Serving Central Oregon since190375
MONDAY August4,2014
Ll:
Plus:tourneyat Juniper TEE TOGREEN• B1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD For Bend'ssmall dogs
— Smaller pooches aregetting more space to play offleash.A7
Hundredsof open-waterswimmers compete overtheweekendasthe Cascade LakesSwim Seriesturns 20, B1
Tentacled robot —Built to resemble anoctopus, "the ideal underwater robot" is almost here.A3
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Switch pitcher —A rare ambidextrous hurler wows the Cape CodLeague.B4
LEGALIZATION MEASURE
Aiheisi TV —Streaming
Pot
channel will emphasize the provable.A9
backers raise
ln world news —Fatal strike in Gaza.A2
And a Web exclusiveIn Times Square, cartoon characters and superheroes seek the American dream. bendbnnetin.com/extrns
• The rural fire district is checking the readinessof homesin 110square miles
1M By Hillary Borrud
EDITOR'5CHOICE
The Bulletin
The campaign to legalize recreational marijuana
At federal job: blow whistle, get basement
in Oregon had raised over $1 million, with three months left until voters
decide on the November ballot measure. A spokesman for New
s
Approach Oregon said last week the group is just getting started on fundraising. Peter Zuck-
erman, com- Chaft munications ins i de director for •Money the campaign, c oming said Thursday f rom East that many Coast,A6 potential donors probably watched from the sidelines to make sure supporters had collected enough signatures to qualify the initiative for the
By David A. Fahrenthold The Washington Post
PHOENIX — On her 71st workday in the base-
ment, Paula Pedene had something fun to look for-
ward to. She had an errand to run, up on the first floor. "Today, I get to go get the papers. Exciting!" she said. "I get to go upstairs and, you know, see people." The task itself was no
November ballot, which the
thrill: Retrieve the morn-
state confirmed they did on July22. "Since we just qualified, the campaign is just beginning in earnest," Zucker-
ing's newspapers and bring them back to the library of
Firefighter Cris Berthelsen plugs data he's collected regarding a home's wildfire readiness into a cellphone app. The program
man said. "Now is where
the Phoenix Veterans Af-
crunches what Berthelsen enters anddetermines a color dot to mark on aninteractive map. The La Pine Rural Fire Protection
fairs hospitaL The pleasure was in the journey. Down a long sunlit hallway. Back again, seeing friends in the bustle of the hospital's main floor. Then, Pedene got back
District is evaluating all the homes in the110 square miles of often wooded terrain it covers.
it reallybegins, because a lot of people logically are going to hang back and make sure we've qualified before they invest in the campaign." SeeMarijuana/A6
Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
By Dylan J. Darling SPRING RIVER — Just
in the elevator and hit "B."
byglancing at William Norquist's home on Downey
The day's big excitement
Road, firefighter Cris Berth-
was over. It was 7:40 a.m.
elsenknewthat the house was
"I will not be able to do
this forever," Pedene said later that day.
Pedene,56,istheformer chief spokeswoman for this VA hospital. Now, she
is living in a bureaucrat's urban legend. See Basement/A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 88, Low 55 Page B10
Go along with the firefighter doing assessments: bendbnneti n.com/homechecks
O
The Bulletin
of southern Deschutes
e
ready should a wildfire strike.
County and northern Klam-
+
ath County. Berthelsen and
There's plenty of space betweenthehome and the trees, the ground around it is
district officials are glad when they see homes like Norquist's house. Berthelsen is tasked with
covered either by lawn or dirt
and there's no clutter such as pine needles to fuel a fire.
the assessments. He started
Protecting the home in case
examininghomes at the beginning of July and will be
cruising the district and An interactive map shows how homes rate in the event of a
doing so the rest of the sum-
By James Barron
wildfire. Green is good, yellow is moderate and red is bad.
mer. The goal is to complete as many assessments of the
New York Times News Service
about 7,500 homes in the dis-
Johnson was flying his battery-powered drone above a park in Brooklyn on a re-
"Mybackyard used to be forest," said Norquist, who with the help of family deared the trees dosest to
the home. "...It's been coming together."
The La Pine Rural Fire Protection District is in
110-square-mile district, cov-
the process of evaluating
ering La Pine, Spring River and numerous neighbor-
the homes around the
hoods tucked into the woods
trict as possible. In about two hours Thursday, he checked out nearly 20 homes. SeeWildfire /A6
Priced out of coasts,middle classmoves inland
Vol. 112, No. 21e,
Americans have never hesitated to pack up the U-Haul in
2epages, 3 sections
search of the big time, a better
credit allowed cities to grow
job or just warmer weather. But these days, domestic migrants are increasingly drivenbythe questforcheaper housing.
without regard to housing cost and when the fastest growing
Q i/l/e userecyc/ed newsprint
:'illlllllll III o
88 267 02329
NEW YORK — Jeremiah
cent weekend when he saw
something in the distance. Faster than you could say"speeding quadcopter" Johnson, a design technologist, realized it was a small, remote-controlled aircraft
ing cities are now those where housing is more affordable than average, a decisive reversal from the earlyyears of the millennium, when easy
An Independent Newspaper
past rules
the place for about five years.
By Shailn Dewan New York Times News Service
The Bulletin
dronesfly
of wildfire is an ongoing project for Norquist, who has had
INDEX Calendar A7-8 Local/State A7-8 C lassified C1-6 Movies A 9 Comics/ Nation/World A2 Puzzles C3-4 Sports B1-10 Crosswords C4 Tee/GreenB1,7-9 Dear Abby A9 Television A9
In NewYork,
OKLAHOM A CITY-
The country's fastest grow-
cities had housing that was less
affordable than the national average. Among people who have
moved long distances, the number of those who cite housing as their primary motivation for doing so has more than doubled since 2007. Rising rents and the difficulty of securing a mortgage on the coasts have proved a boon to inland cities that offer the
middle class a firmer footing and an easier life. Inthe eternal competition
amongurban centers, the shifthas produced some new
winners. Oklahoma City, for example, has outpaced most other cities in growth since 2011, becoming the 12th-fast-
est-growing city last year. It
has also won over a coveted de-
mographic, young adults ages 25-34, going from a net loss of millennials to a net gain.
SeeMigration/A5
just like his — and it was only about 150 feet away. "We were eyeing each other," he said, "sizing each other up." Not long ago, drones were arelativelyrare sight over New York City, usually pilotedbyphotographers. But now drones are soaringas never before, deployed more and more by those who just love gadgets, as newmodels come on the market at lower
and lower prices. SeeDrones/A5
A2
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sraeiairsri e i s roun warscae ac By Sudarsan Raghavan
the ground, covered in blood," recalled Muhamed Yafei, 45, The Washington Post 3,000Palestinians were seek- an air-conditioner repairman RAFAH, Gaza Strip — As ing refuge at the facility, and a who had been staying inside Israel showed signs of scaling crowd of civilians had gathered the school. Among the dead, he back its ground offensive in outside — children buying ice said, was the ice-cream vendor. Gaza, its war from the skies cream from asidewalk vendor, The youngest victim, Saqer continued Sunday, as an airand men and women purchas- AI-Kashif, 8, had walked outstrike outside a U.N. school in ingfood or cigarettes, witnesses side to buy ice cream. He was southern Gaza killed at least 10 sald. severely wounded in the blast people. The bloodshed sparked The missile hit the motorcy- andlater died ofhis injuries. His some of the heaviest U.S. crit- cle, said the witnesses, and then body, covered in awhite shroud, icism of Israel since the war crashed into the road. Shrapnel was brought back Sunday afbegan. flew in every direction, slicing ternoon to the school, where his Capt. Eytan Buchman, a into more than 40 people, and fatherkissed his head before spokesman for the Israel De- killing at least seven civilians, takinghim to the cemetery. fenseForces,said the targetsof induding a boy. ~ sumably, U.N. Secretary-General Ban the attack in the border city of the three militants Israel had Ki-moon called Sunday's attack Rafah were three Palestinian targeted died, too. A U.N. em- a"moraloutrage and acriminal militants riding past the school ployee was among those killed, act." State Department spokeson a motorcycle. "We identi- said Adnan Ab u H asna, a woman Jen Psaki, in an unusufied a successful hit on the tar- spokesman for the U.N. Relief ally harsh statement, said that get," Buchman said. "We defi- and Works Agency, which is as- "the United States is appalled nitely don't target civilians or sisting more than 200,000 Pal- by today's disgraceful shelling" schools." estinian evacuees at 90 schools and urged Israel to do more to "avoid civilian casualties" and But according to eyewitness- in Gaza. "There were bodies all over to protect U.N. facilities. es and U.N. officials, an Israeli missile struck just outside the gates of the school. About
and Griff Witte
Si sil.AvL
Dtseuiesrs
QUAKE KILLS HUNDREDS IN CHINA
~/
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a fatal police chokehold in New York City has beenarrested on gun charges, police said Sunday.Police said 22-year-old RamseyOrta was arrested Saturday night on Staten Island, afew blocks from where officers confronted his friend Eric Garner onJuly17. Orta, whose recording of an officer restraining Garner with a chokehold fueled an outcry against the police, is charged with two counts of criminal possession of aweapon. Police said Orta had aprevious weapon conviction that prohibited him from possessing a firearm. Iraq fightihg —Sunni extremists seized control of three towns in northern Iraq on Sundayafter fierce battles with Kurdish security forces, sending thousands of people fleeing to the nearby mountains and threatening the country's largest dam. In thedarkness of Sunday morning, the Sunni fighters swept in to takeone of thetowns, Sinjar. Hours later, as the militants demandedthat the city's residents swear allegiance to the Islamic State or be killed, the group's social media campaign was underway, with photos posted online showing militants patrolling the city.
Ledanan dOrder raid —Syrian rebels kiled10 Lebanesetroops I
s
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Police chokehold witneSS — Themanwho recorded videoof
continued Sunday ascampaign aides of the presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah accusedone of President Hamid Karzai's vice presidents of involvement in fraud in a runoff vote they saywas stackedagainstAbdullah.Theaudithad beensuspendedforaweek during the Muslim festival of Eid al-Fitr. The campaign teamsof Abdullah and his opponent, Ashraf GhaniAhmadzai, argued through the weekendover the technicalities of how to invalidate fraudulent ballots.
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Oil hlCOm8 —The nation's largest environmental group is earning money from an oil well on land it controls in Texas, despite pledging a decade agonot to permit new oil and gasdrilling on land supposedly set aside for conservation. TheNature Conservancy — which says it helps protect about 20 million acres in the United States — argues that it has had nochoice in the case of thewell. The group has earned millions of dollars over the years from gasand oil production on the property.
AfghaniStan audit —Wrangling overAfghan election results
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U.S. EdOla Patient —A second Americanmissionary stricken with Ebola is expected to beflown Tuesday to the U.S. for treatment, following a colleaguewhowas admitted over the weekend to Emory University Hospital's infectious diseaseunit. A Liberian official confirmed to the Associated Press plans for NancyWritebol to depart with a medical evacuation team.Theofficial, Information Minister Lewis Brown, said the evacuation flight was scheduled to leaveWest Africa between1 a.m. and1.30a.m. local time Tuesday.Writebol is in good spirits despite her diagnosis, said the pastor of her hometown church in Charlotte, North Carolina, who hasspokenwith her husband, David.
e
and likely captured over adozenmore in a raid on a Lebanese border town, the country's military chief said, the most serious spillover of violence yet into the tiny country from its neighbor's civil war. The capture of Lebanesesoldiers and police raised fears that the country could becomefurther entangled in the Syrian civil war and could worsen already-brewing sectarian tensions. "What happened today is more serious than what somepeople imagine," Lebanon's army chief, Gen. JeanKahwaji, told journalists. As fighting raged Sunday,some residents tried to flee from the eastern Lebaneseborder town of Arsal, home to 40,000 residents and 120,000 Syrian refugees. — From wire reports
er
Where BuyersAnd Sellers Meet
Cl™assifjed
Food, Home & Garden Zhang Guangyu / Xinrrua via The Associated press
Rescuers transport an injured man Sunday after an earthquake in Ludian county in southwest China's Yunnan Province, killing at least 381 peopleand injuring more than1,800. About12,000 mostly brick homescollapsed when the quake struck Sundayafternoon in the impoverished Ludian county, about 230 miles northeast of
Yunnan's capital, Kunming. The magnitude-6.1 quakestruck at 4:30 p.m. at a depth of 6 miles, according to the U.S.Geological Survey. Its epicenter was in Ludian county township of Longtoushan. China's earthquakemonitoring agency put the magnitude at 6.5. — The Associated Press
716 SW11tlf St. Redmond 541.923.4732
e • TheBulletin
•'
I
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5413826447~~2090NEWy ttC r ~ S 't 101 Bend OR 97701i bendurology.com
S U r olo S~
Lake Erie'salgaewoes
began adecadeago By John Seewer
rashes. Health officials ad-
The Associated Press
vised children and those with
eB
TOLEDO, Ohio — T h e weak immune systems to toxins t h a t co n t aminated avoid showering or bathing in the drinking water supply of the water. 400,000 people in northwest Worried residents who'd
Ohio didn't just suddenly appear.
been told not to drink, brush their teeth or wash dishes with
the water descended on truckwestern Lake Erie have long loads of bottled water delivbeen worried about this very ered from acrossthe state as scenario as a growing number the governordeclared a state of algae blooms have turned of emergency.The Ohio Nathe water into a pea soup col- tional Guard was using water or in recent summers, leaving purification systems to proWater plant operators along
behind toxins that can sicken
duce drinkable water.
people and kill pets.
Oliver Arnold, of Toledo, loaded up on bottled water Sunday so he could give baths
In fact, the problems on the
shallowest of the five Great Lakes brought on by farm runoff and sludge from sewage treatment plants have been building for more than a decade.
While residents around Ohio's fourth-largest city were being told to avoid drinking tap water for a second day, discussion began t o
to his six children, including
4-month-old twins. "We're going through a lot. I know by tomorrow, we're going to be looking for water again," he sald.
Some hospitals canceled electivesurgeries and were sending surgical equipment
c enter that needed sterilized to facil-
around how to stop the pollutants fouling the lake that supplies drinking water for ll million people. "People are finally waking
ities outside the water emergency, said Bryan Biggie, disastercoordinator for ProMedica hospitals in Toledo.
r
In southeastern Michigan,
authorities were operating waacceptable," Toledo Mayor Mi- ter stations for the 30,000 cuschael Collins said Sunday. tomers who were affected by Toledo officials warned resi- the warning. dents not to use city water earThe National Oceanic and ly Saturday after tests at one Atmospheric A dmi n i stratreatment plant showed read- tion released a satellite image ings for microcystin above showing a small but concenthe standard for consumption, trated algae bloom centered m ost likely because of t h e right where Toledo draws its algae. water supply, said Jeff Reutter, Drinking the water could head of the Ohio Sea Grant recause vomiting, cramps and search lab.
•
•
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•
•
•
up to the fact that this is not
•
Restaurant gb L o u n g
•
61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend, OR 97702 Reservations 541.382.8769 accepted: 5-Close www.scanlonsrestauranLcom
MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014•THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Monday, August 4, the 216th day of 2014.There are 149 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE
SCIENCE QS.A
Osel lone: en Bce
What you should know about Ebola
HAPPENINGS AfriCa —President Barack Obama begins asummit with African leaders in Washington, D.C.
Libya —The nation's newly elected legislature is set to convene for the first time as rival militias continue to skirmish in Tripoli, the capital.
HISTORY Highlight:In1944,15-year-old diarist AnneFrankwasarrested with her sister, parentsandfour others bythe Gestapoafter hiding for two yearsinside abuilding in Amsterdam.(Anneand her sister, Margot, diedthefollowing year atthe Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.) In1735, a jury found John Peter Zenger of theNewYork Weekly Journal not guilty of committing seditious libel against the colonial governor of New York, William Cosby. In1790, the CoastGuard had its beginnings asthe Revenue Cutter Service. In1830,plans for the city of Chicago werelaid out. In1892,Andrewand Abby Borden were axed todeath in their home in Fall River, Massachusetts. Lizzie Borden,Andrew's daughter from a previous marriage, wasaccused of the killings, but acquitted at trial. In1914, Britain declared war on Germany for invading Belgium; the United States proclaimed its neutrality in the mushrooming world conflict. In1916, the United States reached agreement with Denmark to purchasethe Danish Virgin Islands for $25 million. In1936,Jesse Owensof the U.S. won thesecond of his four gold medals at theBerlin Olympics as heprevailed in the long jump overGerman LuzLong, who was the first to congratulate him. In1964, the bodies of missing civil rights workers Michael Schwerner, AndrewGoodman and JamesChaneywere found buried in anearthen dam in Mississippi. In1972, Arthur Bremerwas convicted andsentenced in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, to 63 years in prison for his attempt on the life of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace (the sentence waslater reducedto 53 years; Bremerwas released in 2007). In1977,President Jimmy Carter signed ameasure establishing the Department of Energy. In1987, the FederalCommunications Commission voted to abolish the FairnessDoctrine, which required radio and television stations to present balanced coverage ofcontroversial issues. Tenyearsego:Richard Smith, a Staten Island ferry pilot, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in a crash that killed 11 inOctober 2003,acknowledgingthathe'd passed outat the helmafter arriving at work with medication in his system. (Smith wassentenced to18 months in prison.) Five years ago:North Korean leader Kim Jong II pardoned American journalists Laura Ling and EunaLeefor entering the country illegally and ordered their releaseduring a surprise visit by former U.S. President Bill Clinton. One yearago:Security forces closed roads, put upextra blast walls and increasedpatrols near some of themorethan 20 U.S. diplomatic missions in the Muslim world that Washington had ordered closed for the weekend following warnings of a possible al-Qaidaattack.
BIRTHDAYS Actor-comedian Richard Belzer is 70. FormerAttorney General Alberto Gonzales is 59. Actor-screenwriter Billy Bob Thornton is 59. Hall of Fame track star Mary DeckerSlaney is 56. President BarackObama is 53. Retired MLBAll-Star pitcher RogerClemens is52. Author Dennis Lehane is49. Actor Daniel DaeKim is 46. Race car driver Jeff Gordon is43. — From wire reports
ro o swims in esea "Soft robotics" promises the mechanical versatility found in natural organisms, experts say, and will be able to explore tight spaces and repair
By Misty Williams The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Where did Ebola
come from'? Q • The virus first ap-
A• peared in 1976 in
the skin, in internal organs
and from body orifices. Severely ill patients may also fall into a coma.
two outbreaks, one in a
village near the Ebola River in th e D emocratic
dangerous equipment.
to regulate itself. Symptoms can include bleeding under
Republic of Congo. Fruit bats are considered the likely host of the virus. Infection occurs a mong
several animals, particularly primates. In its most virulent form, it may kill
90 percent of those it infects. The current out-
What is the CDC doing
• about the outbreak in Q Africa'?
CDC is sending A• The more disease-control experts to the affected West
African countries over the next 30 days. The agency is also helping the airports in those countries to screen outbound passengers.
break's death rate is about
60 percent.
Why is this outbreak so
Why ar e
E m ory
• University Hospital Q and the Centers for Disease Control and Preven-
Q • bad'? It is occurring in coun-
A this disease before. CDC
• tries that haven't seen
workers
m u s t e s s entially
tion saying that bringing start from scratch in getting in Ebola patients does not health systems in those counpose a risk to the public? Unlike flu, Ebola is • not an airborne virus that you contract just
A "The Age of Robots" by M. Brega via The New York Times I Submitted photo
by breathing. Infection occurs from contact with the
tries up to speed on the disease and how to treat it. I s there a
cure for
Ebola? Q • No. There's not even a
A robotic octopus, with sinewy armsand a powerful grip, is the first member of a newbreed of robots
blood, secretions or other
— soft robots — that can go where others can't.
bodily fluids of infected patient either survives or he people or animals. In addi- doesn't. Severely ill patients tion, the aircraft and amneed IV fluids or oral rehybulance used to transport dration with solutions conthe patients are specially taining electrolytes to help
"tt sounds pretty prosaic, yet one of the biggest challenges ts just wiring. Thiswas true 20 L IVORNO, Italy — Fo r years ago, and it's still true." y ears, r o b oticists h a v e By Katherine HarmonCourage
New York TimesNews Service
yearned to develop a flexible machine that can explore
— Mark Cutkosky, Stanford School of Engineering
tight spaces, repair dangerous equipment and p otentially
cials say those precautions
ogy had been "a bit of a body. game-changer," enabling just Now one of the first mem- about any research team — or bers ofthis new breed of ro- garage tinkerer — to make bots is almost here. It has sin- new molds to create stretchy ewy arms, a powerful grip and prototypes, a process that just the ability to work underwater a few years ago was slow and without coming up for air. costly. Yes, it is an octopus. A group at Harvard used can
swim, crawl and manipulate objects, they make "the ideal underwater robot," said Fran-
cescoGiorgio-Serchi,a scientist at the Research Center on
Sea Technologies and Marine Robotics here, who is working on the project. In a small seaside laboratory, he and others have been tinkering away on a prototype of a multiarmed robot they
call PoseiDrone for the sea god Poseidon. Pieces of halfbuilt arms are scattered about,
and an inflatable kiddie pool sits between tables. It was in that modest body of water that t h eir r obotic
octopus got its sea legs, as it were. It did so well in the pool that the researchers borrowed a
small boat and deployed it in the Ligurian Sea, still attached to their controls via cables.
It successfully swam in the waves and adeptly crawled along the rocky bottom. Robotic technology is generally based on hard materials — a logical approach, because they can be controlled with precise movements and low computing power. Soft robotics is something else altogether, promising "the mechanical versatility you find in natural
organisms," said Carmel Majidi, a mechanical engineer at Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute who is
working to develop sensitive artificial skin and strong arti-
ficial muscles. Imagine a roving vacuum cleaner that
c o ul d l i t eral-
ly squeeze itself into nooks where dust bunnies hide. Or
more grandly, Majidi said, exploration vehicles, construction drones, "wearable robots
and maybe even implantable robots." Early efforts in the field date to the 1940s, when scientists developed pneumatic "artificial muscles" to be used in
traditional robots. Progress has inched along since then, producing small-scale projects like scooting soft-bodied caterpillars and pneumatic quadrupeds. But the advent of 3-D print-
molds from a 3-D printer to
And although the researchers are applying for patents, it is still a crude specimen, a robotic Frankenstein's monster bridgingthe eras ofhard and squishy — currently only 80 percent soft materials. "It's still very much a work
in progress," Majidi said. And Mark Cutkosky, a pro-
create a prototype of a soft, fessor atthe Stanford School octopuslike four-legged robot of Engineering, said: "How that could be controlled via do we build stretchy conductubes of liquid or air. And here tors? That's still a very open in Italy, Giorgio-Serchi and his question." "It sounds pretty prosaic," colleagues recently acquired a 3-D printer that allows them to he added, "yet one of the bigdesign, experiment and revise gest challenges is just wiring. quickly. This was true 20 years ago, They aim to replicate the and it's still true." The Poseikey features of an octopus: Drone's movements still rely eight arms to provide an al- on external control of convenmost infinite range of mo- tional motors and actuators. tion; the ability t o s queeze Nevertheless, the octopus through any opening larger robot is m ore sophisticated than its chitinous beak; and than a standard robot covan unusual nervous system eredinrubber,Giorgio-Serchi in which the arms are semi- said. Its abundance of soft, autonomous and the central elastic materials enables it to brain is thought to do little do things most other robots more than issue general com- cannot — much as stiff-jointmands ("Arms, let's go catch ed humans cannot do what an that crab!"). octopus can, despite our soft To make quicker headway, skin and muscles. "Without the soft part," Giorsome of the PoseiDrone's components, such as the electron- gio-Serchi said, "it would just ics, remain hard for now. The be a pile of motors and cables." exterior will be silicone — a Like real cephalopods, the material whose density, like PoseiDrone, whose body is that of an octopus, is similar to about the length of an adult water's. human hand, could be just The drone's potential mis- about any scale — from fracsions include inspecting and tions of an inch to dozens of repairing underwater tur- feetacross.A largerversion is bines, wave-energy genera- in the works. And perhaps not tors, oil rigs, ship hulls and reassuring tothose who fear perhaps fishing nets. In con- a robot uprising, the bigger trast to a hard-bodied under- it is, "the easier it is to make water bot, which would need it stronger — and fast," Giorto hover at a safe distance gio-Serchi said. from such equipment, the PoVirtually any conceivable seiDrone should be able to form is now just a click away, attach itself directly without so why do researchers focus damaging the equipment or on animal models? Cutkosky, itself, Giorgio-Serchi said. who has built a climbing robot Sending robots down to per- with gecko-inspired grippers, form dangerous tasks could says we inevitably look to the also help keep human divers natural world for inspiration. safer. And caution. Comparing The drone can already the octopus robot to its real-life crawl, swim and even carry counterpart, he said, "It's probsmall tools. But it is not yet ably a good thing they're conready to repair a turbine. fined to water."
eummo ao
Majidi said the technol-
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MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014•THE BULLETIN
Migration
homeownership in Seattle," he said. Whichis a reallybig deal."
Continued fromA1
Weighing costs
Other affordable cities that
have jumped in the growth rankings include several in Texas, including El Paso and San Antonio, as well as Columbus, Ohio, and Little Rock,
Some of the newcomers say that as they contemplated livI
ing with roommates, sitting in 1
Arkansas.
Newcomers in Oklahoma City have traded traffic jams and preschool waiting lists for master suites the size of their
old apartments. The sons of Lorin Olson, a
traffic and barely scraping by, the good things about life in a high-cost city lost their appeal. "The beach isn't going to pay my rent," said Jacqueline Sit,
Basement Continued fromA1 After complaining to high-
Drones
if one videotapes the inside of private property." Continued fromA1 On Sunday, Sen. Charles But t h e i r pr o l i f era- Schumer, D-N.Y., said the tion has also resulted in
city had turned into the Wild
problems. Two men were charged with reckless endangerment in July after the po-
West for drones. He said it
lice said a drone they were
drones, to issue them by the
flying in Upper Manhat-
end of the year. Other officials have also
32, who left Portland, where
tan came within 800 feet of a New York Police De-
she workedas a television reporter, to come to Oklahoma City, where she quiddy found a job in public relations.
partment helicopter near the George Washington Bridge. Also in July, the Federal
stem cell biologist who moved Nick oxford / New York Times News service here from New York's Upper Tony Trammell, one of a group of about a dozen friends to move Olson, 42, who was recruitEast Side, now ride bikes in from San Diego, paid $260,000 for his 3,300-square-foot home in a ed by the Oklahoma Medical their suburban neighborhood suburb of Oklahoma City. The country's fastest growing cities are Research Foundation after finand go home to a four-bed- now those where housing is more affordable than average. ishing his postdoctoral work, room house. Hector Lopez, a said his family had not shed caricature artist, lives in a loft tears over leaving New York. apartment here for less than housing bust, recession and re- factors in the city's growth. But "There's a little less to do, yeah," he paid to stay in agaragenear covery — that pattern reversed like other midsize cities, this he said. "But now we can afford Los Angeles. Tony Trammell, itself, with most low-cost cities one has labored to give peo- to doit." one of a group of about a dozen growing2.5percentage points ple additional reasons to move Glenn Kelman, the c hief friends to make the move from more than high-cost cities. The here, notably acquiring a pro- executive of Redfin, said that San Diego, paid $260,000 for analysis excluded cities with fessional basketball team, the when the company started its his 3,300-square-foot home in a poor job growth. Thunder. Along the river, a se- real estate service in 2006, he nearby suburb. Before the real estate market ries of modern glass boathous- expected the business to thrive "This is the opposite of the crashed,housing in fourofthe es have risen like wind-filled in coastal centers. "Now we're growing fastest gold rush," Trammell said. five fastest growing metropoli- sails, transforming the city into Sincethestartoftherecession, tan areas, including Cape Cor- a national center for rowing in the middle of the country; we the number of Americans who al, Florida, and Riverside, Cali- sports. All 73 inner-city schools can't hire people fast enough in have moved each year has fall- fornia, was less affordable than arebeingrebuilt orrefurbished. Houston, in Dallas, in Denver. en sharply for a host of reasons, in the average U.S. city, judging Downtown, there is enough And all of our customers come induding the sluggish economy by the relationship between the streetscaping going on to ren- from the same place — the airand the inueasing similarity medianhomepriceand income der a GPS useless. And near the port," he said. "Maybe the midcity's historic neighborhoods, dle dass hasn't disappeared; of job options from city to city. for each metropolitan area. Whenpeopledomove,theyhave But from 2008 to 2012, all chockablock with houses in maybe it's just gone somewhere all kinds of reasons, induding five of the cities with the most arts and craftsor storybook else." family, ~ and , especially growth were more affordable style, rejuvenated commerFor decades, Americans forthosewhomovelongdistanc- than average, including Ra- cial areas like the Plaza Dis- have flocked to the Sun Belt leigh-Durham, North Carolina, trict offer r e sidents locally in search of a better life, first es, employment. But of those who moved and the cities of El Paso, San made goods and trendy "beer abandoning failing industrial more than 500 miles,the share Antonio, Austin and McAllen cocktails." centers like Detroit and Pitts"Everything is here; every- burgh and then increasingly who said they were chiefly 111Texas. "A large percentage of Amer- thing is coming here," said Aa- expensive superstar cities like motivated by housing has risen to 18 percent in 2014, from icans had to read 'The Grapes sim Saleh, 30, who moved from New York and San Francisco, 8 percent in 2007, the earliest of Wrath,'" said Mayor Mick Seattle to coach kayaking in which have been replenished year such data is available, ac- Cornett of Oklahoma City, re- the Boathouse District, where by immigrants. cording to the Census Bureau. ferring to the John Steinbeck construction of a new whiteBut during the housing bubThe desire for a new, better or novel that chronicled the flight water center is planned for this ble, when even people with cheaper home and the opportu- of Oklahomans to California in fall. "If Oklahoma City doesn't modest salaries could get loans nity to buy instead of rent were search of abetter life duringthe have it, they'll build it." to buy staggeringly expensive among the housing-related rea- Depression. Now the grandSaleh moved because he homes, the cost of housing was sons people cited. children and great-grandchil- had a rare opportunity to less of a concern. Now that getThe story was different from dren of those migrants are re- make about $60,000 a year ting a mortgage has become 2000 to 2006, when cities with turning forthe same reason. while avoiding a desk job. The harder, the wage stagnation "It's 'The Wrath of Grapes,'" low cost of living was a major that has hobbled the middle high-cost housing grew more quickly than those with afford- he said. sweetener, he said, enabling class for years has deeper able housing, according to an him to become something he consequences. "People have no choice," Kelanalysis ofmetroareasby Red- Oklahoma City boom thought would not be possible: fin, a national real estate broThe mayor cited dean air, a a homeowner. man said. "They can't move "I would say that, 100 percent, across the street; they have to keragefirm.From 2006 to 2012 lack of traffic gridlock and, of — years that encompass the course, affordable housing as I had given up on the idea of move across the country."
get. The director retired volOn one recent morning, for So the person who forced untarily. "I felt we had actually instance, a man at one comput- Pedene out of her office has done the right thing," Pedene er was loudly doing a telephone been forcedout of her office. SBld. interview ("Occasionally, I'll Has anybody checked to see
A5
w as timefor new federal rules
and urged the FAA, which is considering regulations for
expressed concern. In Lower Manhattan, Community
Board 1's quality of life committee discussed drones at a
hearing convened after two
A d m i n istration reports of drones flying in or opened an investigation near a park, and after a memAviation
into whether a drone sent aloft by the photographer at the wedding of Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, D-NY., in Cold Spring,
ber of the board saw a drone hovering outside an apartment in Battery Park City.
Unquestionably, a ff o r dability is one reason more
New York, b r oke r u l es drones are taking to the skies.
on airspace restrictions.
