' understanding of these ordinary, well-meaning men,
•
FREE 2014 FAIR BUS SCHEDULE DESCHUTES COUNTY FAIRAND RODEO W edneSday, July 30th -Sunday,August,3rd BEND HIGHSCHOOL 230 NE6th Street LEAVE BHS 9:30AM 11:30AM 3:30PM 5:30PM
SISTERSELEMENTARY SCHOOL
611 EastCascade,Sisters
LEA VE FAIR 2:30PM 4:30PM 9:00PM 10:30PM(W/TH) 11:30PM(F/Sati
LEAVE SES LE A VE FAIR 9:30AM 3:30PM 11:30AM 5:30PM 4:30PM (Last bus onSun) (Except Sunday) 10:30PM(Wed/Th) 11:30PM(Fri/Sat)
REDMOND HIGHSCHOOL
NOTE:Sunday August 3th schedule 9:30AM 3:30AM 1 I:30AM 5:30PM
757 SWRimrockWay, Redmond LEAVE RHS 10:00AM NOON 5:00PM
and the complexities of their
inner lives, hidden so politely beneath their dutiful public masks. And Livings proves equally adept at plunging us into the lives of decidedly unsympathetic, even obnoxious
characters, evoking their predicaments with an emotional
precision that is unsparing and oddly forgiving. With "The Dog," Livings has made an incisive — and
highly impressive — debut.
•
Check CET/BATschedules for arrival times at Bend Hlgh School. >a aaaaata tlaa Aii times include 8014 S e s e h u t e s ADA accessible bus.
LE AVE FAIR 3:30PM 5:30PM (Last bus onSun) 10:30PM(Wed/Th) 11:30PM(Fri/Sat)
POWEII PIIOIIU
e oun tp 8
•
•
•
•
0
SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
m on rien s' e sa o "A Spy AmongFriends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal"
F5
ar a e
hands, it hums. "As night falls, tory. For almost three decades, Elliott at Westminster. Both the strange and lethal duel b eginning in the mid-1930s, loved a good, wet evening out. by Ben Macintyre continues, between two men th i s quintessential upper-class Philby polished off 52 brandies (Crown,368 pgs., $27) bonded by dass, club and edu- Englishmanworkedasa Soviet in one evening with a friend, cation but divided by ideology; spy in British intelligence, pass- and Elliott saved a waitress by By John Witwol two men of almost ing information to dousing her with"three glasses Newsday ident cg tastes and BEN MACINTY" ' Moscow that would of white wine" after a flambe A lot of spy novels would upbringing but concost the lives of at attempt gone awry. have you believe that espio- flicting lo y alties; A S P Y leas t h undreds, if Perhaps most important, AMO>G nage involves elite globe-trot- the most intimate of notthousands,while both men possessed that parting adventures laced with enemies," he writes. FR I EN D s cr i p pling Br i t ish ticular English charm, a quality 'M PH«BY»»E good booze and cool toys, and "To an eavesdropand American intel- that most found "intoxicating, GREAT BETRAYAL certainly there are elements of per their converligence operations. beguiling" and some learned "I don't know that all those things in Ben Mac- sation appears excould be "occasionally lethal." " the damage he did When one potential British asintyre's vivid and fascinating quisitely g enteel, new "A Spy Among Friends: an ancient English can ever be actually set met Elliott for the first time, Kim Philby and the Great Be- ritual played out in c alculated," w r o t e for instance, he "felt almost trayal." But t h i s n o nfiction a foreign land; in former CIA director as if his feet rested already on book's most intense scene is reality it is an unRichard Helms. English soil." And Philby, Macprosaic: Two old friends, mid- sparing, bare-knuckle fight, The o ther man having tea intyre writes, "could inspire dle-aged English gentlemen the death throes of a bloodied i n t h at Beirut apartment was and convey affection with such who came up as spies through friendship." Nicholas Elliott, and about the ease that few ever noticed they British intelligence, share a cup One of those men was o n ly thing he didn't have in werebeing charmed." It's perhaps this quality, of tea while "lying courteously H.A.R. "Kim" Philby. Aptly common with Philby was his to each other" in a Beirut apart- nicknamed after the Rudyard allegiance. Both men, Mac- along with his social status, ment in 1963. Kipling character who had a i n tyre tells us, were raised that made Philby's betrayal all Some authors would turn foot in two worlds, Philby was by nannies, and both formed that much harder to detect, esthat m oment i n t o l i t erary perhaps the greatest and most their identities at Britain's fin- pecially for Elliott. "Elliott hero Ambien. But i n M a cintyre's notorious double agent in his- e s t schools — Philby at Eton, worshipped Philby, but he also
They even honored him on a Philby's story has been cov- postage stamp. Some claim eredbefore in severalbiogra- Elliott allowed his old friend phies and other Cold War es- to flee. Others believe Elliott pionage accounts. Macintyre's was duped, which Macintyre aim here is to describe instead thinks unlikely. the "very British relationship" One thing is certain: Elbetween these men. He suc- liott tried for the last laugh. ceeds admirably. The book When Philby died, Elliott recfeels so thoroughly British, you ommended that his old pal may wonder if it's bound with p osthumously r e ceive t h e Marmite. Macintyre calls one sixth-most-prestigious award
Oranges
ian papaya, some squash, a does. fraction of sweet corn — lack Kress set the surveys aside. the iconic status of a breakfast He took encouragement
'
. .
~
"
-
Continued from F1 Leading scientific organi-
loved him," Macintyre writes.
botched operation an "unmiti-
in the British honor system,
gated, gale-force cock-up." The "awarded to men and women culture at MI6, he says, "was who render extraordinary or White's Club; MI5 was the Ro- important nonmilitary service tary Club." in a foreign country," along Hints about Philby's true with a signed obituary that loyalties surfaced occasional- would call Philby the bravest ly throughout his career, but man he had ever known. "The it wasn't until 1963 that Elliott implication would be clear to was presented with irrefut- Moscow: Philby had been actable evidence that his friend ing for Britain all along." was a traitor. Elliott confrontThe proposal was denied. By ed him in that Beirut apart- that point, it seems, "old boy" ment, and Philby subsequently pranks, however brilliant, were managed toescape to Russia, a thing of the past. "The newwhere he lived until 1988 as style MI6," Macintyre writes, a symbol of the Soviet cause. "did not do jokes."
from other attempts to genet-
drink that, Kress conceded, is
zations have concluded that
"like motherhood" to Ameri-
shuttling DNA between spe-
cans, who drink more of it per
cies carries no intrinsic risk to human health or the environment, and that such alterations can be reliably tested.
capita than anyone else. another fruit, the "Arctic apIf various polls were to be ple," whose genes for brownb elieved, a third t o h alf o f ing were switched off, to reAmericans would refuse to duce waste and allow the fruit eat any transgenic crop. One to be more readily sold sliced. study's respondents w ould "The public is going to be accept only certain types: more informed about GMOs two-thirds said they would eat bythe time we're ready," Kress a fruit modified with anoth- told his research director, er plant gene, but few would Michael P. Irey, as they lined accept one with DNA from up the five scientists whom an animal. Fewer still would Southern Gardens would unknowingly eat produce that derwrite. And to the scientists, contained a gene from a virus. growers and juice processors There also appeared to be at a meeting convened by Minan abiding belief that a plant ute Maid in Miami in early would take on the identity of 2010, he insisted that just findthe species from which its new ing a gene that worked had to DNA was drawn, like the sci- be his company's priority. entist in the movie "The Fly," The foes were formidable.
But the idea of eating plants and animals whose DNA has been manipulated in a labora-
a%e
tory — called genetically modified organisms, or GMOsstill spooks many people. Critics worry that such crops carry risks not yet detected and distrust the big agrochemical companies that have produced the few in wide use. And hostility toward the technology, PhotosbyNew York Times News Service long ingrained in Europe, has Orange trees infMed by citrus greening in Clewiston, Florida, are cut down and bumed at groves owned deepened recently among by Southem Gardens Citrus, which grows oranges for Tropicana, Florida's Natural and other brands. Americans as organic food advocates, environmentalists and others have made opposiThat could happen tomorrow. tion to it a pillar of a growing h' Or it could take years, or many movement for healthier and decades. OrtheorangeinFloriethical food choices. da could disappear first. Kress' boss worried about Plunging ahead damaging the image of juice long promoted as "100 percent Early discussions among natural." "Do we really want to do this?"he demanded in a 2008
other citrus growers about
meeting at th e company's headquarters on the northern rim of the Everglades. Kress, now 61, had no particular predilection for biotechnology. Known for working Ricke Kress, president of Southern Gardens Citrus, believes the long hours, he rose through the only way to save Florida's entire citrus crops is to alter the fruit ranks at fruit and juice compa- trees' DNA. nies Welch's and Seneca Foods.
On moving here for the Southern Gardens job, just a few weeks before citrus greening was detected, he had assumed his biggest headache would be
the disease in his greenhouse seeds are clones of the mothlater succumbed in the field.