Lower-priced models, some costing less than $80, have propelled drones beyond their oversees the FAA, said early niche as specialized last week that he had been equipment for committed hob"amazed" bythe technol- byists and professional phoogy "but wasn't up to date tographers. Drones are now on the lack of regulations what Schulman called "more around it." of an impulse purchase" for More recently, a build- many buyers. ing manager on the Upper Retailers agree. "This is the M aloney, who is o n t h e House subcommittee that
West Side of M anhattan
summer of the drone," said
sent a stern email to resi-
Henry Posner, the director of corporate communications
dents. Do not even think of
launching a drone from the building's circular driveway, the July 14 email said before explaining that the
for B&H Photo and V ideo,
last drone that had taken off from there had crashed
video camera costs $79.99. Posner would not provide
on a neighbor's terrace. "Right now, unlike a
sales figures but said, "It's as
manned-aircraft pilot who
can get a l icense from the FAA, there's no offi-
cial training program for smalldrones,"said Brendan Schulman, a lawyer i n Manhattan wh o
which stocks drones from half a dozen manufacturers. The least expensive model with a
if I woke up one day and realized, lo and behold, they're extremely popular." Time magazine recently published an article by Martha Stewart with the head-
line "Why I Love My Drone"
r e p - in answer to a satirical es-
resents a number of drone say in The New Yorker. She operators and enthusiasts. wrote that her drone was a "What you're seeing is birthday present. She said popularity because they that "one of my farm workdon't require any particu- ers" had flown his own more lar expertise to get going. e xpensive-looking dro n e What you're seeing is peo- over her farm in Bedford, ple buying these devices New York. She described off the shelf and operating the images of the horse padthem without any experi- docks and chicken coops as ence or training because "amazing." they're easy to use." But with th e i ncrease in There are no specific popularity have come privacy regulations for local en- and safetyissues.Some operforcement of drones in the
ators have lost control of their
city. Sgt. Brendan Ryan a policespokesman, said the local law that covers drones is in a section of the
drones — but managed to recovervideo of the ensuing
city's administrative code titled "aviation in and over
crash — while others have lost
them entirely. Drones have been known to fly off and not come back, no matter how
hard their owners worked the "The circumstances de- controls. beginning of her troubles, not ony."). Another visitor said his reassigned — indefinitely — to the end. Schaefer said she couldn't termine the seriousness," a desk in the basement. Pedene said the hospital's truckhadbeen stolen. answer the question. he said in an emaiL "Indi"Since these are personnel In the Phoenix case, inves- new leaders were still suspiHe wanted to borrow the lividuals could potentially tigators are still trying to de- cious ofherbecause she'd made brary's phone. actions, we are unable to probe charged with reckless "If it's notbacktoday — inthe vide any comment," she said in termine whether Pedene was trouble for the old leader. In endangerment if, for exampunished because of her ear- December 2012, she said, those yard and parked — those boys anemail. ple, it falls out of the sky, lier complaints. If she is, that new bosses accused Pedene of will be looking for you," he said A spokesman for the House or unlawful surveillance, would make her part of a long, violating VA rules. in one phone call. He seemed to Veterans' Affaus Committee ugly tradition in the federal buThe chief accusation was that be leaving a me ssage to the ac- said the committee is looking 2 locations inBend reaucracy — workers sentto a Pedene had let her husband up- tual truck thief, threatening to into Pedene's case — and so is Main Center cubide in exile. load photos of a VA-sponsored callthe police. the Office of Special Counsel, TOUCHMARK 2150IIEStudioRd,SuiteIO SINCE 19SO which is in charge of protecting In the past, whistleblowers Veterans Day parade onto her Pedene's role in all this is to NWX have had their desks moved work computer. He was helping log visitors onto the computers, federal whistleblowers. The Of2863Nortwhest CrossingDr suite ttO to break rooms, broom clos- her finish a PowerPoint presen- help them make copies, and fice of Special Counsel dedined 541-389-9252 •J ets and basements. It's a dever tation she was working on. He occasionally loan out a stapler to comment, citing privacy sylvan©bendbroadband.com punishment,good-government was a non-VA employee, work- or a pencil. In her idle time, rules. activists say, that exploits a gray ing on a VA computer. the wheels still spin. One day Across the country, there are areainthe law. Pedene and her allies ad- last month, she was constantly no reliable statistics about how FindingSenior Housing can be complex, The whole thing can look mi- mit that this happened (she thinking about how she would often federal employees and but it doesn'thaveto be. nor on paper. They moved your was also accused of excessive be handling the hospital's P.R. contractors are sent into this kind of internal exile. In a 2010 office. Sowhat?Butthe change spending, which she denies). — if that were still her job. is designed to afflict the striving But they say her punishment So how does the VA explain survey,13.7 percent of federal "Youcan trust soul of a federal worker, with a has been far greater than the whathas happenedto Pedene? workers saidtheyhadpersonal4 Place Sr Mom to help you." mix of isolation, idle time and offense. Here, things turn slight- ly been punished by their boss"Theytookher outfromthere ly Kafkaesque. At the Phoe- es, by being moved to a differlost prestige. "I was down there in that like she'd sold nuclear secrets to nix hospital, a spokeswoman ent "geographical location." But office for 16 months. Nothing. the Iranians," said Sam Foote, said she couldn't answer the the question was too broad. Its wording could indude a relocaThey gaveme no meaningful a former doctor at the Phoenix question. h Phrefor Momirfhenotent bgatsenior fiving refcsal inkrmarionservice.Wedonotown,operore,endorseoi "Why she was moved to the tion to thebasement, orto North work," said Walter Tamosaitis, VA hospital, who had been an raommendanysener living mmmuniry. Weorepad byprrrner mmmuniries, soourservi a arecamptenlyfreeetamilier. a former contract worker at an ally of Pedene. library was Ms. Helman's deci- Dakota. Energy Department installaWhile the allegation was be- sion," said spokeswoman Jean tionin Washington state. ing investigated, Pedene losther Schaefer. She meant Sharon Four years ago, he raised Blackberry, her email address, Helman, the hospital's director concerns about the process- her office and her position as fmm2012untilthisyear. ing of radioactive waste. Then spokeswoman. She was shifted, Could Helman explain it, he was transferred to a win- instead, to the hospital's library. then? dowless room in the building's Back then, the library was on The spokeswoman said no to basement. the third floor. The library had that, too. "It was so lonely," he said. windows. But not for long. The reason was that this "They knew that it was mov- spring, Sam Foote — the docOne day, there was a big snowFrom Biogen Idec, the leaders in multiple sclerosis research storm outside. In the basement, ing to the basement," Pedene tor who was Pedene's old ally — revealed an enormous scanthe phone rang. It was his wife, said. This April, it did. who'd seen a TV report that Date: Speakers: Today, the library is one dal that occurred on Helman's his workplace had been shut room stuffed with bookshelves watch. Phoenix VA s taffers Friday, August 8, 2014 Walter Gino Carlini, MD, PhD down. He went upstairs: lights and computers. Pedene is a were using bogus wait lists to Neurologist Check-in time: out. Doors locked. Nobody told kind of backup receptionist hide the fact that patients were ProvidenceMedical Group him. there, sitting in the second desk waiting too long for care. Hel5:00 PM In Phoenix, Pedene believes thatvisitors get to. man was puton leave,Schaefer Medford Neurology "I used to be the first recep- said. She couldn't be reached Seminar time: she is stuck in the basement Medford, OR now because of something she tion person," she said. "Now I'm (Helman didn't respond to an 5:30 PM — 7:30 PM did four years ago. the second reception person. So email from The Washington Venue: Atthetime, shewas a20-year my days are even more boring." Post). An inspirational story will be told by employee at the hospital who Hilton Garden inn Bend an I4S Advocate. oversaw everything from news 425 SW Bluff Drive releases to the hospital newsletFood: Bend, OR 97702 ter to the annual Veterans Day Free dinner will be served. parade. In 2010, Pedene joined Parking: a group that complained to Free VA's upper management about er-ups about mismanagement at this hospital, she has been
But that turned out to be the
have a beer. But that's it," the
whether Pedene should get out man said. "No addiction. No fel- of the basement now7
the city."
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the Phoenix hospital's director.
They alleged that the director had allowed budget shortfalls andberated subordinates. And it seemed to work. The
VA's inspector general investigated and found an $11 million shortfall in the hospital's bud-
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A6 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
Marijuana
FundingOregon'spotmeasure
Continued from A1 So far, the largest contributions come from individuals
and groups on the East Coast, in New York City and Wash-
ington, D.C. A Washington, D.C.-basedpolitical action com-
Of the more than $1million donated so far to support the New Approach Oregoncampaign, less than athird has come from within the state.
D.C. $400,000
mittee, New Approach PAC, contributed $250,000 to New
Approach Oregon in June, and The Oregonian has reported that family members of the late Peter Lewis, former chief executiveof Progressive Corporation auto insurance companies, contributed to the committee. Peter Lewis gave $96,000 to New Approach Oregon before his death in November 2013, according to campaign finance data from the Oregon Secretaryof State's Office.A ccording to an Internal Revenue
Service filing from June, Adam Lewis gave $100,000 to the Washington, D.C.-based committee and Toby Lewis contributed $100,000. Another large donor to the committee was
that want to hear their grandchildren
New York$360,000 Oregon $239,832.5 ~
Dhio$9 6 ,000
gCalifornia $11,250 / Kansas $5,000 f Colorado$3,500 Arizona $1,000 lllinois $1,000 Texas $1,000 Washington $500 Source: Oregon Secretary of State
Philip Harvey, a philanthropist and operator of a large mail-order sexual merchandise com- resents at least one local medipany, who gave $200,000. Har- cal marijuana dispensary and vey also contributed $150,000 other marijuana businesses directly to New A pproach around the state. "Taxing and regulating canOregon. New Approach Oregon has nabis is the only way to truly also received $100,000 from minimize both the access to New York City philanthropist cannabis by minors, and to Henry van Ameringen and reduce the harms associated more than $410,000 from the with consumption by minors," New York City-based political Hughes said Friday. He added action committee Drug Policy
30 GRANDPARKNTS
WHERE CONTRIBUTIONSHAVE COME FROM
that Colorado state officials
Action. Drug Policy Action is found a high level of complithe political arm of the Drug ance in checking identification Policy Alliance, whose execu- to ensure minors could not purtive director Ethan Nadelmann chase recreational marijuana. could not be reached for comAs of yet, there is no active ment Friday. opposition to the Oregon initiaNearly all the contributions tive, although the Oregon State to New Approach Oregon's po- Sheriffs' A ssociation m i ght litical action committee — 96 soon launch such an effort. "Sheriffs are actively dispercent — were at least $10,000. The only contribution tied to a cussing the role we're going Bend address was $500 from to play," association General The Hughes Companies LLC, Manager Darrell Fuller said a business operated by law- Thursday. 'We are certainly yer Michael Hughes, who rep- on record in opposition to the
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
legalization of marijuana and plan to do what we can on a
county-by-county basis, with the sheriffs talking to t heir communities about the dan-
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED AND
gers of smokingmarijuana and legalizing it." Zuckerman said New Approach Oregon is focused on registe ring voters, because the campaign expects to draw support from young people but many of them are not regis-
YOU WISH TO BE INCLUDED CALL T ODAY FOR YOUR APPO IN T M E N T ! PEOPLE WILL BE SELECTED by August 13'", 2014
tered to vote.
"Because of Oregon's voteby-mail system, when you move, you'retaken off the voter rolls," Zuckerman said. "So young people often think they're registered to vote, but they've moved a couple times
HEALTH NQTIFICATIQN
re ou
in the last couple years and
then they never get their ballot, and theynever vote,and their voices are never heard." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.corn
Wildfire
Home checks
Continued from A1 Using an app on his cellphone, Berthelsen plugs in the information he's collecting into
The La PineRural Fire Protection District is assessing the wildfire readiness of the about 7,500 homes in its coveragearea.
Sl
earin '?
40
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a database.
"It ends up being a five-minute assessment," he said. The program crunches the data Berthelsen enters and determines a color dot to mark
0
La Pine Rural Fire Protection District
on an interactive map. Three
colors quiddy show firefighters how the homes rate. "Green is good, yellow is moderate and red is not so hot," Berthelsen said. Most of the
These revolutionary 100% digital instruments use the latest technology to comfortably and almost invisibly help you hear more clearly. This technology solves the "stopped up ears", and "head in a barrel" sensation some people experience.
homes he's rated so far fall into
the moderate category. When he saw Norquist's home he said, "There's an obvious green." He is just gathering information, not trying to enforce any codes. Not everyone wh o
43
P E
s e es
F
Berthelsen when he is out doing evaluations stops to talk with him. Those who do have
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a n
typically been nice and wonder whether he is there to warn
them of anearbywildfire. The app and database started with a pilot program by the Keno Rural Fire Protection District in Klamath County near Klamath Falls, said Mike Supkis, chief at the La Pine Rural Fire Protection District. Fire-
fighters in La Pine are adding to the growing database in an expansion of the pilot project. The Special Districts Association
of Oregon, which supports fire, road and other special districts around the state, gave the La
Pine district a $3,000 grant to coverthe summertimeproject.
Source: La Pine Rural Fire Protection District
See yourrating If their homeshavebeen assessed, people living in the La PineRural Fire Protection District can see their wildfire preparednessrating by going to oregonrsg.org and clicking on the"My Risk: Go tothe Map" link.
Once compiled, the infor-
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
emergency," Supkis said. By going to oregonrsg.org and dicking on the "My Risk Go to the Map" link, people sessed in the La Pine fire distinct can see how they did. They can also see what they could
do to improve their rating. The website also allows them to
request a new assessment if they've made improvements around their house.
and Josephine counties are now
neighborhood. "Those folks can get a real feel for the local community by sifting through the database right at their fingertips," Supkis
collecting information and adding it to the database. He'd like to eventually see information in
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of the driveway, what material it is made of and whether vegetation crowds it — all while
thinking of whether a fire enit for homes around the state. In gine could come in and out of the case of a wildfire, firefight- the drivewayeasily. sald. ers may travel around the state He looks at the trees around Fire departments have long tohelpprotect homes. the property, particularly to see "We wouldloveto havegood how thick the stand is and how been doing assessments of homes in terms of wildfire read- data all over the place where close trees are tothehouse. iness. The Keno district collect- (we) go," Ketchum said. He looks at t h e g r ound ed extensive data about homes Depending how the project aroundthehometo see whether around Klamath County a de- goes in the La Pine district, it is a covered by lawn, dirt, wild cade ago, but for years the in- it could spread to other Cen- grasses or pine needles. formation was only accessible tral Oregon fire districts and He checks out what materiduring a fire if a mapping ex- departments. als are used in the siding and "I would love to see it take off roof. pert was there, said Chief John Ketchum of the Keno Rural Fire around Deschutes County," said There even is an evaluation Protection District. Alison Green, program director for animals, which could pose Over the past couple of years, for Project Wildfire, a group a risk to firefighters responding the district, using a $900,000 started by Deschutes County to a wildfire. grant from the county, has thatfocuses on preparing comIfthere's a "Beware of dog" worked on ways to make data munities for wildfire. sign out front of a home, Berthmore available to firefighters. But the benefits of the data- elsen does his assessment from The doud-based system makes base aren'tjust for firefighters. theroad. "It can be a tool, too, for "I don't want to mess with data accessible from smartphones, tablets and computers. homeowners to see how pro- dogs," he said. "It lets us unders1:and where fessionalfirefighters are see— Reporter: 541-617-7812, the structures are and what vul- ing their home now, before an ddarling@bendbulletin.corn
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MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014• THE BULLETIN
CIVIC CALENDAR TODAY
DeschutesCounty Commission — The commission is expected to meetat10a.m. in a regular session atthe county offices,1300 NW Wall St., in Bend.The commission is scheduled to vote onthe La Pine urban renewalplan,an increase tothe county tourist lodging taxand a change to a real estate agreementwith Biogreen SustainableEnergyCo. The commission isalso scheduled to meet at1:30
p.m.todiscusscompany Leading Edge'sappeal of a land usedecision andto hold anexecutive session to discuss areal estate issue. TUESDAY
Bend Park 4Recreation District board of directors — The board is expectedto meetat5p.m.inawork session at thedistrict building, 799 SW Columbia St. During the worksession, theboard is scheduled toreceive training in ethics, district authority, public meetings, expectations and other items. Theboard is also scheduled tohold an executive session at7 p.m., to discusspotential real estate transactions and conduct anemployee performanceevaluation, according to themeeting agenda.
OFF-LEASH PARKS
BRIEFING
Mores ace orBen 'ssma 0 s By Scott Hammers
Bulldog at Pine Nursery
The Bulletin
Park.
Bend's second small-dogsonly off-leash area opened last week at Ponderosa Park,
and the Bend Park 5 Recreation District expects to open a third facility in the
fall. Jan Taylor, community relations manager for the park district, said as popular as the district's seven off-leash areas have been, the district
frequently heard from the owners of smaller dogs that their animals needed a place
of their own. She said there have been few casesof serious conflicts
between small and large dogs at the district's off-leash area aside from an incident
in April, when a small Papillion was attacked and killed by an unattended American
Local residents who frequent the off-leash areas
behave responsibly, for the most part, Taylor said. "Most people are really, really good with their dogs, and the people who take their dog to dog parks tend to be people who've taken care of their animals," she
Off-leashdogareas in Bend Bend Park & Recreation District offers seven off-leash dogareas in local parks, two of which offer separate small-dog areas: PonderosaPark, Riverbend Park. Asmall-dog area is scheduled to open at Pine Nursery Park in the fall. Em ir v.
Awbr y lles $voi ha' .
sard.
For the purposes of the small-dog parks at Riverbend Park and now at Ponderosa
Park, "small" is any dog under 15 inches high at the shoulder and less than 25
Pjn
ery ocIfiush ad
BigSk
Neff R
,
BE Skyline s R
Bear r e
Overt u e Reservoiw
Reed k. Rd.
Po erosa
pounds. At the new Ponderosa Park facility, a metal silhouette of a similarly sized
dog is bolted to the fence to give dog owners a frame of reference.
SeeDog parks/A8
Knott Rd. Source: Bend Park & Recreation District
ac osc oo ormii a
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
ri a e
ami ies
District.
g'~w9~g]
WEDNESDAY
FIRE UPDATE
CrookCountyCourt — The court is expected tomeetat9a.m., ina regular session atthe Crook Countymeeting room, 320 NE Court St. Among other things, the court is scheduled tohear a presentation on a local option levy of 6cents per $1,000 inassessed property valuethat would support theBowman Museum.Thatmeasureison the Novemberballot.
Beloware the fires reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. More info is online at: • http://inciweb.nwcg. gov/siate/88 • http://centralsriire info.blogspot.csm • wwfLnwccweb.usl information/ firemap.aspx
DeschutesCounty Commission — The
The council is expected to meet beginning at6 p.m. in awork session in council chambers,710 NW Wall St. Aregular meeting is expected to begin at7p.m. The council will likely vote on whether toadopta master planthatcalls for the city to spendasmuch as $25.2 million overthe next 25 years toimprove the Bendstormwater system. Thecouncil is also scheduled tohold a second requiredvote on proposedchangesto city developmentcodeto allow an88-acre master planned communited called StoneCreek in southeast Bend.
Firefighters are monitoring three small fires in the OregonBadlands Wilderness Areathis afternoon, according to the fire dispatch center in Prineville. Each of the three fires was approximately 0.10 of an acre early Sunday afternoon, and fire officials believed it was unlikely they would spread because of the large amount of sand in the area, the dispatch center reported on its blog. Meanwhile, crews continued to battle several other wildfires across Central Oregon early this afternoon. Saturday's thunderstorms caused rain, wind and more than250 lightning strikes in a24hour period, according to a dispatch center press release. Crews were still trying to contain the Castle Fire near Sisters, which was burning within roughly half a mile of Monty Campground on the Metolius arm areaof the Deschutes National Forest's Sisters Ranger
— Bulletin staff report
Cil —The councilis expected to meetbeginning at 6:30 p.m. in aregular session in council chambers, 777 SW Deschutes Ave. Thecouncil is scheduled to vote onwhether to purchase a dump truck for nearly $158,000,as well as whether toadopta housing andcommunity development plan.
Bend CityCouncil-
Small fires burn in the Badlands
A Level 3 evacuation notice remained in place for Monty Campground Sunday afternoon, meaning that people should not be at the campground.
RedmondCity Coun-
commission is expected to meetat10a.m. in a regular session atthe county offices,1300 NW Wall St. The commission is scheduled tohold a hearing onwhether to require that theMountain ViewStables sign be removedfrom Old Bend-RedmondHighway. Commissioners arealso scheduled tovote ona nearly $247,000contract to install a stormwater system in LaPine.
A7
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Danae Stutesman helps her daughter, KynaStutesman, 5, pick out her school supplies through Operation Homefront in Bend onSunday. The nonprofit assists active-duty military and veterans' families.
• Event offers donatedschool supplies to families aheadof National Guarddeployment; another will be Sept. 9 in Medford
programs at the nonprofit's Portland field office, was in
Bend on Sunday to provide backpacks and school supplies tokids.
By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
With one month left until kids return to school in Central
Oregon, children from military families pickedup some of the supplies they will need at an event Sunday. The return to school is not the only major event looming inmanyof these kids' lives. Many parents who serve in
the Bend-based Oregon Army National Guard 1-82 Cavalry Squadron expect to deploy to Afghanistan by the time
their children start school in September.
American-led coalition is training the Afghan Air Force at the 9.26-square-mile former Soviet base. The squadron is currently
"It's one less thingthe military families have to worry about paying for," Collee said of the school supplies. Operation Homefront is a
training at Fort Bliss, Texas.
national nonprofit founded
the Shindand Air Base. The
later this month to western
The"backto schoolbrigade" at the Oregon National Guard armory in Bend was arranged by the nonprofit Operation
Afghanistan, where theywill providesecurity and defend
Homefront. Janice Collee, director of
7wo hundred soldiers,
approximatelyhalf the squadron, are scheduled to deploy
in 2002. Accordingto apress release fromthe group, more than 2,500 volunteers across
the country help military families and wounded veterans. SeeBrigade/A8
1. BinghamComplex • Acres: 452 • Containment: 50% 2. Logging Unit • Acres: 10,447 • Containment: 80% 3. Castle • Acres: 22 • Containment: 0% 4. Nene Creek • Acres: 200 • Containment: 0% 5. Sniption • Acres: 25,937 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Unknown 6. Haystack Complex • Acres: 1,835 • Containment: 95% 7. South Fork Complex • Acreage, containment numbers not available Mote fire news,AS
EVENT CALENDAR
Centact:541-eea-0354, news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write "Civic
TODAY SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL FAIRE: Live and silent auctions and music; $100; 5 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; www.sunrivermusic.org, tickets©sunrivermusic. org or 541-593-9310. DELTAHALOS:The soulfolk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
Calendar" in the subject line. Include a contact name and number. Submissions may be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.
TUESDAY KNOWWWI: ASOLDIER RETURNS:Iraq War
veteran SeanDavis will read from his memoir "The WaxBullet War: Chronicles of aSoldier & Artist"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-312-1034. GREENTEAMMOVIE NIGHT:Ascreening of the award-winning documentary "The House I Live In" about human rights and thewar on drugs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NENinth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-8 I5-6504. WILDLIFE
CONSERVATION & TOURISMIN AFRICA:AGLOBAL CONVERSATION: Map Ives will speak onthe importance of wildlife conservation and tourism in Africa; free; 6:30 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. naturalmigrations.com, info©naturalmigrations. com or 541-382-5174. "DRAGONBALLZ: BATTLEOFGODS": A feature-length anlme film about a newpower and the threat to humanity; $10; 7 p.m.; RegalOldMill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive,
Bend; 541-312-2901. SHAWNCOLVIN:The award-winning singersongwriter performs, with John Cralgie; $49-$60 plus fees; 7 p.m.,doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. TWILIGHTCINEMA:An outdoor screening of "Cloudy with a Chanceof Meatballs 2"; bring lowprofile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333. MISS TESSANDTHE TALKBACKS: The
Brooklyn Americana band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. WEDNESDAY BENDFARMERS MARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Franklin and NW Oregon avenues;www. bendfarmersmarket.com. VOLUNTEER CONNECT BOARDFAIR: The annual event to explore volunteer leadership positions with 20 community organizations; free; 4-6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center,
1036 NE Fifth St.; www. volunteerconnectnow. org, betsy© volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. ALIVEAFTERFIVE: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. CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zoneand more; free admission; 5-10 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds, 1280 S.
Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds. com or 541-447-6575. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Live pop-rock music by Kayleb James &Split Atom, food vendors and more; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; SamJohnson Park, SW15th Street and SWEvergreen Avenue, Redmond;www. redmondsummer concerts.com or 541-923-5191.
See Calendar/A8 Contact:54t -3e3-0351, communitylifeOhendhullelin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least
10 days before publication.
AS
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
"I thinkit builds a
Brigade
sense of community and there's a sense they're not doing this alone."
Continued fromA7 T he nonprofit i s
in the
midst o f bac k -to-school events throughout the Pacific Northwest. Collee said she
— Wendy Rudy
just returned from a series of events in Alaska, and there were events in C l ackamas
on Friday and in Salem on Saturday.
about events such as "back to school brigade." "Our job really is to keep the family members up to
The next "back to school
brigade" day is scheduled for Sept. 9 in Medford. Op-
date on things they other-
eration Homefront purchas-
wise might not know about,
es most of the backpacks with f i nancial donations,
like t hese events," Blythe sard.
but Collee said this year U.S.
Wendy Rudy, 45, whose husband Sgt. Will Rudy is a member of the Oregon National Guard, said events
Bank also donated some backpacks. The school supplies were donated by customers at
such as the "back to school
brigade" are an opportunity for the community to show support for families of ac-
DollarTree stores across the country. Dollar Tree stores
will continue to collect the donations through Aug. 14, according to the company's website.
tive- duty soldiers and vet-
erans. Wendy Rudy is also a Family Readiness Group
Cassie Blythe, 34, of Bend,
volunteer.
"I think it builds a sense
stopped by to pick up supplies with her 15-year-old daugh-
of community, and there's a
ter, Brooke, and 2-year-old
son, Brady. Blythe, whose husband Spc. Jesse Blythe, 31, is a
PENcll.s
member of the Oregon National Guard, is a volunteer with a local Family Readiness
PENClLS Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Brooke Blythe, 15, picks out school supplies through Operation Home Front with her mother, Cassie Blythe in Bend on Sunday.
Group organized through the Guard. Cassie Blythe said the Family Readiness Group provides a support system for The g r oups o r g anize also use a Facebook page families while soldiers serve events for the families to stay a nd newsletter t o s t a y i n overseas.
connected to each other, and
touch and share information
sense they're not doing this alone," she said, after picking up school supplies for her 11-year-old daughter. Some soldiers take a pay cut w he n
t h e y t r a n sition
from civilian jobs to active duty. "School supplies are very expensive," she said, "especially when you have more than one kid." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
WESTERN WILDFIRES
Ca i ornia aze
urnss omes The Associated Press BURNEY, Calif. — A
pair of wildfires burning without restraint about 8 miles apart in n o rtheast
California became the focus of state and federal firefighters Sunday as authorities reported that
one of the blazes had destroyed eight homes and prompted the precautionary evacuation of a small long-term care hospital. The two fires, among 14 burning in the state, started within a day of each other in Lassen National Forest and had expanded into private property and scorched 90 square miles as of Sunday morning, up from 39 square miles a
day earlier. The more d estructive of the two was threaten-
ing the town of Burney, where officials at Mayer
Memorial Hospital decided to evacuate their 49-bed annex for p atients with
dementia and other conditions requiring skilled nursing. The patients were transferred to a hospital in
Redding, about 55 miles away, the hospital report-
ed on its website. The Shasta C ounty sheriff had Burney on an evacuation watch after ordering residents of three small neighboring communities to leave on Saturday night. Sgt. John
Dog parks Continued fromA7 At the new facility Saturday
afternoon, Fred and Joy Holdren of Bend had the grassy expanse all to themselves to play fetch with Molly, their 2-year-
Greene said the area is
sparsely populated and that authorities did not yet
old schnauzer/terrier mix.
Fred Holdren said they'd taken Molly to the small-dogs
know how many residents
were affected or if the destroyed homes were vaca-
area at Riverbend Park a few
times but found she didn't care for the wood-chip surface. He
tion houses or permanent
said he called the park district
dwellings.
to complain about the wood chips and was told the new fa-
E vacuations a l s o r e m ained i n e f f ect f o r a
cility at Ponderosa Park was
community on the edge
nearly ready to open. "There's so few places you
of the second fire, which
was sparked by lightning Wednesday.
can let them really run for free,
so I'm really, really grateful
The two b l azes were among 14 t h a t f e deral,
to the parks department for this. It's wonderful," said Joy
state and local fire crews were tackling on Sunday
Holdren. Taylor said the district is working to construct a third
Scott Hammers/The Bulletin
Molly, a small dog, eyes a larger dog Saturday outside the enclosure of the newly opened off-leash
in central and N orthern
California, state Depart-
off-leash area for small dogs at area for small dogs at Ponderosa Park in Bend.
ment of Forestry and Fire
Pine Nursery Park. As with the area at Ponderosa Park, Pine
Protection s p o kesman Dennis Mathisen said. Together, they have consumed more than 183 square miles of timber and brush left parched by the state's extended drought, Mathisen said, adding that the coming week promises not to be any easier. "Today we are looking at slightly cooler temperatures, but Northern California con t i nues
Nursery will feature a grassy Crossing next year and no in-
small dogs so everybody has a good day in the park."
park set to open in NorthWest is likely to continue looking
for ways to provide places for small dogs to play. "It just gives small dogs a bit of comfort to be with other
CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, danceperformances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kidszone Continued fromA7 and more; free admission; f 0 a.m."DRAGONBALLZ: BATTLE OF f 0 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds, 1280 S MainSt., Prineville; www. GODS": Afeature-length anime crookcountyfairgrounds.com or film about a newpower andthe 541-447-6575. threat to humanity; $1 0; 7p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, SUNRIVERARTFAIRE: Anart show 680 SW PowerhouseDrive, Bend; with more than65 booths featuring 541-31 2-2901. fine arts and crafts, entertainment and food; proceeds benefit nonprofits HUMANOTTOMAN:Theexperimental world-fusion band performs; 7 in Central Oregon; free; 10a.m.-7 p.m.; The Village atSunriver, 57100 p.m.; McMenamins OldSt. Francis Beaver Drive; www.sunriverartfaire. School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5 I74. com, sunriverartfaire©yahoo.com or 877-269-2580. CONNOISSEUR: The BayArea sludge-metal band performs, with The SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Beerslayers andmore; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., CascadeAvenueand Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. Bend; 541-306-3017. FAILUREMACHINE:The Reno JOHN BUTLER TRIO: TheAustralian jam-rock band performs; $34; soul band performs, with No Yield; $5;9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre 6:30p.m., doors open at5:30 p.m.; Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; Athletic Club of Bend,61615 Athletic www.volcanictheatrepub.com or Club Drive; www.c3events.com or 541-323-188f. 541-385-3062. TWILIGHTCINEMA:An outdoor screening of "The Princess Bride"; THURSDAY bring low-profile chair or blanket, no CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver talent show, danceperformances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kidszone Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; and more; free admission; 10a.m.541-585-3333. 10 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds, SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL POPS 1280 S MainSt., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or CONCERT: The Festival Orchestra 541-447-6575. performs with Storm Large from Pink Martini; $35-$45, $30 for seniors MUNCH 8MUSIC:Featuring indle65andolder,$10forchildren 18 folk music by theShookTwins, with Redwood Son; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; Drive, Bend; www.sunrivermusic. www.munchandmusic.com. org, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or JOHN HIATTAND TAJMAHAL: The veteran songwriters perform with their 541-593-9310. bands; SOLDOUT;7 p.m., doors open THE WARRENG.HARDINGS: The 6 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic Seattle bluegrass bandperforms; $5;9p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, & Recreation Center, 57250Overlook 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; Road; www.sunriversharc.com or www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-585-5000. 541-323-188 I. NIGHT NURSE: The Portland extreme metal band performs, with Death Agenda andmore; free; 8 p.m.; Third SATURDAY Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; FLASHBACK CRUZ:Aclassic car show 541-306-3017. of vehicles from1979 andearlier, with live music andmore; seewebsite for detailed schedule; free for spectators; FRIDAY 8 a.m.; DrakePark, 777 NWRiverside FLASHBACK CRUZ:Aclassic car Blvd., Bend;www.bendparksandrec. show of vehicles from 1979and org or 541-480-5560. earlier, with live music andmore; see website for detailed schedule; PEDDLER'SMARKET:Free; 8 free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake a.m.-3 p.m.; TumaloFeedCo., 64619U.S. Highway20, Bend; Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or www.tumalofeedcompany.com, 541-480-5560. copeddlersmarket©gmaibcom or
541-306-8016. TUFF BUTTSPOKERRUN: Featuring a 300-plus mile rude themountains, forests and badlands, to benefit the Central OregonVeterans andFamilies; 8 a.m.; RedmondVFWHall, 1836 SW Veterans Way; crazyhorse@coinet. com or 541-280-5161. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; SahaleePark, Seventh and 6 streets; 541-546-6778. AVENUEOFTHEARTS: Featuring art, crafts, food and live entertainment on CookAvenue; f 0 a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown Tumalo; www.centraloregonshows.com, centraloregonshows©gmail.com or 54 I-420-0279. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NW Wall St.; 541-420-9015. CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, danceperformances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; f 0 a.m.f 0 p.m.; CrookCounty Fairgrounds, 1280 S Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 54 I-447-6575. NORTHWEST CROSSINGFARMERS MARKET: f 0 a.m.-2 p.m.; Northwest Crossing, Mt. Washington and NW Crossing drives, Bend;www. nwxevents.com or 541-312-6473. SUNRIVER ART FAIRE:Anart show with more than65 booths featuring fine arts and crafts, entertainment and food; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central Oregon;free; foa.m.-7 p.m.; The Villageat Sunriver,57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverartfaire. com, sunriverartfaire@yahoo.com or 877-269-2580. "THEOLDMAIDANDTHETHIEF": Gian Carlo Menotti's one-act operaabout the charm of small-town life; free,donations accepted; 3and7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,PinckneyCenter for the Arts, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.cascadiaconcertopera.org or 541-349-0377. SHAKIN' DOWN THE HOUSE: Night of DJ music for dancers of all ages; proceeds benefit Unity Community and Healthy Beginnings; $10, $15 per couple, $20 per family; 6:30-9:30 p.m.; High Desert Community Grange, 62855PowellButte Road,Bend; www.unitycentraloregon.com or 541-389-1783. ELTONJOHN-THEEARLYYEARS:
Kenny Metcalf recreates a1970s show bythepopstar;$8members,$23 nonmembers, plus fees; 8 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
surface when it opens this fall. dication demand has been met, With a n e i ghth o f f-leash Taylor said the park district
Calendar
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
t o be hot SUNDAY FLASHBACK CRUZ:Aclassic car show of vehicles from f 979and earlier, with live music andmore; see website for detailed schedule; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-480-5560. RUN FOR ACHILD 5K:Community fun run and fundraiser for Shriners Hospitals for Children; $25, registration required;9 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; www.shrinersrunforachild.com. SUNRIVERARTFAIRE: Anart show with more than65 booths featuring fine arts and crafts, entertainment and food; proceedsbenefit nonprofits ln Central Oregon; free; 1 0a.m.-4 p.m.; TheVillage at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverartfaire. com, sunriverartfaire@yahoo.comor 877-269-2580. BANDTOGETHERBENEFIT: Fundraiser for Diane Robbins, whoneedsheart surgery, featuring TheRockHounds, FunBobby,Outofthe Blue,Bobby Lindstrom andmore; $5, 21and older only; f f a.m.-7 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 BoydAcres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. CONSIDERTHEFOX: Formerly local folk singers Chris BelandandErin Cole-Baker reunite for a concert; $15-$20suggested donation; 7-9:30 p.m.; The Glenat Newport Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive, Bend; www.j.mp/glenconcertbeland, houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com or 54 I-480-8830. SUNRIVERMUSIG FESTIVAL CLASSICALCONCERTI: A tribute to Lawrence Leighton Smith; $35-$70, $10 for children18 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall,17600 Center Drive; www.sunrlvermusic.org, tickets@ sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. NORAAND THEJANITORS: The North Dakota prairie-goth band performs; free; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
OregonGulchFire nears51 squaremiles ASHLAND, Ore.— Fire officials say awildfire threatening about 270 structures on theOregon-California border has grown to nearly 51 square miles. But fire spokeswoman Jen Warren says firefighters are making good progress and havethe Oregon Gulch Fire 10percent contained as of Sunday morning. The fire that started by lightning on Thursday has burned three homes, five outbuildings and multiple vehicles. Several neighborhoods southwest of Ashland were still evacuated on Sunday. More than1,000 people are fighting acomplexof fires including theOregon Gulch blaze.Morewind and hot weather wasexpected by Sundayafternoon, but weather wascalm overnight. Warren says anew, more accurate infrared measurement of the fire was completed early Sunday morning, establishing the size of nearly 51 square miles burned.
Year after Rim Fire, Californians dedate GROVELAND, Calif. -
Nearly a year since ahistoric wildfire charred ahuge swath of California's HighSierra, debateragesover what to do with millions of dead trees left in its wake:truck them to lumbermills or let nature to takeits course? One sidearguesthat the blackeneddeadtrees and new growthbeneath them alreadysprouting to life create vital habitat for dwindling
birds such as spotted owls and black-backedwoodpeckers. Otherssaytime is running out on agolden opportunity to salvagetimber to payfor replanting and restoring the forest. It's a classic standoff between environmentalists and supporters of the timber industry, which contends dead treesand brush pose a newfire hazard. The U.S. Forest Service is expected to unveil its final decision in the coming weeks on howmuch of the land burned by the wildfire,
known as theRim Fire, can belogged. — The Associated Press
an d d r y a n d
breezy in some areas, and in fact we are looking a t
a fi r e w e a t her
watch going into effect this morning for a large
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2013 Nissan
2013 Ford C-Max H brid
2013 Ford Escape SE AWD
2013 Chevrolet Malibu LTZ
2012 Chrysler Town & Country Touring
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Stk.¹P2136 VIN: 727518
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2011 Ford Escape XLT AWD
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2007 Chrysler Aspen 4X4
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2010 Nissan Altima
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2009 Ford
2007 Toyota Camry LE
2004 FORD F150 4X4
2005 Honda Accord
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1999 Chevy Tahoe 4X4
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1998 Ford Bcplorer 4X4
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Art for illustrationpurposesonly. All pricesshownbefore License,Title 8 Docfees. Onapproval of credit. Subjectto PriorSale. Expiresendof businessday8/I0/I4.
IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W MLB, B3 NFL, B5
Motor sports, B10 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
The week ahea
A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and elsewhere in the world of sports:
Today
Thursday-Sunday
Friday-Sunday
Saturday
Sunday
Little Leaguebaseball, BendNorth vs. Alaska at Northwest Regionals, 11 a.m.:Oregon state champion Bend North is looking to emerge from the seeding portion of the tournament and advance to the semifinal round in San Bernardino, California. BendNorth plays againat8:30a.m.TuesdayagainstMontana. The semifinals are set for 2 p.m. and 6 p.m. onThursday; the final is set for 1 p.m. Saturday.
Golf, 2D14PGA Championship at Louisville, Kentucky(TNT/CBS): Valhalla Golf Club hosts the 96th PGA Championship, the final major of the year.JasonDufner hoisted the WanamakerTrophy last year, but necktrouble has plaguedhim sofar this season. Thursday-Friday TVcoverage: 10 a.m.-4 p.m., TNT.Saturday-Sunday TV coverage:8-11 a.m. on TNT,11 a.m.-4 p.m. onCBS.
Baseball, BendElks vs. Klamath Falls Gems:It's the final home series of the 2014 season for the Elks, whoare battling to stay in postseason contention in the West Coast League's South Division. Game times at VinceGennaStadium are 6:35 p.m. for Friday's andSaturday's games, and 5:05 p.m. for Sunday's regular-season homefinale.
Triathlon, RATRace in Redmond, 7 a.m.:The sixth annual RATRace is a pool-based sprint triathlon (with optional duathlon) designed to beparticipant-friendly. It starts with a 500-meter swim at CascadeSwim Center and includes a12-mile bike ride, followed by a 5K run to the finish at SamJohnson Park. A Lil' RATkids race is also available. For more information or to register, go to www.racetherat.com.
Running, Haulin' AspenFull andHalf Trail Marathon:The10th annual Haulin' Aspen features anewcourse southwest of Bend, starting and finishing at Wanoga Sno-park. Races include afull marathon starting at 7 a.m., ahalf marathon starting at 8 a.m., and a"Half-As" race (6.5 miles) starting at 8:30. For more information, go to www.haulinaspen.com.
WCL BASEBALL
TEE TO GREEN
Elks take series
from Rogues
OREGON MEN'S STROKEPLAY CHAMPIONSHIP
The dasics Number ofholes:18 Status:Openyearround, weather permitting
Location:16900Aspen Lakes Drive about 3 miles east of Sisters Tee times:541-5494653
Course stats:Par 72, 7,302 yards Green fees:Through Oct. 7, $75 daily; after Oct. 7, $45 Dff-peak rates: Through Oct. 7:$45 before 7 a.m.,$60 from 7-7:50a.m., $65 from1-2:50 p.m., $49 after 3 p.m., $40after 5 p.m. Nineholes: $40 from 8 a.m.-5 p.m., $29 before 8a.m. and after 5 p.m.After Oct. 7: $35 before 7:30a.m. Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin Nine holes: $20before A golfer putts on the15th green while playing with his group at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters on Tuesday. 7:30 a.m., $25after. Power cart:$17 Director of golf:Rob Malone Head golf professional:Howie Pruitt Course designer: ZACK Bill Overdorf (original nine, 1997; second HALL nine, 1998) Extras:Putting green, driving range, pro Editor's note: This is another shop, practice bunker, installment in a seasonlong clubhouse, restaurant series in which Bulletin golf Website:www. writer Zack Hall visits each aspenlakes.com public and semiprivate gol f - ~
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Conner Kumpula, of Albany, won the Oregon Men's Stroke Play Championship at Juniper
Golf Course in Redmondon Sunday.
OSU golfer leads the whole way for victory By Zack Hall The Bulletin
REDMOND — Conner Kumpula could not recall a moment during the 62nd Ore-
gon Men's Stroke Play Championship when he knew he had the tournament won.
Maybe that was because he felt he could win before he
everstepped footon Juniper Golf Course. Kumpula, a 19-year-old from Albany, shot a final-round, 5-under-par 67 Sunday at Juniper to post a wire-to-wire win at 13 under in the 54-hole tournament. "Coming into this tourna-
ment I knew I was feeling good enough to win," said Kumpula, a rising sophomore at Oregon State, where he plays for the
• The Sisterscourse is long, challenging, and undeniably beautiful
coursein Central Oregon. SISTERS-
T Aspen Lakes Golf Course last week, something struck me. green to the fourth tee at
I had just walked off a green thatwas bordered bythreemassive red-cinder bunkers, Aspen Lakes' unique signature features
ones," he said of the Stroke
Play, one of the Oregon Golf
green and two more of those
Association's two annual major amateur tournaments. "And it is an honor to win this
blood-red bunkers that contrast so beautifully with the emerald
"This is one of the good
one." SeeStroke/B7
Inside • Mcllroy wins at Bridgestone, while Woods injured again,B7 • Local golf scoreboard and news from around the area,B7,Bg
tt' " @~?t
urning from the third
that are located throughout the course. As I approached the par-3 fourth hole, I saw dark-green reeds rising in front of a shallow
men's golf team. "I just went out there and played.
~ a
green of the turf.
Water sits in the foreground off the12th green.
CENTRAL OREGON GOLF COURSETOUR
indeed breathtaking. Good thing, too. The sceneryhelps takeyour
Breakingdown the course A closer look at Aspen Lakes. For more information on the items below,BS
DIFFICULTY At 7,302 yards, Aspen mind off that "9" you just made on Lakes has theability At that moment, under gray a 600-yard par 5. (For once it was to test the skills of afternoon skies, I was overcome my partner, and not me, who blew even the most talentwith a singular thought. up on the 606-yard third hole.) ed golfers. "Man," I told my friend Dustin, The course, which was demy playing partner for the day, "I signed in 1997 by Pacific NorthSTRATEGY almost forgot how gorgeous this west architect Bill Overdorf, also Go for distance off the place is." happens to be unmistakably tee, avoid the red-cinAspen Lakes — with all its challenging. der bunkers, and be views of snowcapped peaks — is SeeAspen Lakes/B8 aware of the greens' subtle breaks.
Scorecard
VERDICT A significant chalH ole 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Dut 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 1 7 18 ln To t a l lenge, but easily among the best daily Par 4 4 5 3 4 5 4 3 4 S B 5 4 3 4 4 3 4 4 5 SB 72 fee golf courses in Yards* 378 415 606 179 469 547 385 187 462 3,628 554 450 153 399 479 222 443 391 583 3,674 7,302 Central Oregon. * All distances from the back tee
COMMUNITY SPORTS
For swimmers, lots of love at ElkLake By Mark Morical The Bulletin
ELK LAKE — Hardy Lussier
Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Steven Sholdra, 20, of Renton, Washington, swims his final lap on his way to winning the Elk Lake 5,000-meter race on
Sunday.
weekend, hundreds of open-water swimmers competed in five different races.
called it "the pinnacle of my year." Indeed, many Central Oregon
Bend, finished second overall and won his age group in Sun-
swimmers look forward to the
day's 5,000-meter race, which
Lussier, a 49-year-old from
Cascade Lakes Swim Series and served as the U.S. Masters Swimming national champion-
Festival each summer. In the series'20th running here this past
ship for that distance.
"It's a fantastic venue and a terrific event," Lussier said."I'm
delighted to do as well as I did. I just love this every year. The fact that it's a national event this year
just puts a cherry on top of the icing of the cake. It's very significant to have a national event in your hometown." SeeElk Lake/B6
Inside • Community sports calendar, Bg • Community sports scoreboard, Bg
Paced by solid pitching and timely hits, Bend picked up an8-2 victory over Medford on Sunday as the Elks head into the final weekof theWestCoastLeague season. Bend's pitching trio of Jake Thompson, Michael Bennett and Rio Gomezheld the Rogues to two hits and two earned runs at Vince GennaStadium. Thompson, Sunday's starter, scored the win after throwing six innings for the Elks (2820) with two strikeouts. Billy King belted his second home run of the season, a two-run shot, while Turner Gill had three hits with two doubles and anRBI for Bend. ZachClose (one double) and Brock Carpenter (two doubles) each had two hits as the Elks' offense racked up 11 hits. — Bulletin staffreport
GOLF Mid-Am qualifier at Aspen Lakes SISTERS — Thir-
ty-three golfers will be vying for two berths in the 2014 U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship at an 18-hole qualifier at Aspen LakesGolf Course today. Two Bend golfers, James Chrismanand Roger Eichhorn, will also be in the field of 33. The U.S. Mid-Amateur — which is limited
to golfers age 25and older with handicap indexes of 3.4 or lowerwill be held Sept. 6-11at Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem Pennsylvania. The golfers in the qualifier field will tee off between 8 a.m. to 9:40 a.m. Spectators are welcomeandadmission is free. — Bulletin staff report
LITTLE LEAGUE NORTHWEST REGION W L RA
W ashington 2 0 as a Bend
1
6
1 10
Montana 1 1 1 W yoming 0 1 1 5 Sunday'sGames Washington10, Montana4 Wyoming vs. Alaska, ppd., rain Today's Games Oregonvs. Alaska,11 a.m. Wyomingvs.Alaska,1 p.m. Washington vs. Idaho, 7 p.m.
SOCCER Bend PremierCup Champions in 30 divisionsare crowned Sunday on the final day of the fifth annual Bend Premier Cupyouth soccer tournament. Results, Community Sports Scoreboard,Bg.
B2
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time TV /Radio 9a.m. MLB 4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. E SPN2
BASEBALL
MLB, SanFrancisco at N.Y.Mets MLB, Detroit at N.Y. Yankees
Intermediate World Series, final: TeamsTBD
BASEBALL
TUESDAY BASEBALL
Little League,World Series Southwest Regional, semifinal, teamsTBD MLB, Detroit at NewYork Yankees Little League,World Series Southwest Regional, semifinal, teamsTBD MLB, Atlanta at Seattle MLB, L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers or Atlanta at Seattle SOCCER FIFA Women's U-20World Cup, Germany vs. United States
East Division W L Y akima Valey Pippins 30 1 8 W enatchee AppleSox 26 2 2 W alla WallaSweets 2 4 24 Kelowna Falcons 14 33 South Division W L CorvagisKnights 32 16 BendElks 28 20 MedfordRogues 23 25 K lamath FallsGems 12 36 Wesl Division W
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
E SPN2 MLB
5 p.m. 7 p.m.
E SPN2 Roo t
7 p.m.
MLB
3:45 p.m. ESPNU
Listings are themostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL D-backs' Goldschmidt out for year with droken handArizona Diamondbacks star first basemanPaulGoldschmidt is going to miss the rest of the seasonbecause of abroken left hand. Manager Kirk Gibson announcedthe news Sunday,two days after Goldschmidt was hit by a pitch from Pittsburgh reliever Ernesto Frieri. Gibson put Goldschmidt's rehabilitation timetable at eight weeks, with the season ending in late September. Nosurgery is expected. Goldschmidt hit.300 with19 home runsand 69 RBlsthis season.
TRIATHLON NYC Triathlan winnerS Crawned — Ben Collins of Seattleand Alicia Kaye ofClermont, Florida, won the pro divisions of the New York City Triathlon. Collins was timed in1 hour, 43 minutes, 25 seconds on Sundayand Kayein 1:54:52. Nearly 4,000 pro, elite, amateur and physically challenged athletes competed. Collins was followed by Kaleb Vanort of Mishawaka, Indiana, in1:44:05 andChris Foster of Redondo Beach,California, in1:45:14. RadkaVodickova of Orlando, Florida, was secondamong the pro womenat1:59:16 while Jillian Petersen of St. Louis wasthird in 2:01:19. Participants swam ninetenths of a mile in the HudsonRiver, cycled 25 miles on the Henry Hudson Parkway andran6.2 miles in Central Park.
COMMONWEALTH GAMES England winS gOldmedal raCe — TheCommonwealth Games ended Sunday inGlasgow, Scotland, with England winning the overall gold medal raceandthe country it usurped — Australia — hoping for better things in four years when it will host the multi-sports event that attracts athletes from countries aligned with the former British Empire. The first gold Sundaywent to cyclist Lizzie Armistead in the road race, and theEnglish addedanother in badminton later in the dayto increase its total to 58, nine clear of second-place Australia. It marked the first time since 1990 that Australia, which won four events on the last day, hadn't led the gold race atthe Commonwealth Games. Athletes from DownUnderwill have achance to return to first place when the GoldCoast in Queensland state hosts the games in2018.
FOOTBALL BrOWRS Claim lineman Off WaiVerS frOm SeahaWkS
— The Cleveland Browns haveclaimed injured offensive lineman Michael Bowie off waivers from the Seattle Seahawks. Bowiewasa seventh-round pick ayear agoand madeeight starts during his first NFL season. But heneedsshoulder surgery that will sideline him for four to six months, and hewas cut by the Seahawks onSaturday. The 6-foot-5, 320-pound Bowie helped clear thewayfor Marshawn Lynch to run for1,257 yards and12 touchdowns last season. He also started a playoff game inSeattle's run to the Super Bowl title.
Bon JOVi WantS BillS toSuCCeedin BuffalO — Jon Bon Jovi says his prospective ownership group wants the Bills to succeed in Buffalo. His letter in TheBuffalo News onSunday marks the first time the rocker haspublicly discussed his plans regarding the Bills. The team is for sale after owner RalphWilson died in March. Bon Jovi says his group is committed to working with state and local officials to identify a newstadium site in the region. Hesays it's his intention to "carry on RalphWilson's legacy" in Buffalo. Bon Jovi adds that he wants to clarify his group's intentions in light of what hecalls "conjecture." Elected officials and Bills fans areconcerned BonJovi's group intends to buyandeventually move the team toToronto.
Bellingham Bel s 34 C owlitz BlackBears 2 2 V ictoria Harbourcats 22 KitsapBlueJackets 2 0
— From wire reports
www.gocomws.comninthebleachers
Pct GB .625 .532 4 .500 6 ,298 15'/z
Pct GB
.667 .583 4 .479 9 .250 20
Pct GB .702 .458 11H
L
14 26 26 26
.458 t 1 t/t .435 12t/y
Sunday'sGames
6end 8,Medford 2 Bellingham 8,Victoria 0 WallaWalla6, Kitsap2 Yakima Valley 2, Kelowna0 Corvagis14,KlamathFalls1 Wenatchee 9, Cowlitz 4
In the Bleachers D Sole Steve Moore. Dist. by Unrversal Uclrc
"Sign it 'Best wishes, LeBron'... No, wait ... 'Best wishes, Michael Jordan' • • ."
Sunday'sGames
NewYork83,Atlanta 76 LosAngeles70,Connecticut69 Chicag o76,Washington65 Seattle71,SanAntonio65
Tuesday'sGames Chicago at Connecticut, 4p.m. Minnesota at Indiana,4 p.m. NewYorkatWashington,4p.m. Atlantaat Phoenix, 7 p.m. Tulsa atLosAngeles,7:30p.m.
TENNIS Professional WTABankof the West Classic Sunday At TheTaubeFamily TennisCenter Stanford,Calif. Purse:$710,000(Premier) Surface:Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship Serena Wiliams (1), unitedStates, def.Angelique Kerber(3), Germany, 7-6(1), 6-3. Citi Open
Sunday'sGame
MLS
N.Y.Giants17,Buffalo13
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AH TimesPDT
Thursday'sGames IndianapolisatN.Y.Jets, 4p.m. NewEnglandatWashington,4:30p.m. SanFranciscoatBaltimore, 4;30p.m. CincinnatiatKansasCity, 5p.m. Seattleat Denver,6 p.m. Dallasat SanDiego,7 p.m. Friday's Games Miami atAtlanta,4p.m. 6uffalo atCarolina,4:30p.m. TampaBayatJacksonville,4:30p.m. Philadelphia at Chicago,5 p.m. OaklandatMinnesota, 5p.m. NewOrleansat St.Louis, 5p.m. Saturday'sGames Cleveland at Detroit, 4:30p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y.Giants, 4:30p.m. GreenBayat Tennessee,5 p.m. HoustonatArizona, 5:30p.m.
EasternConference
W L T P l sGF GA S porting KansasCity 11 5 6 3 9 32 20 D.C. 1 1 6 4 3 7 32 21 Toronto Fc 8 7 5 29 29 28 NewYork 6 6 1 0 28 35 33 Columbus 6 7 9 27 26 28 NewEngland 8 12 2 26 29 35 Philadelphia 5 8 9 24 34 36 Houston 6 11 4 2 2 23 40 Chicago 3 5 1 3 22 28 34 Montreal 3 13 5 1 4 21 39
WesternConference W L T P l sGF GA
AFL ARENAFOOTBALL LEAGUE
Playoff Glance AH TimesPDT
First Round Saturday'sGames National Conference SanJose55,Spokane28 AmericanConference Cleveland 39, Philadelphia37 Sunday'sGames National Conference Arizona52, Portland48 AmericanConference Orlando56, Pittsburgh48
Seattle 1 2 6 2 3 8 35 28 RealSaltLake 9 4 9 36 33 27 Los Angele s 9 4 6 33 32 17 FC Dallas 9 7 6 33 35 31 Colorado 8 8 6 30 31 28 Vancouver 6 4 1 1 29 31 29 Portland 6 7 9 27 36 38 SanJose 6 8 5 23 23 20 ChivasUSA 6 10 5 23 21 34 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepointfor tie.
Sunday'sGames
Houston1,D.c.United0 FC Daffas1,ChivasUSA0
BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'S NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION
AH TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGame Bayer nMunchenatMLSAff -stars,6:30p.m. Friday's Game SanJoseat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames MontrealatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. Toront oFcatColumbus,4: 30p.m. Coloradoat Fc Dallas, 6p.m. D.C.UnitedatReal Salt Lake,7p.m. ChivasUSAat Portland, 7:30p.m. Sunday,Aug. 10 SportingKansasCity at Vancouver,5p.m. NewYorkatChicago,5p.m. HoustonatSeattle FC,7:30p.m.
EasternConference W L Pct GB 17 10 .630 13 15
13 15 1 2 15 12 16 1 1 18
WesternConference
x-Phoenix x-Minnesota Los Angeles SanAntonio Tulsa Seattle x-clinched playoffspot
W L 23 4 22 6
. 464 4t/t
.464 4'/~ .444 5 .429 5 t/t .379 7
NWSL NATIONAL WOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE AH TimesPDT
Sunday'sGames
Western NewYork4, Boston3 Portland1,Houston0
Wednesday'sGames
P c t G B BostonatFCKansasCity,5p.m. . 8 52 HoustonatSeattle FC7p m . 7 86 1'/~ Saturday'sGames
t/t 13 15 . 464 tg 1 3 16 .448 11
10 19 .345 14 10 20 .333 14'/~
FCKansasCityatChicago,5pm. SkyBlueFCatHouston,6p.m. Washingtonat Seattle FC,7p.m. Sunday,Aug. 10 PortlandatBoston, 3:30p.m.
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Goeowling.com400 Results Sunday At PoconoRaceway Long Pond,Pa. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Start position inparentheses) 1.(9) DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,160laps,127.5 rating, 47points, $193,265. 2. (6) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 160, 114.5,43,
$206,058. 3. (2) JoeyLogano, Ford,160,123,42, $180941. 4. (14)Clint BowyerToyota,160,1021,40, $154466. 5. (25)GregBiffle, Ford,160,83.6,40,$150,450. 6. (5) JeffGordon,Chevrolet,160,134,40,$149,451. 7. (8) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 160,103.7, 37, 8126,279. 8. (21) RyanNew man, Chevrolet, 160, 87, 36, 8103,515. 9. (13)DennyHamlin,Toyota,160,967,35,S96965. 10. (12) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 160, 103, 34, 8103,215. 11. (1) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 160, 95.4, 33, $123,010. 12. (24) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 160, 74.4, 32, $111,298. 13. (4) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 160, 113.9, 32, 884,415. 14. (27) MarcosAmbrose,Ford, 160, 68.7, 30, 8108,835. 15. (11) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 160, 84.5, 29, $132,826. 16. (22) Justin Affgaier,Chevrolet, 160, 76.5, 28, $105,523. 17. (30) David Giffiland, Ford, 160, 64.1, 28, 8102,723. 18. (23) RickyStenhouseJrn Ford, 159,59.5, 26, $116,090. 19. (39)David Ragan,Ford,159,559,25,$99573. 20. (37)RyanTruex, Toyota,159, 38.9,24, $86,937. 21. (33)ColeWhitt, Toyota,159,478,23,$79340. 22. (38) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 159, 56, 22, $78,990. 23.(3) BradKeselowski, Ford,159,72,21,$120 848. 24.(31)JoshWise, Chevrolet,159,43.7,20,S78,515. 25.(34)TravisKvapil,Ford,158,45.6,19,$78,790. 26. (40)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet,158,38.5, 18,$74,940. 27. (35) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 158,40.6, 17, $77,765. 28. (42) Alex Kenne dy, Chevrolet, 158, 34.5, 16, 874,615. 29. (26)Carl Edwards,Ford,157,596,15,$93465. 30. (10) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 156,41.4, 14, 886,815. 31. (36)AlexBowman,Toyota,154,45.4,13, $76,665. 32. (19) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 144,62.3, 12, 8101,898. 33. (29) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 143, 60.8, 11, $101,004. 34. (20) AJAffmendinger, Chevrolet, accident,137, 60.4, 11,$73,590.
35. (28)Aric Almirola, Ford,accident,125,58.9, 10, 8110,376. 36. (16) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 124, 73.6, 8, $107,348. 37. (15)BrianVickers, Toyota, accident,116, 73.6,7, $105,079. 38. (18)MattKenseth, Toyota, accident, 116,69.8, 7, 8117,166. 39. (17) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, accident,111, 72.5, 5,$117,966. 40.(41)JoeNemechek,Toyota,accident,88,26.9,0, $68,030. 41. (32)LandonCassiff, Chevrolet, accident,28,31.7, 0, $56,030. 42. (7)KyleBusch,Toyota, engine,23,43,2, $99,871. 43. (43)JohnnySauter, Toyota, electrical,11, 27.8,0, $48,530.
Race Statistics AverageSpeedol RaceWinner:127.411mph. lime ol Race: 3hours, 8minutes,22seconds. Margin otVictory:0.228seconds. CaufionFlags:8for 35laps. LeadChanges:15among10 drivers. Lap Leaders:J.Logano1-30; Ku.Busch31-43; J.Gordon44-64; Ku.Busch65-74; A.Agm endinger 75-76;A.Almirola77; D.Gililand78;J.Gordon79-94; K.Harvick95; Ku.Busch96-102; M.Kenseth103-105; J.Gordon106-131;K.Harvick132-135;G.Biffle 136146; D.Earnhardt Jr.147-160. LeadersSummary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): J.Gordon, 3timesfor 63laps; J.Logano,1time for 30laps;KuBusch,3 timesfor 30laps; DEarnhardt Jrn 1 timefor 14 laps;G.Biffle, 1 timefor 11 laps; K.Harvick, 2 timesfor 5 laps; M.Kenseth, 1timefor 3 laps; A.Allmendinger, 1 timefor 2laps; D.Giffiland,1 time for1lap;AAlmirola,1 timefor1lap. Wins: D.Earnha rdtJr., 3; J.Johnson,3; Bra.Keselowski, 3;C.Edwards, 2; J.Gordon,2; K.Harvick, 2; JLogano,2;AAlmirola,1; KuBusch,1; KyBusch,1; D.Hamlin,1. Top12 inPoints:1.J.Gordon,757;2. D.Earnhardt Jrn740;3.Bra.Kesel owski,687;4.M.Kenseth,668;5. R.Newm an,642;6.J.Johnson,633;7.J.Logano,633; 8. C.Edwards,618; 9. C.Bowyer, 617; 10. Ky.Busch, 611;11. KHarvick,608;12. KLarson,595.
Win at Stanford gives Serena fourth title of year The Associated Press STANFORD, Calif. — Serena Williams stared at the court, took
Sunday in the Bank of the West Classic. Kerber, 0-4 iyt finals this sea-
a deepbreath and seemed toclear son, won five straight games to her head after falling behind in the go up 5-1 and was serving for the first set. She dominated the rest of
first set at 5-2. Williams saved two
Points: Power548,Castroneves544, Hunter-Reay
485, Pagenaud484,Montoya447,Dixon440,Munoz 416, Bourdai400, s Kanaan389, Andretti 383.
NHRA
Sunday At William H.G.FitzGeraldTennis Center Elks 8, Rogues2 Washington Purse: Men,S1.4million (WT500); Women, Medford 100010000 — 2 2 0 S250,000 (Intl.) Bend 004 030 10X — 8 11 0 Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Kuchta,Snider(5), Beam (5), Woods(8) andMorSingles gan. Thom pson,Bennett (7),Gomez(9)andBlackweg. Men W — Thompson.L— Kuchta.28— Medford;Gloyer; Champi onship Bend:Close,Gil (2),Carpenter (2). HR—Bend:King. MilosRaonic(2), Canada,def.VasekPospisil (13), Canada, 6-1,6-4. Women FOOTBALL Championship SvetlanaKuznetsova(6), Russia, def. KurumiNara, NFL Japan,6-3,4-6,6-4. NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE PreseasonSchedule SOCCER AO TimesPDT
Indiana Washington NewYork Chicago Connecticut
Bourdais 28-39, Dixon 40-61, Newgarden62-64, Bourdais65,Hinchcliffe 66-67,Dixon68-90.
NATIONALHOTRODASSOCI ATION Northwest Nationals
Sunday'sSummary
Atlanta
Sunday At Mid-OhioSporls CarCourse Lexington, Ohio Lap length: 2.258miles All cars Dallara chassis Starting position in parentheses) 1. (22) cottDixon,Cheyrolet,90. 2. (1)SebastienBourdais, Chevrolet, 90. 3. (17)Jame s Hinchcliffe, Honda,90. 4. 4) CarlosMunoz,Honda,90. 5. (7) Graham Rahal, Honda,90. 6. (6) WilPower,Chevrolet, 90. 7. (20)CharlieKimball, Chevrolet,90. 8.(19) Ryan Briscoe, Chevrolet,90. 9.(9) Simon Pagenaud, Honda,90. 10.(5)RyanHunter-Reay, Honda,90. 11.(11)Juan Pablo Montoya,Chevrolet,90. 12.(2)JosefNewgarden,Honda,90. 13.(12)MikeConway, Chevrolet, 90. 14.(13)MikhailAleshin, Honda,90. 15. (8)JustinWilson,Honda,90. 16.(18)JackHawksworth, Honda,90. 17.(10)CarlosHuertas,Honda,90. 18. (21)TakumaSato, Honda, 89. 19. (15)HelioCastroneves,Chevrolet,86. 20.(14)SebastianSaavedra, Chevrolet, 24, Mechanical. 21.(3) Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet, 0, Contact. 22. (16)MarcoAndreti, Honda,0, Contact. Race Statistics Winnem averagespeed:108.140. Time otRace:1;52:45.2043. Margin ofVictory: 5.3864seconds. Cautions: 2for10 laps. LeadChanges:7among5 drivers. Lap Leaders:Bourdais1-25,Hunter-Reay 26-27,
Today'sGames 6ellinghamatKitsap,6:35p.m. KlamathFals at Medford, 6:35p.m. Cowlitz atYakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Tuesday'sGame KlamathFallsat Medford, 6:35p.m. Wenatchee at Kelowna, 6:35p.m. Bellingham atKitsap,6:35p.m. 6endatCorvaff is,6:40p.m. Victoriaat Walla Walla,7:05p.m. Cowlitz atYakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Wednesday'sGam es Wenatchee at Kelowna, 6:35p.m. Bellingham atKitsap,6:35p.m. KlamathFallsat Medford, 6:35p.m. 6endatCorvaff is,6:40p.m. Victoriaat Walla Walla,7:05p.m. Cowlitz atYakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Thursday'sGames Wenatchee at Kelowna, 6:35p.m. Bellingham atKitsap,6:35p.m. Victoria atWalla Wala, 7:05 p.m. 6end atCorvaffis, 7:15p.m. Friday's Games WallaWallaat Kelowna,6:35p.m. Bellingham atCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Corvagisat Medford, 6:35p.m. KlamathFals at Bend, 6:35p.m. YakimaValey atWenatchee,7:05p.m. Kitsapat Victoria, 7:11p.m. Saturday'sGames Bellingham atCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Corvagisat Medford, 6:35p.m. KlamathFallsat Bend, 6:35p.m. WallaWallaat Kelowna,6:35p.m. YakimaValey atWenatchee,7:05p.m. Kitsapat Victoria, 7:11p.m. Sunday'sGames Kitsapat Victoria,1:05 p.m. Bellingham atCowlitz,5:05 p.m. KlamathFallsat Bend,5:05 p.m. YakimaValley atWenatchee, 6:05p.m. WallaWallaat Kelowna,6:05p.m. Corvagisat Medford, 6:35p.m. End ofRegular Season
TexaSOPenS CamP withdiSm iSSalS,SuSPenSiOnS — New Texas coachCharlie Strong opened his first training camp Sunday by announcing the suspension of three potential starters, and confirmed the dismissal of several other players for legal troubles andteam rules violations. Strong said offensive linemanDesmond Harrison, wide receiver DajeJohnson andsafety Josh Turner all will miss at least one gamefor rules violations. Strong wouldn't detail the violations, but said they ran counter to his team rules of honesty, treating women with respect, no drugs and noguns. Strong also said wide receivers Kendall Sanders andMontrel Meander, whowere suspended after being arrested on rapecharges, will not be allowed back regardless of how their cases turn out.
Honda Indy200at Mid-Ohio
WCL WESTCOASTLEAGUE AH TimesPDT
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
IndyCar
IN THE BLEACHERS
TENNIS ROUNDUP
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSDX— DptionedRHPAlexWilson to Pawtucket(IL). RecalledRH P StevenWright from Pawtucket (IL). CHICAGO WHITESDX—TradedDFBlakeTekotte to Arizona for cash. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS—Agreedto termswith 2B JaimePedrozaonaminorleaguecontract. HOUSTONASTRDS— Placed18JesusGuzman on the15-day DL,retroactive toSaturday.Recalled DF DomingoSantanafromOklahomaCity (PCL). KANSASCITY ROYALS — Reinstated LHPJason Vargasfromthe15-dayDL. LDSANGELESANGELS— DesignatedRHPDavid Carpenterfor assignment. Claimed36 RyanWheeler off waiversfromColorado andoptioned himto Salt Lake(PCL).PlacedRHPJoeThatcher onthe15-day DL OptionedLHPMichael Rothto Arkansas(TL). RecalledRHPCamBedrosianfromArkansasand RHP Fernando SalasfromSalt Lake. NEW YORKYANKEES — SentRHP Michael Pineda to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL) for a rehab
assignmen t. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Dptioned RHP Evan Scribner toSacramento (PCL). Placed28 Nick Punto on the15-dayDL.Recalled 1BNate Freimanfrom Sacramen to. TAMPA6AY RAYS — Sent0 RyanHaniganto Charlotte(IL)for arehabassignment. TEXASRANGERS — ClaimedDFMikeCarpoff waiversfromBoston. TransferredRHPAlexi Ogando to the60-dayDL. National League CINCINN ATI REDS— Designated RHPNick Christiani forassignment. ClaimedSSJake Elmore off waiversfromOaklandandoptioned himto Louisville (IL). COLORADOROCKIES— DesignatedLHP Pedro Hernandez for assignment. Selected thecontractof OF JasonPridiefromColoradoSprings (PCL). MIAMIMAR LINS—Optioned MiamiMarlins sent DonnieJosephoutright to NewOrleansZephyrs. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—DptionedRHPPhillippe Aumont to Lehigh Valley (IL). Selectedthecontract ofRHPHector Neris of LehighValley. PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—DptionedINFBrent Morel to Indianapolis(IL). Designated INFDeanAnnafor assignment.Agreedtotermswith INFJaysonNix ona one-yearcontract. SentDFStarling Marte to Indianapolis (IL)for arehabassignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association TORONTORAPTORS— SignedCLucasNogueira and G Wil Cherry. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS— Signed8TyreffJohnson. Rele asedFBRooseveltNix-Jones. CLEVEL ANDBRDWNS— Claimed DLMichael BowieoflwaiversfromSeattle. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signedLBJames Morris. TENNE SSEETITANS— Activated GAndy Levitre from the non-footbaginjury list. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — ClaimedDTCoryBrandon offwaiversfromArizona.
FISH COUNT upstream daily movement of adult chinook jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd
Bonneville 54 0 26 4 4 , 539 1,878 J ohn Day 44 4 18 6 1 , 197 5 9 9 McNary 4 3 4 130 990 532 upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook,
jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdams last updated onSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 298,971 51,971 111,342 56,005 The Dalles 238,479 40,218 55,621 30,511 John Day 208,069 36,282 35,652 18,162 McNary 192,557 32,092 28,423 14,451
Serene Williams holds the winner's
trophy after Raonic tops pospisil in 1st all-Canadian ATP final: WASH-
thing." The e ighth-ranked K erber
INGTON — Miios Raonic easily won the first all-Canadian tourna-
forced a tiebreaker, but Williams took the first five points.
ment final in ATP history, erasing
"It's a good thing that it hapthe way. set points and went on to win five Playing her first tournament games in a row. pened," Williams said. "When "I blinked my eye aytd I was I'm not playing great I know I can since her departure from Wimbledon because of equilibrium prob- down 1-5,B Williams said. "An- make somekind ofcomeback." lems, the top-ranked Williams geiique was playing well and Williams didn't play well in any won her WTA-leading fourth title I thought 'What's going on'?' I of the first sets this week but alof the year, beating third-seeded tried to relax, not think about ways found a way to win. Angelique Kerber 7-6(1), 6-3 on anything and just do the right Also on Sunday:
Sunday At Pacific Raceways Kent, Wash. Final FinishOrder Top fuel 1, DougKalitta. 2,AntronBrown.3, TonySchumacher. 4,ShawnLangdon. 5, SteveTorrence. 6, Troy Buff. 7,KhalidalBalooshi. 8, RichieCrampton.9, BrittanyForce.10,Clay Miffican.11, Spencer Massey.12, Terry McMilen.13,MikeSalinas.14, J.R.Todd. 15, BobVandergriff.16, JennaHaddock. Funnycar 1, JohnForce.2, GaryDensham.3,AlexisDeJoria. 4, MattHagan.5, CruzPedregon.6, TimWilkerson.7, RobertHight. 8,JackBeckman.9,TommyJohnsonJr.. 10, RonCapps. 11,JeffDiehl. 12,DelWorsham. 13, TerryHaddock. 14,Tony Pedregon. 15, BobTascaRI. 16, CourtneyForce. Pro stock 1, Jason Line.2, GregAnderson. 3,ShaneGray. 4, Allen Johnson.5,DaveConnolly.6,JonathanGray. 7, V. Gaines.8, JegCoughlin. 9, Chris McG aha. 10, Deric Kram er. 11, Matt Harfford. 12,Larry Morgan. 13, VincentNobile.14, MarkWolfe.15, TravisMazza.
the only break point he faced aytd
beating Vasek Pospisil 6-1, 6-4 at the Citi Open for his sixth career title. In women's action, two-
time major champion Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia ended her four-year WTA title drought, beat-
ing Kurumi Nara ofJapan 6-3,4-6, 6-4 in the Citi Open.
winning the Bank of the West Classic
on Sunday in Stanford, California. Marcio Jose SBDChgz/The
Associated Press
MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014• THE BULLETIN B3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cntandingS
Baltimore Toronto NewYork
Tampa Bay Boston
Detroit Kansas City Cleveland
Chicago Minnesota
Giants 9, Mets0
A DOZEN K'S
AH TimesPDT
NEW YORK — Madison Bumgarner pitched a two-hitter and Hunter Pence homered twice to lead San Francisco to awin over the New York Mets. Bumgarner (13-8) beat the Mets again, running his record to 3-0 in five gamesagainst them and giving the Giants their third win in 10 games. Brandon Belt and Buster Poseyalso went deep for the Giants.
AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 62 48 60 53 57 53 54 57 49 62
.564 .531 3'/r .518 5 .486 8'/r 441 13'/r
57 56 54 50
53 55 58 60
.565 .518 5 .505 6'/r .482 9 .455 12
W 67 66 57 47 43
L 43 44 54 65 68
Pct GB .609 .600 1 514 tg'/r .420 21 .387 24'/r
Central Division W L 61 47
West Division
Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston Texas
Pct GB
San Francisco N ew York ab r hbi ab r hbi
P encerf 5 3 3 4 Grndrsrf 3 0 0 0 MDuff y2b 5 0 0 0 Tejadass 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 5 2 4 3 DWrght3b 3 0 1 0 Susacc 0 0 0 0 Evelndp 0 0 0 0 S andovl3b 4 0 1 1 Edginp 0 0 0 0 Arias3b 1 0 0 0 dArnadph 1 0 0 0 Belt1b 4 1 1 1 Campff1b-3b 3 0 0 0 Ishikaw1b 0 0 0 0 CYounglf 3 0 0 0 Morself 3 0 0 0 Lagarscf 3 0 0 0 J.Perezlf 0 0 0 0 Flores2b 3 0 1 0 GBlanccf 4 0 0 0 Reckerc 3 0 0 0
Sunday'sGames Cleveland 4,Texas3,12 innings Detroit 4,Colorado0 Baltimore1,Seattle0
LA. Angel7, s Tampa Bay5 Minnesota16,ChicagoWhite Sox3 Houston 6, Toronto1 Kansas City4,Oakland2 N.Y.Yankees8, Boston7 Today'sGam es Baltimore (Gausman5-3)atWashington(Roark11-6), 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati(Simon12-6)at Cleveland(Kluber 11-6), 4:05 p.m. Detroit (Scherzer13-3) at N.Y.Yankees (Mccarthy 3-0),4:05p.m. Texas(N.Martinez1-7) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Noesi 5-8),5:10p.m. Tampa Bay (Cobb 7-6) at Oakland(Samardzija 2-1), 705 p.m. LA. Angels(Richards11-4)at LA.Dodgers (Greinke 12-6), 7:10p.m. Tuesday'sGames Cincinnatiat Cleveland,4:05p.m. Detroit atN.Y.Yankees,4:05 p.m. Houston at Philadelphia,4:05 p.m. Baltimore atToronto,4:07 p.m. SanDiegoatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. Texasat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. Bostonat St.Louis, 5;15p.m. KansasCityatArizona,6:40 p.m. TampaBayatOakland,7:05p.m. AtlantaatSeatle, 7:10p.m. L.A. Angelat s L.A.Dodgers, 7;10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Washington 60 49 .550 Atlanta 58 54 518 3r/r Miami 54 57 .486 7 NewYork 53 58 .477 8 Philadelphia 49 63 ,438 12'/r CentralDivision W L Pct GB Milwaukee 61 51 .545 St. Louis 59 51 .536 1 Pittsburgh 59 52 532 fr/r Cincinnati 56 55 .505 4r/r Chicago 47 63 .427 13 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 63 49 .563 SanFrancisco 60 51 .541 2'/r SanDiego 51 60 .459 11'/r Arizona 49 63 .438 14 Colorado 44 67 .396 18'/r
Sunday'sGames
Detroit 4,Colorado0 Cincinnati 7, Miami3 SanFrancisco9, N.Y.Mets0 Washington 4, Philadelphia0 St. Louis3,Milwaukee2 SanDiego4,Atlanta 3,10 innings Chicago Cubs7, L.A.Dodgers3 Arizona3,Pittsburgh2,10 innings
Today'sGam es SanFrancisco(Hudson8-8) at N.Y.Mets (Gee4-4), 9:10a.m. Baltimore (Gausman5-3)atWashington (Roark11-6), 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati(Simon12-6)at Cleveland(Kluber 11-6), 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels(Richards11-4)at L.A.Dodgers (Greinke 12-6),7:10p.m. Tuesday'sGames CincinnatiatCleveland,4:05p.m. Houston at Philadelphia, 4:05p.m. MiamiatPittsburgh,4:05p.m. N.Y.MetsatWashington, 4:05p.m. SanDiegoatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. SanFranciscoat Milwaukee,5:10 p.m. Bostonat St.Louis, 5:15p.m. Chicag oCubsatColorado,5:40p.m. Kansas CityatArizona,6:40 p.m. AtlantaatSeatle, 7:10p.m. LA. Angelsat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m.
American League
Orioies1, Mariners0 BALTIMORE —Chris Tillman pitched seven innings of three-hit ball in a duel with Hisashi Iwakuma, Nick Markakis hit his first career leadoff homer and Baltimore beat Seattle for its fourth straight series win. Tillman (8-5) struck out six and walked none to earn his first win since June 27. A second-round draft pick by
Chartos Osorio/The Associated Press
Detroit starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez throws during the seventh inning of Sunday's interleague game against Colorado in Detroit. Sanchez had12 strikeouts in helping lead the Tigers to a 4-0 victory over the Rockies. JDysoncf 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 3 0 1 0 Astros 6, BlueJays1 AEscorss 3 1 2 0 Callasp2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 3 7 4 144 Totals 3 0 2 4 2 — Scott Feldman scatK ansas City 0 0 0 0 4 0 000 — 4 HOUSTON Oakland 0 00 001 010 — 2 tered eight hits in his first complete DP — KansasCity1, Oakland4.LOB—KansasCity game in nearly ayear, Chris Carter 7, Oakland1. 2B—Infante (14), C.colon (3). HR Reddick2(8). SB—Infante(5). andMattDominguezeachhadtwo IP H R E R BBSO RBls, and Houston beatToronto. KansasCity ShieldsW,10-6 8 4 2 2 0 2 Feldman (5-8) retired17 of the last G.HollandS,31-33 1 0 0 0 0 1 19 batters, including nine straight Oakland KazmirL,12-4 6 10 4 4 1 2 at one point. 12-3 4 0 0 0 0 Otero Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 Toronto Houston Gregerson 13 0 0 0 0 1 ab r h bi ab r hbi T—2:32. A—22,612(35,067). Reyesss 4 0 3 0 Altuve2b 3 1 1 0 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 0 Grssmnrf 2 0 0 1 Bautistdh 3 0 1 0 Carterdh 4 0 1 2 Angels 7, Rays 5 DNavrrc 3 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 0 0 0 J Frncs1b 4 1 1 0 Krausslf 4 1 1 0 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Mike C IRsmscf 4 0 1 0 Hoeslf 0 0 0 0 Kawsk3b 3 0 0 0 Singltn1b 4 2 2 0 Trout hit an RBIdouble to key a Goins2b 3 0 1 1 MDmn3b 3 1 2 2 five-run first inning and the Los Goserf 3 0 1 0 Mrsnckcf 4 1 2 1 MGnzlzss 3 0 0 0 Angeles AngelsbeatTampaBayin Totals 31 1 8 1 Totals 31 6 9 6 a game delayed by apower outage Toronto 0 10 000 000 — 1 002 310 Oex — 6 at Tropicana Field. Trout had three Houston E—Redmond (2). DP—Houston 3. LOB—Toronhits, walked andstole a base. to 5, Houston 6. 28—Singleton (9), M.Dom inguez
The Angels took two of three and handed the Raystheir first series loss since early July. Trout and the Angels took a quick leadagainst Jake Odorizzi (7-9). LosAngeles TampaBay ab r hbi ab r hbi
Calhon rf 4 1 1 0 Kiermr cf 5 0 0 0 T routdh 4 1 3 2 Zobristrf 5 1 1 0 Pujols1b 4 1 0 0 Joycedh 2 1 1 0 JHmltncf 5 2 2 1 Longori3b 4 1 1 0 Aybarss 5 1 1 0 Loney 1b 4 2 3 2 HKndrc2b 5 0 2 1 YEscorss 5 0 2 0 Freese3b 2 0 1 2 Forsyth2b 4 0 2 0 J McDnl3b 0 0 0 0 JMolinc 1 0 0 1 ENavrrlf 4 1 2 1 SRdrgzph-If 2 0 0 0 l annettc 3 0 0 0 Guyerlf 2 0 0 0 CFigurph 0 0 0 1
Casalic 0 0 0 0
Totals 3 6 7 127 Totals 3 4 5 104
National Lea ue
Padres 4, Braves3 (10 innings) SAN DIEGO — Everth Cabrera singled in the winning run in the 10th inning to lift San Diego to a win over slumping Atlanta. Will Venable led off the10th with an
infield single off David Hale (3-4) and Alexi Amarista walked. The Braves got a double play onRenee Rivera's sacrifice bunt attempt with Amarista taking second. Chris Nelson walked to bring up Cabrera. After the Padres pulled off a double steal, Cabrera lined a hardsinglepastsecondbaseman Ramiro Pena.
San Diego ab r hbi ab r hbi BUptoncf 5 0 0 0 Ecarerss 4 0 2 2 Lastell2b 5 0 2 0 Solarte3b-2b 5 0 0 0 Halep 0 0 0 0 S.Smithrf-lf 4 0 1 0 (16). SB —Reyes (20), Gose(12). S—Ma.Gonzalez. FFrmn1b 5 0 1 0 Medica lf-1b 3 1 1 1 SF — M.Dominguez. J.uptonlf 3 1 0 0 Grandl1b 3 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Heywrdrf 4 2 3 1 Gyorkoph-2b 2 0 0 0 Toronto Gattisc 4 0 1 1 Stauffrp 0 0 0 0 StromanL,7-3 3 7 5 5 1 1 Gosselnpr 0 0 0 0 Venalecf-rf 4 1 2 0 Redmond 2 1 1 0 2 0 Jaimep 0 0 0 0Amarst2b-cf 4 2 2 0 Aa.Sanche z 1 0 0 0 0 1 ASmnsss 0 0 0 0 Riverac 4 0 0 0 McGowa n 1 0 0 0 0 2 C Jhnsn3b 4 0 1 0 TRossp 2 0 1 1 Jenkins 1 1 0 0 0 0 R.Penass-2b 2 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Houston Harangp 2 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 FeldmanW5-8 9 8 1 1 2 2 Bonifacph 1 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Stroman pitchedto 4batters inthe4th. Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 WP —Feldman. Russellp 0 0 0 0 Alonsoph 1 0 1 0 T—2:39.A—19,932 (42,060). Lairdph-c 1 0 0 0 AAlmntpr 0 0 0 0 CNelsn3b 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 3 8 2 Totals 3 64 104 Twins16, WhiteSox3 Atlanta 000 0 0 0 201 0 — 3 SanDiego 01 0 100 010 1 — 4 Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. CHICAGO— RookieDannySantaE—Solarte (2). DP—Atlanta 1, SanDiego2. na had five hits andfour RBls, and LOB —Atlanta 6, SanDiego 13. 28—Heyward (18), Minnesota scored nine runs in the Gattis (13),C.Johnson(23). 38—Heyward(3). HR(7). SB—Heyward (13), R.Pena(1), E.cabrera eighth inning of a rain-delayed vic- Medica 2 (16), Amarista(9), C.Nelson(1). S—E.cabrera. tory over the ChicagoWhite Sox. SF — E.cabrera. Atlanta
Brigncph 1 0 0 0 Strasrgp 1 0 0 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Frndsnph 1 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Clipprdp 0 0 0 0 RSorinp 0 0 0 0 Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 3 0 4 6 3 P hiladelphia 00 0 000 000 — 0 Washington 00 1 0 0 0 03x— 4 E—Asche(11). LOB —Philadelphia 4, Washington 6. 28—Asche (16), Rendon (29), Werth(26). SB — Roffins(22), Byrd(2), Span2(23). S—Hamels, Strasburg. IP H R E R BBSO Philadelphia HamelsL,6-6 7 4 1 0 1 6 Giles 1-3 2 3 2 2 1 Diekman 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Washington StrasburgW,8-9 7 3 0 0 1 10 ClippardH,25 1 0 0 0 0 2 R.Soriano 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP — Diekman.PB— Nieves. T—2:47. A—30,038(41,408).
Reds 7, Marlins3 MIAMI — Billy Hamilton scored three times to help Cincinnati break out of an offensive slump and beat Miami. ToddFrazier had a season-high four hits and Devin Mesoraco hit a two-run single for
Bcrwfrss 4 1 1 0 B.colonp 1 0 0 0 Bmgrnp 2 2 1 0 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 EYong ph 1 0 0 0 the Reds, who had 15 hits and CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 took three of four games in Miami. Duda1b 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 9 119 Totals 2 9 0 2 0 Cincinnati Miami San Francisco 002 130 201 — 9 ab r hbi ab r hbi N ew York 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 E—Belt (4). DP—San Francisco 1. LOB —San B Hmltncf 5 3 2 1 Yelichlf 3 0 0 0 Francisco 4, NewYork3. 2B—Pence(24), Posey(19), Brucerf 5 1 2 1 Vldspn2b 4 0 0 0 Flores(5). HR—Pence2 (15), Posey(13), Belt (11). Frazier1b 5 0 4 1 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 Mesorcc 5 1 3 2 McGeh3b 2 1 0 0 S—Bumgarner. 1b 4 1 1 2 IP H R E R BBSO LudwckIf 5 0 1 1 GJones Schmkr2b 4 0 1 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 0 San Francisco BumgarnerW,13-8 9 2 0 0 1 10 Negron3b 3 1 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 2 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Mathisc 4 0 2 1 New York B.colonL,10-9 4 2-3 8 6 6 0 5 Broxtnp 0 0 0 0 JaTrnrp 0 0 0 0 Carlyle 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 1 1 KHrndzph 1 0 0 0 C.Torres 1 1 2 2 1 1 Leakep 3 1 1 0 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Eveland 12-3 2 1 1 0 2 RSantg3b 1 0 0 0 Solanoph 1 0 0 0 DJnngs p 0 0 0 0 Edgin 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 HBP—byEveland (J.Perez). PB—Recker. Totals 40 7 15 7 Totals 3 1 3 5 3 T—2:40.A—32,408 (41,922). C incinnati 012 2 0 2 000 — 7 Miami 0 00 100 020 — 3 Cardinals 3, Brewers 2 E—Leake (4), S.Dyson(1). DP—Cincinnati 1, Miami 1.LOB —Cincinnati 8, Miami7. 2B—Ludwick ST. LOUIS —John Lackeywon his (17), Hecha varria (16), Mathis(5). 3B—Hechavarria HR—G .Jones(12). SB—B.Hamilton (43), Bruce St. Louis debut whenthe Cardinals (5). (10), Negron (1). CS—Frazier(6). S—Ja.Turner.
rallied for three runs in theseventh inning, capped byago-aheadfrom rookie OscarTaveras to beat Milwaukee. TheCardinals took two of three from NLCentral-leading Milwaukee andpulled within one game of the division lead.
Milwaukee St. Louis ab r hbi ab r hbi CGomzcf 5 0 00 Mcrpnt3b 4 0 0 0 Lucroyc 4 0 1 0 Wong2b 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 1 2 0 Hollidylf 4 1 1 1 ArRmr3b 4 0 2 1 MAdms1b 2 1 2 0 RWeks2b 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 1 1 0 KDavislf 4 0 1 0 Przynsc 3 0 1 1 M rRynl1b 4 1 1 1 Taversrf 3 0 1 1 EHerrrss 3 0 1 0 Bourjoscf 2 0 0 0 Garzap 2 0 0 0 Lackeyp 2 0 0 0 Overayph 1 0 1 0 Descalsph 1 0 0 0 Duke p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Jeff rssp 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Gennettph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 2 9 2 Totals 2 8 3 6 3 M ilwaukee 1 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 2 St. Louis 000 0 0 0 3 0x— 3 E—Lackey (1). DP—Milwaukee1, St. Louis 1. LOB —Milwaukee8, St. Louis 3. 28—Braun (24), Ma.Adams (25). HR—Mar.Reynolds (19), Holliday (12). SB—E .Herrera(3). S—Bourjos.
IP H
Cincinnati LeakeW,9-9 6 3 Hoover 2 1 Broxton 1 1 Miami Ja. Turner L,4-7 4 9 S.Dyson 3 4 Da.Jennings 2 2 WP — Leake,Ja.Turner. T—3:05. A—26,707(37,442).
R E R BBSO
1 1 4 2 2 1
5 2
5 5 2 2 0 0
2 2
0 0 0
0 0 0
3
3
Interleague
Tigers 4, Rockies0 DETROIT — Anibal Sanchez struck out12, Victor Martinez hit a three-run homer andDetroit finished off a weekendsweep of Colorado. Sanchez(8-5) became the third straight Tigers starter to dominate the Rockies, allowing only two hits in seven innings. Colorado
Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi CDckrsdh 4 0 0 0 RDaviscf 4 1 2 0 Rutledgss 4 0 1 0 Kinsler2b 3 1 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 Micarr1b 3 1 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Mornea 1b 4 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 2 3 Milwaukee S tubbscf 4 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 0 0 Garza 6 1 0 0 0 4 P ridielf 3 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 1 0 DukeH,12 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 Rosarioc 3 0 1 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 JeffressL,0-1BS,1-1 2-3 3 1 1 0 1 B arnesrf 3 0 1 0 Avilac 3000 W.Smith 1 0 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 0 0 Suarezss 3 0 0 0 St. Louis Totals 32 0 4 0 Totals 3 2 4 8 4 LackeyW,1-0 7 7 2 2 0 4 C olorado 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 NeshekH,17 1 1 0 0 0 1 Detroit 004 000 Ogx — 4 R osenthal S, 3 4-38 1 1 0 0 1 3 E—Suarez (6). LOB—Colorado 5, Detroit 6. E R BBSO HBP —byGarza(Ma.Adams). WP—Lackey. 2B — R.Davis(18). HR —V.Martinez(23). SB—Stubbs T—2:50.A—44,662 (45,399). (13),R.Davis (26). 2 4 3 IP H R E R BBSO 1 0 1 0 0 0 0'backs 3,Pirates 2(10 innings) Colorado J.De La RosaL,11-7 62-3 6 4 4 1 6 0 2 0 Kahnle 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 PHOENIX — Arizona runner Nick Ottavino 1 2 0 0 0 0 Ahmed put his arms up as heslid Detroit 2 2 7 An.Sanchez W,8-5 7 2 0 0 0 12 0 1 1 into second base and deflected a Chamberlain 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 potential double play relay in the Soria 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 HBP—byJ.DeLaRosa(Kinsler). WP —Kahnle. 0 0 2 10th inning, giving the DiamondT—2:58. A—41,487(41,681). 0 0 2
LosAngeles 500 001 100 — 7 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 1 1 0 300 — 6 IP H R LOB— LosAngeles8,TampaBay12.28— Trout Santana had two hits and two RBls Atlanta (31), J.Hamilton(15), E.Navarro (9), Loney(23), For- in the Twins' big inning. sythe(11).SB—Trout(12), E.Navarro(1). S—LongoHarang 6 5 2 ria. SF —Freese2, Loney, J.Molina. Varvaro 1 1 1 Chicago IP H R E R BBSO Minnesota Russell 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi LosAngeles Jaime 1 1 0 2-3 2 1 WeaverW,12-6 6 6 2 2 4 3 D aSntncf 6 2 5 4 Eatoncf 4 0 1 0 HaleL,3-4 D ozier2b 6 1 2 1 Sierrarf 1 0 0 0 Grilli 13 2 3 3 1 0 San Diego e3b 4 1 2 1 GBckh2b 3 0 0 0 TRoss 6 5 2 Jepsen H,16 1 3- 1 0 0 1 1 Plouff Vincent 1 1 0 J.SmithH,11 11- 3 1 0 0 1 1 Wlnghff 7 1 1 0 JAreudh 4 0 0 0 Quackenbush 2 - 3 1 0 StreetS,6-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kvargsdh 5 1 2 2 Giffaspi3b 4 1 1 0 Colaeff1b 3 1 1 0 AIRmrzss 3 1 2 1 A.Torres 1-3 0 0 TampaBay Parmel p h-1b 2 2 2 2 LeGarcph-ss 1 0 0 0 B enoit BS,1-4 1 1 1 OdorizziL,7-9 3 8 5 5 3 1 0 0 Yates 2 0 0 0 0 3 Arciarf 6 1 3 3 Konerk1b 4 0 0 0 StaufferW,4-2 1 11-3 4 2 2 0 0 Fryerc 6 3 3 2 Viciedorf-If 4 1 1 2 TRosspitchedto 3batters inthe7th. Beliveau Varvaropitchedto 1batterin the8th. C.Ramos 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Nunezss 5 3 2 1 DeAzalf-cf 4 0 2 0 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 WP — Harang, T.Ross. Balfour 1 0 0 0 1 0 N ieto c 1 0 1 0 TM:01. A—30,861(42,302). McGee 1 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 50 162316 Totals 36 3 8 3 WP—Jepsen, Odorizzi. Minnesota 1 0 0 0 0 3 093 — 16 Cubs 7,Dodgers3 T—3:46. A—25,877(31,042). Chicago 0 00 300 000 — 3 E—Colabello (3), Flowers(6), Gilaspie2(8). DPindians 4,Rangers3 (12 innings) Chicago 1.LOB—Minnesota 15, Chicago7. 28- LOS ANGELES — Edwin Jackson Da.Santana (13), Arcia(10), Nunez(3), Gilaspie(26), pitched six innings for his first AI.Rami r ez (20). 38 — D a .S an tan a (3). HR — P arm e lee CLEVELAND — Michael Brantley Arcia(8),Fryer(1),Viciedo(13).SB—Da.Santana2 victory in six weeksandChris homered to lead off the bottom of ((6), 8), Fryer (1), Nunez(5), DeAza(14). CS—Plouffe(1). Coghlan hit a tiebreaking two-run IP H R E R BBSO the 12th inning to give Cleveland a homer, leading theChicago Cubs Minnesota win over Texas. Brantley belted a GibsonW,10-8 7 6 3 3 0 6 to a victory over the LosAngeles 3-2 pitch from Phil Klein (0-1) into Deduno 2 2 0 0 0 1 Dodgers. Jackson (6-11) allowed Chicago Texas' bullpen in right field and Quintana 5 5 1 0 2 5 two runs and sevenhits, struck was mobbed by his teammates GuerraL,1-3BS,5-5 1 4 3 3 1 1 out six and walked none.The Thompson 1 1 3 3 3 1 when he reachedhomeplate after right-hander was 0-4 with a 7.39 Belisario 0 4 4 4 0 0 the Indians' seventh win of the Surkamp 1 4 2 2 0 0 ERA in his previous sevenstarts seasononagame-endinghit. Rienzo 1 5 3 3 1 3 since beating Pittsburgh 6-3 on pitchedto3 batters inthe 8th. The Indians, who were2-51 when Thompson Belisariopitchedto4 batters inthe8th. June 20 at Wrigley Field. The trailing after eight innings, tied the HBP —by Deduno (G.Beckham), byQuintana(K.var- Dodgers dropped two of three gas). WP —Rienzo. game in the ninth on David MurT—4:01.A—23,471(40,615). to the team with the third-worst
backs a win over Pittsburgh. The Pirates lingered on the field to argue with the umpires, to noavail. There was novideo review of the final play.
Leaders
ThroughSunday's Games AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING —Altuve, Houston, .339; Cano, Seattle, .330; Beltre,Texas,.323;Brantley, Cleveland, .322; VMartinez,Detroit, .321; Micabrera,Detroit, .315; Arizona Pittsburgh Gillaspie,Chicago,.314. ab r hbi ab r hbi RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota, 77; Trout,LosAngeJ Hrrsn3b 5 1 2 0 Inciartcf 4 0 2 1 les, 76; Brantley,Cleveland,73; Donaldson, Oakland, GPolncrl 4 0 2 0 Pachec3b 4 0 1 1 73; Mecabrera,Toronto,70;Gardner, NewYork, 70; AMcctcf 2 0 1 1 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 Kinsler,Detroit,70. Watsonp 0 0 0 0EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 RBI — JAbreu, Chicago,84; Micabrera, Detroit, JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 A.Hill2b 4 0 0 0 83; Ortiz,Boston,82; Trout, LosAngeles,80; DonGSnchzph 1 0 0 0 Trumo1b 4 0 2 0 Oakland,77; Ncruz, Baltimore,75; Moss, Seattle in 2006, Tillman is 6-0 M elncnp 0 0 0 0 DPerltrf 4 0 0 0 aldson, Oakland,72. S niderlf 4 0 0 0 AIMartlf 4 0 0 0 HITS — Altuve, Houston, 155; Mecabrera,Toin six career starts against the RMartnc 4 1 1 0 Gswschc 3 2 2 0 ronto, 142;Cano,Seatle, 136;Brantley, Cleveland, Mariners. I.Davis1b 4 0 2 0 Ahmedss 1 1 0 0 Kinsler,Detroit, 131;Markakis,Baltimore, 131; M ercerss 4 0 0 0 Cahillp 1 0 0 0 135; Micabrera,Detroit,129. Mrtnz2b-cf 4 0 2 1 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Seattle Baltimore DOUBLES —Micabrera, Detroit, 36; Altuve, Lirianop 1 0 0 0 AnMadph-3b 2 0 0 1 Houston,32; Plouffe,Minnesota, 31;Trout, LosAnab r hbi ab r hbi PAlvrzph 1 0 0 0 AJcksncf 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 1 3 1 geles, 31; Ki n sl er, Detroit, 30;Brantley, Cleveland,29; JHughs p 0 0 0 0 Ackleylf 4 0 0 0 Machd3b 3 0 1 0 Pedroia,Boston,29. N ix2b 1 0 0 0 Cano2b 3 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 TRIPLES — Rios,Texas,8;Bourn,Cleveland,7; Totals 35 2 102 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 KMorlsdh 4 0 1 0 DYongdh 3 0 0 0 aton,Chicago,7;Gardner, NewYork,6; LMartin, TexPittsburgh 010 000 010 0 — 2 E Seager3b 3 0 1 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 a s,6; D e A z a Chicago,5;BHolt,Boston,5;AJackson, Arizona 002 0 0 0 000 1 — 3 Seattle, 5;Od,or, Denorfirf 3 0 0 0 JHardyss 3 0 0 0 Texas,5; Trout, LosAngeles,5. Twooutswhenwinning runscored. Morrsn1b 3 0 1 0 Loughff 3 0 1 0 phy's two-run homer with one out HOME RUNS —JAbreu, Chicago, 31; Ncruz, record in the majors. Los Angeles' E—ErMarshall (1). DP—Pittsburgh 2, Arizona1. Baltimore, Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 29; E nc on,Toronto, 26;Ortiz, Boston, off Neftali Feliz. LOB —Pittsburgh 8, Arizona4. 2B—G.Polanco(5), 26;Trout,LosAngarenaci BMiff erss 2 0 0 0 Hundlyc 2 0 0 0 Yankees 8,RedSox7 t/z NL West lead was trimmed to 2 25;Donaldson,Oakland,23; AMccutchen(32), I.Davis (13),M.Martinez(1), Trum- VMadinez,Detroit,23;les, Taylorph-ss 1 0 0 0 Moss,Oakland, 23. Cleveland games over San Francisco. Totals 3 0 0 4 0 Totals 2 81 5 1 Texas bo (5), Gose w i s ch (3). CS — G .P ola nco (3), I.Davi s STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,43; Effsbury, BOSTON — Brett Gardner hadatieab r hbi ab r hbi Seattle 0 00 000 000 — 0 (4). S —Liriano,Ahmed, Cahil. SF—A.Mccutchen. NewYork, 29;RD avis, Detroit, 26;AEscobar, Kansas Choodh 5 0 0 1 Kipnis2b 5 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO City, 23;JDyson,KansasCity, 22;Andrus,Texas, 21; Baltimore 100 0 0 0 Ogx— 1 breaking homer inthe sixth inning Chicago LosAngeles PiNsburgh DP — Baltimore 1. LOB—Seattle 4, Baltimore5. A ndrusss 6 1 2 0 Avileslf 6 0 0 0 for one of his threehits, helping the ab r hbi ab r hbi JJones, Seatle, 20;Reyes, Toronto,20. Liriano 6 4 2 2 1 6 28 — Markakis (22). HR—Markakis (9). SB—Seager Riosrf 5 0 1 1 Brantlycf 6 1 2 1 Coghlnlf 3 2 2 2 JuTrnr2b 3 2 2 0 New YorkYankeesbeat Boston. J.Hughes 1 0 0 0 0 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 1 0 CSantn1b 4 0 1 0 A lcantr2b 5 0 1 0 Puigcf 4 0 2 0 (5). CS —Lough(5). NATIONAL LEAGUE Watson 1 1 0 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO Adducilf 5 0 0 0 Chsnhll3b 5 1 1 0 4 0 1 1 AdGnzl1b 4 0 1 1 Former RedSox Stephen Drewhad Rizzo1b BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado, .340; Puig, Ju.Wilson 1 1 0 0 0 1 Arencii1b 3 1 0 0 Swisherdh 3 0 0 0 Valuen3b 3 1 1 1 HRmrzss 4 0 0 0 Seattle osAngeles,.323;MaAdams,St.Louis,.315;AMcdrove in four runs. MelanconL,1-3 2- 3 1 1 1 1 0 L Iwakuma L,9-6 7 2 - 3 5 1 1 2 7 Rosales1b 1 0 0 0 ChDckrph-dh1 1 1 0 a pair of hits and S weenycf 4 1 1 0 Kemprf 4 1 2 1 Cutchen,Pittsburgh,.311;Morneau,Colorado, .309; Arizona 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 LMartncf 4 1 1 0 DvMrprf 3 1 2 3 V alaikass 3 1 0 0 Ethierlf 2 0 0 0 Farquhar Lucroy, Milwaukee,.304; Revere, Philadelphia, .302; Cahill 7 7 1 1 1 7 McGehee, Gimenzc 4 0 1 0JRmrzss 4 0 0 0 New York Boston Baltimore Schrhltrf 4 1 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Miami,.302. Odor2b 2 0 1 1 RPerezc 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Z iegler BS, 6 -7 1 2 1 1 1 0 TillmanW,8-5 7 4 0 0 0 6 JoBakrc 5 0 0 1 VnSlykph 1 0 0 0 RUNS —Rendon, Washington, 78; Pence,San A.Miller H,15 1 0 0 0 0 2 YGomsph-c 1 0 1 0 Gardnrff 4 1 3 3 B.Holt3b 5 2 1 0 A.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 3 Francisco,77;Goldschmidt,Arizona,75; Rizzo,ChiEJcksnp 2 1 2 0 Howellp 0 0 0 0 E.Marshaff W4-2 1 1 0 0 1 2 cago,74;Tulowitzki, Colorado,71; FFreeman,Atlanta, Jeterss 5 0 1 0 Pedroia2b 5 3 2 2 Z.BrittonS,23-26 1 0 0 0 1 1 Totals 39 3 7 3 Totals 4 1 4 9 4 Rugginph 1 0 1 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 WP —Melancon.PB—Gosewisch. T—2:33.A—35,217 (45,971). Texas 120 000 000 000 — 3 Ellsurycf 5 0 0 0 D.Ortizdh 2 1 1 3 Villanv p 0 0 0 0 C.Perez p 0 0 0 0 70; Stanton,Miami, 70. T — 3: 1 3. A — 26,91 3 (48, 6 33). Cleveland 0 1 0 000 002 001 — 4 Teixeir1b 4 1 0 0 Cespdslf 3 1 0 0 SCastroph 1 0 1 2 DGordnph 1 0 0 0 RBI — Stanton,Miami, 74;AdGonzalez,LosAngeNo outswhenwinning runscored. Beltrandh 4 2 2 0 Napoli1b 4 0 1 0 TWoodpr 0 0 0 0 uribe3b 4 0 0 0 les, 72;Goldschmidt, Arizona,69;AMccutchen, PittsRoyais 4, Athletics2 E—Andrus (14). DP—Texas 1, Cleveland 1. M cCnnc 2 2 1 0 Navarf 3 0 1 2 Strop p 0 0 0 0 Butera c 3 0 2 0 burgh, 67; Desmond,Washington, 66; Braun, MilwauNationais 4, Phiiiies 0 LOB —Texas 8, Cleveland11. 2B—Andrus (25), Headly3b 4 1 1 1 Bogartsss 4 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Beckettp 1 0 0 0 kee,65;Byrd,Philadelphia, 63;Howard, Philadelphia, — James Shields Brantley (29), Chi s enhal l (22), Ch.Di c kerson (3), Drew2b 4 1 2 4 BrdlyJrcf 4 0 0 0 OAKLAND, Calif. Crwfrdlf 2 0 0 0 63; Morneau, Colorado,63; JUpton,Atlanta,63. WASHINGTON — Stephen StrasDav.Murphy(20). HR—Brantley (16), Dav.Murph y Pradorf 3 0 0 0 Vazquzc 2 0 2 0 Totals 3 5 7 107 Totals 3 3 3 9 2 HITS — DanMurphy, NewYork, 132;Pence, San pitched eight sharp innings for (7). CS —L.Martin (9). S—J.Ramirez. SF—Choo, I Suzukirf 0 0 0 0 Bettspr 0 0 0 0 Chicago 1 00 020 081 — 7 burg struck out10 while pitching Francisco,131;AMccutchen, Pittsburgh,128; McGehis first win in nearly a month, Odor. Totals 3 5 8 108 Totals 3 2 7 8 7 LosAngeles 100 001 010 — 3 hee, Miami,127;DGordon, LosAngeles, 124; Puig, IP H R E R BBSO N ew York 030 1 3 1 000 — 8 DP—Chicag o3,LosAngeles1.LOB— Chicago three-hit ball for seven innings and Los Angeles,123; FFreem an, Atlanta, 122; GoldandKansasCitybeatOakland. Texas Boston 320 200 000 — 7 10, LosAngeles4. 2B—Coghlan (15), Rizzo(17), Washington beat Philadelphia. schmidt,Arizona,122;Span,Washington,122. Shields (10-6) retired his first15 Darvish 7 4 1 1 2 8 DP—New York 2, Boston2. LOB —NewYork 5, E.Jackson (2), Ruggiano(13),Ju.Turner(12), Butera Strasburg (8-9) got his first win DOUBLE S—Goldschmidt, Arizona,39; Lucroy, Cotts H,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston 4.28—Gardner(16), Beltran(19), Mccann 2(6). HR batters before Josh Reddick hit a —Coghlan(6), Valbuena(10), Kem p(13). Milwaukee,35;AMccutchen, Pittsburgh,32; DanMureliz BS,1-4 1 2 2 2 1 0 (13), Headle(3), since July1, a stretch of seven y Drew(8). HR —Gardner (15), Pe- SB—Ju.Turner(3),Kemp(6). CS—Alcantara(1). phy, New York, 31; Puig,LosAngeles, 30; Scastro, leadoff homer in the sixth. Alberto FMendez 1 1 0 0 1 1 droia(5),D.Ortiz(26).SF —D.Ortiz. IP H R E R BBSO games. Chica go,29;FFreeman,Atlanta,29;Rendon,WashHe walked oneanddidn't Callaspo then had a one-out single Sh.Tolleson 1 1 0 0 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO Chicago ingt on,29;Span,Washington,29. 0 1 1 1 0 0 NewYork E.JacksonW,6-11 6 7 2 2 0 6 permit a runner past second base. TRIPLES —DGordon, LosAngeles, 10;Bcrawbefore SamFuld lined into a double KleinL,0-1 Cleveland Phelps 2 6 5 5 2 0 Viganueva H,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 ford, SanFrancisco,9;Puig,LosAngeles,9;Pence, play. Bauer 71-3 6 3 3 4 4 Whitley 2 2 2 2 1 2 Strop 1 1 1 1 0 0 Philadelphia Washington San Francisco, 7;Braun,Milwaukee,6; BHamilton, Axford 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 RogersW,1-0 3 0 0 0 1 3 H.Rondon 1 0 0 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati, 6;Segura,Milwaukee,6; Yelich, Miami, 6. KansasCity Oakland Rzepczynski 1 1 0 0 0 1 BetancesH,17 1 0 0 0 0 2 LosAngeles Revere cf 4 0 0 0 Spancf 3 1 2 1 HOMERUNS —Stanton, Miami, 26; Rizzo,ChiAllen 1 0 0 0 0 1 Dav.RobertsonS,29-31 1 0 0 0 1 0 BeckettL,6-6 ab r hbi ab r hbi 4 6 3 3 3 6 Rollins ss 4 0 1 0 Rendon 3b 4 1 1 1 cago,25;Byrd, Philadelphia, 21;Tulowitzki, Colora1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Aoki dh 5 1 1 1 Fuldcf 4000 Shaw Boston PRodriguez 2 0 0 0 0 2 Utley 2b 4 0 0 0 Werthrf 4 1 1 1 do, 21;Duda,NewYork, 20; Frazier, Cincinnati, 20; 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Buchholz Infante 2b 5 1 3 2 Jaso dh 4 0 0 0 Crockett 5 8 7 7 5 5 Howell 1 1 0 0 1 0 Howard1b 4 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 20 0 0 Goldschmidt,Arizona,19; Reynolds, Milwaukee,19; 2-3 1 3 3 3 0 Byrdrf 2 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 S.Perez c 4 0 1 1 Dnldsn3b 4 0 0 0 AtchisonW,5-0 1- 3 0 0 0 0 1 BreslowL,2-3 1 1 1 1 0 0 League JUpton,Atlanta,19. 1 1-3 2 1 1 2 1 BButler1b 4 0 3 0 Mosslf 3000 Klein pitched to 1baterin the12th. Tazawa 1 0 0 0 0 C.Perez GSizmr If 3 0 0 0 Hairstnlf 3 0 1 0 STOLENBASES—DGordon, Los Angeles,51; HBP — by B auer (Arenci b i a ), by Crockett (Odor). AGordn If 4 0 1 0 Vogt1b 3 0 0 0 Mujica 1 0 0 0 0 0 Beckettpitchedto3 batters inthe5th. Nieves c 3 0 0 0 Harperlf 1 0 0 0 BHamilton,Cincinnati, 43;Revere, Philadelphia, 30; L.cain rf 4 0 2 0 DNorrsc 3 0 0 0 WP—Bauer. Uehara 1 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Strop(Ju.Turner). PB—Butera. Asche3b 3 0 2 0 Acarer2b 4 0 0 0 EYoung, New York,26;Span,Washington,23;CGoC.colon 3b 4 1 1 0 Reddckrf 3 2 2 2 T—3:58. A—18,422(42,487). T—3:42.A—38,035(37,499). T—3:34.A—44,713(56,000). Hamelsp 1 0 0 0 Loatonc 3 1 1 0 mez,Milwaukee,22;Rolins, Philadelphia,22.