Concerns about public perception and potential delays competition from flavored wa- in regulatory scrutiny put ters or persuading his wife to a damper on some promistolerate Florida's humidity. ing leads. But intent on his But the dwindling harvest mission, Kress shrugged off that could mean the idling signs that national campaigns of his juice-processing plant against genetically modified would also have consequenc- food were gaining traction. es beyond any one company's Only in recent months has bottom line. Florida is the sec- he begun to face the full magond-largest producer of orange nitude of th e gap b etween juice in the world, behind Bra- what science can achieve and zil. Its $9 billion citrus industry what society might accept.
er, new varieties cannot easily
be produced by crossbreeding — unlike, say, apples, which breeders have remixed into fa-
vorites such as Fuji and Gala. But the vast majority of oranges in commercial groves are the product of a type of genetic merging that predates the Romans, in which a slender shoot
of a favored fruit variety is grafted onto the sturdier roots
of otherspecies:lemon,forinstance, or sour orange. And a seedless midseason orange contributes 76,000 jobs to the recently adopted by Florida state, which hosts the Orange Millenniums of intervention growers emerged after breedBowl. Southern Gardens, a Even in the heyday of frozen ers bombarded a seedy variety subsidiary of U.S. Sugar, was concentrate, the popularity of with radiation to disrupt its one of the few companies in the orange juice rested largely on DNA, a technique for acceler-
industry with the wherewithal to finance the development of a
its image as the ultimate nat-
take a decade and cost as much
the reality is that human inter-
rice.
as $20 million.
vention has modified the orange for millenniums, as it has almost everything people eat. Before humans were involved, corn was a wild grass, tomatoes were tiny, carrots were only rarely orange and dairy cows produced little milk. The orange, for its part, might never have existed had human migration not brought together the grapefruit-size
Its proponents argue that genetic engineering is one in
An emerging scientific consensus held that genetic engineering would be required to defeat citrus greening. "People are either going to drink transgenicorange juice or they're going to drink apple juice," one University of Florida scientist
told Kress. And if the presence of a new gene in citrus trees prevented juice from becoming scarcer and more expensive, Kress believed, the Amer-
pomelo from the tropics and the diminutive mandarin from
a temperate zone thousands of years ago in China. And it ican public would embrace it. would nothave become the "The consumer will support us most widely planted fruit tree if it's the only way," Kress as- had human traders not carried sured his boss. it across the globe. His quest to save the orThe varieties that have surange offers a close look at the
C. liberibacter, the bacterium that kills citrus trees by chok-
with a house fly.
ing off their flow of nutrients
daunting process of genetically modifying one well-loved organism — on a deadline. In the past several years, out of public view, he has considered DNA donors from all over the
tree of life, including two vegetables, a virus and, briefly, a pig. A synthetic gene, manufactured in the laboratory, also emerged as a contender. Trial trees that withstood
— detected when it destroyed citrus trees more than a centu-
On a 2004 Food PolicyIn-
stitue at Rutgers University
ry ago in China — had earned a place, along with anthrax
poll, which referred to efforts to forge a frost-resistant tomato with a gene from the winter
and the Ebola virus, on the
what kind of disease research flounder, a question asking if they should collectively sup- tomatoes containing a gene port did little to reassure Kress from a fish would "taste fishy" about his own genetic engi- produced fewer than 50 perneering project. cent correct "no" a n swers. "The public will never drink A fear that the genetic engiGMO orange juice," one grow- neering of food would throw er said at a contentious 2008 the ecosystem out of whack meeting. "It's a waste of our showed in the surveys, too. money." Kress' researchers, in turn, "The public is already eat- liked to point out that the very ing tons of GMOs," countered reason geneticengineeri ng Peter McClure, a big grower. works is that all living things "This isn't like a bag of Dor- share a basic biochemistry: If itos," snapped another. "We're a gene from a cold-water fish talking about a raw product, can help a tomato resist frost, it the essence of orange." isbecause DNA is a universal The genetically modified code that tomato cells know foods Americans have eaten how to read. Even the most for more than a decade — corn, distantly related species — say, soybeans,some cottonseed oil, humans and bacteria — share canola oil and sugar — come many genes whose functions mostly as invisible ingredients have remained constant across in processed foods such as ce- billions of years of evolution. "It's not where a gene comes real, salad dressing and tortilla chips. And the few GMOs sold from that matters," one rein produce aisles — a Hawai- searcher said. " It's what it
Agriculture Department's list of potential agents of bioter-
rorism. Asian citrus psyllids, the insects that suck the bacteria out of one tree and inject
them into another as they feed on the sap of their leaves, can carry the germ a mile without
stopping, and the females can lay up to 800 eggs in their onemonth life.
Continued next page
See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures. Sun ehen youwantit, shade whenyou needit.
IRI I Q
V CI
O >N DEMA N D
541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com
August 8, 9, 10
ating evolution that has yield-
Sponsored by: Central Oregon Classic Chevy Club
a continuum of ways humans
shape food crops, each of which carries risks: Even conventionalcross breeding has occasionally produced toxic varieties of some vegetables. Because making a GMO typically involves adding one or a few genes, each containing in-
e
function is known, they argue, it is more predictable than traditional methods that involve
randomly mixing or mutating many genes of unknown function.
But because it also usually involves taking DNA from the
•
lOCK l kOLC5 011ATE51Hm
Spectators Welcome! OPEN TO ALL1979 & OLDER SPECIAL INTERESTVEHICLES
structions for a protein whose
specieswhere it evolved and putting it in another to which have since arisen through nat- it may be only distantly related ural mutation, are the product — or turning off genes already of human selection, with near- present — critics of the technolly all of Florida's juice a blend ogy say it represents a new and of two: the Hamlin, whose potentiallymore hazardous deunremarkable taste and pale gree of tinkering whose risks color are offset by its prolific are not fully understood. yield in the early season, and If he had had more time, the dark, flavorful, late-season Kress could have waited for the Valencia. orange to naturally evolve reBecause oranges them- sistance to the bacteria known selves are hybrids and most as C. Iiberibacter asiaticus. vived, among the many that
in the works. There was even
who sprouted insect parts after a DNA-mixing mistake
ural beverage, fresh-squeezed ed new varieties in dozens of "transgenic" tree, which could from a primordial fruit. But crops, including barley and
A GMO test case
ically modify foods that were
FRIDAY August 8th 11am-2:15pm: Pre Show 'n Shine at Drake Park 2:Oopm: Fun "Cruz" from Drake Park to NAPA and then returning to Drake Park 2pm-Bpm: Registration at Drake Park 6pm-8pm: Free Entertainment by "JP & the Soul
Acascam
Bam-4pm: CAR SHOW at Drake Park with Free Shuttle Service l Show 'n Shine [ Downtown 8am: Registration Bam-3pm: Raffle to benefit local charities 6pm-Bpm: "Cruz" (Downtown Streets) Free to the public and encouraged to attend Bpm-10pm: Free to public — Street Dance with "JP & The Soulsearchers" Band
SUNDAY August10th 9:30am: "FUN CRUZ" to Mt. Bachelor(Meet at River Front Plaza) Car Olympics — $250 Prize Money For accommodations and other information, please call 541-480-5560 or check www.flashbackcruz.com
N
i~wauanaara ~ane
e. uAa c mN ~~-
• •
~
) )NIII I lilli m
I
WGENTURY
Searchers" Band(eu@icweknmeaet encouragedj
SATURDAY August 9th
S O I I NISV''IQNEELS
ARBAL GAS, EEEB EEE CSEEmaaBOEOE
5TRAHSITIONAL E N D CARE ~
INSU R ANCE GROUPuc
OK~ gjg -=-=.-•
-
MORRIS REALESTATE jlm MOIA Iboher
541-94S4997
CMRIHHRCIAL
l
I
•
' Llbaaten
~~" ORVIZIN ~ ®s u aARLL
Q(QRNtlttEWVK t mmmm Thggggt,'tIII @ HEPa Coffee &Concessions
@
F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014
From previous page
genic solution," said Ted Batkin, the association's director.
still turn brown. Many wrote
out at the audience.
would have to fight off the
But Kress worried that he had
bacteria or the insect. As for
nothing to calm their fears. And an increasingly vocal
as part of apetition drive bythe What these growers wanted Center for Food Safety, a group most, he knew, was reassurthat opposes biotechnology. ance that he could help them "Apples are supposed to be should the disease spread. But
movement to require any food
a natural, healthy snack," it
Kress'
DNA
can d i date
public acceptance, he told his industry colleagues, "We can't
with genetically engineered warned. "Genetically engiingredients to carry a "GMO" neered apples are neither." label had made him uneasy. Others voiced a general disSupporters of one hotly trust of scientists' guarantees: contested California b a llot "Too many things were preinitiative argued for labeling sented to us as innocuous and as amatterofconsumer rights years later we discovered it
think about that right now."
The creepfactor Trim, silver-haired and de-
scribed by colleagues as tightly wound (he prefers "focused"), Kress arrives at the office by
6:30each morning and microwaves a bowl of oatmeal. He stocks his office cabinet with
cans of peel-top Campbell's chicken soup that he heats up for lunch. Arriving home each evening, he cuts a rose from his garden for his wife. Weekends, he works in his yard and pores over dippings about GMOs in the news.
and transparency — but their advertisements often implied
f
II Richard Perry/ New York Times News Service
Spinach gene shoots are grafted onto a natural orange tree in a ClewIston, Florida, test plot. A gene In spInach produces a protein that attacks InvadIng bacterIa — something the orange plant can't do on Its own.
For a man who takes plea-
sure in routine, the uncertainty that marked his DNA quest was disquieting. It would cost
Southern Gardens millions of dollars just to perform the
"The consumer will support (genetic engineering) if it's the only way."
best over time. But in 2010, with the dis-
ease spreading faster than many anticipated, the factor
that came to weigh most was which could be ready first. To fight C. liberibacter, Dean Gabriel at the University of
Florida had chosen a gene from avirus that destroys bacteria as
it replicates itself. Though such viruses, called bacteriophages ("phage" means to devour), are harmless to humans, Irey sometimesurged Kress to consider the public relations hurdle
that might come with such a strange-sounding source of the DNA. "A gene from a virus," he would ask pointedly, "that infects bacteria?" But Kress' chief concern was
that Gabriel was taking too long to perfect his approach. A second contender, Erik Mirkov of Texas A&M University, was further along with trees he had endowed with a
with infected trees and psyllids.