B4
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
BASEBALL
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Kelsey Grant/ Hyannis Athletic Association
Ryan Perez, an ambidextrous pitcher from tiny Judson University in Illinois, has blossomed into a potential high-round pick for the 2015 MLB draft with his performance this summer in the
Cape Cod League. r
e
Ambidextrous pitcher wows
Cape CodLeague By Eric Olson The Associated Press
America, said scouts are impressed with Perez's work from the right side as well.
. Jla.
Ryan Perez might look "Ultimately, I think someback someday and say having Tommy John surgery on one still drafts him as a lefthis right arm was the best
hander, but he's starting to
thing that could have happened to his left.
show people that he is good enough to have a real shot to
That's right, his left.
contribute as an
a mbidex-
The 20-year-old from tiny trous pitcher, which obviously Judson University in Illinois gives him additional value," is one of baseball's rare am-
Fitt said. "I think he could get
bidextrous pitchers. He's been all the rage in the prestigious Cape Cod League since he touched the low 90s on the radar gun — with
drafted in the top 10 rounds next year, although he pro-
both arms — in last week's
rez said he's happy to pitch
All-Star game. He came on in the third
with either arm. "But 90 right-handed is not
files as a reliever, so he could The 6-foot, 190-pound Pe-
special in the major leagues. first batter left-handed, the Everyone throws 90," he said. second right-handed and the "As a lefty you can get away with it because it's more a
"Didn't see that coming," rarity."
Perez said. Neither did the announc-
Baseball's best-known am-
bidextrous pitcher was Greg ers on the regional telecast, Harris, who pitched with fans in the stands and even both arms during one insome of his teammates who ning of scoreless relief for the were doing double-takes Montreal Expos in 1995. The in the field as he flipped his switch pitcher at the highest custom-made, six-fingered level of the sport this season glove from one hand to the is Pat Venditte, who is in Triother. The 18-pitch performance earned him the West team's MVP and left all to ask themselves, "Did he real-
ple-A in the New York Yan-
ly just do that'?" As entertaining as Perez
ed during long training sessions with his father, Juan.
was that one inning, he's
Perez went on to become one
for two seasons, he worked his left-handed fastball up to
93 mph. He also developed a devastating breaking pitch to go with his changeup. This summer he's struck out 38 in 26 '/ innings, almost all as a lefty, and has a 2.05 ERA for the Hyannis Harbor Hawks.
academic standards and ended up at NAIA Judson, a 1,000-student school in Elgin, Illinois. He was 12-3 with a 2.43 ERA and 92 strikeouts in
111 innings as a sophomore this past season, all but 29 from the left side.
Judson coach Rich Benjamin is friends with Gassman
and persuaded him to give Perez a shot in the Cape Cod League. The Massachusetts league is the summer home for many of the nation's top college players, and 257 of its alumni were on major league rosters last year. "It's pretty great that I've done well here," Perez said.
Switchhittervs.switchpitcher During a 2008 short seasonClass Agame,switch pitcher Pat Venditte of the Staten Island Yankees faced off against Brooklyn Cyclones switch hitter Ralph Henriquez, andthe two did an elaborate side-switching dancefor minutes before umpires put a stop to the nonsense.After that game, the Professional Baseball Umpire Coalition releasedguidelines of how to deal with the unique situation: • The pitcher must visually indicate to the umpire, batter and runner(s) which way hewill begin pitching to the batter. Engaging the rubber with the glove on aparticular hand is considered a definitive commitment to which arm hewill throw with. The batter will then choosewhich side of the plate hewill bat from. • The pitcher must throw one pitch to the batter before any "switch" by either player is allowed. • After one pitch is thrown, the pitcher and batter may each change positions one time perat-bat. For example, if the pitcher changes from right-handed to left-handed andthe batter then changes batter's boxes, eachplayer must remain that way for the duration of that at-bat (unless the offensive team substitutes a pinch hitter, and theneachplayer may again "switch" one time). • Any switch (by either the pitcher or the batter) must be clearly indicated to the umpire. • There will be no warm-up pitches during the change of arms. • If an injury occurs the pitcher may change arms but not Use that arm again during the remainder of the game.
some hope after setting the
son theme in the Pac-12 as fall
camps open around the conference without many battles at the sport's most important
position. Ten starting quarterbacks return to
l ead their teams,
including Heisman Trophy candidates and projected firstround NFL picks Marcus Mar-
iota (Oregon) and Brett Hundley (UCLA). Only Arizona and Washington will have to break
inunproven signal-callers. The Pac-12 has eight quarpresented annually to the nation's best quarterback.
But he didn't meet NCAA
Tons oftalent
Ten teams in thePac-12return their starting quarterbacks from last The Year of the Quarterback. year's teams, andeight of them are onthe Davey O'Brien Award watchlist That's the unofficial presea- for the trophy presented to the season's best quarterback.
he started throwing left-hand-
"I think his left arm is going "It's helped me because a lot to be the one that makes him of scouts have seen me. I've a lot of money," Hyannis man- gone from being a guy who ager Chad Gassman said. might not even be drafted to Aaron Fitt, wh o c overs a guy who has a pretty good college baseball for Baseball chance."
Source: MLB.com
The (Eugerte) Register-Guard
terbacks on the Davey O'Brien
of the top pitchers in the Illias a left-hander this summer nois high school ranks and atand blossomed into a poten- tracted attention from schools tial high-round 2015 draft such as Stanford, Michigan pick. and Creighton. surgery he had in fall 2011 came with a silver lining. The operation left him unable to pitch with his right arm his senioryearin high school.He tweaked the right arm again early in his freshman season at Judson and pitched almost all his innings as a lefty. While his right arm was shut down almost entirely
By Ryan Thorburn
kees' organization. Perez was 5 years old when
worked almost exclusively
No doubt, the Tommy John
• The Pac-12 hasa bumper crop this season of talented, experienced quarterbacks
slip a little lower than that."
inning and struck out the third left-handed.
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Oregon State quarterback Sean Mannion throws during last season's Civil War game against Oregon. Mannion is one of 10 returning Pac12 quarterbacks, eight of which are on the preseason watchlist for the Davey O'Brien Award given to the nation's top quarterback.
Award watchlist for the trophy
Player Sean Mannion Marcus Mariota Brett Hundley
Taylor Kelly Cody Kessler Travis Wilson Kevin Hogan Sefo Liufau Connor Halliday Jared Goff
2013 stats starting yards Tg gating
Team
14 6 . 6
Bears' freshman passing record with 3,508 yards during a painful 1-11 season. "I don't think there is a con-
ference that's close in terms of quality of quarterbacks. And that's not to say they're all going to be great NFL players, but they're great college football players," said UCLA coach Jim Mora, the former
O regon State
3
4,662 37
Oregon
2
3,6 6 5 3 1 16 7 .7
UCLA
2
3,0 7 1 2 4 15 2 .9
Arizona State
2
S outhern Cal
1
3,63 5 2 8 1 3 9.6 coach of the Atlanta Falcons and Seattle Seahawks. "Every 2,967 20 14 8 . 8 week you get ready to play a
Utah
2
1,8 2 7 1 6 1 2 9 .6
Pac-12 quarterback and there is a trait that they have that
S tanford
2
2,630 20
151 . 5
C olorado
1
1,779 18
12 8 . 3
W ashington St.
2
4,597 34
12 6 . 5
California
1
3,488 1 8 1 2 3.2 conference." Mariota and Hundley de-
"Never seen anything like this where you have multiple him to have a very good sea- level, you have a chance every guys in our conference that son, quite honestly." week. Thisconference isloadyou could say could be the No. At the bottom of the South ed with them." 1 pick overall in the draft," Division, Utah's talented duStanford might have to lean Stanford coach David Shaw al-threat quarterback, Travis on Kevin Hogan — who had said. "You have multiple guys Wilson, has been deared to only to complete 7 of 13 passes in the conference that could be play after a health scare last for 103 yards in the win against all-Americans and could lead season. Colorado's Sefo Liu- Oregon — because of the gradthe nation in quarterback rat- fau is poised for a breakout uation of running back Tyler ing or lead the nation in yards seasonafter starting as a true Gaffney and a reshuffling deand yards per attempt or in freshman. fense. The 6-foot-4, 228-pound "It's a quarterback-driven senior threw for 2,630 yards touchdown passes. "And that could be any of game,"said Utah coach Kyle and 20 touchdowns in 2013. five or six guys that could do Whittingham, who hasn't been Washington State's Connor that this year." able to keep a starter healthy Halliday enters his final seaOregon State'sSean Manfor an entire season since 2008 son in Mike Leach's system nion led the Pac-12 with 4,662 when the Utes finished 13-0 after throwing for 4,597 yards passing yards and 37 touch- with a Sugar Bowl win against and 34 touchdowns to lead the downs in 2013. Mike Riley, Alabama. "If you have a guy Cougars to a bowl game for who coached the San Diego that pulls the trigger and can the first time in 10 years. Chargers between his stints in make plays for you at a high Jared Goff gives California
is unique. That's difficult to defend. "I have greatrespect for t he q u arterbacks i n
cided to return for their red-
shirt junior seasons instead of entering the 2013 NFL draft.
They are among the primary challengers to dethrone reigning Heisman Trophy winner Jameis Winston of F l orida State. "I can't wait for some of
these guys to get out of our conference, which I thought a couple would happen last year and they disappointed me and came back," Shaw said. "But I think it's going to make for exciting football." Pure. &m/6 t"o.
aj. B~ dU Bend Redmond
Corvallis, believes there is still
plenty of room in the NFL for pocket passers. "There is no doubt about it
that Sean has an NFL future," Riley said. "He had a chance to come out early and he was
"It's a quarterback-driven game. If you have a guy that pulls the trigger and can make plays foryou ata high level,you have a chance every
John Day Burns Lakeview
week. This conference is loaded with them."
going to be drafted relatively high this year, if he wanted to.
— Utah coach Kyle Whittingham
I'm glad that he decided to stay
thi s
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
withus." Arizona State's Taylor Kelly
earned all-conference second team honors behind Mariota after throwing for 3,635 yards and 28 touchdowns last season. He also ran for 608 yards
h
to lead the Sun Devils to an 8-1
conference record and a South Division title. "It definitely motivates me,"
Kelly said of not being mentioned as a Heisman Trophy c andidate with some of h i s
peers."I've alwaysbeenthe underdog my whole high school career, my w hole college career. "I have that chip on my shoulder to b e
• I •
t h e h a rdest
worker. I can only produce what I can do and control what I can control."
USC's Cody Kessler threw for 2,968 yards and 20 touchdowns in his first season as the
Trojans' starter. Nowhe will be the focal point of Steve Sarkisian's more up-tempo offense.
"I've always admired Cody's
competitiveness," said Sarkisian, who tried to recruit Kes-
sler to Washington out of high school. "He's got a big heart, he's a tremendous leader and he's talented. I think Cody fits our scheme very well. I expect
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MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014• THE BULLETIN
B5
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Sideline technologyinchesforward, but still no video
Giants take
By Rachel Cohen
few seconds, and getting them even a
The Associated Press
half-minute faster is worth it to these
over Bills
ultracompetitive men who constantly
NEW YORK — NFL teams used to
take Polaroid pictures of plays from atop the stadium during games then send them down to the field on a rope. Technology improved so that an au-
seek the slimmest of edges.
Consider if the Ravens defense makes a stop, but then the offense immediately commits a turnover. The tablet may be the difference in Balti-
tomated camera could deliver the im-
ages to a printer on the sideline, creating that familiar sight of a quarterback staring at a sheet of paper to figure out what went wrong on an interception. That was still the case last season,
more's defensive players seeing some
when fans in the stands could watch
lets would also speed up looking for, say, first-half plays during the fourth
C ANTON, Ohio —
indefinitely, rookie Andre Wil-
groundgame some freshlegs. The fourth-round draft pick and Heisman Trophy finalist out of Boston College had seven carries for 48 yards and
nator Adam Gase, "and if it can help
us in any way, adjust off that." If the tablets malfunction for one team before the game, then they're
These tablets were allowed for the first time on the sideline of NFL games durlng disabled for both clubs. But if they Fame game, though they won't exactly Sunday's Hall of Fame game In Canton, Ohio, though they won't exactly be running crash after kickoff, the other squad be running the most cutting-edge apps. the most cutting-edge apps. can keep using them, to p r event The devices will replicate the old syscoaches from pretending that the detem of transmitting still photos to the vices aren't working in an attempt to field — but faster, clearer and in color. But the company also pg p /pS yyjll Players and coaches gain an advantage in a game that's not No surfing the Web. No selfies or became a sort of bonus amye $p $Qe canzoominoneachpho- going well. tweets. And more important from a IT department, engineerto and write on it, either The preseason offers teams a . football standpoint: no watching re- ing its Surface tablets to ta b l e tS Iri a with their finger or an at- chance to test and grow comfortable plays of the last snap. withstand the rigors of fe t A SeCpgdS tache d s tylus. with the new technology before the "The purity of the game has always the NFL sideline. Searing >< d e ~~>< S ometimes wit h t h e g ames start counting, and for t h e ~ ~ been not having video," Tennessee Ti- heat in Arizona. Pouring old paper printouts, New league and Microsoft to work out any tans coach Ken Whisenhunt said. "So rain in Seattle. Frigid cold th em e V en a Y ork J e ts coach Rex Ryankinks. "Some of us dinosaurs don't change when you're looking at pictures you in Green Bay. The screens h alf mjrIUte recalled, "you'd get them have to sometimes guess, or a lot of had to be viewable in the f g gI back and you ' re l i k e, easily, but I think it has a chance to be 'Man, what is this?' " times the pictures aren't what really glare of the sun. a benefit," said Miami Dolphins coach "This should be a lot exactly happened. That part of it is still And t he dev i ces it t O theSe Joe Philbin, whose staff plans to use coaching, and I kind of like that." couldn't be vulnerable to Ui)iaCpmpegj/jye nrcer and the qualrty a the tablets exclusively during one exIndianapolis Colts tight end Dwayne hacking — a real concern heck of a lot better," he hibition as a trial run. Allen, though, suggested that allow- in a league famous for sard. Many of the players, of course, have ing video would improve the sport by paranoid coaches, where COnStantly Seek The ol d p aper system been tapping on high-tech gadgets making games even more competitive. the term "Spygate" was (ge SllmmeSg pf wi l l remain in place, both since they were kids. Teams are using And just as instant replay, once revo- spawned. as a backup in case the them more and more during the week. lutionary, is now widely accepted and T he tablets w i l l b e technology fails, and for Under Whisenhunt, for instance, has been expanded over the years, the locked in a t e mperathose coaches and players the Titans have added iPads for playsame could take place with the tablets. t ure-controlled car t b y who don't want to switch. books and an extra camera in the end "I'm old school," said Ravens de- zone during practice for extra angles. Adding video is possible in the future, the NFL during the week. They'll opNFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said. erate on a secure wireless network in f e n sive coordinator Dean Pees, who But on Sundays, for now, the NFL is That would need to go through the stadiums. watches games from upstairs and fig- inching forward. "Like anything, whether it's a new league's competition committee, just The specialized tablets come in a u res he'll keep using the hard copies as the introduction of tablets did. The protective case with an attached grip because they work fine for his needs. vacuum cleaner or a new car, you've NFL signed a sponsorship deal with tomakeholdingiteasier. Therewillbe Sti l l , the NFL's McCarthy predicts got to get used to it," St. Louis Rams Microsoft last year, which includes the 13 on each sideline and another 12 in even the most old-school coachesgeneral manager Les Snead said. "Just because you can watch Youstandard promotions of sticking the the coaches' box. Other than that, the and the league has plenty — might league's logo on products and a more only people on the sideline allowed to be swayed if they suspect the other 'Ilrbe movies on your iPad," he added, sophisticated collaboration of making carry digital devices are the medical team is gaining an advantage. The "doesn't mean it's going to happen that NFL content available on Xbox. staff. photos will arrive to the tablets in a fast."
provide the New York Giants'
scored on a 3-yard run in a
17-13 victory over the Buffalo Bills on Sunday night in the p reseason-opening Hall o f Fame Game. Rookie receiver C orey Washington scored the goahead touchdown on a 73-yard pass up the right sideline from backup Ryan Nassib with 13:18 remaining. Washington reached back to catch the partly under-thrown pass, then
stepped around flat-footed defender Kamaal McIlwain.
Williams' performance was encouraging for the Giants after Wilson sustained his sec-
ond neck injury in less than a year during training camp. Getting additional playing time as the No. 2 back behind
newly acquired starter Rashad Jennings, Williams provided a 1-2 punch to the Giants' new-
look running game that was slowed by injuries last season. And the two took the pressure off quarterback Eli Manning. Though Manning lost a fumble while being sacked on the second series, Williams helped bail out the offense on
the third possession. He had five carries for 37 yards, which he capped with a strong run up the middle to put the Giants ahead 7-3 in the final minute of the first quarter. Williams led the nation with
2,177 yards rushing last season, the fifth highest total in NCAA history.
B e l l e t i x s , U M ' .a g a m i xse g R o h h e r s o n P o r c l P r e s e x s t X Xo~ cio ~ m a . n ,cm, ~u,m. Ea.mai1y Ra~ & am ? SeracI, es a f a x n i l y p h o t o ta 3 c e raira ee m t r a l O r e g o r a am.cI, you am.cI, your f a x n i l y c.'oulcI, he o m. your w ay t o
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T
•
With
runningback David Wilson out
Washington Redskins offensive
"I'm all for trying anything new," said Denver Broncos offensive coordi-
Microsoft,OrangeLV Holdings LLCphoto via The Associated Press
The Associated Press
liamsshowed glimpses he can
quarter.
Tablets will be allowed for the first time starting with Sunday's Hall of
By John Wawrow
photos ofthe previous series before they run back onto the field. coordinator Sean McVay said the tab-
highlights on their smartphones, but players and coaches were flipping through three-ring binders of blackand-white photos. The NFL sideline is finally catching up. Sort of.
The
17-13 win
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MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014• THE BULLETIN
T EE TO
R EEN ROUNDUP
With one awkwar swing, Tigerputs uture in jeopar y By Karen Crouse
B7
After his drive on the par-4 ninth, Woods had a hard time
AKRON, Ohio — Tiger r eaching down to r etrieve Woods' switchback comeback his tee. At that point, Woods, trail is at a n i m passe after w h o w a s 3 over on the day,
he was forced to withdraw s ignaled for a cart, and afmidway through Sunday's fi- ter shaking Watson's hand,
f&e )
nal round of the Bridgestone h e was driven to his tournaInvitational, the World Golf me n t -issued SUVin t h e p lay-
Championships event at Fire- ers' parking lot. stoneCountryClub. Woods was grimacing as Woods, making his t hir d
t h ec art came to a stop next
start since returning from t o t h e b ack surgery i n March, r einjured his lower back on the second hole af- SpmB SgptS ter hitting his sec- ~iI>~ ~By B ond shot from an awkward s t ance yI OtUSBd in the grass near a gp SBBjylg bunken With his weight Tl By i7lt almost entirely on BVByl yI/'iI Byi his right leg and his iIB'S Cpmjyig left leg positioned above the bunker's Qgck ,fj pm lip f o r b a l ance,Byi IAJUQ e Woods got the ball li k e ~i7iS,Sp out with a swing p b y ipUS / t hat m ade h i m P bend his left knee Sp mBhtllyIg .
into the air on the
M/BS
follow-through. He ~~ lost his balance and fell into the bunker, h i m . " jarring his back. — Bubba Watson "It's been spasming ever since,"
car's hatchback. He clutched his right buttock as he slow-
ers, Woods did not bothe r t r y i ng to tie
them . He gingerly walked to the side
of the car and foldd hims e lf into the pass e nger seat His caddi e , JoeLaCava, drove him away, to
anunc e rtain future. "We've seen this m an wi n w i t h a hurt leg," Watson
said, referring to Woods' victory at the 2008 U.S. Open,
which he p layed with a broken leg. ing: "It's just the whole low- "So he's going to try to be a er back. I don't know what c hampion; he's going to try to happened." His day had gone tough it out. Obviously it just awry from the start. Woods got too tough for him." was one minute from teeing Wa t son added: "I shook his off in steady rain when play hand and said, 'I'm praying was suspended because of f o r you.' I hope everything water pooling on the course. t u r ns out good, and he's ready Woods said, add-
After warming up, he faced f o r next week."
a 75-minutedelay before his Woods, 38, was scheduled opening tee shot — not ideal to play this week at the PGA for anyone with a back prob- Championship in Louisville, lem. Woods, the defending Kentucky. He would be rechampion, birdied the first t u r ning a s t h e d efending hole and scrambled for par at champion of sorts, having the second, a par 5, but short- won the event when it was last ly thereafter started playing held at Valhalla Golf Club, in loose shots punctuated by 2 000. He needs a victory in grimaces. the tournament, the year's fiOn the par-3 fifth hole, his nal men's major, to qualify for tee shot traveled 147 yards,
t h e FedEx Cup playoffs and
leaving him 65 yards short of improve his standing for a the pin. He got up and down U.S. Ryder Cup berth. f or par. On No. 6, he hit hi s
But the p l ayoffs and t h e
first two shots into the right R yder Cup, which Woods had rough on his way to a bogey. b e en asked about incessant"He hit s ome shots that
k (,"
ly stood up, and he stru g gled to raise each l e g onto the bumper to remove his go l f shoes. After slip p i ng his feet into sneak-
l y t h e f irst three days of the
we're not used to seeing Tiger Bridgestone, took a back seat hit even when he's coming to the image of Woods being back from an injury like this, whisked away. so obviously something was Ask e d about his playing bothering him," said Bubba status for the PGA ChampiWatson, the reigning Masters onship, Woods said: "I don't champion, who was grouped know. Just trying to get out of with Woods. here."
Mark Duncan/The Associated Press
Rory Mcllroy tips his hat as he walks down the18th fairway with caddie J.P. Fitzgerald during the final round of the Bridgestone Invitational on Sunday. Mcllroy's15-under par total beat Sergio Garcia by two shots.
• Two weeks after holding off Garcia at the British Open, Mcllroy overtakeshim The Associated Press
shot after shot. So yeah, it's
AKRON, Ohio — Winning the British Open wasn't
good.
enough to make Rory McIl-
Garcia wasn't at his best and closed with a 71. He's not
roy want to take the rest of sure it would have mattered. "Everybody saw it," Garcia the year off to celebrate. Neither was the first World Golf said. "He played very, very Championship he won Sunday well. He drove the ball miles at Firestone. and very, very straight for the Another major awaits next most part. He gave himself a week. McIlroy can't wait to get lot of birdie looks." there. McIlroy finished the third Two weeks after his wire-to- round with two straight birdwire win at Royal Liverpool, ies, and not even one day and McIlroy took his game from a rain delay slowed him. He the links of Britain to the park- punched an 8-iron out of the land of America and made rough, under the trees and up the game look just as easy. the slope to an elevated green With another powerful perfor- to 3 feet to open with a birdie. mance, he wiped out a three-
He drilled a ¹ i ron from 219
backed it up with a powerful
have a chance to try to go there to win three in a row. But if
you'dhave asked me what I'm
by a stroke in the Champions
Tour's 3M C hampionship. Perry closed with a 7-under 65 for his second victory of
followed with a gap wedge to ed to come here and really
finished at 23-under 193 at TPC Twin Cities.
birdie at the second, and then 8 feet for a third straight bird-
the yearand seventh overall not being complacent. I want- on the 50-and-over tour. He contend."
ie.Garcia made bogey from the rough, and just like that, He looked just as good as he was trailing. The Spaniard the last time he reached No. 1 never caught up. in the world during his torrid McIlroy became the 13th stretch at the end of 2012. player with a major and a "This is better," he said. World Golf Championship, "Mentally, I'm really sharp. and he joined Tiger Woods as I didn't start to think about the only players to win them in
Also on Sunday: Ogilvy wins 8th PGA Tour title: RENO, Nev. — Geoff Ogilvy won the Barracuda Championship after nearly skipping the event following another disappointing finish
score. I didn't think about where I was in the tourna-
PGA Tour title and first since
consecutive starts.
McIlroy heads south to Val-
ment. I just playing shot after halla with a full head of steam.
last week in the Canadian
Open. Ogilvy won his eighth
Tony Finauwins Web.com event: HAYWARD, Calif. Tony Finau won the Stonebrae -
Classic for his first Web.com Tour title, closing with a 4-un-
der 66forathree-strokevictory. The 34-year-old Finau, from Salt Lake City, had a 22-under 258total at TPC Stonebrae and
earned $108,000 to jump from 2010 at Kapalua, scoring five 24th to eighth on the money points with a 25-foot eagle list with $238,125.
Stroke Continued from B1 Kumpula b eat s e cond-place Zach Foushee, of West Linn, by
three strokes. Taylor Garbutt and Justin Kadin, who both live in
Bend, tied for 11th place at even par. Starting the day with a two-
stroke lead, Kumpula quickly asserted control with birdies on four of his first seven holes.
That helped stretch his lead to a five-stroke advantage. In fact, Kumpula was playing so well that with a birdie on the
par-3 13th hole he moved to 7 under — despite a bogey on the par-4 ninth hole after he hit into a water
hazard. But his bid for the Juniper course record (64) was lost when his approach shot into the 15th green drifted into the greenside water hazard.
tional winner in th e event,
performance on a soggy Fires- had 14 points Sunday to finish tone course to take the top spot with 49. After the eagle on 13, in the world from Adam Scott. the 2006 U.S. Open winner "That's the most pleasing added birdies on the par-4 thing about this week is not 14th and par-5 18th. dwelling about what happened Perry birdies to win 3M at Hoylake," he said. "That's Championship: BLA I N E, what I'll have to do after this, Minn. — Kenny Perry scramas well. I've just got to keep bled for a birdie on the 18th moving forward. It's great to hole to beat Bernhard Langer
proudest of this week, it's the mindset that I took into here of
shot deficit to Sergio Garcia yards into 25 feet for a two-putt in three holes, closed with a 4-under 66 and returned to No. 1 in the world with a twoshot victory in the Bridgestone Invitational.
putt on the par-5 13th and the claret jug, he was deter- pulling away for a five-point mined to move forward and victory in the modified Stachase more titles over the final blefordevent.The37-year-old four months of the year. He Australian, the first internaAfter a brief celebration with
"I was playing great today," Meg Roussos/The Bulletin Kumpula said. "I hit two in the Oregon State golfer Conner Kumpula, of Albany, wore his college gear during Sunday's round at the Oregon water, though, so it could have Men's Stroke Play Championships at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond. been an awesome round. But, you know, those things happen. "I was feeling a little too relaxed a 6-over 78. thought it would be good enough," grin while giving a modest wave out there at times." Scott Carver, of Portland, won said Foushee, who started the of appreciation. In the Senior Division, Randy the Master-40 Division at 8 over. day five strokes behind KumpuBy winning the Oregon Stroke Mahar shot a 4-under-par 68 to Perhaps the best final round la. "But Kumpula is playing great Play, he had added to his golf recome from well back in the field to belonged to Foushee, the 2013 right now. That's good for him sume one of the important amawin at even par. Stroke Play champion. The Or- and good for Oregon State." teur titles in the state. Mahar — a 58-year-old Port- egon Ducks golfer closed with a When Kumpula walked off the Still, he was not ready to land stockbroker who has won 7-under 65 to finish at 10 under 18th green and to the Juniper club- say that he is one of the best in the Oregon Amateur Champion- and in second place. house to sign his scorecard, he Oregon. "Zach's been on top for a while, ship and the Oregon Mid-AmaFoushee also made a run at the was met with applause from more teur Championship in his career course record, but his chip for than a dozenspectators,most of so you can't really just swing me — trailed Bend's Don Orrell by birdie on the par-5 18th stopped whom were his opponents. in right there," Kumpula said. seven strokes to begin the final just inches from the hole. Wearing the orange and black "But take it for what it is." "I was looking to try to get to of Oregon State, the West Albany round. Orrell finished in a tie for — Reporter: 541-617-7868, third place at 3 over after shooting double digits (under par) and High graduate flashed a sheepish zhall@bendbulletin.com.
GOLF IN BRIEF FootGolf coming toTheGreens at RedmOnd —TheGreens at Redmondwill be home to the first public FootGolf course in Central Oregon, the owners of the Redmondfacility announced last week. FootGolf, which was introduced to the region earlier this year by private AwbreyGlenGolf Club in Bend, is played bykicking a standard-sized soccer ball into a 21-inch cup using rules that correspond with the Rules of Golf. The Greens atRedmond's FootGolf course begins on theconventional course's 14th hole, followed by No. 6,then played in order from the sixth hole through the13th hole. The course should be open toFootGolfers after 3 p.m. on Mondays, ThursdaysandSundays.FootGolfersat The Greens atRedmondcan play for $9, and rental balls are available for $2. For more information or to reserve a time: 541-923-0694.
Bend GOlf and COuntry Cliih SeleCtS arChiteCt fOr maSter Plan —BendGolf and Country Club recently selected DanHixson, of Portland-based DanHixson Golf Design, to develop a master plan for the venerable golf course. Hixson will be charged with a plan to reshapethe18-hole golf course at the private club, which opened in1925 and is the oldest course in Central Oregon, aswell Bend G8CC'spractice facilities. Hixson, an Oregon native, designed acclaimed WineValley Golf Club in Walla Walla, Washington, among other facilities in the Pacific Northwest.