The Monsanto effect
gene from spinach — a food, he ed that existing GMOs were reminded Kress, that "we give as safe as other crops, and the to babies." The gene, which ex- National Academy of Sciencists in slightly different forms es, the World Health Organiin hundreds of plants and an- zation and others had issued imals, produces a protein that statements to the same effect. attacks invading bacteria. But some of his researchEven so, Mirkov faced skep- ers worried that the popular ticism from growers. "Will my association between GMOs juice taste like spinach?" one and Monsanto — and in turn asked. between Monsanto and the For a t i m e , t h e a n swer criticisms of modern agriculseemed to lie with a third sci- ture — could turn consumers entist, William Dawson at the against Southern Gardens' University of Florida, who had transgenic oranges. "The article doesn't say managed to alter fully grown trees by attaching a gene to a 'Monsanto' anywhere, but the virus that could be inserted by comments are all about Monway of a small incision in the santo," Mirkov said. bark. Genes transmitted that Some of Kress' scientists way would eventually stop were still fuming about what functioning, but Kress hoped they saw as the lost potential to use it as a stopgap measure for social good hijacked both to ward off the disease in the by the activists who opposed 60 million citrus trees already genetic engineering and the in Florida's groves. Dawson corporations that failed to conjoked that he hoped at least vince consumers of its benefits. to save the grapefruit, whose In many developing countries, juice he enjoyed, "preferably c oncerns about safety a n d with a little vodka in it." ownership of seeds led govBut his most promising re- ernments to delay or prohibit
position had never hit Kress so hard. "Will theybelieve us?" he
signed in, as required by Agriculture Department regulations for a field trial of a genet-
ically modified crop. Just m the premous few months, Whole Foods had said
that because of customer demand it would avoid stocking most GMO foods and require
labels on them by 2018. Hundreds of thousands of protesters around the world had
sard. But Kress and Irey shared a sense of celebration. The path
spawned a ballot initiative in
ahead was starting to clear.
Washington state and legisla- fruits in Florida are ready to tive proposals in many other pick: environmental organizastates.In Oregon, a measure to tions, consumer advocates and require GMO labeling will be others. Exactly what he would on the ballot in November. say when he finally contacted Driving through the Central them, he did not know. WhethValley of California in October er anyone would drink the juice to speak at the California Cit- from his genetically modified rus Growers meeting, Kress oranges, he did not know. considered how to answer But hehad decided to move critics. Maybe even a blanket ahead. "GMO" label would be OK, he This summer, he will plant thought, if it would help con- several hundred more young sumers understand he had trees with the spinach gene, nothing to hide. He could nev- in a new greenhouse. In two er prove there were no risks to years, if he wins regulatory apgenetically modifying a crop. proval, they will be ready to go But he could try to explain the intothe ground. Thetrees could risks of not doing so. be the first to produce juice for Southern Gardens had lost salein fiveyearsorso. 700,000 trees trying to control Whether it is his transgenthe disease,more than a quar- ic tree,or someone else's, he ter of its total. The forecast believed, Florida growers will for the coming spring harvest soon have trees that can prowas dismal. The approval to duce juice without fear of its use more pesticide on young being sour, or in short supply. trees had come through that For a moment, alone in the day. At his hotel that night, field, he let his mind wander. "Maybe we can use the he slipped a new slide into his standard talk. On the podium technology to improve orange the next morning, he talked juice," he could not help thinkabout the growing use of pes- ing."Maybe we can find away ticides: "We're using a lot of to have oranges grow yearchemicals, pure and simple," round, or get two for every one he said. "We're using more we get now on a tree." than we've ever used before." Then he reined in t h ose Then he stopped at the new thoughts. He took the clipslide. Unadorned, it read "Con- board down, signed out and sumer Acceptance." He looked locked the gate.
neered with a synthetic gene.
bothered him was that a label
want them to understand how
and why his oranges were genetically engineered. What seemed to lump all GMOs into one stigmatized category. A nd when t h e E P A i n formed him in June 2012 that it would need to see test results
for how large quantities of spinach protein affected honeybeesand mice,Kressgladly wrote out the $300,000 check
to have the protein made. It was the largest expense
yet in a project that had cost more than $5 million. If these tests raised no red flags, he would need to test the protein
as it appears in the pollen of transgenic orange blossoms. Then the agency would want to test the juice. "Seems excessive," Mirkov
Rather t h a n wa i t for Mirkov's 300 trees to flower,
a year. Kress would soon have which could take severalyears, 300 of themplanted in a field tri- they agreed to try to graft his al. But in spring 2012, he asked spinach gene shoots to mature the Environmental Protection trees to hasten the production Agency, the first of three fed- of pollen — and, finally, their eral agencies that would evalu-
first fruit, for testing.
ate his trees, for guidance. The next step was safety testing.
Wall of opposition
Early one morning a year started fast enough. ago, Kress checked the AgOther concerns weighed on riculture Department's webKress that spring: Growers site from home. The agency in Florida did not like to talk had opened its 60-day public about it, but the industry's tri- comment period on the trees pling of pesticide applications modified to produce "Arctic to kill the bacteria-carrying apples" that did not brown. His psyllid was, while within legal own application, he imagined, limits, becoming expensive would take a similar form. He and worrisome. One widely skimmed through the compaused pesticide had stopped ny's 163-page petition, showing working as the psyllid evolved how the apples are equivalent resistance, and Florida's citrus in nutritional content to normal growers' association was pe- apples, how remote was the titioning one company to lift likelihood of cross-pollination the twice-a-season restrictions with other apple varieties and on spraying young trees — in- the potentially bigger market creasingly its only hope for an for ahealthfulfruit. uninfected harvest. Then heturned to the comAnd he felt that it could not be
Others in the industry who
some distancefrom his office, and far from any other citrus
asked himself for the first time. ture Department had issued "Will they believe we're doing its final report for this year's this to eliminate chemicals and orange harvest showing a 9 we're making sure it's safe'? Or percent decline from last year, will they look at us and say, attributable to citrus greening. 'That's what they all say?'" But visiting the field gave The major brands were ru- him some peace. In some rows mored to be looking beyond were the trees with no new Florida for their orange juice gene in them, sick with green— perhaps to Brazil, where ing. In others were the 300 jugrowers had taken to aban- venile trees with spinachgenes, doninginfected groves to plant all healthy. In the middle were elsewhere. Other experiments the trees that carried his immethat Kress viewed as similar diatehopes: 15mature Hamlins to his own had foundered. and Valencias, 7 feet tall, onto Pigs engineered to produce which had been grafted shoots less-polluting waste had been of Mirkov's spinach gene trees. euthanized after their develThere was good reason to oper at a Canadian university believe the trees would pass the had failed to find investors. EPA's tests when they bloom A salmon modified to grow next spring. And he was gathfaster was still awaiting FDA ering the data the Agriculture approval. A study pointing to Department would need to enhealth risks from GMOs had sure that the trees posed no risk been discredited by scientists to other plants. When he had but was contributing to a sense fruit, the Food and Drug Adamong some consumers that ministration would compare the technology is dangerous. its safety and nutritional conAnd although the California tent to conventional oranges. labeling measure lost, it had In his office is a list of groups
did not aim to hide anything from consumers, but he would
knew of Kress' project were sult thatyear was doomed from cultivation of needed crops: turning to him. He agreed to the beginning: Of the dozen Zambia, for instance, declined speak at the fall meeting of bacteria-fighting genes he had shipments of GMO corn even citrus growers in California, then tested on his greenhouse during a 2002 famine. where the greening disease "It's easy for someone who had just been detected. "We trees, the one thatappeared effective came from a pig. can go down to the grocery need to hear about the transOne of about 30,000 genes in the animal's genetic code,
One recent sunny morning, Kress droveto a fenced field,
joined in a "March Against Monsanto" — and the Agricul-
store and buy anything they need to be against GMOs," said Jaynes, who faced such barriers with a high-protein sweet potato he had engi-
vived unscathed for more than
Planting
ucts, which stood to gain if n on-GMO a lternatives. H e
To Kress in early 2011, any far with the broader battle rag- comparison to Monsantoing over genetically modified whose large blocks of patents food had come in 2010, in the he had to work around, and readercomments on a Reuters whose thousands of employarticle alluding to Southern ees worldwide dwarfed the Gardens' genetic engineering 750 he employed in Florida at efforts. Some readers vowed peak harvest times — seemed not to buy such "frankenfood." far-fetched.Ifit was successAnother attributed a rise in ful, Southern Gardens would allergies to genetic engineer- hope to recoup its investment ing. And dozens lambasted by charging a royalty for its Monsanto, the St. Louis-based trees. But its business stratcompany that dominates the egy was aimed at saving the crop biotechnology business, orange crop, whose total acrewhich was no t e ven m en- age was a tiny fraction of the tioned in the article. crops the major biotechnology "If this trend goes on, one companies had pursued. day, there will be only Monsanto engineered foods avail- A growing urgency able," read one letter warning In an infection-filled greenof unintended consequences. house where every nontransKress wa s u n p erturbed. genic tree had showed sympDozens of long-term animal toms ofdisease,M irkov'strees feeding studies had conclud- with the spinach gene had sur-
dence, it doesn't matter what we come up with."
tree. He unlocked the gate and
drove customers to their own
Kress' only direct brush so
don't have consumer confi-
the crops were a hazard: One feel like taking any more unpictured a child about to take necessary risks." a joyful bite of a pest-resistant Many insisted that, should cob of corn, on which was em- the fruit be approved, it ought blazoned aquestion mark and to be labeled. thecaption "Corn, engineered Irey tried to console Kress to grow its own pesticide." with good news: The data on Kress attributed the labeling the honeybees and mice had campaigns to the kind of tac- come back. The highest dose tic any industry might use to of the protein the EPA wantgain a competitive edge: They ed tested had produced no ill were financed largely by com- effect. panies that sell organic prodBut the magnitude of the op-
— Ricke Kress, presIdent of Southern Gardens CItrus packaging implying a hazard
safety tests for a single gene in a single variety of orange. Of his five researchers' approach- harvest. In fall 2010, they were es, he had planned to narrow put to the test inside a padthe field to the one that worked locked greenhouse stocked
was untrue," wrote one woman. "After two cancers I don't
he had to warn them: "If we
ments. There were hundreds. And they were almost uni-
versallynegative. Some were from parents, voicing concerns that the n onbrowning trait
would disguise a rotten apple — though transgenic apples rotten from infection would
it was, he ventured, "a pretty
small amount of pig." "There's no safety issue
to contact when the first GMO
A Free Public Service
from our standpoint — but
there is a certain creep factor," an Environmental Protection
Agency official observed to Kress, who had included it on an early list of possibilities to run by the agency. "At least something is working," Kress bristled. "It's a proof of concept." A similar caution dimmed
his hopes for the timely approval of a synthetic gene, designed in the laboratory of a fourth scientist, Jesse Jaynes of Tuskegee University. In a simulation, Jaynes' gene consistently vanquished the greening bac-
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
teria. But the burden of proving
a synthetic gene's safety would prolong the process. "You're going to get more questions," Kress was told, "with a gene
I
not found in nature." And in fall 2010, an onion
1
I
gene that discouraged psyllids from landing on tomato plants
was working in the Cornell laboratory of K r ess' final hope, Herb Aldwinckle. But it
would be some time before the gene could be transferred to orange trees. Only Mirkov's newly finetuned trees with the spinach gene, Kress and Irey agreed, could be ready in time to stave off what many believed would soon be a steep decline in the
0 gggg •
ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
I
i
'
i
'
~ i
1
ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • •
J
J
•
•i•
• J
J
fi'je Qts
~g 's igi ! 'aJ «esssls
ni'JI
-n .'Jj li
contact us:
hours:
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
T h e~
u l l e t i~
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
:
17 7 ~
w.
G n a np lg r
, • B g n d • o l e gg n
9 7 $02
208
208
210
246
260
267
383
Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc.ltems
Fuel & Wood
Produce & Food
a
TheBulletin Tactical 1911 recommends extra ' Springfield 9mm upper 8 45 up-
i
Chihuahua Teacuppuppies, 1st shots/dewormed.
Want to Buy or Rent $250. 541-977-0035
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
i i
I
Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
Cute, Smart & No Shed. Min-schnauzer schnoodles. Tails docked, 1st shots, 8 wormed. $500-$600. Good homes only!
205
541-322-0609
Items for Free Doberman pups AKC reg. male/fem., $600 2 Kidney bean shaped ea. 541-771-5438 loveseat, exc. shape, you haul. 541-379-3530 Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., Couch, leather, non-profit rescue, for good shape. You haul. feral cat spay/neuter. 541-379-3530 Cans for Cats trailer 208 at Jake's Dlner, Hwy 20 E; donate M-F at Pets & Supplies Smith Sign, 1515 NE (8) Snow white doves, 2nd; or CRAFT, Tu$ 40 cash f o r a l l . malo. Leave msg. for pick up of large amts, 541-382-2194 541-389-8420.
Reduce Your Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Pine 8c Juniper Split Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Gar- PROMPT D ELIVERY 542-389-9663 nishments. Call The Tax DR Now to see if Qualify you 269 1-800-791-2099. Gardening Supplies (PNDC) & Equipment The Bulletin Offers Free Private Party Ads • 3 lines - 3 days BarkTurfSoil.com • Private Party Only • Total of items adver- PROMPT DELIVERY tised must equal $200 54XN89-9663 or Less FOR DETAILS or to Electric Lawn Mower, PLACE AN AD, $95 Call 541-385-5809 541-388-1833 Fax 541-385-5802 Toro gas lawn mower For newspaper with bag, $35. delivery, call the 541-382-0673 Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 Wanted- paying cash To place an ad, call for Hi-fi audio & stu541-385-5809 dio equip. Mclntosh, or email JBL, Marantz, D yclassified@bendbulleiin.com naco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. The Bulletin Call 541-261-1808
P eople g iving p e t si caution when puraway are advised to chasing products or • per. $1,359 in custom be selective about the services from out of I work. Asking $1,250 new owners. For the l the area. Sending l 541-306-0166 protection of the ani- ' cash, checks, o r ' mal, a personal visit to i credit i n f ormation TURN THE PAGE the home is recom- may be subjected to For More Ads mended. i FRAUD. For more The Bulletin information about an I The Bulletin Seving Central Cnngonsince tgle advertiser, you may I WIN model 12, 20 ga., l call t h e Ore g onl modified pump $750 POODLEpups, toy. Atto r ney ' Call/text 541-419-9961 Home raised w/love. ' State Schnoodlepups also! i General's O f f i ce Consumer Protec- • 247 541-475-3889 tion h o t line a t i Sporting Goods P oodle, T oy , m a l ei 1-877-877-9392. - Misc. puppy, ready to go, $300. 541-728-1694 I TheBulletin I Serving Cenrrai Oregon sinceigm KODIAK tackle system, QueenslandHeelers soft bag, 8 boxes, new, Standard & Mini, $150 $50. 541-647-2314 212 & up. 541-280-1537 STEARNS inflata-Vest, www.rightwayranch.wor Antiques & new. Pd $75, now $50. dpress.com Collectibles 541-647-2314 Siberian Husky-1/8 Wolf pupsl 3 wks, $400. Tak- Antiques wanted: tools, Therm-A-Rest self inflatfurniture, marbles,early ing mattress, new. $60. ing deps, 541-977-7019 B/W photography, 541-647-2314 Yorkie pups AKC, 2 tiny beer cans, jewelry. girls, 1 boy, potty trainUS Divers snorkling ouffit, 541-389-1578 ing, shots, health guar., NEW. Pd $70, now 265 $1100. 541-777-7743 215 $45. 541-647-2314 Building Materials Coins & Stamps 210 253 Furniture & Appliances Private collector buying TV, Stereo & Video Bend Habitat RESTORE postagestamp albums & Building Supply Resale 5 0 " Sam sung A1 Washers&Dryers collections, world-wide TV, Plasma, excellent cond Quality at LOW and U.S. 573-286-4343 $150 ea. Full war$175. 541-977-2505 PRICES ranty. Free Del. Also (local, cell phone). 740 NE 1st wanted, used W/D's 255 240
I
202
A v e
i
I
Adopt a rescue cat or www.craftcats.org kitten! Altered, vaccinated, ID chip, tested, ENGLISH BULLDOG more! CRAFT, 65480 541-280-7355 Puppy, AKC Regis78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM tered Male, born Sat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420 5/9/1 4, $2000. www.craftcats.org. 541-416-0375 Border Collie-McNab Iillin Pin AKC pups. reg'd puppies, 5 F's O $600 ea; 3 M's O $500 2 females left! $400. Born 4/14/14, potty ea. Working parents; 1st shots, wormed, micro- training, shots, microAntique sideboard/ chipped, In La Pine, chipped, Ready 8/1. buffet:Walnut, 602-284-4110 541-408-8944 home or beautiful detail. Early 714-943-2385 (cell) 1900's. Exterior has Old English Sheepdog Boxers AKC & V alley puppies, 4 males, $500 top drawer & 3 doors Bulldogs CKC puppies. e ach. Please c a l l with original key. Inside has 2 shelves $700-800. 541-325-3376 541-891-0372 ask for and a drawer. MeaDenny Hale or Janev, sures Brittany pups, AKC 8 71x21x36 Ex541-887-6030. V t f i ll American Field Reqiscellent cond. Pick-up send picture by email tered, born 5/31/14. Field as request. Ready to only.$800 OBO. Champion bloodlines, 415-279-9893 (Bend) go to new homes. $500. 505-220-2639
Bed - electric & adjustable medical b ed, used, twin 80" Korfoam mattress, never needs turning. $500. 541-382-2935
541-312-6709
Crafts & Hobbies
Computers
T HE B ULLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple s • • ad schedules or those Repalr 8sSupplles selling multiple syss g tems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term 241 "dealer" in their ads. Bicycles & Private party advertisers are defined as Accessories those who sell one GT Karakoram kids mtn computer. bike, like new, $200. 260 541-379-3530 Misc. Items Specialized Rock Hopper mtn bike, exc. Are you in BIG trouble $200. 541-379-3530 with the IRS? Stop wage 8 bank levies, 245 liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll isGolf Equipment sues, & resolve tax Club Car golf cart, elec. debt FAST. Seen on 48-volt w/AC, street legal, CNN. A B BB. Call new batt, like new cond. 1-800-989-1278. $5000 obo. 541-285-1515 (PNDC) AGATE HUNTERS
Poffshers • Saws •
Open to the public. Two 10-ft extension ladders, $50 each 541-548-4051 266
Heating 8 Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER
Grass fattened natural beef, cut and wrapped at $3.50/lb. 541-480-8185
325
Hay, Grain & Feed
1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters
/i 0
0
421 O rchard g r as s m i x $235/ton, 7 2 lb. Schools & Training 2-twine bales, delivery avail. Call Lee, IITR Truck School 541-410-4495 REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! Quality 1st cutting or1-888-438-2235 chard grass mix, small WWW.IITR.EDU bales $225/ton. Madras, OR. 541-420-9736 454 Looking for Employment 341 Horses & Equipment ELECTRICAL APPRENTICESHIP e OPPORTUNITIES • ., • g This notice is to est ablish a P o o l o f Eligible's, not to fulfill INSTANT GREEN immediate job openMcPheeters Turf ings. 2001 Silverado Lawn Fertilizer ACCEPTING 3-horse trailer 5th APPLICATIONS. wheel, 29'x8', deluxe MUST APPLY IN showman/semi living 542-389-9663 PERSON quarters,lots of extras. Beautiful condi- AUGUST 11, 2014 TO Prompt Delivery AUGUST 22, 2014 tion. $21 900. OBO Rock, Sand 8 Gravel Information about the 541-420-3277 Multiple Colors, Sizes program may be obInstant Landscaping Co. (3) Gentle Fox Trotters, tained at www.high541-389-9663 well trained, moundesertapprenticeship. tain experienced, com 270 $6500/ea. Lost & Found 541-523-0933 470 elkhornfoxtrotters.com Domestic & FOUND C a m elback In-Home Positions backpack with contents o n N W Mt. Experienced Caregiver Washington D r i ve. needed in Sisters for reCall to ID lief 1-2 days per week. (858) 487-2526 541-598-4527 Found visor on 7/30, S hilo bumper pull 3Shevlin Park, Call to horse trailer w/tack room, YARD help needed: mow, identify, 520-260-7123 like new, more extras, pullweeds,weedeating, $5900. 541-923-9758 $9. 9 0/hr. 541-389-0034 local.
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the O regon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g ency (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified woodstove may be identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not k nowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.