BendyOlfei' PlayS at GirlS JuniOr AmeriCa'S CuP —Madison Odiorne shot a 19-over-par 80-78-77 — 235 last week to finish in a tie for 37th place out of 72 golfers at Walla Walla Country Club in Walla Walla, Washington. Odiorne, 17, helped the four-player Oregon team into a tie for12 place at 51 over in the18-team stroke-play competition. The Girls Junior America's Cup field included teams representing 12Western states, two Canadian provincesand Mexico. — Bulletin staff reports
BS
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
Filling in the details for an absencewith little explanation By Karen Crouse
added, "If they decide not to make things public, why wouldn't you hide the reason you're not playing? Who's going to voluntarily say, 'Hey, I got busted for this?' "
New York Times News Service
AKRON, Ohio — Josh Gordon, a Cleveland Browns receiver with abilities that separate him from his
The tour's policy p r otects the
peers, spent Friday pleading his case
players from the public shame endured by the likes of Gordon and
before an arbitrator in an effort to
avoid a minimum yearlong suspension after testing positive a third
Baltimore Ravens r u nning b a ck
Ray Rice, who received a two-game suspension from the NFL for as-
time for recreational drugs.
We know t hi s b ecause the transparency of the NFL's sub-
saulting the woman who is now his
wife. Whether that is a good thing depends on whether you believe, as some addiction therapy specialists do, that being forced to drive around with license plates that indi-
stance-abusepolicy ensures that ev-
ery development in Gordon's case is made public. Less than an hour from Gordon's workplace, a high-profile world golf event proceeded without Dustin Johnson, whose absence has
cate you have DUI arrests is strong
motivation to stop drinking, or side with those who believe that humil-
cast a spotlight on the opacity of the
PGA Tour's drug policy. Three days after Johnson withdrew from the World Golf Championships event at Firestone Country
iation is not the road to behavior
modification. "I think it definitely helps protect our image," Every said, "because there might be a household name out here, and I'm not saying this is
Club, he took an i n definite leave from the tour, citing his need to
seek "professi onal help for personal challenges I have faced." He also described what he was embarking upon as a "mission of
true, but if there is and everyone
thinks 'Oh, this guy's a great guy' but he failed one test for marijuana or whatever and the public finds out,
self-improvement."
The ambiguity of Johnson's explanation, combined with a deafening silence from the PGA Tour, which
released a statement saying it had nothing to add to Johnson's remarks,
his image totally changes. Is that really that big of a deal?"
Scott Heppell/The Associated Press
Dustin Johnson plays during the final round of the British Open last month. Johnson is taking an indefinite leave from golf, citing his need to seek "professional help for personal challenges." The ambiguity of Johnson's explanation, combined with a deafening silence from the PGA Tour, created an information vacuum that commenters rushed to fill.
He added, "If it's steroids I think
we should know. That's different." The tour's anti-doping policy includes out-of-competition testing, but TigerWoods, who began the
created an information vacuum that
commenters on social media and the can professi onal sports leagues and Internet rushed to fill. On Friday, the even the men's and women's profesrampant speculation about John-
son's hard-partying lifestyle gained credence with the publication of a vaguely sourced Golf.com article that reported he had been suspended for six months after a third failed drug test and second for cocaine.
A few hours after the Golf.com article was posted on the Internet, the PGA Tour released a statement
saying that Johnson had taken a voluntary leave of absence and had not been suspended. The wording called to mind the coach who is told by his bosses that if he resigns he will not be fired. Not surprising, really, given that the tour offices are populated by lawyers trained to stand on semantics, not principles.
Unlike the major North Ameri-
its drug-testing policy in 2009, it has ensnared only one player, a journeysional tennis tours, the PGA Tour man. Most of the discipline meted has steadfastly refused to announce out for behavior unbecoming of a fines or suspensions. Tour officials professional that the public finds out do not acknowledge discipline met- about comes courtesy of a court case ed out for acts like using foul lan- (John Daly's multiple suspensions) guage on the course, getting into an or a police blotter (Matt Every's 2010 on-course altercation with another arrest on a misdemeanor charge of player or testing positive for a recre- marijuana possession). ational drug. Every was suspended for three The reasoning, tour officials say, is months even though the charges that in most cases, few people know against him were dropped. In the about the original transgression, so absence of any official pronouncewhy broadcast it to the masses? A ment, Every, now 30, could have cynic might add, why publicize any- tried to explain away his absence as thing that subverts the image care- injury-related. fully cultivated by the tour and its In 2012, when Johnson returned corporate partners of golf as a game from an 11-week absence that he populated by gentlemen? ascribed to injuries incurred in a Jet The tour makes an exception for Ski accident, he stammered when doping offenses, but since it initiated asked how exactly the injury hap-
pened and gave an answer that was
strangely short on details. Was his vagueness due to the fact he had not actually been injured and instead because he was serving a suspension for a failed drug test'?
year ranked No. I in the world, said in June that he had not been tested
in 2014. Next year, when the golfers come under the Olympic umbrella in advance of their 2016 Summer
Games debut, they will have to prodisciplinary matters casts everyone vide the World Anti-Doping Agency in a dark light. Every prolonged with a daily one-hour window of absence from c ompetition r aises availability, listing when and where eyebrows and invites speculation. drug testers can find them. While Every did not try to hide his On Friday, Roger Goodell, comsuspension, it was not by choice. missioner of the NFL, could be "When I got in trouble it was in found a half-hour drive from here, the papers, so people knew when I in Canton, defending the league's was suspended what it was for," Ev- decision to discipline Rice much ery said Friday after finishing his less harshly for hurting a woman round at Firestone Country Club. than what Gordon faces for hurt"It's not like I could hide that as eas- ing no one but possibly himself. ily as someone else who fails a test Tim Finchem, commissioner of the or two and no one's ever heard of it." PGA Tour, was nowhere to be heard Referring to the tour policy, Every from, and his silence was deafening. The tour's nontransparency on
Aspen Lakes
ers wil l d i s cover surfaces roughly on par with Central with often subtle breaks that Oregon's other high-caliber
Continued from B1
can make even short putts a challenge.
A t 7,302 yards from t h e back tees, Aspen Lakes is
Off the course
the second-longest daily fee course in CentralOregon.
Aspen Lakes is loaded with extras, including GPS in every golf cart. The practice facilities include an average-sized driving range and roomy putting green, both within a short
Half of its holes bring water
into play, and the layout twists and turns with eight doglegs. Some of those doglegsincluding nearly 90-degree turns on the 378-yard, par-4 450-yard, par-4 11th holeforce golfers to play from uncomfortable angles. The course demands much of a player. Sometimes Aspen Lakes begs for a big drive, and at other times it forces a golfer into precise shots to
icant distance. But the short-
other times, the course challenges a player to decide be-
and Brand 33 restaurant — is among the nicest such facili-
tween precision and distance.
For instance, a ridge bisects
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
A golfer putts on the 15th green at Aspen Lakes Golf Course in Sisters on Tuesday afternoon.
some 260 yards down the fairway. A layup with a fairway yard approach into a tough green, which is a challenging shot for any amateur. But as
tempting as bombing a drive may be, anything less than a perfectly squared blast will meet almost certain trouble.
Aspen Lakes also serves up four exceptional par 5s, ranging in distance from 547 to 606 yards. And its difficult set of par 3s is highlighted by the 222-yard, par-4 15th hole, which is easily among the best-designed short holes in Central Oregon. Such an array of quality holes and the interesting
shots they produce should appeal to any golfer who wants to test the limits of his or her
game. "The landing zones are generous, but you have to hit
to them," says Rob Malone, Aspen Lakes' director of golf, "and there is a tree that fol-
lows you around the whole course, it seems sometimes. "It's a fair course, but it's
not an easy course." Malone is right. On this day, Aspen Lakes would get the best of both members of o u r t w o some during c e r t ai n st r e tches.
For me, I managed the front nine well, avoiding trouble throughout. That changed on theback nine,when my game gave way to Aspen Lakes' challenges. Yet, we were undeterred by our struggles. After a three-putt bogey
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall®bendbulletin.com.
game areaism assive. The Aspen Lakes clubhouse — which houses a relatively well-stocked pro shop, a snack bar, a full bar
play around water. And at still
wood leaves a monstrous 200-
receive a discount (twosomes,
$35 with cart; foursomes, $45 with cart) after 5 p.m. every walk of the first tee. day. The course's short-game In the end, if playing a tough practice area is set across course in a gorgeous setting is Aspen Lakes Drive from the appealing, Aspen Lakes is awclubhouse, which is a signif- fully difficult to beat.
first hole and the signature
the 479-yard, par-4 14th hole
daily fee courses. The course does offer an early-bird rate each morning and twilight rates,and itreduces its rates after noon on Mondays for seniors ($39 with cart) and on Tuesdays for any local ($49 with cart). In addition, families
on the picturesque par-5 10th tough task. hole, we headed to the signaThe 554-yard 10th h ole, ture par-4 11th. though, sticks out because of "I'm not even close to play- its risk-reward nature. ing my best out here and I am To reach the green in two still enjoying it," Dustin said shots, the tee shot should be casually. played on the left side of the And what higher compli- fairway. From there, a golfer ment could be paid to a golf will have two choices. Going course? for the shallow green means negotiating around bunkers Difficulty of course set in the front and rear of the At 7,302 yards from the green and a small pond that back tees — second only to guards the front-right portion Pronghorn Club's Nicklaus of the putting surface. Course as the longest daily The safer play is to lay up fee coursein Central Oregon left of the pond. That angle — Aspen Lakes has the abil- opens up the green on apity to challenge every golfer. proach and takes most of the More than just long, the water out of play. ponderosa pine-lined layout the course forcesgolfers to be accurate, How to approach too. Water is present on nine The length of Aspen Lakes holes, and Aspen Lakes' forcesgolfers to rely on a unique red-cinder bunkers d river frequently. But o n and slick, undulating greens holes where a driver is manmake approach shots particu- datory for a reasonable aplarly difficult. proach shot — such as the However, Aspen Lakes of- 606-yard, par-5 third hole, fers five sets of tees, including the 469-yard, par-4 fifth, the a forward tee at a relatively 462-yard, par-4 ninth, and the manageable 5,594 yards. And 443-yard, par-4 16th — the novices should find comfort fairways are typically generin the fact that there are few ous to aid an aggressive shot realforced carriesoverw ater, off the tee. and that the fairways are relaThere is a learning curve tively generous. with Aspen Lakes' bunkers,
Favorite hole The par 5s are the strength of Aspen Lakes. All four are quality holes that offer a wide variety of d istances. And each par 5
has its own character, which makes picking a favorite a
which are filled with red cin-
der that is much heavier and far more coarse than conventional sand.
If a ball does find its way into a bunker, consider using a putter or playing the shot more like a chip rather than
ties in the region.
Verdict
Aspen Lakes is among the The cinder does not grab a top public facilities in the area, ball like lighter sand, and an and one that will test every imaginative golfer can use level of golfer. that to his or her advantage. With $75 green fees during Once on the greens, golf- primetime, Aspen Lakes is
H o me I n t e ri o r s
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a more standard bunker shot.
C om p l e m e n t s
•
MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014• THE BULLETIN B9
GOLF SCOREBOARD The Bulletinwelcomescontributions to its Deschutes Cup,July1 weekly localgoll results listingsandevents TeamMatchPlay calendar. Clearly legible items should be Overall —Crosswaterdef. AwbreyGlen,12-6. faxed to the sports department, 641-885lndividual matches —C-John Alkire/Carey 0831, emailed to sportsqp bendbuletfn.com, Watson tiesAG-Greg Walsh/Bob Agnew, 1.5-1.5. ormailedtoP.O.Box6020;Bend,OR97708. C-GeorgeBlankenship/Ken Cleveland def. AG-Bert Larson/Bill Macri, 3-0. C-GregSollers/Biff Breault def. AG-JohnManiscalco/Larry Hinkle, 2-1. AGLocal Lon Ulmer/RustyErtle def.C-RickBraithwaite/John Nogueira,2-1.C-JimClarke/RogerRuthdef. AG-Ron 62ndOREGON MEN'8STROKE Foerster/GaryMack, 3-0. C-EricRohde/Guy HarrelPLAYCHAMPIONSHIP son tiesAG-Gerald Heck/SteveHanus,1.5-1.5. 64-HoleStrokePlay Overall —BrokenTopdef. Tetherow,15.5-2.5. Aug. 1-3 atJuniperGolfCourse, Redmo nd Individual matches —BT-R.C.Mench/Biff Final Round Michel def.T-EricJensen/BobWilson, 3-0. BT-Milo 7,186 yards,par72 Magnano/EricHughsondef. T-TomCarlsen/Scott OpenDivision arry Mode/Jan Wick def. T-JerConnerKumpula, Albany 68-68-67 —203 Floyd,2.5-0.5.BT-G emy Cox/Casey Miler, 2.5-0.5. BT-BarrySchnabel/ ZacharyFoushee,West Linn 71-70-65 —206 K en Bl a k e d e f . T R o b Dumas/PatWorley,3-0.BT-Lee KevinMurphy,Rogue River 71-73-67 —211 Handley/MichaelTobeydef. T-Colin Morrison/Scott RayRichards,Tualatin 70-68-73 —211 Mortenson, 2-1. BT-Biff Dubois/Kip Gladderdef. Hayden Christensen, BrushPrairie, Wash. er/Cff ffCowan,2.5-0.5. 70-73-69 —212 T-DonBauhof BrentGrant,Honolulu, Hawai 73-67-72 —212 BLACK BUTTERANCH TaylorSchmidt,Boise,Idaho 71-71-71 —213 Men'sClub,July2 DylanWu,Medford 72-70-72 —214 71-77-67 —215 lqet BestBall Championship SulmanRaza, Eugene First Flight — 1, KentGodfrey/Tim Shuler,185. AdamRuben, LakeOswego 73-68-74—215 oom,188.3,MelJolly/ TaylorGarbutt,Bend 73-72-71—216 2,BobHausman/EdSeabl JustinKadin,Corvagis 73-69-74—216 CHuckLeutwyler,190. Second Flight — 1, LarryDaw son/RichEffiot, TyeGabriel, Portland 73-76-68—217 BrettJohnson,Vancou ver,Wash. 72-73-72—217 187.2, BiffBenson/BruceGibbs,188. 72-72-73—217 Women'sGollClub, July29 JoelJohnson,Portland at GlazeMeadow MaxCarter,LakeOswego 73-77-68—218 Two NetBestBalls AlistairDocherty,Vancouver, Wash 78-70-70—218 1, Carolyn Hayden/Laurie Santam aria/Peggy JaredLambert, Redmond 75-72-71—218 JustinWiles,KlamathFalls 74-71-73—218 Miller/blinddraw,129.2, NancyEffiot/Barbara Love/ Nigel Lett,Bea verton 74-71-73—218 JackieKvanvig/Ellie Rutlege,130. Men's Club,July30 AustinLandis,Gladstone 70-75-74—219 Net StrokePlay TylerNelson,Portland 73-76-71—220 1, TomNelson,68. 2 (tie), DavidHam aker, 69; RyanPickthorn,Damascus 75-73-72—220 69. JesseHeinly, Bend 79-68-73—220 Jerry Lawhun, ChrisTedesco, Corvaffis 72-74-74—220 BROKEN TOP John-MichaelPilot,Vancouver, Wash. DeschutesCup,July 29 74-76-71 —221 TeamMatchPlay TylerCarlson,Clarkston,Wash. 76-77-70—223 Overall —BendGolf andCountry Clubdef. AwKyleLuttreff,Corvaffis 75-75-73—223 brey Gl e n,11.5-6.5. Nicklaus Baines, Portland 75-75-73—223 Individualmatches—8-Charlie Rice/TimCeConnorTa ff man,LakeOswego 73-76-74—223 BrettWolvert,Wilsonviffe 73-75-75—223 cil tiesAG-RonSeals/Mark Freeland,1.5-1.5. 8-Tom C.J. Sitton,WestLinn 73-74-76—223 Offer/CraigSmithdef. AG-LonUlmer/RonHomer, Conner Barr, Beaverton 74-72-77—223 2.5-0.5. B-BradPatrick/RossKranzdef. AG-Bob on/BertLarsen,3-0.AG-Jerry Heck/Steve JackPennington,Eugene 76-73-75—224 Johans def. B-MarkGarcia/Jerry Mattioda,2-1. 8-Biff AlecFourie,Tigard 78-73-74—225 Hanus EdwardAbeffar,Vancouver,Wash. 76-74-75—225 Holm/Scott Hakaladef. AG-RonFoerster/Sheffey Grudin, 2.5-0.5.AG-G -Larry Hinkle/Rusty Ertle def. Matt Hartley,Vancouver, Wash. 76-72-77—225 JakeRyan,Portland 75-72-78—225 8-Biff Beckley/EricWellman,2-1. Overall —Tetherowdef. Crosswater,15.5-2.5. TaylorSmith,Vancouver,Wash. 75-77-74—226 lndividual matches —T-TomCarlsen/Ted DylanCramer,Bend 75-73-79—227 L aRosa def.C-Steve Spina/George Blankenship, MontanaFrame, Reedsport 76-76-76—228 T-lanMcLean/ErikJensendef.C-EricRhode/ HarrisonMoir, Portland 77-75-76—228 3-0. SeanCoffopy,LakeOswego 73-76-79—228 Guy Harrelson, 3-0. T-JeremyCox/Leif Anderson C-BobHoff oway/WayneDuncan,2.5-0.5.T-Alan HunterWescott, Portland 76-73-79—228 def. Will Street,Medford 73-80-76—229 Miffs/PatWorleyties C-KevinHertig/RonPope, 1.5JasonWood, Portland 80-71-78—229 1.5. T-ScottMortensen/Pat Mayer def. C-Ted Cronin/ TravisJohnsen,Wilsonviffe 78-73-79—230 Jerry Waissman,3-0. T-DavidBrunkal/Mark Sole NicholasHuff,Vancouver,Wash. 74-76-80—230 def. C-BrianBritton/LyleYeck,2.5-0.5. Season standings— 1,Bend Golf andCountry BrentPollock,Eugene 75-78-78—231 DavidPatterson,Vancouver,Wash. 72-76-83—231 Club, 39points. 2, AwbreyGlen,30. 3,Tetherow, TreyPflug, Portland 74-79-81—234 26.5. 4,BrokenTop,25. Crosswater, 20.5. RyanDecastilhos, Bend 77-76-81—234 EAGLECREST Keegan Brasch,Sherwood 78-73-83—234 Men's ClubChampionship Master 40 July16 atResortCourse ScottCarver,Portland 72-77-75 —224 July 23 atChallengeCourse CodyPinkston,Eugene 71-79-75 —225 July 21 atRidgeCourse CharlieRice,Bend 76-75-75 —226 StrokePlay ScottHval,Portland 73-77-76—226 Club Champion — Gross:1, Dennis Rector, TomGreger, Newberg 78-77-77—232 —219. JasonPigot,Redmond 81-77-77—235 76-67-73 A Flight — Net1,Jim Trench,78-61-71—205. Jeff Ward,Bend 73-78-85—236 TerryParesi,OregonCity 79-76-84—239 2, AndrewLesko,71-71-71—213. 3, HankMcCau—214. PaulScott,Tualatin 75-79-85—239 ley, 78-63-73 B Fight —Net:1, RonCady, 69-67-72—208. SeniorDivision(6,803 yards) 2, Hank Ca v en der, 71-65-74—210. 3, NateWilhite, RandyMahar,Portland 75-73-68—216 —212. ByronPatton,Tigard 72-75-71—218 78-61-73 C Flight — Neh1, Allan Falco, 70-57-67TomPrevost,McMinnvige 74-72-73—219 Pat O'DonnellHappy , Valley 73-71-75—219 194. 2,JerryDecoto, 72-58-70—200.3, Terry Black, 72-62-68 —202. DonOrreg,Bend 69-72-78—219 D Flight — Neh 1, Mike Farley, 69-54Carey Watson,Sunriver 75-77-68—220 191. 2, Peter Brown,73-54-72—199. 3 (tie), MarkBowler,Portland 74-74-72—220 68 — DennyTaylor, Gladstone 74-69-77—220 Brad Hallock,70-57-73—200; DanMyers, 74-5769 — 200. MichaelKloenne,West Linn 72-75-74—221 Tim O'Na el,Vancouver, Wash. LadiesClub,PartnerTournament, July22 75-73-74—222 fk 29 ChrisHudson,Portland 72-73-77—222 at RidgeCourse MikeGleason, Camas,Wash. 75-75-75—225 Chapman, BestBall RonHop,Dayton 77-74-75—226 First Flight —1, CorinneMcKean/Lael CookTomCarlsen,Bend 73-80-74—227 —131. 2, SandyAustin/Kathie Johnson, AlexFoster,Beaverton 74-77-77—228 sley, 69-62 Scott Alford,Camas, Wash. 79-76-74—229 66-66—132. 3, Dianne Rogers/DonnaHawkes, 70-63 — 133. 4, Debbie Hehn/Sherry Cady, 67TomZupan,Portland 76-76-79—231 135. BrianLittle,Portland 78-77-77—232 68 — Second Flight —1, TeddieCrippen/Beattie RobMatson,Wenatchee,Wash. 80-74-82—236 Stabeck,66-63—129. 2, Carol Haffock/Lori Black,
QUAILRUN Men's Club,July80 StrokePlay Flight1 —Gross:I, RichardBeeson,81. Netr 1, Dave Royer, 67.2, JimUlrey, 69. Flight2 —Gross:1,DennisHaniford,86. Nett 1, EarlAllen,69.2, RonMoye, 70. Flight 3 — Gross:1, MauriceWalker,97. plett 1, Richard Johnson,72. 2,JimMyers, 73. W omen's Club,July81 StrokePlay Flight A — Gross:1, LindaMorrow91. Net:1, LindaBennett,73.2,SandyHaniford 75. Flight B —Gross:1, LindaDyer112. Net:1, LahondaElmblade77. 2 (tie), Linda Baum an, 79; Brenda Roffandi, 79.
Aug. 4:Central OregonSeniors Golf Organization eventat Valey Golf CourseinBurns.Theformat is individualgrossandnet best bal, aswell asteambest ball. Cashprizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament seriesis open tomen'sclubmembers at host sites, andparticipantsmusthaveanOregonGolf Association handicap. Cost is$150for theseasonplus a$5per-eventfee. For moreinformation,contact TedCarlin at541-604-4054or vptcarlin@y ahoo.com. Aug. 4: U.S. Mid-Am ateur sectional qualifying tournam entatAspenLakesGolfCourseinSisters. Event is opento anyamateur male playerage25 or olderon Sept. 6withahandicap indexof3.4 or lower.Topfinishersqualify fortheU.S.Mid-Amateur Championship to beheldSept. 6-11at SauconValleyCountry Clubin Bethlehem,Pa.Deadline to enter isJuly9. Download a registrationformat ww w.usga.org andclick onthe "championships"link. BUNRIVERRESORT Aug. 7: Cent r al Oreg on Golf Tourindividual stroke Men's Club,July 80 play tournam ent atAspenLakesGolf Coursein Sisters. at Woodlands TheCentral OregonGolf Tour is acompetitive golfseries One-Two-Three 1, Dan Weybright/Virgff Martin/FrankSchultz/ held atgolf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Gross DennisWood,105. 2, HannesSpintzik/Phff Mc- and netcompetitions open to agamateurgolfers of ag Cage/D avid Eidsaune/Eric Saukkonen, 110. 3, abilities. Prizepool awarded weekly, andmembership Dan Frantz/Jim Zant/GaryBrooks/Mike Stamler, not required.Formoreinformation or to register:541633-7652, 541-350-7605,or www.centraloregongolftour. 114. 4, RobertHiff/PatHoward/GaryJohansen/Cal com. Hutchins,115. Aug. 9:JeffersonCounty Habit for Hum anity Golf Individual — Gross:1, DonOlson,76.2, RobcrambleatDesertPeaksGolf CourseinMadras.Second ert Hill, 78.Iqett1, DavidEidsaune,63. 2, Frank S annualscramblebeginsat8a.m.Cost is $45per person Schultz,67. includes golf cart. Long-driveandKPcontests also KPs —DavidEidsaune,No.5;FrankSchultz, and availableProc . eedsbenefit JeffersonCounty Habitat for No.7;RobertHill, No.12;DanFrantz, No.17. Humanity.Formore information or toregister: 541-460Skins —0-18handicap,gross: RobertHill 2, orvisit ww w.desertpeaksgolf.com. CharlieWeffnitz,TerryTjaden,DonOlson.0-18, net: 0159 Aug. 9: SecondAnnualDuncan MemorialGolf TourVirgil Martin 2,CharlieWeffnitz, DanFrantz, Terry nament at R ive(s EdgeGolf Coursein Bend. Two-person Tjaden,Robert Hil.19-36, gross:David Eidsaune4, scrambletournam ent begins with a 10 a.m.shotgun. FrankSchultz3, DixonFreeman. 19-36, net:David Cost is$99perpe rsonand includes, rangeballs, cart, Eidsaune3, TomGleason2, Bill Peck, Eric Sauk- barbecue l u n ch, pri zes,KPand long-drive contests, and konen,Carl Meeuwsen, Greg Smith. team tourn a m en t pi c ture. Proceedsbenefit CANCancer. Ladies GolfAssociation,July80 For moreinformation orto register: 503-209-0022or at Woodlands travisduncrigmag.m co. One-Two-Three Aug. 9-18:JuniperMan-Gal is a 36-holetourna1, NancyNevin/Nancy Coton/Barbara Smith/Jom ent for two-person c oedteams at JuniperGolf Course anneSmith,112.2, DeniceGardemeyer/Rita Brund- in Redm ond. Cost is$240perteam.For moreinformation age/SheriSchneider/CarolCassetty,119. 3, Nancy or to regi Carpenter/BarbaraWeybright/Katie Wayland/Katie com. ster,contact541-548-3121orwww.playjuniper. Bjornstad,121. 4, Holly Kimbrel/AdeleJohansen/ Aug. 18:CentralOregon Junior Golf Association SueRevere/MargaretWard,123. Tournam ent of ChampionsatEagle Crest Resorfs Ridge Coursein Redmond. TeetimesTBD. For more informaTETHEROW tion, call COJG A president Neil Pedersenat541-480DeschutesCup,June16 6288,email cojgagoffrNhotmaff.com,or visit www.cojga. TeamMatchPlay com. Overall —AwbreyGlendef, BrokenTop, 8-7. Aug. 16:24thAnnualRedmondChamberGolfTourIndiviudalmatches —AG-JamesChrisman/ namentatJuniperGolf CourseinRedmond. Four-person Troy Johnstondef.BT-Gary Mode/Jeff Ris,3-0. AG- scramble wil beginwith8a m.shotgun.Cost is$100per JoeOberto/John Murphy def.BT-Bob Newberry/ person andincludescateredbreakfast, drinks, snacksand EricHughson,2-1.AG-BiffMacri/Bob Johanson cateredbarbecue lunch.For moreinformation, call541ties BT-Bob Pearson/Biff DuBois, 1.5-1.5. AG-Dave 923-5191 oremail karenrNvisitredmondoregon.com. Quattrone/RonHomerties BT-Kip Gladder/Barry Aug. 16:Central Oregon PoliceChaplaincybenefit Schnabel,1.5-1.5. BT-Tom Strange/Steve Harrison golf tournam entat theRidgeCourseat EagleCrestResort def. AG-GaryMack/SteveHanus,3-0. in Redm ond.Scrambletournament beginswith an8a.m. Overall —BendGolf and CountryClub def. shotgun start. Costis $125pergolfer andincludesrange Crosswater,12-6. balls,cateredlunch,aswell assnacksandrefreshments. Individual matches — 8-Jeff Ward/TimBoo- For moreinformation orto register: www.copchaplain. her def. C-CharleyGriswold/JamesClarke, 3-0. com. 8-Jim Keffer/PatMcClaindef. C-KevinHertig/Dave Aug. 18-16: TheGhost TreeInvitationalatthe NickHendricks,2.5-0.5. B-EricKnapp/MarkGarcia def. lausCourseat PronghornClubnear Bendis afour-perC-WayneDuncan/Denny Kampfer,2.5-0.5.B-Ron son scrambletournament that is opento thepublic. Estes/BrettEvertdef. C-Biff Breault/Scott McAvoy, Double-shotguntourna mentbeginsat745a m,and1:30 3-0. C-TedCronin/Jerry Waissmandef. 8-Geoff p.m.Costis $2,500fora corporateteam,whichincludes Higffn/AndyWest, 2.5-0.5. C-Brian Britton/Lyle foursome and10tickets to DinnerontheRangeSaturYeckdef. 8-BiffBeckley/Scott Hakala,2.5.0.5. day night;$1,100for foursome,including fourticketsto DinnerontheRange. Individual golferandsponsorship WIDGICREEK packages alsoavailable. Proceedsbenefit theAssistance Men's Club,July80 Leagu eofBendandRonaldMcDonaldHouseCharities. Stablelord For more informationorto signup,visit www.ghosttreeinvitational.com . 1, BobStorjohann/RonStassens/KenSchofield/ Aug. 16-17: Cowboy-Cowbegecouplestournament Chas Nelson,171. 2, Woody Kinsey/Phil Faraci/ eolfClub. Couplescompetitionisplayedina Russell Struve/RayHorgen, 152.3, Jeff Adler/Tom at PrinevigG scotch-balformat l .Tournament includesaFridaypractice Haigh /Tom Gff mer/RonNelson,149. KPs —John Sweet, No.15; FranOstlund, No. roundandevening nine-holefunandfeast. Toregisteror formore i n form ation,callPrineyigeGCat541-447-5891. 15. Aug. 18:Birdiesfor BabiesNine-Hole Golf Tou rW omen's Club,July30 namentatSunriver Resort's CalderaSprings. Five-club Chapman begins at4p.m.Cost is $50per personand 1st Flight —1r JanSandburg/MeffndaBailey, limit game dinner.Agproceedsfromtheevent godirectly to 63.2,AnnKieff er/Di anaBaker,67.5.3,Eff yCashel/ includes Mountai n Star Family Relief Nurserytoaidlocal children Chris Fitzgibbons, 69. 2nd Flight —1 (tie), JaniceVanderwaff/Niki at riskofabuse.Formoreinformation ortoregister: 541w.mountainHalpern, 69.5;Kathi Loring/SueSherrer, 69.5. 3, 322-6820,b4bgolfegmail.comorvisit ww starfamily.org. BethWhitney/GloriaHorvath,72. Aug. 18:Oregon State University-CascadesWomKPs —A Flight: DianaBaker. BFlight: Mindy en's GolfScram ble andClinic at BrokenTop Club in Cicineffi. CFlight: SueSherrer. Bend. Women-onlytournamentbeginswith11a.m,clinic led by thecoachesof OregonState'swomen'sgolf team. Scrambletournament begins with 12:30p.m. shotgun start. Costis $125perpersonand includesgolf, clinic, box lunch,post-tournament reception andprizes. Event will supportexpansionandacademicprogramdevelopmentat OSU-Cascades. Formoreinformationorto regist er,visitwww.osucascades.edu/womens-goff -scramble-2014, orcontactShawn Taylor at shawn.taylore 66-65 — 131. 3, Carole Flinn/Sandra Martin, 66osucascadse .eduor 541-322-3113. 66— 132.4,Joan Mathews/DianeConcannon,65Aug. 18:Central OregonSeniors Golf Organization 67 —132. eventatTheGreensat Redmond. Theformat is individual grossandnet best bal, aswell asteambest bal. Cash prizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament seriesis open to men'sclubmembers at hostsites, andparticipants musthaveanOregonGolfAssociation handicap.Cost is $150fortheseason plus a $5per-event fee.Formore information,contactTed Carlin at541-604-4054or vptcarff n@yahoo.com. Aug. 21: Couplegol s f outingat Aspen LakesGolf Coursein Sisters.Nine-holescramblebegins at 4p.m. Cost is $90percoupleandincludesa three-course dinner atAspenLakes' Brand33 restaurant. Formore informatioor n to register: 541-549-4653or visit www. aspenlake s.com. Aug.28:OregonGolfAssociationTourindividualseries tournam ent atJuniperGolf CourseinRedmond. Tee times beginat1:30 p.m.OGAToureventsareopentoany golferwithaUSGAhandicapandincludeopenandsenior divisions.Costfor thiseventis $79for OG Amembers and $99 for nonmembers. Deadline to enter is Aug.16. Formoreinformationorto register,visit www.oga.orgor call theOG Aat503-981-4653. Aug. 24:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual seriestournament atAspenLakesGolf CourseinSisters. Teetimesbeginat 8:30a.m. OGATour eventsareopento any golferwithaUSGAhandicapandincludeopenand seniordivisions.Costfor thisevent is$79forOGAmembersand$99for nonmembers. Deadlineto enter is Aug. 17. Formoreinformationor toregister, visit www.oga.org or calltheOGAat 503-981-4653. Aug. 25:Fifth Annual RedDogClassicGolf TournamentatAwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bend.Thefour-person scramble begins witha1:30 p.m.shotgunandbenefits the BrightsidAenimalCenter.Cost is $125per golfer and includes golf withcart,rangebags, gourmetdinner,auction, givea waysandraffle that includestwotickets tothe 2015Masters.Formoreinformation orto register:call 206-713-6686,email volunteerebrightsideanimals.org or visitww w.brightsideanimals.org.