•
•
ESTATE AUCTION
Estate of Gar Geor e • I
I
e$ I
'I
I
I
I
III vds
'"rc
The Bulletin's "Call A Service NEW Nicklaus set, baq, Buying Diamonds Professional" Directory 12 Titleist TP balls $1T5 280 288 /Gold for Cash is all about meeting obo. 541-382-0956. Saxon's Fine Jewelers Estate Sales Sales Southeast Bend your needs. 541-389-6655 246 3-FAMILY SALE Sat. & BUYING Call on one of the Guns, Hunting Sun., 7-5, 61310 Par- professionals today! Lionel/American Flyer 267 & Fishing FIIRNITURE SRlS FIRST© 10:00 A.M. rell Rd. ¹25. G uns, PEDDLERS MARKET trains, accessories. Fuel & Wood ammo, large variety. Club c h airs b r ownBend Iocai pays CASHII 541-408-2191. Sat.,Aug. 9, 8-3 Oak corner desk • Oak chi n a cabinet w/gjassfront • Oakknick-knack shelf lots of misc. Some- leather, some wear Tumalo Feed Co., • 5 StOrageCIOSetS• 2 BBQS• SearSStainleSS 22 CIJ.ft. refrigeratOr • Gray BUY!NG 8s S ELLIHG for aff firearms 8 thing for everyone! Hwy 20 West WHEN BUYING 1@$150 & 1 © $75 ammo. 541-526-0617 All gold jewelry, silver recliner• Floralhjde-8-bedsofa• Marble-style patio table with chairs Antiques, crafts, 541-389-8789. FIREWOOD... and gold coins, bars, vintage, and more. Yard Sale! Camping CASHII RRHLRMS —HAIIID IUNS rounds, wedding sets, To avoid fraud, equipment, clothes, Dresser with m i rror, For Guns, Ammo & (541 ) 306-8016 class rings, sterling silThe Bulletin S&W.657.41 mag • RIJger RedhaWk AlaSkan.454/45 • Coonan.357 mag autO chairs, miscellaneous. shelves on each side, copeddlersmarket© Reloading Supplies. ver, coin collect, vin- recommends payFri-Sat-Sun-Mon,10-5, $75 obo. 541-516-8990 gmail.com • GltnCrafter.50 Gj autO • S&W52-2.38autO • S&W1911 SC.45ACP• S&W 541-408-6900. tage watches, dental ment for Firewood 734 SE Sun Lane Oak antique rocking gold. Bill Fl e ming, only upon delivery .41 .22 LR auto • Cojt1911 Rail gun.45 ACpauto• CZ452 Scout.22 LR 541-382-9419. chair, looks g reat! Colt SAA 44 spcl, 7 and inspection. • Savage93R17-FVSS.17 caj 1/2", N.F., 2nd gen 290 $50. 541-382-8973 286 NIB. B r ass a v a il.DID YOU KNOW 7 IN • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Sales Redmond Area MOSTlV IIIEW GUNSUPPUS 4' x 4' x 8' 10 Americans or 158 Sales Northeast Bend Patio table, glass top, $1650. 541-389-1392 • Receipts should pistol primers • New gun powders • Op tics, ajj types• Bullets, mostly handgun wrought iron, + umbrella, million U.S. A dults Huge Sale! Collectibles, both $50. 541-382-8973 Fishing Reels: Hardy Fly, r ead content f r om include name, • New ammo, mostl y handgun • Di e s, mostly RCBShandgun• Newcustom glassware, tools, adult Quick spinning & Penn ** FREE ** ewspaper m e d i a phone, price and clothing, crafting & much Pool Table with 1n Slate Int'I, all top shelf, $150- n handgun griPS to i n Cl u de1911S • LOtS of autOCliPS• RelOading PreSSeS kind of wood week? Discover Garage Sale Kit morel Fri-Sat-Sun, 9-4, Top. Needs felt. Wood $450. Jim, 541-771-7700 each purchased. • RCBS, Redding, HOrnady SuPPlieS• LOtSof neWhOISterS• SaltoriuS POW der the Power of the PaPlace an ad in The 2733 SW 50th St. (cor- legs, leather pockets, Northwest News- • Firewood ads SCale• ShOOting reStS 5 StaCk-OnSteel Starage SafeS• Too muChto liSt! GOto Bulletin for your ga- ner Wickiup & Helmholtz) 5ft x 8ft. $350 OBO. HOWA .338 mag, syn- cific MUST include Advertising. For rage sale and reComputer desk with t hetic s t o ck , 3x 9 paper FaCebook orOltr WebSitefOr liSt andPhOtOS. species 8 cost per free brochure call ceive a Garage Sale folding doors by Broy- Weaver scope, $400. a 292 cord to better serve 916-288-6011 or SHOPEQUIPMBIT 541-419-6295 Kit FREE! hill, cherry finish. 5ft our customers. Sales Other Areas email W x 6ft H x 2ft D. Inc power woodworking equipment• Huskychajnsawandhedgetrimmer ceceliaocnpa.com Marlin 90 bent rib o/u, KIT INCLUDES: power strip, bulletin • 8 ft. pVC shelves • Electric handtools • Chainjink dogpanels • 4 Garage Sale Signs Big yard sale I 55105 board, shelving, file 12 ga., rear (PNDC) Serving Cenerei Oregon sincelgte Jackpine Way, Sunri- drawer, room for 2 • $2.000ff Coupon To 1937-1958, exc. • 4 ft. Wire fenCing• LOtSOfdog SuPPlieS• PaverSand Cinder blOCkS FAST TREES ver. Kids items availUse Toward Your $450. Grow 6-10 feet yearly! monitors, pc, printer. cond., DIRECTIONS:South endof Redmond, turn off Hwy97 onto YewAve., Next Ad able. 8-5 Fri. to Sun. All YearDependable $325 OBO. audrey© 541-306-0166 $16- $21 delivered • 10 Tips For "Garage Firewood: Seasoned; go west to round-a-boui and head south on Canal Blvd. Go about 3 miles. swissfamilykeller.com www.fasttrees.com Sale Success!" New! 2 Glock 26 9mm Lodgepole, split, del, or 509-447-4181 Sale on corner of Canal Blvd. and McVeyAve. USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI Rolltop Desk, very good mags, grip extenders, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Auctionser's Note:Positively NOEarly Sales or Preview $35. 541-306-0166 cond, dark wood $150 Magma marine kettle or 2 for $365. Call for PICK UP YOUR Door-to-door selling with obo. 541-516-8990 Sst. 8sm tiy% Buyers Fee Terms: Cash, Check, Visa/MC(3ys Charge onV/MC) char. grill 14n ss, new multi-cord discounts! PREVIEW: GARAGE SALE KIT at fast results! It's the easiest Protect your dog 541-420-3484. $50. 503-639-3355 1777 SW Chandler Table and chairs, solid from dangerous way in the world to sell. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 oak, pedestal table, 4 rattlesnakes Log truck loads of New dark brown 2-pc windsor style chairs. with Rattlesnake sofa slip covern by Sure- Juniper firewood logs The Bulletin Classified Dennis Turmon Romey • www. d ennisturmon.coim The Bulletin Great condition. $350. Avoidance classes. F it, 74'- 9 6 $35. $900local. Serving Cenrrai Oregon since igna 541 A80.0795 408.840.1282 Check us out on Facebook 541-385-5809 541-382-6773 541-382-0673 541-419-5174. Call 541-213-4211
The Bullein
G2 SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED •541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
WHAT'S MY LINE?
1
2
3
4
5
B
7
5
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
BY RANDOLPH ROSS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 16
ACROSS
51 Like 52 Story line 56 First two words of "Dixie," often
1 Sandwiches with toothpicks 5 Corner key 9 Refuse 14 Alternative to texted 18 European capital, to natives 18 Discipline 20 Jimrny "They'll Do It Every Time" cartoonist 21 "Le Roi drYsn
composer 22 Telephone line 2$ " Eyes" (1975 Eagles hit) 26 nLet
27 Dash 28 Union gain? 28 Gut feeling? 30 Cruise line 33 Like one's favorite radio stations, typically 34 Perfect, e.g. 35 Sarcasticretort 36 Played out 37 San , Calif. 40 "Double" or "triple" feat 41 Special somethings 43 Late actor Wallach 44 Vinyl-roofed car 48 Butler's quarters? 48 Tickle Me Elmo maker Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords
($39.95 a year).
57 Longtime basebaH union exec Donald 59 Loudrnouth's talk 60 Romance novelist Roberts 61 de Champlain, founder of Quebec 63 Like the Marx Brothers 65 Pinched 6$ Interprets 70 Car featured in the "Transforrners" rnovies 72 Country with the most all-time medals in Olympic baseball 73 Pathet (old revolutionary group) 75 Fitof fever 76 Capt.'s prediction 77 Finish line 82 Draft pick 83 Astronaut Slayton 85 Email virus, power outage, etc. 86 Formal confession 87 Iraq War danger, for short 88 Maze feature 90 Shake off 92 Names hidden in Al Hirschfeld drawings 94 Gown accessory $5 Politician's goal
12 Zipped 13 Endorsing 14 Help line 15 Date line 16 A-list 17 Robert who played filrndom's Mr. Chips 18 Trident-shaped letters 23 House 24 Weeper ofmyth 2$ Only non-Southern state won by the G.O.P.in '64 31 College in Atherton, Calif. 32 Confusion 33 Some charity events 36 Famous Amos 37 Embarrassed 38 Put off 39 Power line 40 Org. with the Sullivan Award for character, DOWN leadership and 1 Stock sportsmanship 2 Slow 41 Baud measurement 3 Target, as a football 42 I.R.S. form with a receiver line for "Casualty 4 Approximately and Theft Losses" 5 Cartierunits 45 calls 6 Throat soother 46 Birthplace of Pres. Polk 7 Name meaning ''born again" 47 Drew 8 Trail 48 Starch source 9 French connection? $0 Canola, soybean 10 Exemplar of and peanut indecision 53 Former center of 11 How an angry Los Angeles dog should be 54 Affirmative action kept 55 Listen here 86 Hunt in "Mission: Impossible" 99 Small pellets of noodle dough in Jewish cuisine 101 Fault line 106 Foreign princes 107 Hogan contemporary 108 Road shoulder 108 Stove cover 110 Old Venetian V.I.P. lll Laughline 114 "I Ain't Marching Anyrnore" singer/ songwriter 115 Bayer brand 116 Picture problem 117 Some spinners, informally 118 Chris who played Mr. Big on "Sex and the City" 118 Lets go of 120 Gallic greeting 121 Spanish 3+ 3
20
22
23
26
27
25 29
a1
30
35
29
32
as
a4 37
21
39
ae
40 44
51
45
4B
41
47
49
49
sa s4
52
55
60 63
B4
B5
70
B6
71
76
sa
79
B9 75
90
91
62
66
69
99
94
67
91
92
95
100
96
101
106
97
93
95
102
107
103 1 0 4
109
110
112
113
115
11B
117
119
119
120
121
79 Almost stop with the head facing the wind, as a ship 80 Bloomingbusiness? 81 1967war locale 84 Subway line 89 Executes $0 Bagel toppers 91 Good to have around
105
109
114
58 Coastline feature 62 Start of an apology 64 PC component 66 Mug 67 Alley org. 68 F.D.R.'s Scottie 71 "There's always next timel" 74 Initials, in a way 78 Bang-up
SB 62
va
55
es
99
es
B7
79
34
61
72
77
50
93 Pitched right over the plate 95 Work on the docks 96 Hottie $7 Ring leader? 98 Something to get over 99 Had for a meal 100 Discontinued gas brand 101 Signed
102 Govt. security 103 "Me, too I" 104 Law man 105 Fall setting 107 Closing act? 111 Part of a winning combination 112 Ring org. 113 Discophile's collection
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
•
AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
Place aphoto in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 47S
476
47S
47S
476
476
47S
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
Aquatics Coach
CDLTruck Driver Needed. Our wood chip and lumber drivers average 54K annually. Off weekends, paid vacation, health insurance. Fo r 35 years we have serviced Eastern Oregon, Central Oregon, Sou t hern O regon an d t h e B oise Valley a n d you can live in any of these locations. We run late model P etes an d K enworths all 550 cats with 13 speeds, our trailers are Curtin vans (no tarps to deal with) 40'-23' doubles year around work. We our looking for long term drivers, our average employee has w orked for us f o r over 8 years. So if you are looking for a home, give us a call
The Madras Aquatic Center seeks qualified Aquatics Coach for adult & youth swim, and head coach for water polo teams. 1-3 yrs previous swimming and/or water polo coaching preferred. Yearround position; maintains/coordinates coaching duties with all facets of aquatic sports program including organizing & planning practices & game strategies, training, health education and recruiting of athletes. Could be 22 positions.) ontact MAC Executive Director Joe McHaney: jmchaneyCi! macaquatic.com 541.523.9202 or 1195 SE Kemper Way, Madras, OR 97741. For more information, visit www.macaquatic.com People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sulletin Classlffeds S UB A R U .
®
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
DID
YOU
KNO W
Food 8 Beverage Newspaper-genera red content is s o valuable it's taken and repeated, condensed, broadcast, t weeted, discussed, p o sted, copied, edited, and emailed c o u ntless We are hiring for times throughout the dishwashers, line day by others? Dis- cooks & prep cooks. cover the Power of Please submit apNewspaper Advertisl ications a t o u r ing in SIX STATES end Pub located at with just one phone 1 044 N W Bo n d call. For free Pacific Street, Bend. PreNorthwest Newspa- employment drug per Association Net- testing is required. work brochures call 916-288-6011 or email Hotei/Resort cecelia@cnpa.com OPENING (PNDC)
SOON!!
Finance Manager The City of La Pine is accepting applications for a part-time Finance Manager. C andidates m ust have knowledge of municipal financial accounting and management practices consistent with local, state, and federal rules and regulations. This position will remain open until filled, with an initial review of applications on August 13, 2014. Complete Job Announcement and Job Description can be found on the City's website: www.ci.la-pine.or.us
Hampton Inn & Suites at the Old Mill District. Come join the team! Part-time Housekeeping starting at $10.25/hour. Flexible schedule. Contact Matt Blackburn at matt.blackburn©hilton.com or 808-430-1836.
Log Truck
Auto Sales Drivers Sales professional to Construction Mgmt firm (Long 8 Short) in Sunriver seeking Join Central for logging comOregon's l a rgest highly motivated indipany in Florence, new ca r de a ler vidual(s) for full-time OR. Experience Subaru of B e nd. preferred. CDL CONSTRUCTION Offering 401k, profit DISBURSEMENT and current medisharing, m e dical AGENT cal card. Great plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Expepay and benefits. rience or will train. Requires 2-yr. experiYear-round, longence in construction What are you 90 day $1$00 guarterm employment. a nree. Dress f o r administration or looking for? Caii commercial lending. success ro work in 541-997-8212 our drug free work WORD/ Excel You'll find it in place. Please apply profiency. EOE. Fax at 2060 NE Hwy 20, resume 541-593-3604 The Bulletin Classifieds or 6-mailto Find exactly what Bend. See Bob or Devon. roberta.moody© you are looking for in the 541-385-5809 rerratech.com. CLASSI Ff EDS
r
MECHANIC Sisters School District
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Ger Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbullerin.com
The Bulletin has an opening for a I Recommends extra caution when purpermanent, Full-time Mechanic/Transporta- chasing products or I services from out of tion Supervisor I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r Qualifications: • Minimum of three years I credit i n f ormation experience in repair and I may be subjected to management of motorFRAUD. ized vehicles and 3 For more informayears experience in tion about an advermanagement, combined I tiser, you may call expenence of at least 5 the Oregon State years desired. Attorney General's • Current CDL license Office C o n sumer I and be ODE certified or Protection hotline at I be willing to obtain. I 1-877-877-9392. Salary: $38 , 000. gThe Bulletin g $40,500. depending on experience.
I I I I I I I I
I
I I I
I
TRUCK DRIVER WANTED
See website for details i0 www.sisters.k12.or.us all Leland at 549-8521 exr. 4017 if you have questions.
Must have doubles endorsement. Local run. Truck is parked in Madras. 541-47$-4221
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
Crook Countyl Wellness8 Education Board of Central Oregon (N/EBCO) Quality Program Coordinator Salary Range: I70,$53 -$74,863 DOE Full-time with benefits Closes:August 12, 2014 at 5:00 p.m.
S UBA R U .
Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon'3 l a r gest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e n d. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.
WEBCO is a governmental non-profit agency that acts on behalf of Local Mental and Public Health Authority for Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson Counties. This position develops, implements and c oordinates the q uality improvement system and p rograms for WEBCO. Requires Master's degree and prior work experience as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker or other clinical licensure experience. Work is performed in our Redmond office and frequent tri-county travel is required. Applications and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us . Please apply at the Crook CountyTressurer'e/Tax Office 200 NE 2 St. Prineville, OR97754 541-447-6$54
EOE
I I
Pick up complete application packet & job description at Lake County School Dist. ¹7, 1841 S. First Sr. or www.lakeview.k12.or.us. To be considered for this position please provide a cover letter, resume & completed district application by fax or in person. Applications sent via email will not be accepted. For more information contact Sean Gallagher at 541-947-3347. EOE. This position closes st Nr00 pm on August 11th,2014.
The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy ream. This is a full rime, 40 hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy elements within thar district. Work schedule will be Thursdaythrough Monday with Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires good communication skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability ro multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, sales and problem solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: circulationiNbendbulletin.com Applications are available at the front desk. Drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; No phone inquiries please. Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace Must be insurable to drive company vehicle.
I
THUR — SUN
12PM - 4PM
LCSD ¹7 is looking for a full-time ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE SUPERINTENDENT AND SCHOOL BOARD. Must have high school diploma or equivalent, and 2 years of administrative support experience or equivalent education. Associate Degree and/or equivalent preferred. Salary commensurate to experience. In addition ro salary, the district provides an insurance cap, district paid PERS retirement, annual leave, paid holidays, sick leave, and bereavement leave. This position is located in Lakeview, OR.
s<rvine central oregon sincesatn
CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
The Bulletin Classifieds
LAKE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT ¹7 LAKEVIEW, OREGON
The Bulletin
General
Fax it te 541-322-7253
®
Check out the classifieds online www.bendburtetfn.com Updated daily
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
66
SAT. 8c SUN. 12PM - 4PM
Homes starting in the Iow ~
I200,000s. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahfisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma q uartz counters (even in baths) wi6
,
IIg
20781 NE Comet Lane
under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen,extra attention Dlrerrloesi North ott Bgyd Acres,
given to allow for tons or Right on Sierra,ftLeonBfack Potsdsr, natural light a much more RlghtonComettcine.look forsigns. Come by the model home for stattlstg In the Iow more infonnation and plans.
Hosted 6 Listed byi
Homes Starting Mid-$200s
Principal Broker
RHIANNA KUNKLER
EDIE DELAY
Broker
541-306-0939
I
Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot ace,Bend tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SEGoldenGatePl of walking trails. Tour a Directions:From Iheptttiway, east variety of single level and onReedMarket,south on 15th,then 2 story plans. follow signs.
TEAM DELAY
Hosted & Listed byi
•
541-420-2950 R 5 A
z T 0 R 3
R E A L T 0
R S
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 2014 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 940
975
975
975
975
975
975
975
975
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Cadillac CTS2011
B
Looking for your next employee?
z
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
h
(photo for illustration only)
Toyota Sienna 201 1, LE model, 7 passenger, stow-n-go seating, alloy wheels. (exp. 8/3/1 4)
Vin ¹019106. Stock ¹43981A
® s um a u $24,999
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354
AWD luxury, get there in style! Vin ¹116768 $32,977 ROBBERSON enleeen~
~
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing good thru 08/15/14
(photo forillustration only) Chrysler 200 LX 2012, Dodge Avenger 2013, Hyundai Elantra 2011, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. Touring, leather, auto, (exp. 8/3/14) (exp. 8/3/14) CD, pw, pdl. VIN ¹292213 Vin ¹535474 (exp. 8/3/14) Stock ¹83014 Stock ¹83015 Vin ¹090677 $14,979 $14,979 Stock ¹82995
©
Automobiles
2000 Inspected & Ready! Vin¹239718 Bargain Corral
$3,977
ROBBERSON i ~m
a aa a
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing god thru 08/15/14
Audi A6 Quattro
2008 AWD, automatic. Ready to go for only $24,977 Vin¹055921
ROBBERSONX o. ~
mamm
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. special pricing thru 8/15/14
$13,979
The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
e ROW I N Q
975
S Ua A R U .
n
s U a ARu 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ® 877-266-3821 877-266-382'I 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Get your business
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
©
s U a A R LL
2008 Nearly perfect - a true must see! $14,998 Vin ¹050612 ROBBERSON ~
Corvette Cpe 2004 Two-tops (glass 8 painted), auto., only 44k mi. pewter/black, CD, tinted windows, local Bend car, showroom cond., CD, tires 80%, clear title, everything works!Won't last! $20,995 obo 928-210-8323 More photos at www.bendbulletin.com
Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible
with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. DID YOU KNOW 144 702-249-2567 million U.S. A d ults (car is in Bend) read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Advertising in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, U t a h an d Washington with just one phone call. For a FREE ad v e rtising Hyundai Accent GL network brochure call 1999, auto, CD. 916-288-6011 or (exp. 8/3/14) email VIN ¹584982 ceceliaocnpa.com Stock ¹44383B
Chevy Malibu 2012, Lots of options; sunroof, 6 speed trans with manual option, bluetooth, o nStar, Sirius satelite, heated seats, pw, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech engine, 20 MPG city, (PNDC) $4,999 35 MPG hwy, USB s U aaau port, Ipod r eady, Need help fixing stuff? © $14,900 OBO. Call A Service Professional 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-504-6974 find the help you need. 877-266-3821 www.bendbulletin.com Dlr ¹0354
~
ammm
Suberu Outback2006, Limited, leather, 5 spd, pw, pdl, tilt.