Professional WorldGolfChampionships BridgestoneInvitational Sunday at FirestoneCountry Club, South Course,Akron,Ohio Purse: $9million Yardage:7,409; Par79 Final RoryMcgroy(550),$1,530,00069-64-66-66—265 SergioGarcia(315),$900,000 68-61-67-71—267 MarcLeishman(200), $522,00064-69-68-67—268 Keegan Bradley(114), $308,000 68-67-67-69—271 PatrickReed(114), $308,000 67-68-71-65—271 JustinRose(114), $308,000 65-67-70-69—271 CharlSchwa rtzel (114), $308,00065-69-73-64—271 RickieFowler(81),$170,000 67-67-72-67—273 GraemeMcDoweg(Bt), $170,00071-70-66-66—273 RyanMoore(Bt), $170,000 65-73-68-67—273 AdamScott(81), $170,000 69-68-65-71—273 Matt Kuchar(65),$115,000 71-66-72-65—274 HidekiMatsuyama(65), $115,00070-71-65-68—274 BrandtSnedeker(65), $115,000 68-68-68-70—274 Thomas Bjorn,$97,500 6 9 -68-69-69—275 Jim Furyk(56), $97,500 6 9-68-69-69—275 HunterMahan(56), $97,500 71-65-71-68—275 Phil Mickelson(56), $97,500 71-73-69-62—275 KevinStadler(51), $89,000 71-70-66-69—276 HenrikStenson(51),$89,000 71-66-68-71—276 LeeWestwood(51), $89,000 72-71-70-63—276 GaryWoodland(51), $89,000 70-68-68-70—276 BrandenGrace, $82,000 69-71-67-70 —277 ZachJohnson(47), $82,000 70-70-68-69—277 Kevin Na(47),$82,000 7 1 -73-66-67 —277 ErnieEls(43), $75,200 7 1 -69-70-68 —278 J.B. Holrnes(43),$75,200 69-69-67-73—278 JohnSenden(43), $75,200 74-66-67-71—278 JimmyWalker(43),$75,200 69-7 0-70-69— 278 FabrizioZanotti,$75,200 70-71-68-69—278 AngelCabrera(38), $69,500 73-68-70-68—279 Victor Dubuisson,$69,500 72-70-69-68—279 HarrisEnglish(38), $69,500 69-69-68-73—279 Matt Jones(38), $69,500 70-70-69-70—279 Franc escoMolinari,$69,500 67-70-73-69— 279 WebbSimpson(38), $69,500 72-69-70-68—279 BrendondeJonge(33), $64,50072-69-70-69—280 JamieDonaldson, $64,500 68-70-71-71—280 Seung-YulNoh(33I, $64,500 69-69-70-72 —280 BubbaWatson(33), $64,500 69-70-73-68—280 Biff Haas(29),$61,000 7 1 -69-69-72—281 RussellHenley(29),$61,000 72-70-71-68—281 Chris Kirk(29), $61,000 69-73-72-67—281 StevenBowditch (27), $59,000 69-71-73-69—282 Miguel A.Jimenez,$57,500 69-6 9-72-73— 283 Brendon Todd(26), $57,500 74-70-69-70—283 Matt Every(24), $55,500 74-68-73-69—284 Stephe nGaff acher,$55,500 74-71- 69-70— 284 JordanSpieth(22), $54,000 71-70-73-71—285 Tim Clark(21), $52,500 7 2 -73-70-71—286 LukeDonald(21), $52,500 73-70-72-71—286 DavidHow ell, $49,625 6 9 -71-71-76 —287 ThongchaiJaidee,$49,625 70-74-71-72—287 lan Poulter(18), $49,625 73-73-70-71—287 Scott Staffings(18), $49,625 72-75-68-72—287 MartinKaymer(15), $47,750 77-68-72-71—288 Joost Luiten,$47,750 73 - 73-71-71 288— JonasBlixt (12),$46,500 75-72-69-73—289 AlexanderLevy,$46,500 72-71-77-69 —289 RichardSterne,$46,500 7 5-70-73-71—289 Louis Oosthuizen(10),$45,500 75-73-67-75— 290
ScottVerplank(0), $4,375 Billy Andrade (0), $3,500 Jim Rutledge (0), $3,500 Willie Wood (0), $3,500
Tommy Armourffl (0), $2,975 TomKite(0), $2,975 LarryMize(0), $2,975 MarkBrooks(0), $2,450 Jeff Hart(0), $2,450 JohnInman(0), $2,450 JoseCoceres 0), $1,792 RickFehr(0), 4 1,792 Wayne Levi (0j, $1,792 LarryNelson(0), $1,792 CoreyPavin (0), $1,792
AndyBean(05, $1,246 ChipBeck(O I $1,246 JohnHarris(0), $1,246 Gil Morgan(0),$1,246 MikeRe>d(OI,$1,246 DonBerry(0, $980 TomPurtzer (0), $980
DanForsmanIO),$840 MarkWiebe(O I, $840 BradBryant(0), $735
CraigStadlerIO),$735
67-71-74—212 72-69-72—213 72-73-68—213 70-73-70—213 71-69-74—214 70-72-72—214 73-71-70—214 73-69-73—215 71-74-70—215 74-73-68—215 69-70-77—216 73-69-74—216 71-72-73—216 71-72-73—216 76-70-70—216 72-75-70—217 74-70-73—217 71-69-77—217 73-73-71—217 77-70-70—217 73-71-75—219 75-75-69—219 74-75-73—222 74-76-72—222 70-85-68—223 81-71-71—223
BarracudaChampionship SundayatMontreux Golf andCountryClub, Reno,Nev. Purse: $3 million Yardage:7,472; Par72 Final Note:Underthemodified Stablefordform at, players receive 8points for doubleeagle, 5 for ea gle, 2 for birdie, 0for par,minus-1for bogeyandminus-3 for doublebogeyorworse. 49 Geoff Ogilvy(300),$540,000 16 7 12 14 — 44 Justin Hicks (165),$324,000 9 6 11 18 — Jonathan Byrd(9I), $174,000 7 6 13 11 — 37 JohnHuh(93), $174,000 12 7 7 11 — 37 RodPampling (65), $120,000 11 5 9 11 — 36 Jason Affred, $104,250 7 11 14 3—35 MartinLaird(58),$104,250 13 -4 14 12 — 35 34 RickyBarnes(43), $84,000 5 6 12 11 — 34 KyleStanley(43),$84,000 5 11 6 12 — NickWatney(43), $84,000 18 8 6 2—34 Tim Wilkinson (43), $84,000 16 5 1 12 — 34 Eric Axle(34), v $66,000 11 4 3 15 — 33 Hudson Swafford(34), $66,000 9 9 6 9—33 -1 7 Chad Campbell (31),$54,000 13 13 — 32 BryceMolder(31), $54,000 10 10 6 6—32 Robert Streb(31), $54,000 10 4 9 9—32 31 M.A.Carbaffo(29), $43,500 10 1 7 13 — 31 George Coetzee,$43,500 11 -1 11 10 — Joe Durant (29), $43,500 9 1 14 7—31 Tommy Gainey(29), $43,500 11 10 3 7—31 Steve Flesch(27), $32,400 1 9 11 9—30 Morgan Hoff mann(27),$32,4006 3 13 8—30 DavidLingmerth(27), $32,400 9 7 12 2—30 Wes Roach(27), $32,400 12 10 0 8—30 29 RetiefGoosenI25I, $25,200 5 8 6 10 — Brendan Steele(25), $25,200 9 11 10 -1 —29 Woody Austin (23), $20,400 11 8 3 6—28 Derek Ernst(23), $20,400 11 0 5 12 — 28 LeeJanzen(23), $20,400 8 7 13 0—28 DougLaBelle Ii (23),$20,400 11 1 13 3—28 Billy Mayfai(23, r $20,400 3 9 11 5—28 Andres Romero (23), $20,400 7 7 4 10 — 28 Johnson Wagner (23), $20,400 10 8 4 6—28 -1 6 10 — 27 Keyin Cha ppeff (2 0), $15, 4 80 12 GonzaloFdez-Castano(9),$45,000 79-71-67-74 —291 -2 10 15 4—27 PabloLarrazabal,$44,250 71-74-77-70—292 BriceGarnett (20), $15,480 4 12 6 — 27 Henry (20 $15,480 5 SteveStricker(8), $44,250 74-73-72-73—292 J.J. Jones(2$, ), $15,480 5 11 -2 13 — 27 BrianHarman(6), $43,750 72-70-75-76—293 Kent Lovemark(20), $15,480 6 5 10 6—27 JasonDufner(5), $43,375 70-74-73-77—294 Jamie -2 — 26 JohnMaffinger,$12,900 4 5 19 Mikko gonen,$43,375 7 5 - 74-73-72 —294 PatrickRod gers, $12,900 11 0 11 4—26 DaisukeMaruyama,$43,000 73-73-73-78—297 D.J. Trahan (18), $12,900 2 6 9 9—26 DavidLynn(2I $42,625 7 6-72-75-75 —298 GregChalmers(17), $11,100 3 13 10 -1 —25 Yoshitaka Takeya,$42,625 74-75-74-75—298 Overton(175, $11,100 7 13 0 5—25 KevinStreelman(1), $42,250 78-71-78-73—300 Jeff Kevm Tway(17), $11,100 8 25 1 5 11 — Tano Goya,$42,000 76-77-71-78—302 OliverGoss,$9,600 6 3 9 5—23 MarkWilson(15),$9,600 8 9 2 4—23 Champions Tour PadraiHa g rrington (13), $7,810 10 7 2 3—22 3M Champion ship KevinLucas,$7,810 11 2 3 6—22 SundayatTPCTwin Cities, Blaine, Minn. TroyMatteson(13),$7,810 5 3 11 3—22 Purse:$1.75million Thorbjorn Olesen(13), $7,810 10 5 -2 9—22 Yardage:7,114; Part72 MichaelPutnam(13), $7,810 8 3 16 -5 —22 CharlesSchwabCuppointsinparentheses MarcTurnesa(135, $7,810 6 5 6 5—22 KennyPerry(2631,$262,500 65-63-65 —193 Arjun Atwal(1I), $6,980 7 10 6 -2 —21 Bernhard Langer 154), $154000 64-67-63—194 Danny Lee(1t), $6,980 1 1 4 0 6—21 Jeff Maggert(104, $104,417 64-67-65 —196 Tim Petrovi(t1), c $6,980 10 2 4 5—21 I GeneSauersIfgdj, $104,417 66-65-65 —196 NicholasThompson(10),$6,840 10 5 -1 6—20 MarcoDawson(104), $104,417 63-66-67—196 TrevorImmelman(95, $6,750 7 1 6 4—18 MikeGoodes(70), $70,000 6 6-68-64 —198 Andrew Loupe(9), $6,750 8 0 6 4—18 JohnCook(60), $59,500 6 9 -63-68 200 — Jim Herman (8), $6,630 10 2 5 tl — 17 Vijay Singh(60),$59,500 6 4 -68-68 200— Bronson La'Cassie (Bj,$6,630 6 3 2 6—17 SteveElkington(41), $40,542 68-67-67 —202 Cameron Beckman(7), $6,420 7 2 4 3—16 PaulGoydos(41), $40,542 6 7-68-67 —202 Charlie Beljan(7),$6,420 6 5 5 0—16 PeterSenior(41), $40,542 6 8 -68-66 —202 BenCurtis(7), $6,420 7 5 6 -2 —16 (7), $6,420 4 5 4 3—16 WesShort, Jr. (41),$40,542 70-70-62 —202 Ryuji Imada John Me r ri c k 16 GaryHaffberg(41), $40,542 66-65-71 —202 I7), $6,420 3 58 83 00— —15 HaleIrwin(41I $40,542 68-66-68 —202 Tim Herron (4), $6,180 4 69-66-68 —203 D.H.Lee(4),$6,180 11 5 -1 0—15 Bart Bryant (0), $28,000 MarkCalcavecchia (0),$28,000 72-64-67—203 JohnRollins(4), $6,180 12 2 1 0—15 -1 9 7 -1 —14 DavidFrost(0), $28,000 69-65-69 —203 LenMattiace(1), $6,000 RoccoMediate(0), $28,000 64-71-68 —203 RorySabbatini (1),$6,000 -3 13 2 2—14 KevinSutherland(0), $28,000 69-67-67—203 Scott Dunlap(0),$21,000 6 9 -65-70 204— TomPerniceJr. (0), $21,000 69-67-68 —204 RodSpittle(0),$21,000 68-67-69 —204 DuffyWaldorf(O I, $21,000 6 8-70-66 2 — 04 FredFunk(0), $16,730 70-70-65 —205 DougGarwood(0), $16,730 66-67-72 —205 Biff Glasson(0), $16,730 70 - 66-69 205— BlaineMcCaffister (0), $16,730 69-68-68—205 M ark O'Meara(0), $16,730 6 9
W EAT H E R
B9.0 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, AUGUST 4, 2014
Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 I
o
i
'
I
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH
I f '
A full day of sunshine
I
ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record 99' in 2009 28'in 1903
PRECIPITATION
New
Partly sunny
UV INDEX TODAY 2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ S~ N 5
The highertheAccuWnniberxmmuy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlreme.
POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ees Wee d s Moderate ~ Lo~w ~Lo~w
90/56
Bandon
/58
91/61
Po 0 Gra 67/ a et Gold ach
Ham ton
• Fort Rock Cresce t • 87/53
•
84/51
Roseburg
66/54
0'
• La pfne
Grove Oakridge
OREGON EXTREMES Co 66 4 YESTERDAY High: 102' at The Dalles Low: 45' at Lakeview
86 / 2
•
• Silver Lake 84/50 86/52 Chiloquin Medfo d ' 85/56 •
Beaver Marsh
65/
P l e asant with plenty of sun Mostly sunnypland easant
82/59
86/56
• Burns Jun tion • 85/60 Rome 87/61 McDermi
• Lakeview 85/54
82/59
Yesterday Today Tuesday Yesterday Today Tuesday Citv Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Astcrin 74/59/0.00 69/56/s 68/56/pc L n Grande 93 / 57/0.00 94/58/s 92/54/pc Portland 90/6 1/0.00 90/60/s 86/62/s Baker City 91/51/Tr 90/54/pc89/50/pc Ln Pine 84/46/0.00 86/52/n 84/49/pc Prineviiie 89/ 5 5/0.00 93/58/s 84/51/pc Brcokings 63/53/0.00 67/55/pc 66/54/pc M edford 92/6 6/0.00 98/67/pc 96/64/pc Redmond 88/ 54/0.13 94/54/s 93/49/pc eums 95/53/0.00 87/55/pc 90/51/I Ne w port 64/5 5 /0.00 63/53/n 63/54/pc Rnneburg 8 8/60/0.00 91/61/n 90/59/pc Eugene 90/52/0.00 91/56/s 87/55/pc NorthBend 66/55/0.00 65/54/s 65/55/pc Salem 93/56/0.00 94/56/s 90/58/s Klamnth Falls 89/51/0.00 87/56/pc 83/53/t O n t ario 98/66/Tr 91/66/pc 93/63/I Sisters 87/53/0.00 93/54/s 88/49/pc Lnkeview 91/45/0.00 85/54/pc 82/50/I Pe n dleton 96/ 6 2/0.00 99/66/s 97/62/pc The Dalles 1 0 2 /69/0.00 100/67/s 92/62/s Wenther(W):s-sunny, pc-pnrtly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-shcwers, t-thunderstorms, r-rnin, sf-sncw flurries, sn-sncw i-ice, Tr-trsce,Yesterdaydata ascf 5 p.m.yesterday
city
Yesterday Today TUesday H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W
NATIONAL WEATHER
Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577
~ tos ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES
~ os
~ t os
~ 2 0 8 ~ 3 0 s ~ 40 s ~ 50s ~egs ~ 708 ~ egs ~ ggs ~tOOs ~ttgs ' ~ gnign i ZS/62
Snn 87/59
o
i Queb ' 82/5
• i nipng, 5
C rane Prairie 367 3 3 66% YESTERDAY(for the h r s ny Bismarck Port 42'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 83211 /49 SO/69 7 Billings 'n Crescent Lake 7 1 4 68 82% National high: 103 Tnrnn M n 90/63 ani 8 Ochoco Reservoir 22244 50% at Phoenix, AZ 8 /SO uk nio Prinevige 114015 77% National low: 36 8 Rapid c River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. at Bodie State Park,CA nl nw Yn 87/Sf < ~lxhin 82/71 8 il bltllhg ' Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 402 Precipitation: 3.18" Omnh 85/SS > gn Cni mbu Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1540 at Marathon, FL 84/64 n n~ 0 $ nynnnn 73/62 Deschutes R.below Bend 141 W bin O/70 .~Q'v nn Dnnv I Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1950 9 87/62 86/75 Knnnn Clty Lc vuln Little Deschutes near LaPine 91 9168 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 76 • nnhvn Lnn An lnn 916 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 ~4 • L' Phnnn x , Anchorng Albuque ue klnhnmn C ' 8 7 • Ae Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 217 • fcfua i, ss/5 n 0 83/64 9 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 64 Sir inghn 8 8 • Dnlln Juneau El Pnn dd Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 12 eznz High High o d~erate ~ e ry~high ~ High
Source: USDA Forest Service
Hi/Ln/Prsc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lu/W Abilene 92/64/0.00 91/71/s 93/74/s Akron 79/63/0.49 83/62/s 81/64/pc Albany 81/63/0.00 83/64/I 84/66/pc Albuquerque 81/63/0.00 83/64/I 85/63/pc Anchorage 68/55/0.07 66/56/sh 64/56/r Atlanta 88/68/0.00 88/68/c 89/69/I Atlantic City 73/68/0.29 82/70/t 83/71/pc Austin 94/67/0.00 92/69/s 93/70/s Baltimore 79/69/0.25 85/67/pc 87/68/pc Billings 90/60/0.08 90/63/c 84/62/pc Birmingham 92n1/0.14 91/68/c 92/69/s Bismarck 82/59/0.46 80/59/I 77/59/pc Boise eeno/o'.oo91/66/c 89/66/I Boston 70/62/Tr 80/66/I 81/65/pc Bridgeport, CT 73/64/Tr 82/68/t 81/69/pc Buffalo 73/65/0.04 80/62/pc 79/63/I Burlington, VT 83/62/0.00 83/61/I 83/63/I Caribou, ME 82/61/0.00 79/57/I 80/60/I Charleston, SC 84n4/0.87 86/74/t ssn4/I Charlotte 86/67/0.00 84/65/pc 86/66/I Chattanooga 88/68/0.00 89/65/I 90/68/s Cheyenne 82/53/0.00 81/57/c 79/56/pc Chicago 87/62/0.00 85/64/I 78/58/pc Cincinnati 86/59/0.00 85/62/s 85/65/pc Cleveland 78/64/0.00 81/62/pc 80/62/t ColoradoSprings 80/52/0.00 82/59/pc 82/57/pc Columbia, Mo 90/64/0.00 90/65/I 88/67/pc Columbia, SC 86no/0.00 89/72/c 92/72/pc Columbus,GA 86/72/0.04 seno/I eono/I Columbus,OH 84/64/0.00 86/65/s 85/66/pc Concord, NH 76/54/Tr 81/59/I 84/59/pc Corpus Christi 96n2/0.00 93/72/pc e4n4/pc Dallas 93/73/0.00 95nz/s 97n5/s Dayton 84/60/0.00 84/63/s 84/64/pc Denver 88/56/0.00 87/62/pc 85/60/pc Des Moines 88/68/0.00 85/66/I 83/66/pc Detroit 84/60/0.00 83/64/I 79/59/I Duluth 77/60/Tr 71/49/pc 75/55/pc El Paso 85/67/0.03 86/68/pc 89/68/pc Fairbanks 72/57/Tr 73/57/sh 65/52/sh Fargo 81/64/0.44 80/55/pc 81/56/pc Flagstaff 70/55/0.77 70/49/I 75/47/pc Grand Rapids 88/58/0.00 84/62/t 79/59/pc Greenesy 85/61/0.01 75/55/I 75/52/pc Greensboro 84/64/0.00 83/65/pc 86/66/pc Harrisburg 74/67/0.38 82/63/pc 85/66/pc Harffcrd, CT 76/60/0.01 86/65/I 86/66/pc Helena 91/58/0.00 87/59/pc 88/58/I Honolulu 90/78/0.10 eon7/pc 9Onz/s Houston 89n2/0.00 88/72/t 90/73/I Huntsville 89/67/0.00 91/65/pc 92/68/s Indianapolis 84/61/0.00 84/63/s 83/62/I Jackson, MS 92/73/Tr 90/69/I 93/71/t Jacksonville 89n3/0.20 89/72/t eonz/I
75/61/0.00 70/57/I 99n3/0.00 94ns/s Auckland 59/52/0.09 58/47/sh Baghdad 113/86/0.00 108/76/s Bangkok 91/81/0.10 89/78/t seijing 95n9/1.30 83/70/t Beirut 86n9/0.00 85/77/pc Berlin 85/68/0.65 74/61/I Bogota 64/48/0.07 66/48/c Budapest 86/64/0.00 83/65/I BuenosAires 68/59/0.21 62/41/s Cnbc Snn Lucns 95/78/0.00 96/78/s Cairo 91/76/0.00 92/76/s Calgary 79/54/0.01 73/52/t Cnncun 90n3/0.00 90/76/pc Dublin 64/54/0.16 67/54/pc 8 Edinburgh 66/55/0.18 65/45/pc + oddd dd 62/ 5 3 d d I d Geneva 73/61/0.14 76/55/I o,d o d . o dv ndo d,. 'Hnrnre 72/44/0.00 73/44/s , .~,c . u 8/72 Hong Kong 92/84/0.11 92/82/pc +78/6 BERTHA H onolulu o~ v 'e %0. ' ~.f Istanbul 84/69/0.05 88/77/s nnter Miami Jerusalem 80/65/0.00 79/65/s 9 2 ssnp e'e Johannesburg 66/41/0.00 65/45/s vu Limn 65/59/0.00 67/57/pc Lisbon 77/66/0.00 77/63/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day London 73/55/0.00 74/56/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 86/64/0.00 91/64/s Manila 84/77/0.20 82/77/r '
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
Earnhardt sweeps Pocono The Associated Press LONG POND, Pa. — Dale Earnhardt Jr. trad-
ed hats, waited for his cue, and flashed three fingers for the cameras.
73/58/I
94ns/s 58/50/pc 108/78/s
87ne/I
92/72/pc
Sznsls
74/57/pc 65/48/c 78/63/I 62/50/pc
94m/pc
esn7/s
78/54/pc
sens/I
68/54/sh 68/53/c 74/52/I 76/44/s 92/81/r
9On7/s
81/64/s 69/47/s 68/58/s 80/64/s 73/61/sh 91/65/pc
84mlr
Yesterday Today Tuesday Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRn/W 77/51/0.00 62/53/r 64/51/sh
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln
86/65/0.75 83/58/Tr 88/74/0.02 84/56/0.00 93/66/0.00
90/68/I 83/61/I
efn«pc 76/57/pc
86n5/I een4/n 86/61/s 88/65/pc 90/66/pc 94/68/pc
seno/o.oo 89/67/s
Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
92/72/s
85nz/0.04 83/64/pc 82/60/pc
87/61/0.00 89/66/s eono/pc 85/60/0.00 82/58/I 77/56/pc 92/73/0.00 90no/s 92/74/s 84ne/o.oo 88n7/I 88/77/t 85/62/Tr 81/59/I 71/58/pc 88/68/0.00 81/60/I 80/60/pc 91/66/0.00 90/64/s 92/69/s
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
95n7/rr
89n5/I
76/66/0.06 78/66/0.09 78/71/0.26 90/66/0.00 87/64/1.42 96/79/2.25
82/71/t 85//0/t
80no/I
eon5/I
84/71/pc 85/69/pc
81/70/t 90/67/s 92/71/s 88/69/I 88/68/pc 92//6/t 94n7/I 94n5/o'.85 98n6/pc 102/74/s 86/64/Tr 86/66/I 84/62/pc 77/67/0.26 86/71/pc 86/71/pc 103/78/Tr 100/84/pc 104/83/pc Pittsburgh 75/64/0.12 82/61/s 83/64/pc Portland, ME 72/56/Tr 77/60/I 78/61/pc Providence 73/62/Tr 83/67/I 81/66/pc Raleigh 80/67/0.00 82/67/pc 86/67/pc Rapid City 86/57/Tr 87/61/c 76/59/c Reno 91/69/0.00 82/60/pc 81/62/t Richmond 83/71/0.47 86/69/pc 87/69/I Rochester, NY 74/65/Tr 81/61/pc 79/61/I Sacramento 83/58/0.00 86/65/s 87/67/s St. Louis 89/65/0.00 eonon 89/71/pc Snit Lake City 93/67/0.00 82/65/I 82/66/pc San Antonio ezno/o'.oo 92/74/s 93/76/s Snn Diego 76/72/0.02 80/68/pc 79/67/pc Snn Francisco 70/60/0.00 73/62/pc 74/62/pc Snn Jose 74/58/0.00 78/61/s 81/62/s Santa Fc 78/54/0.00 77/57/I 80/56/pc Savannah ssn5/o.fe 89n3/I 91/73/t Seattle 88/58/0.00 87/59/s 83/61/s Sioux Falls 86/59/0.02 83/62/I 73/61/pc Spokane 93/62/0.00 96/66/s 95/65/s Springfield, Mo 88/67/0.14 89/68/I 91/68/pc Tampa 91/74/0.99 89n7/I 89/77/t Tucson 96/70/0.11 97/74/pc een5/pc Tulsa 90/66/0.00 91/69/s 92/71/s Washington, DC 85/73/Tr 88n1/pc 89/72/pc Wichita 92/65/0.00 92/68/pc 93/71/pc Yakimn 97/62/0.00 100/63/s 99/61/s Yuma 93/80/0.15 98//9/pc 102/76/s
OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Puorin Philadelphia Phoenix
o
Amsterdam Athens
6
FIRE INDEX
Today Tuesday
cify
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
• Paisley
87/56
85' 50'
o
Riley 87/55 87/56
Klamath
91/6
67/5
' ' ~~
84' 50'
54 49'
Yesterday
Nysse 91/ 6 7
unture • Burns J92/61
Chr i stmas alley
86/53
• Ashl nd • FaNS
Bro Ings
FRIDAY
TRAVEL WEATHER
•
2:12 p.m. 1 2 :20 a.m. 10:49 p.m. 1 1 :41 a.m.
Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters ~M Prinevige ~v La Pine/Gilchrist
THURSDAY
Mostly sunnyandnice
•
S ep 2 THE PLANETS T he Planets Ris e Set Mercury 5:31 a.m. 8: 2 1 p.m. Venus 4:07 a.m. 7: 1 8 p.m. Mars 1:17 p.m. 1 1 :31 p.m. Jupiter 5:15 a.m. 8 : 0 3 p.m.
5 NI~ B
'r~p
•
First
Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 25
10 a.m. Noon
50'
~
Partly cloudy
•
i~. (o OI
Saturn Uranus
5 5'
•
Today Tue. Sunrise 5:56 a.m. 5: 5 7 a.m. Sunset 8:26 p.m. 8: 2 4 p.m. Moonrise 2 :41 p.m. 3:44 p.m. Moonset 1 2:06 a.m. 12:48a.m. Last
-"'"-
•
SUN ANDMOON
Full
55
•
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.12" 0.63"in 1934 Record o o Month to date (normal) 0.1 2 (0.05 ) Year to date (normal ) 5.14o(6.33o) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 3"
MOONPHASES
LBW I -"'"
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST:Partly sunny ria I and remainingwarm umatiga Seasid Hood 100/66 today with a few 66/56 RiVer Rufus • ermiston afternoon andevening Cannon /66 Ifngton t e t /65 Meac am Loshne Portland mountai tn hunder64/56 /54 „ « /6 7 94/6O En«rp se storms developing. dl9t Ofl • 5 he Oag 9 • 92 /58 Tdlamo • • 99/ CENTRAL:Partly andy • 100/67 73/53 Mc innviu JosePh /59 Goven nt • u pi • He p pner Grande • sunny andwarmtoday Condon 5/62 Cam u 94 94 58 with spotty afternoon Lincoln union 83/ andeveningmountain 67/55 Sale pray Granite thunderstorms across 94/5 • 7/64 a 'Baker C Newpo 86/54 southern regions. 63/53 • 94/60 0/54 • Mitch 9 90/54 0am 9 Se r an R 9 d n WEST: Plenty of sun9 1 /5 7 0 rV 8 I9 uU Yach 91/54 • John shine today; remaining64/54 92/54 • Prineville Day 9/53 tario warm and abit breezy 93/58 • P a lina 9 0/ 5 9 9 66 from time to time. Floren e • Eugene 'Se d S r others 8955 Valen 66/54 Su iVern 88/55 93/66
TEMPERATURE 84 49'
WED NESDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 84 57'
TUESDAY
4
I
Mecca Mexico City
111/88/0.00 109/85/s 76/56/0.05 74/56/I Montreal 81/63/0.00 82/64/pc Moscow 84/65/0.00 81/61/pc Nairobi 68/57/0.00 71/54/c Nassau 86/81/0.17 92/80/sh New Delhi 95/81/0.00 93n9/I Osaka 86/71/0.68 83/77/I Oslo 68/57/0.57 70/57/I Ottawa 82/59/0.00 83/59/I Paris 75/57/0.00 74/56/pc Ric de Janeiro 79/65/0.00 85/69/s Rome 81/72/0.11 83/66/s Santiago 61/47/0.00 66/40/pc Snn Paulo 82/61/0.00 83/55/n Snppcrc 87/69/0.30 84/76/r Seoul 88n7/0.58 88/74/r Shanghai 94/80/0.01 95/81/sh Singapore 87/79/0.02 87n8/I Stockholm 82/64/0.29 86/68/pc Sydney 59/40/0.00 65/43/s Taipei 98/82/0.02 93/78/I Tei Aviv ssn4/o.oo 87n6/pc Tokyo 96/81/0.00 93/80/pc Toronto 81/63/0.00 82/61/I Vancouver 75/61/0.00 78/58/s Vienna 82/66/0.06 79/64/I Warsaw 88/66/0.00 92/66/pc
109/86/s 72/53/t 77/62/t 81/62/pc 76/56/c 92/79/pc
eone/I
87/77/I 69/55/I 77/56/I 78/62/pc 74/63/c 84/66/s 64/38/s 60/54/c 83/70/r
88/73/pc 94/81/c 87/78/t
83/65/s 67/43/s 92/79/t 88/75/s 92/80/s 77/58/t 75/60/s 76/62/t 82/65/I
PREMIUM HEARING AIDS at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices
/ c.a
ng
That's one for every win.
The beer baths, champagne toasts, selfies, and photo opps in Victory Lane are almost routine now for Junior.
He addedanew wrinkle atPocono,abroom. Earnhardt hoisted the broom high over
CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS:
his head after he completed a season sweep
at Pocono Raceway, the third win in a season that has served as a career renaissance for
Free Lunch
NASCAR's most popular driver.
Earnhardt now holds the No. 1 seed in the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship.
with a Complete Hearing Test!
Can he hold it headed into NASCAR's ver-
c
sion of the playoffs? "You'rethe broadcaster, " Earnhardt teased
Freedom SIE
crew chief Steve Letarte about that question.
"You don't," the departing Letarte said.
"YOu're toO far frOm the Chase." The legion of Junior Nation fans roared
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Pair
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Save $200!
when Earnhardt stormed ahead of the pack off the final restart with three laps left for the lead. His third win, he also won the Daytona
$799 due at time of purchase.
Freedom Silver $949 8'. SaV e $ 9 4 9 -a BuyOnm/GetOne! $1899 due at time of purchase.
500, tied him for the most in Sprint Cup this season.
Matt Slocum /The Associafed Press
Eamhardt held off the hard-charging Kev- Dale Earnhardt Jr. Is doused by crew members in in Harvick to become the first driver to sweep Victory Lane after winning at Pocono Raceway in both races at the track since Denny Hamlin in Long Pond, Pennsylvania, on Sunday.
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Rebates are processed 30 days after invoicing. Offers valid through August 31, 2014 or tarhlle supplies last. Call or vlstt for detalls.
2006.
He tweeted "Lookin for a broom" last week When he landed in POCOnLL He found one in Victory Lane.
"This group all really enjoys each other,"
•
Cup championship.
•
'
"We had a fast car all day," Earnhardt said. "Steve's strategy was perfect at the end. I don't
Earnhardt said. uWe want to see everybody
know if anyone knew what was going on there, happy." but it was pretty awesome." They had tons of fun inside the Pocono media Also on Sunday: center. Dixon continues to roll at Mid-Ohio: LEXLetarte acted hurt when his nameplate didn't have the same three winner's stickers that were on Earnhardt's card. Earnhardt also brought a Make-A-Wish Foundation teen to the podium
INGTON, Ohio — Scott Dixon went from last
and madesure he would have his own nameCard aftd StiCkerS.
tory drought in 2014. The 34-year-old Aussie, who started last in the 22-car field, also won
Earnhardt said. They all got their stickers — the same ones
Target Chip Ganassi has won the past six rac-
in qualifying to capture his fifth win at MidOhio in the past eight years, coasting in on low
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fuel to ertd Target ChiP GanaSSi RaCing'S ViC-
"This is my buddy, Chris. Does he get one," on the twisty road course between Cleveland
applied to the No. 88 Chevrolet. Earnhardt also became the fifth straight Hendrick Motorsports driver to win at Pocono.
Owner Rick Hendrick was not at the race, though he did talk to his winning driver on the phone on pit road. "I told him thanks for believing in me and making my life better," Earnhardt said. Eamhardt's sweep followed Kasey Kahne and Jimmie Johnson last year and Jeff Gordon
and Columbus irt 2007, 2009, 2011 and 2012. es at the track, including all four of Dixon's
triumphs. John Force wins NHRA Northwest Nationals: KENT, Wash. — John Forceraced to his third
Funny Car victory of the season and record 141st overall win in the NHRA Northwest Nationals at Pacific Raceways. The 65-year-old
Force beat former teammate Gary Densham in the final with a run of 4.173 seconds at 302.48 mph in a Ford Mustang. Densham's Chevrolet
Impala lost traction early and finished in 5.808 at 120.44. Force has raced in four consecutive six times in 2004. His three wins are one shy finals, winning twice. Doug Kalitta won in of his combined total from 2005-2013. His win Top Fuel, and Jason Line topped the Pro Stock Sunday was the 22nd of a career still without a division. in the August 2012 race. Eamhardt has his most wins since he won
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ENGLISH BULLDOG
Puppy, AKC Registered Male, born 5/9/1 4, $2000. 541-416-0375
I
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery TV, 5 0 " Sam s ung and inspection. Plasma, excellent cond, • A cord is 128 cu. ft.