(exp. 8/3/14)
VIN ¹361575 Stock ¹44255A
$12,979
©
541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/15/14
s U a ARu
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Find exactly what Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an you are looking for in the interestingManner. Write CLASSIFIEDS from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them insomeway. This
127k miles.
advertising tip brought toyou by
$5,900 obo. 541-420-3277
The Bulletin Serving CenlretOregon svnceIgie
People Lookfor Information Mercedes Benz e320, About Products and 1999 wagon, white Services Every Daythrough 120k mi., incl. studThefi nfi ntinClnssifi efi s ded tires, exc. cond., $4500. 541-318-4502.
Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mor e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB O $27 , 500 541-344-5325 annie2657©yahoo.com
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
ways garaged, all
maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
FIND IT! BUT IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809
VW GOLF2012 I
~
from out of the area.
f S ending c
I
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
L'"" " " '
maaa a
541-312-3986
Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/1 5/1 4
I
B ulletin recoml
mends extra caution I when p u r chasing •
f products or servicesf
Mazda Miata2010
Well cared for, only 18k miles. Bring your suncreen! $18,977 Vin ¹208304 ROBBERSON
I e
J
hatchback, gas hater. VIN ¹273107 $14,988 ROBBERSON
Suberu Outback 3.6R Limited 2011, moon roof, AWD, pw, pl, leather,(exp. 8/3/14) Vin ¹381548 Stock ¹44184A
© 1 9 85
~
aama a
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 (Specia/ pricing good thru 8/15/14)
ash ,f
a checks, or credit in-
I formation may be I [ subject toFRAUD. For more informaf tion about an adver-f tiser, you may call I the Oregon Statel General's I I Attorney I Office C o nsumer f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392.
~m-Bu~~ serving central oregon since Sgm
S Ua ARU aeneneosnmn.onn
Check out the Porsche 928S $23,979 Call The Bulletin At 91,821 miles, e x c. classifieds online 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. cond., maintenance 541 e385 n5809 www.bendbulletinecom 877-266-3821 updated. 3rd owner. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Updated daily Dlr ¹0354 $7,000. 541-598-9182 At: www.bendbulletin.com
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREc ertain trust d e ed FORE, notice hereby made b y Ha r v ey is given that the unWade Halbrook, as dersigned trustee will grantor, to Regional on October 15, 2014 Trustee Ser v ices at the hour of 10:00 Corp., as trustee, in o'clock, A.M. in acfavor of M o rtgage cord with the stanElectronic R egistra- dard of time estabtion Systems, Inc. lished b y ORS solely as nominee for 187.110, at th e f o lGB Mortgage, LLC, its lowing place: inside successors and as- the main lobby of the signs, as beneficiary, Deschutes C o unty dated 11/19/08, reCourthouse, 1164 NW corded 11/26/08, in Bond, in the City of the mortgage records Bend, County of Desof Deschutes County, chutes, State of OrOregon, as egon, sell at public 2008-47153 and sub- auction to the highest sequently assigned to bidder for cash the Guaranty Bank by As- i nterest in th e d e signment recorded as scribed real property 2014-015972, cover- which the grantor had ing the following de- or had power to conscribed real property vey at the time of the situated in said county execution by grantor and state, to wit: Lots of the trust deed, toTen (10) and Eleven gether with any interBlock est which the grantor (11), Ninety-Four (94), De- or grantor's successchutes River Recre- sors in interest acation Homesites Unit quired after the ex8 Part II, recorded ecution of the trust July 5, 1967, in Cabi- deed, to satisfy the net A, Page 137, De- foregoing obligations schutes County, Or- thereby secured and egon. P R O PERTY the costs and exA DDRESS: 15 7 5 0 penses of sale, inLava Drive La Pine, cluding a reasonable OR 97739 Both the charge by the trustee. beneficiary and t he Notice is further given trustee have elected that for reinstatement to sell the real prop- or payoff quotes reerty to satisfy the obli- quested pursuant to gations secured by O RS 8 6 .786 a n d the trust deed and a 86.789 must be timely notice of default has c ommunicated in a been recorded pursu- written request that ant to Oregon Re- complies with t h at vised Statutes statute addressed to 86.752(3); the default the trustee's "Urgent for which the foreclo- Request Desk" either s ure i s m a d e i s by personal delivery grantor's failure to pay to the trustee's physiwhen due the follow- cal offices (call for ading sums: monthly d ress) or b y fi r st of class, certified mail, payments $1,119.96 beginning r eturn r e ceipt r e 01/01/14; plus l a te quested, addressed to charges of $0.00 each the trustee's post ofmonth beg i nning fice box address set 01/16/14; plus prior forth in t his n otice. accrued late charges Due to potential conof $190.20; plus ad- flicts with federal law, vances of $0.00; to- persons having no gether with title exrecord legal or equipense, costs, trustee's table interest in the fees and attorney's subject property will fees incurred herein only receive informaby reason of said de- tion concerning the fault; any further sums lender's estimated or advanced by the ben- actual bid. Lender bid eficiary for the protec- i nformation is a l s o tion of the above de- available a t the scribed real property trustee's web s ite, and i ts inte r est www.northwesttherein; and prepay- trustee.com. Notice is ment penalties/premi- further given that any ums, if applicable. By person named in ORS reason of said default 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s five days before the owing on the obliga- date last set for the tion secured by the s ale, to h av e t h is trust deed immedi- foreclosure proceedately due and pay- ing dismissed and the able, said sums being trust deed reinstated the following, to wit: b y payment to t he $128,335.00 with in- beneficiary of the enterest thereon at the tire amount then due rate of 7.5 percent per (other than such porannum beg i nning tion of the principal as 12/01/13; plus l ate would not then be due charges of $0.00 each had no default ocmonth beg i nning curred) and by curing 01/1 6/1 4 until paid; any o t he r d e f ault plus prior accrued late complained of herein charges of $190.20; that is capable of being cured by tenderp lus advances o f $0.00; together with ing the performance title expense, costs, required under t he trustee's fees and at- o bligation o r tr u s t torneys fees incurred deed, and in addition herein by reason of to paying said sums said default; any fur- or tendering the perther sums advanced formance necessary by the beneficiary for to cure the default, by the protection of the paying all costs and above described real expenses actually inLEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7210.20098 R e f e rence is made to that
curred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from persons named in ORS 86.778 for reinstatement quotes received less than six d ays prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if r equired by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor i n interest t o t h e grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" and nbeneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. The trustee's rules of auction may be accessed at ww w .northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status a t ww w .northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. For further information, p l ease contact: Heather L. Smith Nort h west Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 4 25-586-1900 H a l brook, Harvey Wade (TS¹ 721 0 .20098) 1002.269785-File No. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7827.20620 R e f erence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Janice W. Hearn, Trustee of the J anice W . He a r n Trust, dated October 20, 2003, as grantors, to First American Title Insurance Company of Oregon, as trustee, in favor of Bank of the
Cascades, as beneficiary, dated
10/09/2007, recorded 1 0/15/2007, i n th e
mortgage records of Deschutes, Oregon, as 2007-54964 and
subsequently assigned to OneWest Bank N.A. by Assignm ent recorded a s 2014-016900, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 17 of THE PINES AT SISTERS, P.U . D., Deschutes C o unty, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1066 West Collier Glacier D rive Sisters, O R 97759 Both the beneficiary a n d the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revlsed Statutes 8 6.752(3). The d efault for which foreclos ure i s m a d e i s grantor breach of the terms and conditions of the obligation secured by the deed of
c ommunicated in a for certain property Amy B a r r y at trust. The event of default under the note written request that from Sunriver Urban (541)693-2114, abarryobendoreand deed o f t r ust, c omplies with t h at Unincorporated pursuant to Section statute addressed to Community Forest to gon.gov. Send writ9(b)(i) of the Deed of the trustee's "Urgent Sunriver Urban Unin- ten testimony to the Trust, which provides Request Desk" either corporated Commu- City of Bend, c/o CDD, 710 NW Wall that, "Lender may re- by personal delivery nity Utility. I n addiquire immediate pay- to the trustee's physi- t ion, the d e n o v o St. 97702, or attend ment in full of all sums cal offices (call for ad- hearing will be on Or- t he meeting a n d secured by this Secu- dress) or b y f i r st dinance 2 0 1 4-022, state your views. D e s chutes rity Instrument if... The class, certified mail, adding LEGAL NOTICE property ceases to be r eturn receipt r e - County Code Section and T RUSTEE'S N O the p rincipal r esi- quested, addressed to 18.108.175 the trustee's post ofamending Title 18, the T ICE O F SA L E . dence of a Borrower for reasons other than fice box address set Deschutes C o u nty Reference is made forth in this notice. Zoning M a p , to death and the Propto that certain Trust zo n e Deed mad e erty is not the princi- Due to potential con- c hange t h e by flicts with federal law, designation for cerKevin T. S a wyer pal residence of at tain property f rom a nd T a mara L . least one other Bor- persons having no rower". The Default record legal or equi- Sunriver Urban Unin- Sawyer, as tenants corporated Commu- by the entirety, as date of 0 2 /07/2014 table interest in the and pay the following subject property will nity Forest D istrict Grantors, to Ameronly receive informa(SUF) to Sunriver