The Bulletin reserves US Divers snorkling outfit, the right to publish all NEW. Pd $70, now ads from The Bulletin $45. 541-647-2314 newspaper onto The 253 Bulletin Internet website. TV, Stereo & Vide
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Min Pin AKC pups. 2001 Silverado 470 2 females left! $400. 3-horse trailer 5th Domestic & Born 4/14/14, potty wheel, 29'x8', deluxe Want to Buy or Rent training, shots, microThe Bulletin In-Home Positions showman/semi living chipped, In La Pine, quarters, lots of exWanted: $Cash paid for 4' x 4' x 8' 215 $175. 541-977-2505 602-284-4110 tras. Beautiful condi- Experienced Caregiver vintage costume jew• Receipts should • C oins & Stamps tion. $21,900. OBO needed in Sisters for reelry. Top dollar paid for Old English Sheepdog 255 include name, lief 1-2 days per week. 541-420-3277 Gold/Silver.l buy by the puppies, 4 males, $500 541-598-4527 Computers phone, price and Estate, Honest Artist e ach. Please c a l l Private collector buying (3) Gentle Fox Trotters, kind of wood Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-891-0372 ask for postagestamp albums 8 well trained, mounpurchased. 476 world-wide T HE B ULLETIN r e Denny Hale or Janev, collections, tain experienced, • Firewood ads 205 Employment 5 41-887-6030. Nfi l l and U.S. 573-286-4343 quires computer ad$6500/ea. MUST include vertisers with multiple Items for Free send picture by email (local, cell phone). Opportunities 541-523-0933 ad schedules or those species & cost per as request. Ready to 241 elkhornfoxtrotters.com cord to better serve selling multiple sys2 Kidney bean shaped go to new homes. Add your web address Bicycles & tems/ software, to disour customers. loveseat, exc. shape, to your ad and readPOODLEpups, toy. close the name of the Accessories you haul. 541-379-3530 Home ers on The Bulletin's raised w/love. business or the term The Bulletin Serrlnr Central Oretrensince fetts web site, www.bendCouch, leather, Schnoodle pups also! GT Karakoram kids mtn "dealer" in their ads. bulletin.com, will be good shape. You haul. 541-475-3889 Private party advertisbike, like new, $200. able to click through 541-379-3530 ers are defined as All Year Dependable P oodle, T oy , m a l e 541-379-3530 automatically to your those who sell one Firewood: Seasoned; Shilo bumper pull 3208 puppy, ready to go, Specialized Rock Hop- computer. website. horse trailer w/tack room, Lodgepole, split, del, $300. 541-728-1694 Pets & Supplies per mtn bike, exc. new, more extras, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5like $200. 541-379-3530 260 Queensland Heelers or 2 for $365. Call for $5900. 541-923-9758 The Bulletin is your 245 Misc. Items multi-cord discounts! The Bulletin recom- Standard 8 Mini, $150 383 & up. 541-280-1537 • G olf Equipment 541-420-3484. Employment mends extra caution Produce & Food Buying Diamonds when purc h as- www.rightwayranch.wor Log truck loads of dpress.com Marketplace /Gofd for Cash ing products or serCHECK YOURAD Saxon's Fine Jewelers Juniper firewood logs. Grass fattened natural vices from out of the Yorkie pups AKC, 2 tiny beef, cut and $900 local. 541-389-6655 Call area. Sending cash, girls, 1 boy, potty trainwrapped at $3.50/lb. 541-419-5174. checks, or credit in- ing, shots, health guar., 541-480-8185 BUYING f ormation may be 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 $1100. 541-777-7743 269 Lionel/American Flyer subjected to fraud. trains, accessories. Gardening Supplies For more informa210 to advertise. 541-408-2191. tion about an adver- Furniture & Appliances on the first day it runs & Equipment to make sure it is cortiser, you may call rect. nSpellchecke and BUYING & SE LLING www.bendbulletin.com the O regon State human errors do oc- All gold jewelry, silver BarkTurfSoil.com Attorney General's A1 Washers&Dryers and gold coins, bars, cur. If this happens to rounds, wedding sets, Office C o n sumer $150 ea. Full waryour ad, please conProtection hotline at ranty. Free Del. Also class rings, sterling sil- PROMPT DELIVERY tact us ASAP so that SereintrCentral Oregon since t9IB 1-877-877-9392. wanted, used W/D's ver, coin collect, vin541-389-9683 corrections and any 541-280-7355 tage watches, dental adjustments can be The Bulletin gold. Bill Fl e ming, Serrinxrentrel Onyon since ttltt made to your ad. 541-382-9419. The Bulletin For newspaper 541-385-5809 Serv/ngCentral Oregon\inre tees delivery, call the The Bulletin Classified (8) Snow white doves, FAST TREES The Bulletin Circulation department is looking Circulation Dept. at $ 40 cash fo r a l l . 6-10 feet yearly! Club Car golf cart, elec. Grow 541-385-5800 for a District Representative to join our Single 541-382-2194 48-volt w/AC, street legal, $16 - $21, delivered. To place an ad, call Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week www.fasttrees.com new batt, like new cond. Adopt a rescue cat or 541-385-5809 position. Overall focus is the representation, or 509-447-41 81 kitten! Altered, vacci- Antique sideboardl $5000 obo. 541-285-1515 sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaor email classified@bendbulletin.com nated, ID chip, tested, per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, New dark brown 2-pc 246 buffet: Walnut, more! CRAFT, 65480 beautiful detail. Early special events and news dealer outlets. Daily sofa slip covere by Sure- The Bulletin Guns, Hunting 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM 1900's. Exterior has responsibilities include driving a company veF it, 74'- 9 6 $35. Serving Central Oregon sincesettt & Fishing hicle to service a defined district, ensuring Sat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420 top drawer 8 3 doors 541-382-0673 www.craftcats.org. newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, with original key. In270 Bend local pays CASHII Toro gas lawn mower managing newspaper counts for the district, side has 2 shelves Border Collie-McNab for all firearms & with bag, $35. Lost & Found building relationships with our current news and a drawer. Meareg'd puppies, 5 F's O ammo. 541-526-0617 541-382-0673 dealer locations and growing those locations sures 71 x21x36 Ex$600 ea; 3 M's O $500 FOUND C a m elback with new outlets. Position requires total ownerea. Working parents; 1st cellent cond. Pick-up CASH!! paying cash backpack with con- ship of and accountability of all single copy eleonly.$800 OBO. For Guns, Ammo & Wantedshots, wormed, microfor Hi-fi audio & stu- t ents o n N W Mt . ments within that district. Work schedule will be 415-279-9893 (Bend) Reloading Supplies. chipped, Ready 8/1. dio equip. Mclntosh, Washington D r i v e. Thursday through Monday withTuesday and 541-408-8944 home or 541-408-6900. JBL, Marantz, D yCall to ID W ednesday off .Requires good communication 714-943-2385 (cell) Bed - electric 8 adjust- Colt SAA 44 spcl, 7 naco, Heathkit, San- (858) 487-2526 skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift Boxers AKC & Valley a ble medical b e d, 1/2", N.F., 2nd gen sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to Bulldogs CKC puppies. used, twin 80" Kor- NlB. B rass a v ail. Call 541-261-1808 Found visor on 7/30, multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong $700-800. 541-325-3376 foam mattress, never $1650. 541-389-1392 Shevlin Park, Call to service/team orientation, sales and problem 265 needs turning. $500. Fishing Reels: Hardy Fly, identify, 520-260-7123 solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: Brittany pups, AKC 8 541-382-2935 local. Building Materials circulation@bendbuuetin.com American Field ReqisQuick spinning8 Penn tered, born 5/31/14. Field Club c h airs b r o wnInt'I, all top shelf, $150280 La Pine Habitat Applications are available at the front desk. Champion bloodlines, leather, some wear $450. Jim, 541-771-7700 RESTORE $500. 505-220-2639 Estate Sales Drop off your resume in person at 1©$150 & 1 @$75. HOWA .338 mag, syn- Building Supply Resale 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; 541-389-8789. t hetic s t o ck , 3x 9 Quality at PEDDLERS MARKET No phone inquiries please. scope, $400. LOW PRICES Sat.,Aug. 9, 8-3 Pre-employment drug testing required. G ENERATE SOM E Weaver 541-419-6295 52684 Hwy 97 Tumalo Feed Co., EOE/Drug Free Workplace EXCITEMENT in your 541-536-3234 Hwy 20 West Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. neighborhood! Plan a Marlin 90 bent rib o/u, Antiques, crafts, ga., rear Open to the public . garage sale and don't 12 vintage, and more. exc. Chihuahua Teacuppup- forget to advertise in 1937-1958, Two 10-ft extension General (541) 306-8016 cond., $450. pies, 1st shots/dewormed. classified! The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturladders, $50 each copeddlersmarketO 541-306-0166 541-385-5809. $250. 541-977-0035 541-548-4051 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We gmail.com Protect your dog currently have openings all nights of the week. Pool Table with 1e Slate from dangerous 266 Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts Top. Needs felt. Wood s rattlesnakes start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and legs, leather pockets, Heating & Stoves with Rattlesnake end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo5ft x Sft. $350 OBO. Avoidance classes. sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Computer desk with NOTICE TO Call 541-213-4211 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a ADVERTISER folding doors by Broyminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Cute, Smart & No hill, cherry finish. 5ft Springfield Tactical 1911 Since September 29, are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Shed. Min-schnauzer W x 6ft H x 2ft D. Inc 9mm upper & 45 up- 1991, advertising for loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackschnoodles. Tails power strip, bulletin per. $1,359 in custom used woodstoves has ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup docked, 1st shots, & board, shelving, file work. Asking $1,250 been limited to modand other tasks. For qualifying employees we wormed. $500-$600. drawer, room for 2 els which have been 541-306-0166 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Good homes only! monitors, pc, printer. certified by the Or325 short-term 8 long-term disability, 401(k), paid 541-322-0609 $325 OBO. audrey© WIN model 12, 20 ga., egon Department of pump, $750. Environmental QualHay, Grain 8 Feed vacation and sick time. Drug test is required swissfamilykeller.com modified, Doberman pups AKC Call/text 541-41 9-9961 prior to employment. ity (DEQ) and the fedreg. male/fem., $600 Table and chairs, solid eral E n v ironmental 1st Quality mixed grass 247 ea. 541-771-5438 hay, no rain, barn stored, oak, pedestal table, 4 Please submit a completed application attenProtection A g e ncy Sporting Goods $250/ton. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Donate deposit bottles/ windsor style chairs. (EPA) as having met Call 541-549-3831 Great condition. $350. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan- Misc. cans to local all vol., smoke emission stan- Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541-382-6773 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be non-profit rescue, for dards. A cer t ified KODIAK tackle system, w oodstove may b e O rchard grass m i x obtained upon request by contacting Kevin feral cat spay/neuter. 212 Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Cans for Cats trailer soft bag, 8 boxes, new, identified by its certifi- $235/ton, 7 2 lb. Antiques & $50. 541-647-2314 at Jake's Diner, Hwy cation label, which is 2-twine bales, deliv- No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No 20 E; donate M-F at Collectibles permanently attached ery avail. Call Lee, STEARNS inflata-Vest, to resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reSmith Sign, 1515 NE the stove. The Bul- 541-410-4495 new. Pd $75, now $50. letin quired prior to employment. EOE. will not know2nd; or CRAFT, Tu- Antiques wanted: tools, 541-647-2314 malo. Leave msg. for furniture, marbles,early ingly accept advertis- Quality 1st cutting orTherm-A-Rest self inflat- ing for the sale of chard grass mix, small pick up of large amts, B/W photography, The Bulletin Serving Centrer Oregons/nce ieer 541-389-8420. beer cans, iewelry. ing mattress, new. $60. uncertified bales $225/ton. Madras, www.craftcats.org 541-389-1578 541-647-2314 woodstoves. OR. 541-420-9736 202
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The Bulletin
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Aquatics Coach
The Madras Aquatic Center CDL Truck Driver seeks qualified Aquatics Needed. Coach for adult & youth wood chip and swim, and head coach Our lumber drivers averfor waterpolo teams. 1-3 yrs previous swimming age 54K annually. and/or water polo coach- Off weekends,paid ing preferred. Year- vacation, health inround position; main- s urance. For 3 5 tains/coordinates coach- years we have sering duties with all facets viced Eastern Orof aquatic sports pro- egon, Central OrSou t hern gram including organiz- egon, ing & planning practices O regon an d th e & game strategies, train- Boise Valley and ing, health education you can live in any and recruiting of athletes. of these locations. Could be 22 positions.) We run late model ontact MAC Executive P etes an d K e nDirector Joe McHaney: worths all 550 cats jmchaneyO with 13 speeds, our macaquatic.com trailers are C urtin or 1195 SE Kemper Way, vans (no tarps to Madras, OR 97741. For deal with) 4 0'-23' more information, visit doubles year around www.macaquatic.com work. We our looking for long term USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! drivers, our average employee has Door-to-door selling with w orked for us f o r fast results! It's the easiest over 8 years. So if you are looking for a way in the world to sell. home, give us a call 541.523.9202 The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
System Administrator Are youa geek who can also communicate eff ectively with non-technical executives and employees? Would you like to work hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. We are abusy media company seeking an experienced systems administrator who is also a forward thinker, creative problem solver, excellent communicator, and self-motivated professional. We have 8 locations throughout Oregon and California. Job Res onsibilities: • Evaluation, selection and deployment of new technology and tools • Provide expertise regarding system installations, configurations and ongoing maintenance • Install, configure and administer stable Linux environments • Maintain virtual server environments • Monitor and maintain enterprise network security • Work with team to optimize system performance across applications, network and databases • Help team troubleshoot and repair both hardware and software • Occasional travel to remote locations • Participate in on-call rotation Essential Ex ertise Needed: • *nix systems administration - Ubuntu, Solaris, OpenBSD, FreeBSD • ZFS/Solaris file servers • Virtualization and Cloud experience - VMWare, XenServer • Server Support - Windows Server 2003/2008/2012, Active Directory, Group Policy • Network administration - Switches, routers and ISPs • Firewalls/VPN - pfSense, OpenVPN. • Domain registrations, SSL certificate management, DNS • Google Apps for Business
Preferred Ex erience: • Background in the media industry • Apache and Nginx • PC and Apple hardware and software support
experience
•M ySQL, Rubyon Rails,PHP, PERL, VisualStudlo
• Confluence • Telecommunications — Avaya Definity and Asterisk • Adobe Creative Suites
We are Central Oregon's most comprehensive news and information resource. This full-time position is located at corporate headquarters in the beautiful resort town of Bend, OR. Do you love the outdoors? We have activities right outside your doorstep (literally) that include world-class mountain-biking, rock climbing, skiing, fly-fishing, rock-climbing, golfing, hunting and mountain hiking trails. We have music and seasonal events year-round. This is the place everyonecomes to vacation. You couldn't ask for a better lifestyle! If you've got what it takes, email a cover letter and resume toresume@wescom a ers.com
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Homes with Acreage
Boats & Accessories
Motorhomes
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Travel Trailers
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk
Keystone Laredo 31'
2 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 acres, large shop, carport, fenced yard, n e ar La P in e $ 8 4 ,000. 12' aluminum fishing boat, t r ailer, 54'I -771-0143 motor, fish finder, 773 accessories, $1200. 541-389-7234 Acreages
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. acres. 65694 Old 13.5' Bayliner Capri 1985, Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. 5.17 Bend/Redmond Hwy. 50hp Force motor, trailer, Mtn view, power, wa- very clean, low hrs, accys, septic approved. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. ter, $174,000 O.B.O. Call $2275. 541-306-1317 Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
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PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $16.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
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*tlllust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulleiimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Construction Mgmt firm in Sunriver seeking highly motivated individual(s) for full-time
CONSTRUCTION DISBURSEMENT AGENT Requires 2-yr. experience in construction administration or commercial lending. WORD/ Excel profiency. EOE. Fax resume 541-593-3604 or e-mail to roberta.moodyo tetratech.com.
Hotel/Resort
OPENING SOON!!
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 Ohilton.com or 806-430-1836.
Find exactly what Just bought a new boat? you are looking for in the Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our CLASSIFIEDS Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Food& Beverage
We are hiring for dishwashers, line cooks & prep cooks. Please submit app lications at o u r Bend Pub located at 1 044 N W B ond Street, Bend. Preemployment drug testing is required.
Log Truck Drivers
(Long 8 Short) for logging company in Florence, OR. Experience preferred. CDL and current medical card. Great pay and benefits. Year-round, longterm employment. Caii 541-997-8212
Rmljmss ® D(IjekZCm
MECHANIC Sisters School District has an opening for a permanent, Full-time Mechanic/Transportation Supervisor Qualifications: • Minimum of three years experience in repair and management of motorized vehicles and 3
years experience in management, combined expenence of at least 5 years desired. • Current CDL license and be ODE certified or be willing to obtain.
Salary: $38 , 000. $40 500. depending on experience. See website for details O www.sisters.k12.or.us all Leland at 549-8521 ext. 4017 if you have questions.
•
WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have
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BANK TURNED YOU
DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no caution when purchasing products or I problem, good equity services from out of s is all you need. Call l the area. Sending Oregon Land Mortgage 541-368-4200. c ash, checks, o r l credit i n f ormation LOCAL MONEY:We buy l may be subjected to secured trustdeeds & FRAUD. hard money For more informa- I note,some loans. Call Pat Kellev tion about an adver- • 541-382-3099 ext.1 8.
I
l l l
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l tiser, you may call l the Oregon State
PRIVATE MONEY for
General'sl short term 1st mortBULLETINCLASSIFIEDS l Attorney Office C o n sumer s loans. Strong Search the area's most I Protection hotline at l gage security 541-480-1670 comprehensive listing of I 1-877-877-9392. I
classified advertising... real estate to automotive, LThe Bulletin merchandise to sporting Western Washington goods. Bulletin Classifieds TRUCK DRIVER Guy seeks gal 50-66, appear every day in the WANTED print or on line. slim/average build, to Must have doubles share quiet t i mes; Call 541-385-5809 endorsement. trips, walks, nature, www.bendbulletin.com Local run. moon-light, cuddling! Truck is parked in Greg, PO Box 3013 The Bulletin Madras. 541-475-4221 serving central oregonsince ale Arlington, WA 98223. •
528
Loans & Mortgages
J
Brad 5 41-419-1725, or Deb 541-480-3956.
debra©bendbroad band.com
630
Rooms for Rent
Apt JMultiplex General
Aggregate
Domestic Services
L a ndscaping/Yard Care CHECK yOUR AD
Vic Russell Const. Inc. Aeration/Dethatching Aggregate 8 Paving Home is Where the Dirt Is 1-time or Weekly Services Ask about FREEadded Res. & Comm. 9 yrs experience in CB¹31 500966MDI housekeeping. Refs 8 svcs w/seasonal contract! Bonded & Insured. 541-536-3478 rates to fit your needs. Call Julie 541 %10-0648 COLLINS Lawn Maint. or 541-41 0-1136 Ca/l 541-480-9714 Baths & Kitchens CARLSENG DESIGNS Reid Construction Landscape Design, Handyman Bathroom & Kitchen Consultation 8 Garremodel specialists! dening. 541-610-6961 Daniel, 541-768-4676 Tanya Carlsen I DO THAT! CCB¹200883 Home/Rental repairs Allen Reinsch Yard Small jobs to remodels Maintenance& Mowing Building/Contracting Honest, guaranteed (& many other things!) work. CCB¹151 573 Call 541-536-1294 or NOTICE: Oregon state Dennis 541 -317-9768 541-815-5313 law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to Landscaping/Yard Care YARD NIAKEOVERS Better,cheaper, be licensed with the Bigfoot Yards Construction Contrac- NOTICE: Oregon Land541-633-9895 tors Board (CCB). An scape Contractors Law active license 671) requires all means the contractor (ORS that adMasonry is bonded & insured. businesses vertise t o pe r form Verify the contractor's Landscape Construc- Ellingson Masonry CCB l i c ense at tion which includes: Custom stone work, www.hirealicensedl anting, deck s , lic. bonded, insured. contractor.com ences, arbors, CCB¹ 157238 or call 503-378-4621. water-features, and in541-460-9512 The Bulletin recom- stallation, repair of irmends checking with rigation systems to be the CCB prior to con- l icensed w it h th e Painting/Wall Covering tracting with anyone. Landscape ContracSome other t rades tors Board. This 4-digit ALL AMERICAN also req u ire addi- number is to be inPAINTING tional licenses and cluded in all adverInterior and Exterior certifications. Family-owned tisements which indicate the business has Residential & Commercial R&TCustom Const. 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts a bond, insurance and 5-year warranties Fine and Finish Carworkers compensaSummer Special! pentry. CCB ¹179914 tion for their employCall 541-337-6149 Ron & Tammy Berg, ees. For your protecCCB ¹193960 541-647-8701 tion call 503-378-5909 or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to WESTERN PAINTING Debris Removal check license status CO. Richard Hayman, before contracting with a semi-retired paintJUNK BE GONE the business. Persons ing contractor of 45 I Haul Away FREE doing lan d scape years. S mall Jobs For Salvage. Also maintenance do not Welcome. Interior & Cleanups & Cleanouts r equire an LC B l i - Exterior. c c b¹51 84. cense. 541-386-6910 Mel, 541-389-8107
„e
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $18,000or best offer. 541-318-6049
16' Old Town Canoe, spruce, cedar & canvas, HOLIDAY RAMBLER Lake model, 1 owner, VACATIONER 2003 very good cond, w/extras. 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, $1000. 541-388-3386 workhorse, Allison 1000 speed trans., 39K, Ads published in "Wa 5 TIRES, 2 slides, tercraft" include: Kay NEM/ Onan 5.5w gen., ABS aks, rafts and motor brakes, steel cage cockIzed personal pit, washer/dryer, firewatercrafts. Fo lace, mw/conv. oven, "boats" please se ree standing dinette, Class 870. was $121,060 new; now, 541-385-5809 $35,900. 541-536-1008
The Bulletin
1997 Bounder 34' w/slide. $17,900. Excellent condition, must see! Ford 460 w/Banks, new tires, dual A/C, rear camera, triple axle, Onan gen, 63k miles. 541-306-9897
Providence 2005 Fully loaded 35 000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles. 541-548-4807
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras.Asking $58K. Pll. 541-447-9268
Can be viewed at Western Recreation (fop of hill) ln Prlnevllle. HD FXSBI 2006 new cond., low miles, Stage I download, extras, bags. $8900. 541-447-0887
Ril W I
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
a
Allegro 31 ff., 2006 onginal owner, 2 Senior Apartmentslides, Ford V-10, Independent Living 28,000 miles, satellite ALL-INCLUSIVE TVs, queen bed, with 3 meals daily HD Sportster, 2001 exc 6, lots of storMonth-to-month lease, cond, 1 owner, maint'd, sleeps age, stored under check it out! new t i res, cu s tom cover, A/C, electric Call 541-318-0450 chrome, leather saddle awning, 5.5 KW genbags, 32,400 mi, $4200. erator, auto leveling, 663 Tom, 541-362-6501 no smokers, no pets, Houses for Rent 865 $52,900. 541.390.9932 Madras ATVs Call The Bulletin At A 3 bdrm, 2 bath house 541-385-5809 on the Flats in Madras. Place Your Ad Dr E-Mail $1000 month. 541-475-3519 At: www.bendbulletin.com 1
TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles
/ Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to e ~ ~alle obus.co or email trainwater1 57© g a I.co or call858-527-8627
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K ~0 ®) I jil miles, excellent shape, new tires, Allegro 32' 2007, like professionally winter870 new, only 12,600 miles. ized every year, cutBoats & Accessories Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 off switch to battery, transmission, dual explus new RV batterhaust. Loaded! Auto-levies. Oven, hot water eling system, 5kw gen, heater & air condi747 power mirrors w/defrost, tioning seldom used; Southwest Bend Homes 2 slide-outs with aw- just add water and it's nings, rear c a mera, ready to go! On the Water! 1530 sq trailer hitch, driyer door $22,000 obo. Serious 12' Aluminum boat ft.. 3 bdrm/2 bath, river w/power window, cruise, inquiries please. rock frplce, tile, over t/a with trailer, 3hp motor, exhaust brake, central Stored in Terrebonne. acre. $263,000. good cond, $1200.. vac, satellite sys. Asking 541-548-5174 541-280-5630 503-307-6570 $67,500. 503-781-8812
BwIj
Q oQ o
Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' bed, with ramps. $700 obo. 541-549-4834 or 541-588-0068
OR For Hire
room slide, 48k miles, in good cond. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.
Call for quote Ask for Theo,
541-260-4293
$27,900
Motorhomes
HDFatBo 1996
Sell for $3500.
2004 with liwing
Call Dick at 541-406-2387
880
HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 8 2 Vance & Hines pipes, $12,500. 541-306-0166
5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,
Winnebago Sightseer 30'
serv>ng central oregon since r903
$15,000
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
beds, micro, (3) Tvs,
sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541488-7179
®
Jim, 541-419-4513 632
20 06 w i th 1 2'
slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$f8,600
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 TURN THE PAGE Wakeboard Boat 54'I -4047-4805 For More Ads I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. The Bulletin New Dream Special Full wakeboard tower, 3 bdrm, 2 bath light bars, Polk audio $50,900 finished speakers throughout, on your site. Winnebago Adven• -' $ E completely wired for J and M Homes turer 2005 35t/a', gas, amps/subwoofers, un541-548-5511 less than 20,000 miles, derwater lights, fish Price Reduced! finder, 2 batteries cusexcellent condition, 2 P a c ific tom black paint job. Bigfoot 29 2003,sleeps slide-outs, work horse Komfort Like $12,500 541-81 5-2523 5, walk-around queen chassis, Banks power Ridge 27 ' :e. deluxe NW debed, 57K mi 7.3L power brake system, sleeps sNEW Su p e r stroke t u rb o di e sel 5, with a l l o p tions, ign, 1 5 ' private bdrm, w/Banks power pak incl $62,000 / negotiable. Slide, auges, torque lock & Call 5 4 1-306-6711or power jack, electric ake brakes. Power ev- email a i kistuobend- awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, alerything, auto leveling cable.com ways stored inside. jacks, air ride w/90psi A MU S T see! compressor, 3.6kw pro860 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 p ane gen set. V e r y $23,500 obo! Call INotorcycles & Accessories 4.3L Mercruiser, low clean, no pets, no smkrs, Pam 541-788-6767 hrs, 190 hp Bowaraged. N o sl i des. or Bill 541-480-7930 rider w/depth finder, 29,500. 541-548-3985 radio/ CD player, rod Need to get an holders, full canvas, Winnebago Aspect EZ Loader trailer, ad in ASAP? 2009 - 32', 3 slideexclnt cond, $9500. outs, Leather inteYou can place it 707-484-3518 rior, Power s eat, online at: (Bend) locks, win d ows, FXSTD Harley Aluminum wheels. www.bendbulletin.com Davidson 2001,twin 1997 Reinell 16.5 ft. ski 17" Flat Screen, cam 88, fuel injected, Dodge boat, in/out Volvo enSurround s o u nd, 541-385-5809 Vance 8 Hines short Brougham 1978, i ne, e x c . co n d . camera, Queen bed, shot exhaust, Stage I 15', 1-ton, clean, 8000. 541-389-6256 Foam mattress, Awwith Vance & Hines RV 69,000 miles. ning, Generator, Infuel management CONSIGNMENTS verter, Auto Jacks, $4500. system, custom parts, WANTED Air leveling, Moon extra seat. In La Pine, We Do The Work ... roof, no smoking or $1 0,500OBO. call 541-280-3146 You Keep The Cash! Call Today p ets. L ik e n ew, On-site credit 541-5'I 6-8664 $74,900 approval team, 541-460-6900 19' Pioneer ski boat, web site presence. Harley Davidson 2003 1983, vm tandem We Take Trade-Ins! Anniversary Road King, trailer, V8. Fun & Free Advertising. Stage 1, pearl white, exfast! $5800 obo. BIG COUNTRY RV cellent condition, lots of 541-815-0936. Bend: 541-330-2495 chrome & extr a s. rvv ~ r= Redmond: Fleefwood Discovery $13,999. 541-279-0846 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 541-548-5254 Check out the options - 3 slide outs, Winnebago C 22' classifieds online satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Looking for your 2002 - $30,500 etc., 32,000 m i les. www.bendbttffetirt.com next employee? Wintered in h eated Big engine, heavy Updated daily Place a Bulletin help duty, many extras, shop. $82,000 O.B.O. Chaparral 2130SS wanted ad today and 541-447-8664 21,000 miles, like Clean, well m ainreach over 60,000 new. Please call for tained 2 1 ' fa m i ly readers each week. details ski/wakeboard Your classified ad 541-280-3251 open-bow runabout will also appear on with new Barewest bendbulletin.com Winnebago Sightseer tower/Bimini. Great which currently reHarley D a vidson 27' 2002. workhorse sound system, new ceives over 1 5 mil2006 FXDLI Dyna FLEETWOOD as motor, Class A, dual battery system. lion page views evLow Rider, Mustang PACE ARROW, 1999 ' slide living rm/diStored under cover, ery month at no seat with backrest, Updated interior, 36', 2 nette, new tires. spare fresh water use only, extra cost. Bulletin new battery, windshdes, 42,600 miles, V10 tire carrier, HD trailer 2nd owner. J u st Classifieds Get Reshield, forward con5000 watt generator, hitch, water heater, b ought a lar g e r as, sults! Call 385-5609 ydraulic levelers, auto trols, lots of chrome, Chaparral! $14,000. steps, back-up camera, micro/oven, generaor place your ad Screamin' Eagle extor, furn/AC, outside 541-419-9510 on-line at washer/dryer, central vac, shower, carbon dioxhaust, 11,360 miles. bendbulletin.com ice m aker, l o aded, ide & smoke detector, Well maintained! 875 excellent condition. $8,650 in La Pine fiberglas ext., elect. $27,500 541-620-2135 step, cruise control, 882 (928) 581-9190 Watercraft (SeeCralgsllst CB radio, 60k miles, Fifth Wheels ¹4470374489) awning, TV antenna w booster, flat screen 23" TV. A M/FM/CD stereo. $2 7 ,500. 541-548-2554
Room for rent in Redmond, $450, incl utilities. No smoking. Mature, responsible, 8 stable. Call
Call54I3855809topromoteyour service•Ad vertisefor28de/t startingdttl(0(!hisSedalpackageit notsstrbletner wehitcl
RV
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
BS(jtIRnlh
. 0 0
$23,995.
541-383-3503
I
775
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
881
Travel Trailers Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or. 206-715-7120
Arctic Fox 24.5' 2005, axles are turned, stored in
garage, 1 slide, all new tires, 1 owner. $11,900. 541-633-0520 or 541-389-2087
CHECK YOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Heartland P r owler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r ge closet, 15' power awning, power hitch 8 s tabilizers, 1 8 g a l . Fleetwood Prowler water heater, full size 32' - 2001 queen bed , l a r ge 2 slides, ducted shower, porcelain sink heat & air, great & toilet. $2 6 ,900 condition snowbird 541-999-2571 ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! o" $14,500 obo. .
•
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
JaycoJay Feather LGT25Z 2005 LR slide, central air, micro, AM/FM/CD stereo, TV antenna with booster, queen walk around bed, s leeps 4-6, outside grill, entertainment center and shower, awning, power hitch, new g a s/elec water heater. All new tires, includes spare. Clean, Great Shape. $1 1,200 541-389-8154
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
FLEETWOOD Wilderness 2000 28' 1 slide, good cond with awning. and A/C, shower, queen bed, nice condition. $8775. 541-548-0675
Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214
C4
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, AUG 4, 2014
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will $I)prtz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Monday,Augu st4,2014
Through thick and thin
ACROSS 1Airlineto the Holy Land 5 Finishes
By FRANK STEWART One trait of an expert declarer is a thick skin. If he judges that an oddlooking play is correct, he adopts that play even at the risk of looking silly. At today's 3NT, South won the first club in dummy, unblocked the king of hearts, came to the king of clubs and cashed four more hearts. East saved both spades, the A-J of diamonds and two clubs. South then finessed with dummy's queen of spades. East took the king and cashed two clubs, and the defense also got the A-K of diamonds. Down one.
try one spade. Partner raises to three spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner appears t o h a v e 4 - 4 - 0- 5 or 4- 4- 1 - 4 distribution. Even if h i s h i gh-card values are minimum, you may have a s lam: Hemayhold K J6 5 , A Q 5 4 , None, K J 7 5 2. Your hand is worth at least one try for slam. Cue-bid four clubs to show your ace in that suit. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
DAILY QUESTION 4 9 A Q 10 2
9 K
0 Q 8 6 4 3 4 A 4 3. Your partner opens one club, you respond one diamond, he bids one heart and you
WEST
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Opening lead — A 9 (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.prg. BIZARRO
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T J A SOL I J A NOM
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3 Surrounding, as sound 4 Experiment sites 5 Santa's little helper 6 Nothing 7 Sketched 8 Give an informal greeting 9 Poster with a "You are here" label 10 Rink surface 11 in M a nila (Ali/Frazier fight) 12 Favorite entrant in a tournament 13 Kitchen scourers 18Tues. vis-3-vis Wed. 22 Handbag monogram 26 Brazilian soccer legend 27 Singer Baker with the 1988 hit "Giving You the Best That I Got" 28Throw 29 "Pretty Boy" of crime 34 Completely unlike a wet noodle
5
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62
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70
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PUZZLE BY EO SESSA
36 Author's submissions: Abbr. 37 Flower part 40 Feudal peasant 41 Casino card game 42 Stick out 43 More calm 44 Spoken slur
62 G-men
47 Charge for entenng a park, e.g. 48 Flower part 49 Kleenexes 51 Pup's cry 53"TheBridge on the River 56 Burial vault 570n all (crawling, say)
64"If you ask me," in chat rooms 65 Internet connection inits. 67"Great Expectations" boy 68 Stores for G.l.'s
Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
DENNIS THE MENACE
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45 "The Thin Man" a handkerchief pooch 17Celebrity chef 46 t ape and host of the Food Network's 50 Proverbial place "Boy Meets Grill" for bats 19Crooks, to cops 52 Biblical boat 20 Licorice flavoring 54" hear" 21 For what 55 It's typically slow I eason? during rush hour 23ADLor SSHosp. triage EarthLink: Abbr. areas 24Tell tall tales 59 Stimpy's TV pal 25Thememusic for 600ne who plays TV'8 "The Dating for pay Game" 61 Jackson 5 30 Majority of the hairstyles contestants on "The Dating 63 Disentangled Game" 66 Dismissive term 31 Equivalent of a for chronic Roman X fatigue syndrome
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BEST PLAY South's spade finesse was not a favorite; East would usually hold the king for hi s t w o-level vulnerable overcall. As the cards lay, South could havesucceeded by leading the ace and a low spade, but his winning play would seem strange to most players: At T r i c k T h ree d ummy should lead the queen of spades. East can win and set up his clubs, but after South runs the hearts, he leads a spade to the ten. When that finesse wins, South has five hearts, two clubs and two spades.
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1 Money owed 5 Peaks across eight European
countries 9 Japanese sliding
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tummy"
players: Abbr.
22 Initials for an amateur handyman 24 LPGA star Lewis 25 Not even
26 CIA cousin 28 Cheese in red
wrapping 30 Eden dweller 33 " news?"
34 Toys bouncing on strings 35 "Sometimes you f eel like ! " 36 "Huzzah!" 37 Lie next to 2
47 Road service ol'g. 48 Oklahoma tribe 49 The Stooges,
3
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HERMAN
THAT SCRAOOBLEO WORD GAME 95
Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knorek
Unscramble these four Jumbles
ono letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
VREIR
Hello, 8on! Love tao oooooooeol
n, I
Thooo hovo
NASTD 9:,
OLEVIT BIFocAL5 w5586 aeccMINe A5 POPUIAIZ A5 BEN RZANKLIN-
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise anowoa ao suggested by the above cartoon. HERMAN~ 9 LauahilOSock umnsina Inc., 084 by Universal Udick, 2014
Answer here: (Anoworo tomorrow)
"I don't think I'll bother with a tan 'tll I get out."
J omblom SWOON D E PTH P R A NCE A B SURD Answer. Picking up food can make it hard toDROP POUNDS
brand 61 Kernel holder 62 President Lincoln
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: P A CH T O S Y
C K A G E D A T T A N O Y S O L D I S MO A N D I R T A B L A Z E B D R U Z E P R D I C E N E A I C K M E S S S K Y H A W K S A L B U N D Y B A R B I E A A Y E A L L S B E A C H E E A R K S I N A xwordeditor@aol.com 5
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J A B G A M E A D E R S E R T 08/04/1 4
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By Jeffrey Wechsler (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
08/04/14
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