Ur- iTitle, an O r egon sums: principal balance of $155,675.00 tion concerning the ban Unincoroporated corporation, as Uti l i ty Trustee, in favor of with accrued interest lender's estimated or Community from 01/07/2014; to- actual bid. Lender bid District (SUU) with a Michael J. Tennant i nformation is a l s o Limited Use (LU) as gether with title exBen e f iciary, the Combing Zone allow- dated November 30, pense, costs, trustee's available a t web s ite, ing a fire training facil- 2007, recorded Nofees and attorney's trustee's ity. APPLICANT:Sunfees incurred herein www.northwestvember 30, 2007, as trustee.com. A right river Service District. Instrument by reason of said deNo. exists, or may exist A TTORNEY: Tia M . fault; any further sums 2007-62046, under ORS 86.778 to Lewis, Schwabe, Wiladvanced by the benR ecords of D e s eficiary for the protec- have the proceeding liamson and Wyatt. chutes County, Ortion of the above de- d ismissed and t h e STAFF C O NTACT: egon covering the scribed real property trust deed reinstated Cynthia Smidt, Cyn- following described and i ts inte r est by paying the entire thia.SmidtOdesreal property situtherein; and prepay- amount then due, to- chutes.org. Copies of ated in Deschutes gether wit h c o sts, the staff report, appliment penalties/premiCounty, O r e gon, ums, if applicable. By trustee's fees and at- cation, all documents to-wit: PARCEL 1: torney fees, and/or by and evidence subreason of said default, Lot T w e nty-three the beneficiary has curing any other de- mitted by or on behalf (23) SILVER SAGE, d eclared al l s u m s fault complained of in of the applicant and PHASE 2, recorded owing on the obliga- the notice of default, applicable criteria are J uly 6, 1 9 94, I n tion secured by said at any time that is not available for inspec- Cabinet D, Page 59, trust deed immedi- later than five days tion at the Planning Deschutes County, Division at no cost Oregon. (Comately due and pay- before the date last a nd can b e p u r - monly referred to as able, said sums being set for the sale In construing this notice, chased for 25 cents a 2093 N E the following, to wit: H o l low the singular includes page. The staff re- Tree Lane, Bend, $155,675.00 with inthe plural, the word port should be made OR 97701). PARterest thereon at the rate of 1.13 percent "grantor" includes any available seven days CEL 2: Lot Twenty per annum beginning successor in interest prior to the date set (20), Block One (1), STAR BRIGHT ES01/07/2014; plus ad- to the grantor as well for the hearing. vances of $12,563.34; as any other person TATES, PHASE 11, owing an obligation, together with title exrecorded July 24, The Bulletin pense, costs, trustee's the performance of 1979, i n C a b inet To Subscribe call which is secured by B-659, Deschutes fees and attorneys fees incurred herein said trust deed, and 541-385-5800 or go to County, O r e gon. by reason of said de- the words "trustee" www.bendbulletin.com (Commonly reand "beneficiary" infault; any further sums ferred to as 1788 clude their respective LEGAL NOTICE NE Meerkat Ave., advanced by the beneficiary for the protec- successors in interest, PUBLIC HEARING Bend, OR 97701). if any. The trustee's tion of the above deNOTICE P ARCEL 3 : Lo t rules of auction may scribed property and CITY COUNCIL Thirty-six a c cessed a t P ROJECT N U M - ROCKRIDGE (36), its interest therein; be and prepayment pen- www.northwestBER: P Z 1 4-0449 PHASE 2, recorded a lties/premiums, i f trustee.com and are APPLICANT: August 2, 1996, in applicable. WHERE- incorporated by this Bend-La Pine C abinet D, P a g e reference. You may FORE, notice hereby Schools NATURE 246, Des c hutes also access sale stais given that the unOF THE APPLICACounty, O r e gon. tus a t ww w .northdersigned trustee will TION: Vacation of (Commonly rewesttrustee.com and on October 27, 2014 portions of the pubferred to as 2625 at the hour of 10:00 www.USA-Foreclolic right of way for NE Cordata Place, sure.com. For further Elwood Lane and o'clock, A.M. in acBend, OR 97701). cord with the stan- information, p l ease Skyline Ranch Road C hris Hatfield o f Bre a n on adjacent to the new dard of time estab- contact: Hurley Re , P . C ., Nort h west Bend-La lished by ORS Miller Pine 747 SW Mill View Trustee Services, Inc. 187.110, at th e f o lmiddle school site. W ay, Bend, O R lowing place: inside P.O. Box 997 Belle- APPLICABLE CRI9 7702, wa s ap vue, WA 98009-0997 the main lobby of the TERIA: Bend Code pointed Successor 5 86-1900 Hea r n , Trustee by the BenDeschutes C o unty Chapter 3.80; Right (TS¹ of Way V acation; eficiary on January Courthouse, 1164 NW J anice W . 7827.20620) Oregon R e v ised 10, 2014. Both the Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Des- 1002.270176-File No. Statutes, ORS Beneficiary and 271.080-271.170 Trustee have chutes, State of Oregon, sell at public LEGAL NOTICE available in City Hall elected to sell the auction to the highest NOTICE OF PUBLIC or at the Commusaid real property to bidder for cash the HEARING nity D e velopment satisfy the obligai nterest in th e d e - The Desc h utes Department portion tions secured by scribed real property County B o ar d of of the City's website. said Trust Deed and which the grantor had Commissioners w i ll a Notice of Default DATE, TIME, AND or had power to con- hold a Public Hearing LOCATION OF THE has been recorded vey at the time of the on August 13, 2014, HEARING: pursuant to Oregon execution by grantor at 10 a.m. in the Des- W ednesday, A u Revised S t a tutes of the trust deed, to- chutes County Board gust 6, 2014 at 7:00 86.735(3); the degether with any inter- of Co m missioners PM, City of Bend fault for which the est which the grantor H earing Room a t Council Chambers, foreclosure is made or grantor's succes- 1300 NW Wall Street, 710 NW Wall Street, is Grantor's failure sors in interest ac- Bend, to take testi- Bend. ADDIto pay when due the quired after the ex- mony on the following TIONAL INFORMAfollowing sums: Inecution of the trust i tem: F I L E NU M - TION: The applicat erest only p a ydeed, to satisfy the B ERS:PA-14-1 a n d tion, all documents ments of $3,000 beforegoing obligations ZC-14-1. SUBJECT:A and evidence subginning January 1, thereby secured and de novo hearing on mitted by or on be2008 through JanuOrdinance 2014-021, half of the applicant the costs and e xary 1, 2014 in the penses of sale, in- amending Deschutes and the apphcation amount of cluding a reasonable County Code Section criteria are a vail- $216,000.00, p l us charge by the trustee. 23.01.010 and Com- able for inspection penalty fees from Notice is further given prehensive Plan Sec- at City Hall at no J anuary 5, 2 0 0 8 that for payoff quotes tions 5.10 and 5.12, to cost and will be prothrough January 15, requested pursuant to Adopt an Exception to vided at a reason2014 in the amount O RS 8 6 .786 a n d Goal 4 and to change able cost. C O Nof $44,060.00, and the plan designation TACT PE R SON: 86.789 must be timely any real property
taxes due. By reason of the default, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to-wit: As of January 15, 2014, unpaid principal in the of amount $300,000.00, p l us accrued interest at the rate of 12% per annum from November 30, 2007 in the a m o unt of $220,832.88, p l us penalty fees from January 5, 2008 in the a m o unt of $ 44,060.00, for a t otal a mount o f $564,892.88, p l us interest continuing to accrue at the rate of $98.63 per day, plus penalty fees at rate of $20.00 per day from January 15, 2014, until paid, plus an y u n paid property taxes, plus a ttorney's fee s , foreclosure costs, and s u m s advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said Trust Deed. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given that t h e un d e rsigned Trustee will on October 6, 2014, at the hour of 11:00 o'clock, A.M., in accord with the standard of time established b y ORS 1 87.110, o n th e front steps of t he Deschutes County Courthouse, 1 100 NW Bond, City of B end, County o f Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to t he highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantors have or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantors of the said T rust D e ed, t o gether with any interest which the obligations th e reby s ecured and t h e costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that an y p e rson named i n ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five (5) days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire a mount then d u e (other than s u ch portion of the principal and interest as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the p erformance re quired under the obl igation o r Tr u s t Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the pe r formance necessary to cure
the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and T rust D e ed , t o gether with Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by s a i d ORS 86.753. In a c cordance with the Fair Debt Col l ection Practices Act, this is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that p u rpose. This c o mmunication is from a debt c ollector. In c o n struing this Notice, t he s i ngular i n cludes the p lural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, a nd t h e wor ds "Trustee" and OBeneficary" include its respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: May 13, 2014. Chris Hatfield, Su c cessor Trustee, Hurley Re, P.C., 747 SW Mill View Way, Bend, OR 97702, Telephone: 541-317-5505.
PUBLIC NOTICE T he Bend Park & Recreation D i s trict Board of Directors will meet in a work session at 5 :0 0 p .m., Tuesday, August 5, 2014, at the district office,799 SW Col umbia, Bend, O r egon. The work session will consist of board training conducted by the special Districts Association of Oregon. The board will meet in a regular business meeting at 7:00 p.m. to consider approval of an a mendment tot h e Discovery Park Developer Agreement. Following the b usin ess meeting t h e board will meet in executive session pursuant to ORS 192.660(2)(e) for the purpose of discussing real property transactions a nd ORS 192.660(2)(i) for the purpose of reviewing and evaluating the job performance of public officers and employees.
T he a g enda a n d s upplementary r e ports are posted on the district's website, www.bendparksandrec.org. For more information call 541-389-7275.
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed,hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
G6 SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?
11 I
1 1 '»I
II II
List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.